COPYCENSE

Archive for December 2007

Shackling the Future of Reading

dive into mark. The Future of Reading (A Play in Six Acts). Nov. 19, 2007. A great literary mashup that notes Newsweek’s breathless predictions that Amazon.com’s new e-book reader will change “the future of reading” is not due to the technology because the device’s license agreement and copy restriction technology will, in fact, impinge on “the future of reading.”

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/21/2007 at 08:55

Posted in Uncategorized

Does the RIAA Really Claim Rips Are Illegal?

It is undisputed that Defendant possessed unauthorized copies of [] copyrighted sound recordings on his computer. … Virtually all of the sound recordings … are in the ‘.mp3’ format. … Defendant admitted that he converted these sound recordings from their original format to the .mp3 format for his and his wife’s use. The .mp3 format is a ‘compressed format [that] allows for rapid transmission of digital audio files from one computer to another by electronic mail or any other file transfer protocol.’ Napster, 239 F.3d at 1011. Once Defendant converted Plaintiffs’ recording into the compressed .mp3 format and they are in his shared folder, they are no longer the authorized copies distributed by [plaintiff recording companies].” — Recording Industry Assn. of America supplemental brief (.pdf) in Atlantic v. Howell.

MacNN. RIAA Claims CD Rips Are Piracy in Lawsuit. Dec. 11, 2007. The MacNN headline is provocative, but not quite accurate. What the music industry lobby argues is ripping copyrighted music from CD (i.e. the “original format”) to another format (e.g. .mp3 files, for example) and posting to a shared folder on a peer-to-peer program (like Kazaa) means the music becomes de facto illegal, and therefore copyright infringement. While most press coverage of this brief focuses on the alleged illegality of ripping music from compact disc to another format, the real story to us is about the recording industry’s attempts to extend into judge-made law the “making available” doctrine, which the industry argued strongly in the Jammie Thomas trial. Although the RIAA does, in fact, think that making personal copies of music is illegal, we think the likelihood of them trying to enforce that principle is, by itself, far fetched. We’ve seen stranger things occur, however.

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings, and it was a Quote of the Week” selection.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/20/2007 at 08:59

Posted in Uncategorized

Industry Using File Sharing as Consumer Research

Last 100. TV Industry Using Piracy as a Measure of Success. Dec. 13, 2007. We’re not sure whether television executives have started doing this recently, or this was just divulged recently. No matter: the industry has been doing this sort of thing for years already.

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/20/2007 at 08:58

Posted in Research

Playing the PR Game In The Copyright Battle

Maura Corbett. ‘Tis the Season for Common Sense Copyright. News.com. Dec. 13, 2007. Last time we saw Qorvis’ Maura Corbett, she was defending the CCIA’s “Defend Fair Use” campaign. Now, like so many sequels, she is back, this time repping for the Digital Freedom Campaign (which counts ALA, Public Knowledge, and EFF among its partners), spouting the evils of the PRO IP bill that has caught the attention of many a media outlet. “Messaging” is as common a Washington activity as passing through metal detectors, but we continue to feel queasy about taking a public relations approach to legislative negotiations.

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/20/2007 at 08:57

Posted in Uncategorized

The Old Days

Seth Mnookin. Universal’s CEO Once Called iPod Users Thieves. Now He’s Giving Songs Away. Wired. Nov. 27, 2007. First Edgar Bronfman, now Doug Morris. At some point, all these executives get the message that Slim Charles conveyed to Bodie early in Season 4 of The Wire: “The thing about the old days is that they the old days.” We can hear refrains of Gladys Knight singing “Can it be that it was all so simple then?”

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/20/2007 at 08:56

Posted in Uncategorized

Using Model Laws to Help Copyright Interpretation

Pamela Samuelson. Preliminary Thoughts on Copyright Reform. The UC-Berkeley law professor offers “preliminary thoughts about what a model copyright law might include and how one might go about getting rid of some of the clutter in the existing statute,” using the example provided by the American Law Institute’s model laws.

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings, and was an Article of the Week selection.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/19/2007 at 08:59

Posted in Research

Copyright’s Self-Censoring Effect

“We are willing to purchase media, and have thousands of music and movies; we are the entertainment industries best friend when it comes to spending money on entertainment. But as with all end of an era kind of things, everything we do is somehow proscribed, regulated, or locked. Those heady days of being 14 or 40 and copying something so it can come with us are over, and that is a shame.” — Techwag.

Techwag. The End of An Era Over Copyright. Dec. 12, 2007. We disagree that the days of copying something to come with you are over, but it is a shame that too many citizens feel proscribed from doing this very fundamental networked activity.

(Editor’s Note: Copycense editors originally commented on this article in the Dec. 18, 2007, edition of Copycense Clippings, where it was a Quote of the Week selection.)

Copycense™: Incisive IP.

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Written by sesomedia

12/19/2007 at 08:58

Posted in Uncategorized