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FAIR USE bill opposed by RIAA
Information Technology News
FAIR USE bill opposed by RIAA | FAIR USE bill opposed by RIAA |
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| by Stephen Withers | |
| Thursday, 01 March 2007 | |
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Page 1 of 2
The DMCA overrode traditional though limited rights to make copies for purposes including teaching and research, as it made it a crime to circumvent a technological protection measure applied to a copyrighted work, even when it is done to exercise rights under other laws. Not surprisingly, the RIAA is outraged, claiming "The difference between hacking done for non-infringing purposes and hacking done to steal is impossible to determine and enforce." Isn't that a bit like saying that it's impossible to tell whether a key is being copied for the legitimate use of the building's owner or occupier, and therefore all key duplication should be illegal, and that if we want a new key we should be forced to purchase a new lock with the required number of keys? Among other provisions, the bill protects hardware manufacturers from liability for products that have "substantial, commercially-significant non-infringing use", but apparently does not extend the same protection to software vendors. What else does it allow?
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