FC: Hollywood wants to plug "analog hole," regulate A-D converters

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Fri May 24 2002 - 08:27:13 PDT

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    From: "Trei, Peter" <ptreiat_private>
    To: "'declanat_private'" <declanat_private>
    Subject: MPAA wants all A/D converters to implement copyright protection.
    Date: Fri, 24 May 2002 11:17:08 -0400
    
    My mind has been boggled, my flabbers have been ghasted.
    
    In the name of protecting their business model, the MPAA
    proposes that every analog/digital (A/D) converter - one of
    the most basic of chips - be required to check for US
    government mandated copyright flags. Quite aside from
    increasing the cost and complexity of the devices many,
    manyfold, it eliminates the ability of the US to compete
    in the world electronics market.
    
    If this level of ignorance, chuptza, and bloodymindedness
    had been around a hundred years ago, cars would be
    forbidden to have a range greater then 20 miles, to
    protect the railway industry, and transoceanic airline
    tickets would have a $1000/seat surcharge, to compensate
    the owners of ocean liners for lost revenue.
    
    I know that Tinsletown is based on dreams and fantasies
    (as well as the violation of Edision's movie patents), but
    someone needs to sit these people down and teach them
    the lesson that King Canute taught his nobles.
    
    Peter Trei
    [The above is my personal opinion only. Do not
    misconstrue it to belong to others.]
    
    ---
    
    Date: Thu, 23 May 2002 16:06:08 -0700
    Subject: Hollywood wants to plug your analog hole
    From: Cory Doctorow <coryat_private>
    To: Declan McCullagh <declanat_private>
    
    FYI
    --
    http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org/archives/000113.html
    
    Hollywood Wants to Plug the "Analog Hole"
    
    *New MPAA report reveals chilling agenda*
    
    =The Big Picture=
    
    The people who tried to take away your VCR are at it again. Hollywood has 
    always dreamed of a "well-mannered marketplace" where the only technologies 
    that you can buy are those that do not disrupt its business. Acting through 
    legislators who dance to Hollywood's tune, the movie studios are racing to 
    lock away the flexible, general-purpose technology that has given us a 
    century of unparalelled prosperity and innovation.
    
    The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) filed the "Content 
    Protection Status Report" with the Senate Judiciary Committee last month, 
    laying out its plan to remake the technology world to suit its own ends. 
    The report calls for regulation of analog-to-digital converters (ADCs), 
    generic computing components found in scientific, medical and entertainment 
    devices. Under its proposal, every ADC will be controlled by a "cop-chip" 
    that will shut it down if it is asked to assist in converting copyrighted 
    material -- your cellphone would refuse to transmit your voice if you 
    wandered too close to the copyrighted music coming from your stereo.
    
    The report shows that this ADC regulation is part of a larger agenda. The 
    first piece of that agenda, a mandate that would give Hollywood a veto over 
    digital television technology, is weeks away from coming to fruition. 
    Hollywood also proposes a radical redesign of the Internet to assist in 
    controlling the distribution of copyrighted works.
    
    This three-part agenda -- controlling digital media devices, controlling 
    analog converters, controlling the Internet -- is a frightening peek at 
    Hollywood's vision of the future.
    
    =Hollywood Tips its Hand=
    
    The "Content Protection Status Report" 
    (http://judiciary.senate.gov/special/content_protection.pdf) points to 
    future where innovation and fair use rights are sacrificed on copyright's 
    altar, where entertainment companies become *de facto* regulators of new 
    technologies, deciding which mathematical instructions are mandatory and 
    which are forbidden.
    
    The first part of the document details the efforts of the Broadcast 
    Protection Discussion Group (BPDG: http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org/), which will 
    release its final standard for the regulation of digital media technology 
    at the end of May. The BPDG's standard would ban the production of digital 
    television devices that had not been approved by three Hollywood studios. 
    Approved devices will only interoperate with other approved devices. The 
    combination of legal restrictions on digital television devices and 
    licensing restrictions on the computer technologies they can interface with 
    gives Hollywood an absolute veto over all new digital media technology 
    without the need for unpopular, sweeping legislation like Senator 
    Hollings's Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act (CBDTPA).
    
