U.K. DRM Report Singles Out Sony BMG
The All Party Parliamentary Internet Group (APIG) has released its report into Digital Rights Management. The inquiry received over 90 written submissions from consumers, Think Tanks, libraries, print media publishers, the film and music industries and lawyers. An oral evidence session was organized at the House of Commons in February when a cross selection of the respondents were invited to give oral evidence to APIG officers.
Key points of the report include:
- A recommendation that the Office of Fair Trading (OFT) bring forward appropriate labelling regulations so that it will become crystal clear to consumers what they will and will not be able to do with digital content that they purchase.
- A recommendation that OFCOM publish guidance to make it clear that companies distributing Technical Protection Measures systems in the UK would, if they have features such as those in Sony-BMG’s MediaMax and XCP systems, run a significant risk of being prosecuted for criminal actions.
- A recommendation that the government do not legislate to make DRM systems mandatory.
All Party Internet Group. Digital Rights Management: Report of an Inquiry by the All Party Internet Group. (.pdf) June 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
BBC News. What Do You Know About Digital Rights? June 5, 2006. (Citizen survey with responses. Survey Questions: What are your experiences with copyright of online material? Do you have trouble moving content from PCs to personal audio/video players? Should MPs be pressing for these changes?)
BBC News. MPs In Digital Downloads Warning. June 4, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
A New Way To Achieve Bling Bliss
“Is that rock you’ve been flaunting really a diamond?
“Ever since the DeBeers Group managed to convince a significant part of the English-speaking world that “A Diamond is Forever” — and that a diamond solitaire ring all but guarantees a successful proposal of marriage — would-be grooms have been searching for ways to get more bling for their buck. With the arrival of gem-quality synthetic diamonds, they may have found it.
“Tiny diamond crystals have been produced for industrial purposes for decades, but the past few years have seen companies like Gemesis and Apollo Diamond develop multiple methods for growing large, near-flawless diamonds. These “cultured” diamonds are physically and chemically ‘real’ diamonds, not cubic zirconia or some other substance, and are for most jewelers indistinguishable from mined diamonds. Except, of course, for the price.”
Counterfeit Chic. A Fiancée’s Best Friend? June 1, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
DMCA’s Heavy Weight Over Consumer Electronics
“In 1998, U.S. entertainment companies persuaded Congress to make dramatic changes in its copyright code by passing the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The DMCA gave copyright holders new rights to control the way people use copyrighted material and new protection for technologies designed to restrict access or copying. The movie and record companies argued they needed these new restrictions to fight increased piracy threats in the digital era.
“In the eight years since the DMCA’s passage, however, piracy has not decreased, and hurdles to lawful uses of media have risen. The Motion Picture Association (MPA), the international arm of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), estimated worldwide losses because of piracy to be US $2.2 billion in 1997 and $3.5 billion annually in 2002, 2003, and 2004.
“Meanwhile, entire consumer electronics categories have been wiped from retail shelves. If three or four years ago you didn’t buy a digital video recorder that automatically skips commercials, you’re out of luck; that feature is not in such products today. Television executives brought litigation that bankrupted the company offering DVRs with these user-friendly features, because skipping commercials potentially undermines their ability to sell commercial time.”
Fred von Lohmann and Wendy Seltzer. Death by DMCA. IEEE Spectrum Online. June 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Ex-RIAA Capo Questions Lawsuits’ Legitimacy
“Commenters on this site regularly accuse me of suing college students and other ‘innocents’ in my past role as Chairman and CEO of the Recording Industry Association of America. The lawsuits against individuals initiated by the RIAA was started after I left. When I was there, our litigation focus was on those who were building commercial businesses on the backs of the creative community without their agreement or participation.
“I don’t honestly know what I would have done about the individual lawsuits had I stayed. I certainly participated in multiple planning and debate sessions about them.
