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Google and Microsoft Help To Defend Fair Use 122

An anonymous reader writes "The Computer & Communications Industry Association filed a complaint this month with the FTC 'alleging that professional sports leagues, Hollywood studios, and book publishers were all using copyright notices that misrepresented the law'. That is, they were aggressively pursuing 'right' that they were not entitled to. Now a group, backed by companies like Oracle, Microsoft, Google, Yahoo, Sun, and Red Hat, has launched a web site called Defend Fair Use that shows they are serious about making the complaint stick. From the article: 'In contrast to copyright notices that take no account of fair use and claim control over "all accounts and descriptions" of a game, the CCIA offers a different copyright notice of its own. "We recognize that copyright law guarantees that you, as a member of the public, have certain legal rights," it says, "You may copy, distribute, prepare derivative works, reproduce, introduce into an electronic retrieval system, perform, and transmit portions of this publication provided that such use constitutes 'fair use' under copyright law, or is otherwise permitted by applicable law."'"
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Google and Microsoft Help To Defend Fair Use

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  • by garnetlion ( 786722 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @01:53PM (#20414103)
    Google and Microsoft? Going above and beyond the call of "Don't be evil"? Together?

    Wonders never cease. Nice work.
  • by argmanah ( 616458 ) * <argmanah@y[ ]o.com ['aho' in gap]> on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:00PM (#20414189)
    It sounds like those entertainment lawyers DCMA'd one too many people. The lawyers start letting the fact that they were able to trample on the little people get to their head and eventually piss off someone big enough and with enough teeth to fight back. When SCO declared they were going to start charging $699 Linux licenses, it was the little guys who were concerned. Then they picked on Novell and IBM and look where they are now: Litigated into oblivion.
  • ZOMG THE IRONY! (Score:4, Interesting)

    by kimvette ( 919543 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:01PM (#20414207) Homepage Journal
    Am I the only one finding it ironic that Microsoft is demanding that Fair Use be recognized, while shutting down Autopackager [slashdot.org] and infringing on the right of first sale [blogspot.com], even in cases where the software isn't even opened [applelinks.com]?

    Sorry, I'm just frustrated that I spent thousands on two MSDN subscriptions and have been trying to activate them for a week, and have spent over 115 minutes on the phone, with the last two calls assuring me with 100% certainty that the problem is now resolved, only to discover they are STILL not activated and I have to call them yet AGAIN. GRRRRRRRRR!!! This is why I run Linux for everything except for client projects. Ugh.
  • by t0qer ( 230538 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:05PM (#20414277) Homepage Journal
    Quick summary...

    Karaoke is about 10 years behind the music industry, we *just* started getting PC based karaoke systems rolling.

    2 karaoke companies have decided that copying a karaoke disc to your PC isn't covered under fair use laws. Below are their press statements.

    ANTI-PIRACY CAMPAIGN STATEMENT 12/28/06

    Stellar Records in a collaborative effort with some of its clients,
    customers, law enforcement agencies, and in some cases even its competitors has
    stepped up its campaign against piracy. As part of this campaign, Stellar will be
    directing much of its attention at the venue level and soon will be taking
    steps to notify suspected venues as to the potential risks and hazards
    involved when using unauthorized copies of Stellar Records products.

    Stellar Records, its customers, clients as well as several of its legitimate
    competitors have been damaged considerably through the illegal copying and
    distribution of their products, as well as other acts of piracy, some of which
    pertain to the violation of trademarks that are also the property of
    Stellar Records.

    Prior to pursuing any further action, we do recognize the possibility that
    at least some venues may not be aware of these violations and may be engaging
    in these activities unknowingly. Hopefully this communication will provide
    the information necessary in helping to determine if the use of a Stellar
    Records product is authorized, or in any way infringes on its copyrights and/or
    trademarks. At the very least, we hope this will provide the impetus to seek
    legal advice on these matters before continuing to engage in these practices.

