FC: Rep. Berman replies to Politech, defends his anti-P2P piracy bill

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Wed Sep 04 2002 - 15:59:02 PDT

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    Previous message:
    
    "Weekly column: Congress is back, and we should be worried"
    http://www.politechbot.com/p-03941.html
    
    Background:
    http://www.politechbot.com/cgi-bin/politech.cgi?name=berman
    
    ---
    
    From: "French, Alec" [email address deleted --DBM]
    To: "'declanat_private'" <declanat_private>
    Subject: RE: Weekly column: Congress is back, and we should be worried
    Date: Wed, 4 Sep 2002 18:43:52 -0400
    
    Declan,
    
    I am responding on behalf of Representative Berman to the slew of articles
    (including one linked to below and another yesterday) you have forwarded to
    Politech that reference H.R. 5211, the P2P Piracy Prevention Act Rep. Berman
    introduced in late July. Since those articles have likely created many
    misimpressions about the bill among Politech readers, I ask that you extend
    me the customary courtesy  of sending this response to the Politech group.
    While you may identify me, and Mr. Berman welcomes a reasonable discourse on
    the issue, I ask that you mask my email address.
    
    Alec French
    Minority Counsel
    House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet, and Intellectual
    Property
    
    In the article linked to below, in your article today on News.com, and in
    several other articles, you have written that H.R. 5211 "would permit
    copyright holders to perform nearly unchecked electronic disruptions if they
    have a "reasonable basis" to believe that piracy is taking place."  As I
    indicated to you during the radio program in which we participated a few
    weeks ago, this assertion has no basis. There simply is no "reasonable
    basis" language in the safe harbor created by H.R. 5211.
    
    The actual language of H.R. 5211 is clear: new 17 USC 514(a)would only
    provide a safe harbor to copyright owners who actually impair the piracy of
    their copyrighted works through P2P networks - without regard to whether
    they have a reasonable basis to believe piracy is taking place.  To put it
    another way: under H.R. 5211, a copyright owner who impairs lawful
    file-trading would not get the benefit of the safe harbor EVEN if that
    copyright owner had a reasonable basis to believe piracy is taking place.
    
    The ONLY place that the words "reasonable basis" appear in the entirety of
    H.R. 5211 is in subsection 514(d), which provides P2P users with a new cause
    of action to sue copyright owners who wrongfully impair lawful P2P
    file-trading.  There is no possible way to read the cause of action in
    514(d), or the use of the words "reasonable basis" therein, as expanding,
    modifying, or otherwise affecting the safe harbor provided by 514(a).
    
    On that note, several other articles you have written state that H.R. 5211
    limits the remedies available to P2P users or others against whom copyright
    owners have acted wrongfully.  For instance, your July 25, 2002 News.com
    article entitled "Hollywood hacking bill hits House" states that the bill
    "limits the right of anyone subject to an intrusion to sue if files are
    accidentally erased."  This assertion is not only wrong, it is directly
    contradicted by the clear language of H.R. 5211. In fact, to the contrary,
    H.R. 5211 provides P2P users with MORE remedies than current law against
    copyright owners who "hack", stop lawful file-trading, delete files, damage
    computers, or otherwise wrongfully interfere with file-trading.
    
    Subsection 514(f)(2) of H.R. 5211 specifically preserves all remedies that a
    P2P user or any other person, including network operators, may have under
    current law to sue copyright owners for such activities.  Further, in
    514(d), H.R. 5211 provides affected P2P users with a new, ADDITIONAL cause
    of action against copyright owners who wrongfully impair lawful
    file-trading.  Lastly, H.R. 5211 creates a new ability for federal
    prosecutors to act on behalf of affected file traders and stop copyright
    owners from wrongfully interfering with file-trading.
    
    It is almost besides the point to note that, in 514(a), H.R. 5211
    SPECIFICALLY states that the safe harbor does not allow the deletion,
    alteration, or corruption of computer files or data.
    
    There are other misimpressions created by your articles that necessitate a
    response, but I did not intend for this to become a screed against your
    writing.  Therefore I will simply paste below the FAQ Mr. Berman has
    prepared to correct such misimpressions.  An earlier version of the FAQ may
    be found at the following link, and I believe an updated version will be
    available tomorrow.  http://www.house.gov/berman/p2p_faq.html
    
    Frequently Asked Questions about the P2P Piracy Prevention Act (H.R. 5211)
    
    What does H.R. 5211  do?
    
    H.R. 5211 allows copyright owners to protect their property.  The bill gives
    copyright owners, such as songwriters and photographers, a limited safe
    harbor from liability when they prevent piracy of their works through
    publicly accessible, peer-to-peer (P2P) networks, like KaZaA, Morpheus, and
    Gneutella.
    
    Does H.R. 5211 allow copyright owners to hack into my computer?
    
