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Date: 2001-09-10

BRUTE FORCE: Copyright-Zwang für alle Kisten


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Lobbyisten der Musikindustrie et al holen zum ultimativen
Vernichtungschlag gegen Raubkopierer aus: Die Copyright-
Kontroll/mechanismen sollen in möglichst alle Consumer-Geräte
und PCs eingebettet werden - bei ansonstigen Strafen von USD
500.000/5 Jahre Knast für den Hersteller.

Eine derartige Regelung soll im Security Systems Standards and
Certification Act (SSSCA)erfolgen. Sie hätte de facto zur Folge,
dass nur mehr Storage-Systeme jeder Art auf den Markt kommen,
die den US-Copyright-Vorstellungen folgen - bei sonstiger
Strafzahlung. Außerdem würde die Musikindustrie damit alle
potentiellen Trust-Vorwürfe unterlaufen.

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relayed by "Bademeister" <bademeister@aon.at>
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"Wired" 4:19 p.m. Sep. 7, 2001 PDT

New Copyright Bill Heading to DC

WASHINGTON -- Music and record industry lobbyists are quietly
readying an all-out assault on Congress this fall in hopes of
dramatically rewriting copyright laws.

With the help of Fritz Hollings (D-S.C.), the powerful chairman of
the Senate Commerce committee, they hope to embed copy-
protection controls in nearly all consumer electronic devices and
PCs. All types of digital content, including music, video and e-
books, are covered.

The Security Systems Standards and Certification Act (SSSCA),
scheduled to be introduced by Hollings, backs up this requirement
with teeth: It would be a civil offense to create or sell any kind of
computer equipment that "does not include and utilize certified
security technologies" approved by the federal government.

It also creates new federal felonies, punishable by five years in
prison and fines of up to $500,000. Anyone who distributes
copyrighted material with "security measures" disabled or has a
network-attached computer that disables copy protection is
covered.

Hollings' draft bill, which Wired News obtained on Friday,
represents the next round of the ongoing legal tussle between
content holders and their opponents, including librarians,
programmers and open-source advocates.

Hollywood executives fret that without strong copy protection in
widespread use, piracy will allow digital versions of movies to be
pirated as readily as MP3 audio files once were with Napster. With
the SSSCA enacted, the thinking goes, U.S. technology firms will
have no choice but to insert copy-protection technology in future
products.

The last legislative salvo in the content wars was the controversial
1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, which the SSSCA extends
and expands. Under existing law, Russian programmer Dmitry
Sklyarov has been charged with allegedly selling "circumvention"
devices, and 2600 magazine has been sued for distributing a DVD-
decryption utility.

"The government is mandating what your technology has to do,"
says Cindy Cohn, the legal director of the Electronic Frontier
Foundation of the SSSCA. "The government's now in some ways
effectively writing code that anyone who makes anything with a
microprocessor has to implement in anything they make. I'm
unaware of any other requirement like that."

Hollings' aides could not be reached for comment on Friday. One
lobbyist opposing the legislation said Disney, which markets
movies and TV shows, is the measure's most ardent supporter
among industry groups.

The SSSCA and existing law work hand in hand to steer the
market toward using only computer systems where copy protection
is enabled. First, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act created the
legal framework that punished people who bypassed copy
protection -- and now, the SSSCA is intended to compel
Americans to buy only systems with copy protection on by default.

The SSSCA says that it is illegal to create, sell or distribute "any
interactive digital device that does not include and utilize certified
security technologies" that are approved by the U.S. Commerce
Department. An interactive digital device is defined as any
hardware or software capable of "storing, retrieving, processing,
performing, transmitting, receiving or copying information in digital
form."

Jessica Litman, a law professor at Wayne State University who
specializes in intellectual property, likened it to the 1992 Audio
Home Recording Act that slapped restrictions on digital audio
recorders.

"This appears to be an attempt to expand the concept to anything
that has a microprocessor in it and to have everyone agree or to
have the government set technological standards that will enforce
copyright owners' preferences," Litman says.

"Forgetting all the reasons why this is bad copyright policy and bad
information policy, it's terrible science policy," she says.

Sonia Arrison, a technology policy analyst at the free-market
Pacific Research Institute, said, "Some parts of this go too far....
Would this mean that if I distributed a file that I received from
someone who had broken security technology that I would be
breaking the law? Sounds like it."

Under the SSSCA, industry groups have a year to agree on a
security standard, or the Commerce Department will step in and
decide on one. Sunshine laws would not apply to meetings held in
conjunction with the law, and industry organizations would be
immune from antitrust prosecution. (By Declan McCullagh)

http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,46655,00.html
http://www.politechbot.com/docs/hollings.090701.html





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published on: 2001-09-10
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