    To be more specific, it has been brought to our attention that there are
    several venues in the Phoenix and Scottsdale area that have been promoting
    karaoke shows which are using unauthorized copies of karaoke products either
    directly through the use of in-house systems or vicariously through the
    contracting or employment of KJ/DJ hosts and/or hosting companies. Some of these
    products have been identified as karaoke products containing the copyrights and/or
    trademarks of Stellar Records including products bearing the trademarks "
    Pop Hits Monthly", "Top Hits Monthly", or "Stellar Records". In addition it
    has been suggested that there could be other products containing Stellar
    Records' copyrights and/or trademarks being illegally distributed, and an
    investigation is currently under way in an effort to identify those products as well.

    In order to assist those in determining what constitutes an unauthorized use
    of Stellar Records' products, please be advised that Stellar does not
    support nor does it have the authority to support (due to contractual limitations
    in its licensing agreements with various publishers) any device which stores,
    and/or plays karaoke products from a hard drive or any device other than a
    device that plays directly from a CD+G disc. For example products include but
    are not limited to the CAVS JB199 as well as the RSQ-500 when play back is
    not directly from a CD+G disc. There are a number of software based products as
    well like MTU's Hoster, PCDJ, CompuHost, TriceraSoft, Sax N Dotty Show
    Hoster, and Dart just to mention a few, when play back is not directly from a
    CD+G disc.

    Stellar Records does empathize with the concerns of some of its customers
    who may want to make copies of their legally purchased products for the
    purposes of making back-ups or to rip them onto a hard drive in a more convenient
    format. However we do not have the authority to grant anyone the right to do
    so. Most if not all of our karaoke products contain the copyrights owned by
    parties other than Stellar, namely the writers, authors and/or publishers of
    the work (song) itself to which we must seek prior approval for use in
    producing our final karaoke products. The licenses and/or approvals that we secure
    from these publishers do not include the right to distribute t
  • by UbuntuDupe ( 970646 ) * on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:32PM (#20414637) Journal
    If the NFL had it's way you wouldn't be able talk to your co-workers about the previous nights game.

    It seems that major sports leagues are given special legal status in general. For one, they're exempt from antitrust laws. (Not that I like anti-trust laws, but selectively enforcing them can be worse.) For another, they seem to have additional rights to the content of their games beyond what IP law normally grants. Like, if I watch a game and stream my commentary about it so people can listen as they watch with the official broadcast's sounds muted, I'd be shut down in a heartbeat. But if I did the same thing to the e.g. Kasparov/Deep Blue chess match, IBM couldn't stop me if they wanted to.
  • by kebes ( 861706 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:39PM (#20414711) Journal
    Well, it is a bit surprising.

    Neither Google nor Microsoft have much of a stake in content creation.
    Google's entire business is based upon fair use, so they have a stake in defending "reasonable" copying (fair use, indexing, etc.). Microsoft, however, have a business model that relies on people paying for copies of their copyrighted software. For instance, they make money when restrictions force a person to buy multiple copies of software. (E.g. lost your backup copy, it's illegal to download a copy off the net even if you already bought a real copy, so you have to buy another copy...)

    Moreover, with Microsoft in the video game market (both on PCs and via the XBox), they are very much implicated in the content-creation game. Microsoft also has a history of helping the media companies achieve their aims, such as agreeing to a per-unit fee on the Zune or implementing DRM in Vista. If Microsoft was actually serious about defending fair use, their operating system would make fair use easy instead of making it onerous.

    The more I think about it, the more surprising this move on Microsoft's part becomes. I guess it just comes down to Microsoft being a company so large (and poorly guided?) that different divisions can have wildly different priorities. Some parts of Microsoft would also love for you to pay a fee everytime copyrighted content is transmitted, viewed or discussed. Other parts of Microsoft only have value so long as fair use is protected.

    In any case, I expect their support of fair use to be one of convenience, and hence tenuous at best. Google, on the other hand, are a valuable example of fair use being innovative and driving the economy.
  • Re:Of course.... (Score:2, Interesting)

    by Elemenope ( 905108 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @02:41PM (#20414739)

    Not at all. Microsoft undoubtedly realizes that (as some other posters have noted) they themselves may only benefit from the fair use doctrine if it exists, perhaps to wiggle around the GPL for example, hence it must apply to everyone. Thus they would logically act to bring pressure so that the fair use doctrine remains intact.