    No.  Despite wildly inaccurate press reports, H.R. 5211 in no way allows a
    copyright owner to "hack" into anyone's computer.  Copyright owners are only
    allowed to enter or look into a P2P user's computer to the same extent that
    any other P2P user is able to do so.  In other words, if a KaZaA user has
    advertized to all 100 million other KaZaA users that he wants to download or
    distribute a copyrighted song, the songwriter is not "hacking" if she reads
    the advertisement like everyone else.  H.R. 5211 then allows the songwriter
    to take certain, limited actions to stop the distribution of her copyrighted
    song between KaZaA users, but in no way allows her to enter or look into a
    private area of those KaZaA users' computers.
    
    Why is a safe harbor from liability for copyright owners necessary?
    
    Certain laws, while intended to prohibit malicious computer hacking, are so
    broadly drafted that they may inadvertently create liability for copyright
    owners who are merely trying to prevent piracy of their creations on P2P
    networks.  Because it is virtually certain that some P2P pirates will
    attempt to use those laws to prevent copyright owners from stopping piracy,
    it is necessary to clarify those laws.
    
    Does the P2P Piracy Prevention Act authorize copyright owners to do illegal
    things that no one else can do?
    
    No.  H.R. 5211 just ensures that copyright owners are treated like other
    property owners.  Current law allows property owners in many contexts to use
    "self-help" to protect their property.  Satellite companies face no
    liability when they use electronic countermeasures to stop the pirating of
    their signals and programming.  Banks face no liability when they repossess
    automobiles for delinquent loan payments.  A bicycle owner faces no
    liability for grabbing his bike from a thief's yard.  A victim of a
    pickpocket faces no liability for tackling and taking back his wallet from
    the pickpocket.  However, due to the overbreadth of many anti-hacking laws,
    copyright owners do not have a corresponding ability to prevent the theft of
    their property through P2P systems.  H.R. 5211 would correct this
    unintentional inequity.
    
    Doesn't current law provide copyright owners with sufficient tools to stop
    piracy?
    					
    The massive copyright piracy occurring on decentralized, P2P networks cannot
    be adequately addressed through current law.  Decentralized P2P networks
    were designed specifically (and ingeniously) to thwart suits for copyright
    infringement by ensuring there is no central service to sue.  Digital rights
    management technologies provide no protection to copyrighted works once they
    are distributed "in the clear" on P2P networks.  Lastly, suits against
    individual infringers on P2P networks are viable, but are unlikely to make a
    dent in the billions of files traded monthly among over 150 million P2P
    network users.
    
    Who does H.R. 5211 benefit?
    
    H.R. 5211 will help all copyright owners, including songwriters,
    photographers, musicians, software programmers, needlepoint designers, film
    producers, journalists, graphic artists, and recording artists.  H.R. 5211
    restores to these copyright owners the right to decide whether their
    creations are distributed through P2P networks, and takes that decision out
    of the hands of pirates.  A  photographer - not a pirate - should decide
    whether her photographs are distributed through Gneutella.
    
    In addition, H.R. 5211 will help consumers by fostering the development of
    reliable and legal online services for downloading copyrighted works.  P2P
    networks are notoriously unreliable, have bugs that expose personal
    information to public disclosure, can be used as "tunneling protocols" to
    breach computer security, and are rife with malicious viruses.  However,
    some copyright owners have been stymied - at least partially - in their
    efforts to roll out legitimate online services because they cannot compete
    with  the free availability of their works on P2P networks.
    
    Is P2P file-sharing illegal?
    
    It depends.  P2P file sharing is perfectly legal if the work being shared is
    not copyrighted or is shared with the authorization of the copyright owner.
    However, unauthorized distribution of copyrighted works through a publicly
    accessible, P2P network is copyright infringement pure and simple.  There is
    no concept of fair use that encompasses making a copyrighted needlepoint
    design available for downloading by 100 million KaZaA users.
    
    Does the safe harbor created by H.R. 5211 extend to any copyright owner who
    interferes with file-trading upon a reasonable basis to believe piracy is
    taking place?
    
    No.  It is an utter fabrication to say that H.R. 5211 provides a safe harbor
    for copyright owners who have a "reasonable basis" to believe piracy is
    taking place.  There simply is no "reasonable basis" language in the safe
    harbor created by H.R. 5211.  The actual language of H.R. 5211 is clear: it
    only provides a safe harbor to copyright owners who actually impair the
    piracy of their copyrighted works through P2P networks - without regard to
    whether they have a reasonable basis to believe piracy is taking place.  To
    put it another way: under H.R. 5211, a copyright owner who impairs lawful
    file-trading would not get the benefit of the safe harbor even if that
    copyright owner had a reasonable basis to believe piracy is taking place.
    
    Does this bill protect computer users against overzealous or unscrupulous
    copyright owners that might abuse the safe harbor the bill provides?
    
    Yes.  H.R. 5211 provides strong protections against abuses by overzealous or
    unscrupulous copyright owners.  In fact, H.R. 5211 provides computer users
    with more protection than current law.  If a copyright owner engages in
    abusive actions, the affected computer user can sue the copyright owner for
    all remedies available under prior law, and in addition, can bring a new
    cause of action created by H.R. 5211.  Furthermore, H.R. 5211 gives the U.S.
    Attorney General new power to stop an abusive copyright owner from ever
    again using self-help measures.
    
