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Copyright law: tiny changes
'Net Insider
By Scott Bradner, Network World, 12/01/06
Every three years the U.S. Copyright Office gets a chance to fix
some of the universe of bad things about the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Just like the last two times, the Copyright Office has labored mightily and
birthed a mouse where an elephant was needed. Some parts of this mouse look
good, but you have to be mostly impressed by what the Office managed not to do.
I've had rather nasty things to say about the DMCA (see Legally
mandated stupidity, "Bad law or really bad law?", and Reach for the
stupid juice.)
The DMCA does provide an escape mechanism, though. Every three
years the U.S. Copyright Office takes a look to see if some particular cases
can be exempted from the legal prohibition. The Office just finished its latest
review and has added a few more exemptions to the very short list that came out
of the previous reviews.
The new report exempts six classes of copyrighted works:
¥ Use of audiovisual
works in a college or university in making classroom materials if done by media
studies or film professors.
¥ Archiving computer
programs or video games where readers are no longer available.
¥ Renewed the
exemption for the use of dongle-protected computer programs when the dongles
are no longer available.
¥ Renewed the
exemption for ebook materials that block the use of screen readers (for example
for the blind).
¥ Firmware in cell
phones for the sole purpose of switching to a new carrier.
¥ Systems like the
Sony rootkit to research the problems and correct security flaws.
These exceptions are all very narrow - for example, limiting the
exception for the educational use of audiovisual material to higher ed and to
media studies or film professors. But this result was quite predictable.
Why not just rule that a user can circumvent the protection on anything
that he owns where the vendor is no longer manufacturing equipment that can
access or enable it (as long as it's for the user's own use)?
But I do not expect that sort of thing out of the Copyright Office
- you see, that would be a "principle" rather than a narrow exception
and I'm not sure the office understands the concept of principles.
Some of these exceptions are quite useful, even though they are
narrow, but at this rate you and I will be dealing with the DMCA blocking good
technology and good security until long after we retire.
Disclaimer: I'm sure Harvard will outlive the bad effects of the
DMCA (I'm not sure I will), but I have not seen any university comment on the
Copyright Office (in)action.
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