    However, it is not necessarily in their own best interest to make it easier for you to use their software to engage in activities that would traditionally fall under fair use, because such capacities may harm their business relationships with content production and distribution companies, and may laterally increase the chance of intrusive federal regulation re: media player technologies, since the content production industry has a decent amount of sway with legislators, at least here in the US. To avoid either damaged business relationships or governmental interference, Microsoft would do well to make sure the tools it publishes do not make it easier for others to realize their fair use rights.

    Hence, Microsoft's actions here are, conceivably, entirely consistent with one another.

  • Re:Of course.... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Marxist Hacker 42 ( 638312 ) * <seebert42@gmail.com> on Thursday August 30, 2007 @03:00PM (#20414963) Homepage Journal
    I have to wonder what use of software would fall under "fair use" guidelines.

    Educational & backup copies, of course. And of course, derivative works, for stuff that is open source to begin with.

    Then again, I have to wonder why we treat software as similar to music and literature by placing it under copyright scope in the first place. If software needs a form of IP protection, copyright is the wrong fit, and fair use just makes that all the more evident.

    That's strange, I'd argue exactly the opposite- that patents are a wrong fit, as evidenced by the LACK of fair use since software patents have been applied.

    To the broader topic: That a company is not required to provide for your fair use is established law, true. Of course, that concept predates the DMCA. The DMCA takes us out of balance by introducing the infamous anti-circumvention clause. Under this clause, not only must I respect the rights of the copyright holder, so must any technology in which I traffic. Not so with fair use -- I can traffic in technology that tramples the consumer's fair use right (per prior law), but not in technology that might be used to trample the copyright (per the new law).

    Correct. But also, given fair use (as predated the DMCA, which completely trampled fair use) the consumer's right to fair use should give them the ability to say, make an ISO file of any CD they own.

    Most fair-use advocates assume that the best solution to restore balance is to elmiinate the anti-circumvention clause. This returns us to the world of yesterday, where the most technologically capable among us have exercisable fair use rights and the rest of the citizens don't; except that DRM schemes are ever more complex, resulting in an even higher technical barrier to entry into the world of the fair-use "haves".

    True enough, though I'd argue that for the widest form of fair use (multiple copies supplied to a classroom for educational purposes) any reasonably well-funded school should be able to circumvent easily (by using nearly identical hardware, thus defeating the "license keyed to specific hardware" algorithm), and have done so for non-circumvention reasons (for ease of maintenance- every computer in a classroom should have identical and interchangeable parts).

    But there's another way. Keep the anti-circumvention clause, but add a new clause. Make it illegal to traffic in technology that abridges fair use. If it's illegal to make tools that violate one right, make it illegal to create tools that violate either right. Restore balance. And at the same time, give everyone the ability to exercise their fair use rights, regardless of individual technical knowledge.

    Interesting idea that- which would make Windows Genuine Advantage illegal tech....
  • by crovira ( 10242 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @03:06PM (#20415037) Homepage
    them some money for their content (nobody EVER turns down money.)

    If I was asking them for a PRICE for their Karaoke CDs/DVDs to play in a PC based player, I bet that I'd be able to license it.
  • Logical, cynical. (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Scrameustache ( 459504 ) on Thursday August 30, 2007 @05:43PM (#20417171) Homepage Journal

    There is no logical conflict between a company defending a legal right for a customer to do something, while also failing to provide the technical means to exercise that right, or even placing technical hurdles to exercise it.
    Yes there is a GIGANTIC logical conflict between defending a right and going out of your way to make it as hard as possible for someone to excercise that right.

    If someone says that they defend my right of way, but place their car in my path so that I cannot proceed, I will not believe their statement, because actions speak louder than words and their deed is incompatible with their words.

    And when a company who has invested their precious money into assuring that only geeks can enact their rights by using their software, because only geeks can overcome the hurdles they have chosen to spend man hours on implementing, I will not believe them when they say they defend our rights. I will believe that their legal expenses related to those rights have now exceed the profits they intended to make by denying to their customers the means to excercise those rights.

    There is a gigantic difference between "I defend your right on principle, but I will not intervene on your behalf" and "I defend your right, but I'll intervene so that you may not act on them if to the extent of my abilities". They took the initiative to place an obstacle, that is not compatible with a claim of intent to defend the right, not at all.

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