    Does H.R. 5211 limit the ability of P2P users to sue a copyright owner for
    hacking, wrongfully stopping file-trading, or otherwise damaging their
    computers?
    
    No.  To the contrary, H.R. 5211 provides P2P users with More remedies
    against copyright owners who "hack", stop lawful file-trading, damage
    computers, or otherwise wrongfully interfere with file-trading.  Subsection
    514(f)(2) of H.R. 5211 specifically preserves all remedies that a P2P user
    or any other person, including network operators, may have under current law
    to sue copyright owners for such activities.  In fact, H.R. 5211 provides
    affected P2P users with a new, additional cause of action against copyright
    owners who wrongfully impair lawful file-trading.  Further, H.R. 5211
    creates a new ability for federal prosecutors to act on behalf of affected
    file traders and stop copyright owners from wrongfully interfering with
    file-trading.
    
    Does H.R. 5211 require P2P users to suffer more than $250 in damages before
    they can sue a copyright owner for hacking, wrongfully stopping
    file-trading, or otherwise damaging their computers?
    
    No.  An affected P2P user can sue a copyright owner in such circumstances
    under a wide variety of statutes and legal theories which have different
    monetary thresholds.  H.R. 5211 does not alter these remedies or create a
    $250 threshold for using them.  H.R. 5211 does create a brand-new cause of
    action, in addition to all previous causes of action, that contains a $250
    threshold, but the creation of this new cause of action does not affect a
    P2P user's ability to also access other, pre-existing remedies.
    
    Will H.R. 5211 allow copyright owners to "bring down" P2P networks?
    
    No.  H.R. 5211 is quite clear that it only immunizes the blocking of
    copyright infringement on P2P networks.  A copyright owner would remain
    fully liable for any action that "brings down" or otherwise disrupts P2P
    networks, even though such disruptions were the unintended consequence of
    stopping infringements.  It is critical to remember that H.R. 5211 does not
    create some new, affirmative right for copyright owners, but only provides
    them with a limited safe harbor from potential liability under other laws.
    As such, H.R. 5211 only limits a copyright owner's liability for the
    activities specified in the legislation, and cannot be read to limit
    liability for activities not specified therein.  Attempts by piracy
    profiteers to read the bill more broadly are akin to saying that H.R. 5211
    would allow a copyright owner to burn down a P2P user's house if such arson
    had the effect of disrupting file trading.
    
    Will H.R. 5211 allow copyright owners to violate the privacy of P2P users?
    
    No.  Nothing in the bill implicates the privacy of P2P users, and in fact,
    the bill may enhance privacy.  A P2P user has no expectation of privacy in
    computer files that he has chosen to publicly download from, or distribute
    to, 100 million other P2P users.  H.R. 5211 only allows copyright owners to
    view these files to the same extent as all other 150 million P2P users have
    such an ability, thus, the bill does not violate a P2P user's privacy.
    Furthermore, H.R. 5211 does not give copyright owners any ability to
    determine "who" a P2P infringer is.  Rather, a copyright owner, like every
    other P2P user, simply knows "where" - at which IP address - their
    copyrighted work is located.
    
    In fact, the types of technological self-help measures encouraged by H.R.
    5211 will prove less invasive of privacy than the other option - lawsuits
    against individual infringers.  The use of technological self-help measures
    only reveals the IP address of a file on a P2P network, but does not reveal
    the identity of the distributor or downloader of that file.  Lawsuits, on
    the other hand, necessitate the public identification of a P2P infringer,
    and will usually involve the entry into public court documents of many
    private files, data, photographs, and other correspondence found on the
    infringer's computer.
    
    Does the bill outlaw or otherwise "kill" P2P networks?
    
    No.  H.R. 5211 only affects illegal activity on P2P networks, but in no way
    affects the networks themselves or the sharing of legal content through
    them.  Further, the bill recognizes that P2P networks are tremendous
    technological innovations that could be used for many beneficial purposes,
    but that they will not reach their potential until their use for illegal
    purposes is curtailed.  H.R. 5211 aims to clean up P2P networks, not clear
    them out.  Those who claim that the bill will kill P2P networks are
    short-sighted piracy profiteers who believe P2P networks are only useful for
    illegal purposes.
    
    Will the bill allow copyright owners to knock P2P file sharers offline?
    
    No.  As noted above, H.R. 5211 only immunizes the blocking of copyright
    infringement on P2P networks.  A copyright owner would remain fully liable
    for any action that knocks a P2P user offline, even if such disruptions were
    the unintended consequence of stopping infringements.  It is critical to
    remember that H.R. 5211 does not create some new, affirmative right for
    copyright owners, but only provides them with a limited safe harbor from
    potential liability under other laws.  As such, H.R. 5211 only limits a
    copyright owner's liability for the activities specified in the legislation,
    and cannot be read to limit liability for activities not specified therein.
    
    Does H.R. 5211 allow copyright owners to destroy files on my computer?
    
    No.  H.R. 5211 explicitly states that it does not allow copyright owners to
    destroy, corrupt, or otherwise alter files or data on a P2P user's computer.
      
    
    
    
    
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