Self-serve
August 31, 2007 on 2:08 am | Comments OffCategories: copyright, law
Sometimes, the corporate interests of tech companies and those of copyfighters intersect. For some, it’s a relatively transparent case of self-interest: Google and Microsoft are sued continually - and harangued by Old Content industries - for their various activities which rely on Section 107 or 108 of the U.S. Copyright Act. Others have a foot in both camps. Apple pays lip-service (in public, at least) to sympathy for the content industries’ perceived ‘piracy’ crises.
All of which makes the composition of companies involved in the Computer & Communications Industry Association’s “Defend Fair Use” campaign especially telling.
UK Think Tank Calls For Fair Use Of Your Own CDs
October 29, 2006 on 7:12 pm | No CommentsCategories: copyright, music, politics, technology, uk
Tags: copyright, music, politics, technology, uk
Sensible proposals from the Institute for Public Policy Research. Shame they’ll probably not be given a second look in the Government’s copyright review.
UK Think Tank Calls For Fair Use Of Your Own CDs:
jweatherley writes “The BBC reports that a UK think tank, the Institute for Public Policy Research, has called for the legalization of format shifting. In a report commissioned by the Chancellor of the Exchequer, Gordon Brown, they state that copyright laws are out of date, and that people should have a ‘private right to copy’ which would allow them to legally copy their own CDs and DVDs on to home computers, laptops and phones. The report goes on to say that: ‘it is not the music industry’s job to decide what rights consumers have. That is the job of government.’ The report also argues that there is no evidence the current 50-year copyright term is insufficient. The UK music industry is campaigning to extend the copyright term in sound recordings to 95 years.”
(Via Slashdot).
The Parallel Politics of Copyright and Environment
October 13, 2006 on 11:04 pm | No CommentsCategories: copyright, culture, law, politics
Tags: copyright, culture, drm, environment, geist, law, michael, michael-geist, politics, slashdot, youtube
Picked this up on Slashdot today. Is copyright, and perhaps digital rights issues in general, creeping up on the back of the environment as a major political issue? For my part, I hope so.
Traditionally, copyright has been firmly in the realm of ’stakeholder’ politics, but in an age where ’stakeholders’ include 15-year-olds uploading videos to SueTube (explanation), multi-billion dollar ‘content’ companies and the quasi-corporatist non-governmental organisations, isn’t it time for a proper debate?
The Parallel Politics of Copyright and Environment:
zumaya100k writes “In recent months, Slashdot has covered the rise of the Pirate Party and the battles in Europe over iPod interoperability. Canada’s Hill Times has an insightful column from Michael Geist that links these developments as the growing importance of copyright as a political issue. He argues that copyright is now tracking the environment as a mainstream political issue.” (Geist is talking about Canada here, but much the same can be said about the U.S. and other places.)
(Via Slashdot).
Publishers Thank Google for Book Sales
October 8, 2006 on 11:00 pm | 1 CommentCategories: books, copyright, culture, google, law, technology
Tags: authors-guild, books, copyright, culture, google, law, lawsuit, publishing, scanning, search, technology
The latest chapter in Google’s continuing world-domination book-scanning operations, this is a defence of the programme - a rare publisher’s voice speaking out in favour of it, at a time when the nebulous and highly-successful company is being sued by authors’ associations for copyright infringement over the service. And as for the scheme’s greatest benefit for less well known books - further confirmation of the Long Tail thesis?
I, for one, welcome our digitising, organising, aggregating, comparison shopping, advertising, Mountain View overlords.
Publishers Thank Google for Book Sales:
eldavojohn writes “A few book publishers are actually thanking Google for an apparent rise in sales due to Google’s scan plan. Google is busy defending itself against authors and publishers that have brought lawsuits for ignoring copyrights. The director of the Oxford University Press said, ‘Google Book Search has helped us turn searchers into consumers.’ It seems to work in favor of the smaller publishers: ‘Walter de Gruyter/Mouton-De Gruyter, a German publisher, said its encyclopedia of fairy tales has been viewed 471 times since appearing in the program, with 44 percent of them clicking on the ‘buy this book’ Google link.’ Do you think that Google’s ’sneak peak’ search access increases sales or violates copyrights on intellectual property?”
(Via Slashdot).
Australian High Court Deals a Blow Against Ubercopyright (Donna Wentworth)
October 9, 2005 on 1:18 am | No CommentsCategories: australia, copyright, law, law, copyright and drm
Tags: australia, copyright, corante, donna-wentworth, drm, john-howard, law, mod-chip
Sanity prevails in John Howard’s Australia?
Australian High Court Deals a Blow Against Ubercopyright (Donna Wentworth):
The Australian High Court today brings us refreshing copyright sanity.
It ruled for the mod-chippers in Stevens v. Sony, the case in which Sony was suing under Australia’s anti-circumvention laws to stop people from modifying the Sony PlayStation to play cheaper overseas versions of games. Specifically, it found that:
[The] true construction of the definition of “technological protection measure” must be one which catches devices which prevent infringement. The Sony device does not prevent infringement. Nor do many of the devices falling within the definition advanced by Sony. The Sony device and devices like it prevent access only after any infringement has taken place…[In] construing a definition which focuses on a device designed to prevent or inhibit the infringement of copyright, it is important to avoid an overbroad construction which would extend the copyright monopoly rather than match it.
If I’m interpreting correctly (and that’s a big “if”), the Court has essentially said, “If you’re not using a technological protection measure to stop copyright infringement, you don’t deserve protection under copyright law. We will not uphold your ‘right’ to use technological protection measures to protect anything but copyright.”
In other words, the Court refuses to turn an appropriately limited monopoly right (copyright) into an unlimited “ubercopyright.”
Australian copyright expert Kim Weatherall has extensive analysis, explaining:
[Measures] like those used by Sony are about controlling use of and access to Sony PlayStation consoles. Sony controls all kinds of things about the way people use Sony consoles. For example: they control whether people can:
- play legitimately purchased games sold in overseas markets;
- play games created by someone other than Sony on the Sony console (something that cannot be done on a non-chipped console owing to the absence of an access code).
So while Sony can argue that it wanted to prevent piracy (it clearly did), and that the measures acted in part to deter piracy (they clearly could), Sony’s own approach to the measures muddies the waters. It doesn’t just act to prevent infringement, and that point is taken notice of by the Court here. One can’t help but suspect the legal reasoning would look different, in this case, if Sony only used its power over the console to actually prevent use of ‘pirated’ disks.
Very encouraging.
(Via Copyfight.)
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