Peter Friedman
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Ruling Imagination: Law and Creativity

January 25th, 2012 | Art & Money, copyright, copyright and fair use, Free Speech, Law as a reflection of its society, problem solving, technology and law | Add your comment

The motion picture and music industries won’t give up trying to protect their money-making models even if they are obsolete.

Bill McGeveran in the Guardian makes clear that the film and music industries aren’t going to go away, but that there are ways to to address legitimate copyright concerns without PIPA and SOPA’s utter inadequacies:

At the end of a Hollywood blockbuster, when the vanquished villain declares that he should have won and that we haven’t seen the last of him, we all know what it means: the sequel is coming.

So, Hollywood’s top lobbyist, former Senator Chris Dodd, followed a familiar script last week after sweeping online protests derailed the Stop Online Piracy Act (Sopa) and Protect IP Act (Pipa), a pair of legislative proposals backed by movie and music distributors. Dodd snarled that his opponents had misled the public and vowed to continue pressing for new laws to combat unauthorized copying of intellectual property. Coming soon to a congressional hearing room near you, it’s Sopa II: Revenge of the Content Industries.

. . . . Even Dodd’s enemies acknowledge that these sites pose a problem, though many question industry estimates about its scope.

Those of us who opposed the excesses of Sopa and Pipa need to prepare for the next round. . . . At a minimum, Congress must address three other problems as well.

First and foremost, Sopa II needs to take due process seriously. . . .

Second, the standards for judging infringement must be clear and must be consistent with existing intellectual property law. . . .

Finally, these bills cannot shift IP owners’ duty to safeguard their own rights onto innocent bystanders like Google, eBay or Facebook. Open online forums enable millions of daily communications from ordinary people. Intermediaries cannot examine every post searching for links to pirates. That’s why federal law exempts them from liability for nearly everything their users post independently – even fraud or defamation. IP already gets special treatment, because intermediaries must remove infringing material if rightsholders complain.

May 11th, 2009 | copyright and fair use, legal madness, Legal News, propaganda, Stupid legal events, technology and law | 1 comment

The MPAA explains how to show DVD clips in the classroom (the easy way?)

More lobbying to ridicule! From Ars Technica comes a video shown by the Motion Picture Assocation of America to the U.S. Copyright Office as “part of the triennial DMCA exemptions review.”  

In the video, the MPAA suggests that teachers who want to use movie clips as part of their curricula should use a camcorder to record the movie off of a TV set, and that this is an acceptable way to use video clips without breaking a DVD’s copyright protections.