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Up Front
U.S. Digital Copyright Act Gets the Nod from the PresidentBy Matt McKenzie Is the Digital Millenium Copyright Act a well-crafted compromise, or a threat to legitimate research? The law, passed in October, sets the rules for enforcing the international copyright treaties signed two years ago. But it left unresolved the debate over stronger enforcement of commercial databases.On Oct. 28, President Clinton signed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) into U.S. law. The final version of the DMCA (http://thomas.loc.gov/home/thomas2.html), which bans the production, sale and, in most cases, use of devices intended to thwart digital copyright protection technology, is the product of a yearlong battle between publishers and a loose alliance of civil rights groups, academics, scientists and librarians. Both the publishing industry and some former opponents have described the law as a compromise, protecting both the interests of copyright owners and the rights of individual consumers. Yet whether the law lives up to its goal of benefiting both copyright holders and end users, and whether it really settles the debate over digital copyright, are questions that don't have any clear answers. Groups that opposed earlier versions of the law, such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) and the Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), have grudgingly accepted the DMCA in its current form, although they still worry that it could erode the concept of "fair use" in cyberspace and hinder legitimate research. And some of the law's most vocal supporters, such as the Software Publishers Association and the Association of American Publishers, have already vowed to push for a law granting new copyright protections to databasesa controversial provision that didn't make it into the final version of the DMCA but that some major players in the publishing industry desperately want passed (see sidebar). Read a book, go to jail. The DMCA, which brings U.S. law into line with World Intellectual Property Organization treaties signed in 1996, doesn't actually tinker with the basic principles of copyright law. Instead, the law aims to safeguard the technologies, such as encryption or copy-protection systems, that protect and manage digital content. Specifically, it outlaws attempts to circumvent or disable these systems, and it also bans devices whose primary purpose is to defeat copyright protection technology. The DMCA would make it illegal, for example, to tamper with the watermark on a digital image, or to remove encrypted digital "wrappers" that control access to electronic documents and software. In most cases, courts will treat people who break the law as civil offenders and impose fines up to $2,500 per violation. The DMCA also includes criminal penalties, however, subjecting big-time violators to penalties as severe as a $1 million fine and ten years in prisona hefty price to pay for lifting someone else's bytes. In its earlier incarnations, the DMCA laid down what would have been a blanket ban on a wide range of technology and activities, including many that are currently legal and widely accepted. Most network security and anti-virus research would have become illegal, for example, since these projects often require researchers to reverse-engineer computer software or to circumvent security systemsactivities that the DMCA would have outlawed. Similar bans would have applied to some forms of encryption research, compatibility testing and many other common research activities. Unintended consequences? The sheer breadth of the law stunned scientists, academics and researchers, many of whom literally saw their livelihoods going down the drain. In a letter to the U.S. Congress sent earlier this summer, 50 of the nation's leading computer scientists and technology industry executives stated that the law would "imperil computer systems and networks throughout the United States, criminalize many current university courses . . . and severely disrupt a growing American industry in information security technology." | |||||
The law aims to safeguard the technologies, such as encryption or copy-protection systems, that protect and manage digital content. |
(To read the letter, see www.cs.purdue.edu/homes/spaf/WIPO .) The American Library Association also cried foul, noting that while the DMCA wouldn't change existing fair use doctrine per se, it would effectively gut fair use by allowing publishers to lock up their content and then prosecute anyone who tried to peek inside. Other critics pointed out that publishers had frequently vilified manufacturers of legitimate consumer devices, such as videotape recorders and cassette decks, for encouraging piracy, and that the DMCA would only encourage efforts to stifle new technology. One of the law's most prominent opponents, ACM president Barbara Simons, noted that had the VCR been invented after the DMCA became law, it probably wouldn't have passed legal muster. "How could one have proven that VCRs have other [legitmate] uses," Simons wrote, "when some of those uses were not yet known?"
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A vocal opponent. ACM president Barbara Simons has been an active opponent of the DMCA. | |||
Association of Computing Machinery, www.acm.org | ||||
During the next 18 months both sides will be closely watching one anotherand the Librarian of Congressfor hints about how the DMCA will actually affect public policy. |
Barbara Simons is just as pessimistic about the impact that law will have on scientific and academic research. Because the DMCA still requires researchers to make a "good faith effort" to contact copyright holders before circumventing copyright protection systems, she said, they can still use the law to block legitimate researchsuch as cases when reverse-engineering a product might reveal security flaws that will hurt sales. Even if the law is enforced liberally, Simons added, it will have a chilling effect among researchers who don't want to risk huge fines and prison time. Simons also challenges many of the terms used in the DMCA, some of which "are so vague as to be almost meaningless" and which will encourage publishers to prosecute offenders selectively. Ironically, Simons, concluded, the law may actually hurt intellectual property holders by sweeping flaws in their protection systems under the rugthat is, until a thief comes along and exploits the weakness. "Computer security is something that everyone should be concerned about," she said. "Especially the owners of large amounts of intellectual property."
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"There's going to be
enormous political pressure applied and the Library of Congress is going to
get caught in the middle."
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