    =Plugging the Analog Hole=
    
    But the most disturbing pieces of the Status Report comes later in the 
    document. The second section, "Plugging the Analog Hole," reveals 
    Hollywood's plan to turn a generic technology component, the humble 
    analog-to-digital convertor, into a device that is subject to the kind of 
    regulation heretofore reserved for Schedule A narcotics.
    
    Analog-to-digital converters (ADCs) are the building blocks of modern 
    digital technology. An ADC's job is to take samples of the strength 
    (amplitude) of some analog signal (light, sound, motion, temperature) at 
    some interval (frequency) and convert the results to a numerical value. 
    ADCs are embedded in digital scanners, samplers, thermometers, 
    seismographs, mice and other pointer devices, camcorders, cameras, 
    microscopes, telescopes, modems, radios, televisions, cellular phones, 
    walkie-talkies, light-meters and a multitude of other devices. In general, 
    ADCs are generic and interchangeable -- that is, a high-frequency ADC from 
    a sound-card is potentially the same ADC that you'll find in a sensitive 
    graphics tablet.
    
    Hollywood perceives ADCs as the lynchpin of unauthorized duplication. No 
    matter how much copy-control technology is integrated into DVDs and 
    satellite broadcasts, there is always the possibility that some Internet 
    user will aim a camcorder at the screen, always the shadowy fan at the 
    concert wielding a smuggled digital recorder, always the audiophile jacking 
    a low-impedance cable into a high-end stereo. These bogeymen plague 
    Hollywood, and each one uses an ADC to produce unauthorized copies.
    
    Accordingly, the report calls for a regimen where "watermark detectors 
    would be required in all devices that perform analog to digital 
    conversions." The plan is to embed a "watermark" (a theoretical, invisible 
    mark that can only be detected by special equipment and that can't be 
    removed without damaging the media in which it was embedded) in all 
    copyrighted works. Thereafter, every ADC would be accompanied by a "cop 
    chip" that would sense this watermark's presence and disable certain 
    features depending on the conditions.
    
    This is meant to work like so: You point your camcorder at a movie screen. 
    The magical, theoretical watermark embedded in the film is picked up by the 
    cop-chip, which disables the camcorder's ADC. Your camcorder records 
    nothing but dead air. The mic, sensing a watermark in the film's 
    soundtrack, also shuts itself down.
    
    The objective of a law like this is to make "unauthorized" synonymous with 
    "illegal." In the world of copyright, there are many uses that are legal, 
    even -- *especially* -- if they are unauthorized, for example, the fair-use 
    right to quote a work for critical purposes. Any critic -- a professor, a 
    reporter, even an individual with a personal website -- may be lawfully 
    copy parts of copyrighted works in a critical discussion. Such a person may 
    scan in part of a magazine article, record a snatch of music from a CD or a 
    piece of a film or television show in the lawful course of making a 
    critical work.
    
    And you don't need to be a critic to make a lawful, unauthorized copy! You 
    might be someone who wants to "format-shift" some personal property -- say, 
    by scanning in a book or transferring an old LP to MP3 so that you might 
    take it with you while travelling with your computer. This is absolutely 
    lawful, but under the "analog hole" proposal, providing the tools to make 
    such unauthorized uses would be illegal.
    
    =Unintended Consequences=
    
    It's outrageous that Hollywood would demand a law that intentionally breaks 
    technology so that it can't be used in lawful ways, but the unintended 
    consequences of this regime are even more bizarre.
    
    Virtually everything in our world is copyrighted or trademarked by someone, 
    from the facades of famous sky-scrapers to the background music at your 
    local mall. If ADCs are constrained from performing analog-to-digital 
    conversion of all watermarked copyrighted works, you might end up with a 
    cellphone that switches itself off when you get within range of the 
    copyrighted music on your stereo; a camcorder that refuses to store your 
    child's first steps because he is taking them within eyeshot of a 
    television playing a copyrighted cartoon; a camera that won't snap your 
    holiday moments if they take place against the copyrighted backdrop of a 
    chain store such as Starbucks, which forbids on-premises photography 
    because its fixtures are proprietary works.
    
    As was mentioned, ADCs are fundamental, generic computing components, found 
    in medical and scientific equipment, computers, and a variety of consumer 
    electronics. Surely Hollywood doesn't mean to suggest that geologists will 
    have to equip their seismographs with cop-chips (lest they should 
    accidentally record a copyrighted earthquake)?
    
