Copyright Office poll: IE-only OK?

By Paul Festa
http://news.com.com/2102-1038_3-5827627.html?tag=st.util.print

Story last modified Wed Aug 10 17:08:00 PDT 2005

Signaling a new addition to the list of browser-specific Web sites, the U.S.
Copyright Office solicited opinions on a planned Internet Explorer-only
zone.

The office, a division of the Library of Congress, invited comments through
Aug. 22 on an upcoming Web service for prospective copyright owners that may
launch with support for only limited browsers.

"At this point in the process of developing the Copyright Office's system
for online preregistration, it is not entirely clear whether the system will
be compatible with Web browsers other than Microsoft Internet Explorer
versions 5.1 and higher," the office said in its notice. "In order to ensure
that preregistration can be implemented in a smoothly functioning and timely
manner, the office now seeks comments that will assist it in determining
whether any eligible parties will be prevented from preregistering a claim
due to browser requirements of the preregistration system."

The Copyright Office's request for comments goes to the heart of the battle
over Web market share and Web standards. Web standards advocates have long
argued that inconsistencies in the way browser makers implement
standards--that is, W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) recommendations--force
Web developers to write different pages for individual browsers. Another
concern is that Web page and application developers have to perform quality
assurance testing multiple times for different browsers.

The Copyright Office site in question is a preregistration system for
unpublished, commercial works-in-progress. Scheduled to launch Oct. 24, the
system would let a film studio preregister a movie, for example, so that the
studio could prosecute copyright violations that resulted from scenes or
copies prematurely distributed over the Net before the work was complete.

In its request for comments, the office made clear that it plans to support
other browsers in the future. In an interview, an attorney with the office
said that the sticking point was Siebel software that guaranteed
compatibility with only selected browsers--including both IE and Netscape
7.02, a browser with negligible market share--in the current Siebel 7.7
software.

The Copyright Office said it planned to upgrade to Siebel 7.8, which
supports Netscape 7.2, Firefox 1.0.3 and Mozilla 1.7.7, but not in time for
the Oct. 24 launch.

Neither the Copyright Office nor Siebel said they planned to support other
browsers like Opera or Apple Computer's Safari.

Siebel defended its selective support of Web browsers.

"We're running a business, and testing is extremely costly," said Stacey
Schneider, director of technology product marketing. "We optimize against
what our customers demand. For Siebel 7.8, it became clear, especially for
the government sector, that there's demand for Mozilla. But there are
hundreds of vendors out there with their own browsers. And not many
applications support many more than what we do."

The Copyright Office said original comments and five copies should be mailed
to Copyright GC/ I&R, P.O. Box 70400, Southwest Station, Washington, D.C.
20024-0400.



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