“But for the record, I do share a concern that the lawsuits have outlived most of their usefulness and that the record companies need to work harder to implement a strategy that legitimizes more P2P sites and expands the download and subscription pool by working harder with the tech community to get devices and music services to work better together.”
Hilary Rosen. For the Record, for What It’s Worth. The Huffington Post. June 4, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Documentarians Face the Business of Fair Use
“Alicia Sams’ ‘Wanderlust’, a 90-minute documentary about American road movies, to be broadcast Monday night on the Independent Film Channel (IFC), was a window into the frustrations of making a clip-intensive film dependent on copyright clearance, which has become hugely expensive in the past decade. Initial quotations for the necessary sequences came to more than $450,000, which would have raised by half the cost of the IFC film, directed by the Oscar-nominated team of Shari Springer Berman and Robert Pulcini.
“‘Paramount wanted $20,000 for 119 seconds of ‘Paper Moon,’ ‘ Ms. Sams said. ‘The studios are so afraid of exploitation that they set boundaries no one will cross. Even after the prices were cut, we were $150,000 in the hole.’
“Unwilling to pay those fees, IFC’s general manager, Evan Shapiro, helped Ms. Sams pursue another, more aggressive, tack, which may point the way for documentarians who want to tap movie iconography without paying studio prices. Its strategy involved some negotiating hardball, backed up by a willingness to fall back on the tricky legal doctrine known as fair use.”
Elaine Dutka. No Free Samples for Documentaries: Seeking Film Clips With the Fair-Use Doctrine. The New York Times. May 28, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
K. Matthew Dames. Demystifying Fair Use. CopyCense. March 2, 2006.
CopyCense. Documentary FIlmmakers Release Fair Use Statement. Dec. 9, 2005.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
The Backstory on the 99 Cent Download
“The major labels put aside their fight with Apple Computer over the pricing of digital music when they all signed new one-year licensing deals for the iTunes Music Store in April. But the industry debate over what a song should cost is anything but over.
“Even as 99 cents remains the most common price tag for tunes, efforts are afoot in the mobile music business and in other parts of the PC-based downloading market to test the limits of the iTunes-favored buck-a-track formula.
“To understand just how slippery music pricing has become, look at the smorgasbord of prices for a hit tune like “Check on It” by Beyonce. Among the cell phone carriers, Sprint is selling the track as an over-the-air download for $2.99, Verizon is selling it for $1.99, and upstart mobile virtual network operator Amp’d Mobile has it for 99 cents. Users of Russian sites like Allofmp3.com can download it for 10 cents. And, of course, it’s also widely available across leading peer-to-peer networks and a handful of blogs for nothing.
“So what’s the song actually worth?”
Reuters. Navigating Digital-Music Pricing Wars. News.com. June 5, 2006.
CopyCense™: The law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.
Is Slingbox Next in Big Content’s Crosshairs?
“Hollywood is not happy about the SlingBox, and that displeasure is becoming increasingly visible. The SlingBox is a device that “place-shifts” your television programming by streaming it across the Internet for remote viewing on a laptop or portable device, but the ability to watch your TV anywhere in the world is making some broadcasters nervous. HBO’s Bob Zitter was the latest in a long line of television executives to make ominous rumbling noises about the legality of the new technology.
“No one has yet come out of the litigation closet to announce plans to sue the new company, but plenty of people are willing to question Sling’s business model. Is this just FUD on the part of content owners, or does it have some basis in law?”
ArsTechnica. Will Hollywood Sue the SlingBox Out of Existence? April 27, 2006.
Updates (Originally published in CopyCense on May 2, 2006):
Greg Sandoval. Major League Baseball Takes Swing At Sling Media. News.com. June 6, 2006.
Related Stories & Documents:
Andrew Wallenstein. Slingbox Could Spark New Lawsuits. The Hollywood Reporter. July 6, 2005.
Engadget. SlingBox Personal Broadcaster. Aug. 20, 2004.
CopyCense™: K. Matthew Dames on the law, business, and technology of digital content. A business venture of Seso Digital LLC.