    It seems likely that they do. The primary difference between most ADCs is 
    the frequency at which they run. Two ADCs of like frequency and bitrate can 
    be interchanged. If any "free" ADCs are allowed into the marketplace, they 
    will surely find themselves repurposed in camcorders, samplers, and 
    scanners (oh my!).
    
    =The Scourge of P2P=
    
    Hollywood's report to Congress includes its third legislative goal: 
    "Putting an end to the avalanche of movie theft on so-called 'file-sharing' 
    services, such as Morpheus, Gnutella, and other peer-to-peer (p2p) networks."
    
    Here, rather than making "unauthorized" and "illegal" synonymous, Hollywood 
    is seeking to overturn the Betamax doctrine -- the principle that a 
    technology is legal, provided that it can be used to accomplish legal ends. 
    VCRs are legal, even though they can be used to make illegal copies of 
    copyrighted works, because they can *also* be used to make legal copies of 
    personal works and copyrighted works (in the case of time- and 
    format-shifting).
    
    P2P networks -- such as the Internet -- are not infringing in and of 
    themselves. "P2P" describes a technology where the system's control is 
    largely or entirely decentralized. P2P application networks are turned to 
    all manner of ends, from sharing classroom materials and independently 
    produced media to distributing large scientific problems associated with 
    the search for a cure for AIDS to providing a distributed proxy service 
    that allows Chinese Internet users to circumvent China's national firewall 
    and read uncensored news. True, they can also be used to make unauthorized 
    -- and even illegal -- copies of copyrighted works, but the Betamax 
    doctrine does not establish as its standard that no illegal uses be 
    possible with a technology; only that a technology have some legal use.
    
    What's more, thoroughly decentralized networks like Gnutella have no 
    control-point. There is no central server, no standards-body, no 
    exploitable point where leverage can be applied to control what is and is 
    not available on the network. The Internet is fundamentally constructed to 
    permit any two points to communicate, and as long as this is true, Gnutella 
    and its brethren will thrive.
    
    Which begs the question: How will Hollywood put "an end to ... movie theft 
    on ... p2p networks?" Short of dramatically re-architecting the Internet it 
    seems inconceivable that P2P will ever controlled or eliminated.
    
    But dramatic redesigns of the Internet are well within Hollywood's stated 
    desires. In 1995, Hollywood's representatives in government penned "The 
    Report of the Working Group on Intellectual Property Rights," calling for a 
    neutered Internet whose functionality had been magically constrained to 
    "permit [rights-holders] to enforce the terms and conditions under which 
    their works are made public."
    
    We can only guess at where these delusional technological speculations have 
    wandered in the intervening years, and this "Content Protection Status 
    Report" is a good and grim indicator.
    
    =Take a Stand=
    
    Hollywood's legislative agenda may be ridiculous, but it is hardly 
    unlikely. The BPDG is bare weeks away from turning over a veto on new 
    technologies to Hollywood. They are doing so with the cooperation of the 
    technology companies that are willingly participating in the BPDG process. 
    If just one major computer company would step forward in the press and in 
    Congress and object to the BPDG's mandate, the entire rubric of a 
    "consensus" upon which the BPDG depends would collapse.
    
    The BPDG mandate is critical to Hollywood's legislative agenda. With the 
    BPDG mandate in place, an ADC control law and a radical Internet redesign 
    are attainable goals.
    
    If you work for a technology company, please ask your favorite senior 
    manager or corporate officer to contact the EFF. We'd be delighted to 
    deliver a briefing on this and help make the decision to stand up.
    
    As an individual, write to the companies you are a customer of. Take a look 
    at your computer and your consumer electronics: they have been built by 
    companies that are either willingly participating in the BPDG or have not 
    come forward to oppose it. Only once these companies realize that their 
    customers care about liberty will they find the courage to oppose 
    Hollywood's powerful Congressional representatives, like Senator Ernest 
    "Fritz" Hollings (D-Disney).
    
    Show this article to your friends and co-workers. Hollywood's perverse 
    obsession with plugging the analog hole must be brought to light, as must 
    the likely outcome of its agenda.
    
    --
    Cory Doctorow
    Outreach Coordinator, Electronic Frontier Foundation
    415.726.5209/coryat_private
    
    Blog: http://boingboing.net
    
    
    
    
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