FC: Sen. Biden wants to ban spoofing of digital rights management

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Mon Jul 29 2002 - 07:07:06 PDT

  • Next message: Declan McCullagh: "FC: Stewart Baker on Sen. Biden's digital rights management bill"

    http://news.com.com/2010-1071-946732.html?tag=politech
    
       Pirate this, go to jail
       By Declan McCullagh 
       July 29, 2002, 4:00 AM PT
    
       WASHINGTON--Sen. Joseph Biden has become one of the newest field
       marshals in Congress' intellectual property wars.
       
       After the 59-year old Delaware Democrat took over the Foreign
       Relations committee last year, the software and entertainment
       industries enlisted him in their anti-piracy struggles. That prompted
       Biden to convene a hearing where he denounced copyright thievery in
       stentorian tones. "Windows XP was available for illegal use on the
       streets of Moscow two months before it was released in the U.S. by
       Microsoft," Biden said. "Every episode of "Seinfeld" is now available
       to download free to anyone with access to the Internet."
       
       At the hearing in February, Biden released a 52-page report written by
       his aides and titled: "Theft of American Intellectual Property:
       Fighting Crime Abroad and At Home." One section devoted to counterfeit
       products expressed the worry that "counterfeiters flood markets with
       their underpriced products and steal a great deal of revenue."
       
       A few weeks later, Biden introduced a bill titled the
       "Anticounterfeiting Amendments of 2002." It originally targeted the
       kind of large-scale pirates who manufacture fake Windows holograms,
       but in a little-noticed move this month before being sent to the
       Senate floor, the proposed legislation was rewritten to encompass
       technology used in digital rights management.
       
       Biden's new bill would make it a federal felony to try and trick
       certain types of devices into playing your music or running your
       computer program. Breaking this law--even if it's to share music by
       your own garage band--could land you in prison for up to five years.
       And that's not counting the civil penalties of up to $25,000 per
       offense.
    
       [...]
    
    
    
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