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They are Trying to do it to us AGAIN!
Posted by Mike (Shmoo) on December 21, 2005 at 5:01 AM   (printer friendly)

Second Class Citizens

December 19, 2005
The Technology Liberation Front


Perhaps the most striking thing about the Sensenbrenner bill is this passage:

PROFESSIONAL DEVICE.—(A) The term‘‘professional device’’ means a device that is designed, manufactured, marketed, and intended for use by a person who regularly employs such a device for lawful business or industrial purposes, such as making, performing, displaying, distributing, or transmitting copies of audiovisual works on a commercial scale at the request of, or with the explicit permission of, the copyright owner.

(B) If a device is marketed to or is commonly purchased by persons other than those described in subparagraph (A), then such device shall not be considered to be a ‘‘professional device’’.

“Professional” devices, you see, are exempt from the restrictions that apply to all other audiovisual products. This raises some obvious questions: is it the responsibility of a “professional device” maker to ensure that too many “non-professionals” don’t purchase their product? If a company lowers its price too much, thereby allowing too many of the riffraff to buy it, does the company become guilty of distributing a piracy device? Perhaps the government needs to start issueing “video professional” licenses so we know who’s allowed to be part of this elite class?

I think this legislative strategy is extremely revealing. Clearly, Sensenbrenner’s Hollywood allies realized that all this copy-protection nonsense could cause problems for their own employees, who obviously need the unfettered ability to create, manipulate, and convert analog and digital content. This is quite a reasonable fear: if you require all devices to recognize and respect encoded copy-protection information, you might discover that content which you have a legitimate right to access has been locked out of reach by over-zealous hardware. But rather than taking that as a hint that there’s something wrong with the whole concept of legislatively-mandated copy-protection technology, Hollywood’s lobbyists took the easy way out: they got themselves exempted from the reach of the legislation.

This reminds me of nothing so much as the McCain-Feingold campaign finance law. McCain and Feingold, like Sensenbrenner, faced a difficult problem: a straightforward reading of their legislation, which prohibited people from spending large sums of money on political advocacy, would seem to prevent corporate entities like the New York Times and Fox News from talking about politics in the closing weeks of the election. Clearly, that wouldn’t do. But rather than taking this as evidence that there was something fundamentally wrong with their approach, they simply created a class of journalists to whom the rules did not apply. If Michael Moore wants to spend a million dollars promoting John Kerry’s election, that’s free speech. But if you or I spent a million dollars on anti-Bush ads in the closing weeks of the election, we could wind up in jail.

Like McCain and Feingold, Sensenbrenner demonstrates a profound contempt for ordinary Americans, whom his legislation literally makes second-class citizens. It seems that he can’t imagine that ordinary consumers might ever have legitimate reasons to use “professional” video editing tools for personal projects. Consumers, after all, are just that—passive recipients of the culture made for them by the professional magic-makers of Hollywood. We wouldn’t want the riffraff to make culture of their own.

Posted by Tim Lee at December 19, 2005 09:42 PM

===================

Folks, THIS sorta thing is what pisses me off the most about the RIAA and Hollywood. Compared to these kinds of monopolistic control of our laws and the marketplace, the p2p file-sharing issue is a harmless drop in the bucket.


User Comments (These do not necessarily reflect the beliefs of this site)

goldenpi  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 8:56 AM
In unrelated news, our old enemy Hatch has been mentioned on another highly-specialised news site, though one completely unrelated to the RIAA - it appears he is temporially extremally popular with the influencial Religious Right lobbying movement for his involvement in some rather complicated politics involving stem cell research. Its a long story - its enough to know that it started with a simple funding bill, and rapidly became so heavily politicised that any trace of the scientific aspect has been pushed out. Hatch's roll has been to promote the scientificly-inferior 'Cell Lite' bill, which was created as an 'ethical' bill purely in order to make a similar bill look more 'unethical.'

RaidHHI  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 11:31 AM
And just think, the majority of voters wanted these Gob snopping shits present in Office. Isn't it cute? LoL!

What's even worse, these same pundits re-elected Bush.. Weapons of mass destruction, admitting to spying on americans without any court order. And you think anythings going to change? Boycott all you like, you and I are in the minority, nothing will change unless change is forced on them.

In the words of Dope,
"I'll put a gun to your head and pull the fucking trigger."

CynicalGeezer  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 3:26 PM

"The RIAA and the Cartels want all consumer play-back devices to be hard-wired with DRM."

Ain't gonna get us boyotters to buy that kind of crap; and I hope there'll be some other smart people besides us too.

CynicalGeezer  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 3:27 PM

boyotters = boycotters

(All I want for Christmas is an edit button!)

RaidHHI  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 4:28 PM
So your not going to buy a dvd player/cdplayer/whatever for your car/truck/rv either then?

:)

Dreddsnik  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 4:50 PM
"So your not going to buy a dvd player/cdplayer/whatever for your car/truck/rv either then? "


No. I'm not.

:)

CynicalGeezer  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 6:12 PM

Ditto.

gfmlcka  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 6:23 PM
No way will they ever see my money.

Olde-Phart  
Date: December 21, 2005 @ 7:58 PM
"So your not going to buy a dvd player/cdplayer/whatever for your car/truck/rv either then?"

Nope, not here, either.

Wonder what happens when the electronics industry starts losing sales because people won't buy players that they can't do anything with?

Pretty soon the media landscape will be as dry and lifeless as the moon. Of course, with the crap the RIAA and MPAA are putting out, it might as well be dead.

Dreddsnik  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 8:42 AM
""So your not going to buy a dvd player/cdplayer/whatever for your car/truck/rv either then? "

If it were food, water, clothing ..or some other essential that they were holding over our heads, then I might have to give in.
The thing is ....
Entertainment is an EXTRA, not an ESSENTIAL.
Most lives can continue with alternate forms of entertainment.

independentm...  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 9:19 AM
"So your not going to buy a dvd player/cdplayer/whatever for your car/truck/rv either then?"

I won't EVER buy any such gizmo that doesn't allow all the uses that a "professional device" (as described above) does.

The point of this article is that they are trying to FORCE consumers into buying DRM infected playback devices so that the RIAA and the Cartels can cantrol everything you watch or listen too.

It is wrong, and it is EVIL.

independentm...  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 9:21 AM
...and, as a side benefit, they make it harder and much more expensive for an independent content creator to compete with the industry.

goldenpi  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 9:46 AM
boy-otters sounds rather fun too.

The funny thing here is that the protection will be absolutly usless against those mass-pirating counterfitters that are the center of the lobbying - those mysterious figures who send their profits straight to Bin Larden. They could easily pay $5000 for a piece of professional equipment - or failing that, steal some, or buy it on a black market.This much is very obvious. Its clear who the real target of the proposals is - average consumers who might want to run off a copy for a friend, or record a series from TV so they dont have to pay $100 for a boxed set.

Dreddsnik  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 10:08 AM
Actually,
It appears that the REAL targets are the musicians that wish to create and promote themselves without the aid of the middle-monkeys.

IFeelFree  
Date: December 22, 2005 @ 2:09 PM
(I posted this on a different topic, but it might be more appropriate here):

Surely, the consumer electronics and computer industries are much bigger than the Hollywood entertainment industries. Why aren't they fighting on behalf of the consumer for fair use rights, and against horrid legislation like the "analog hole" bill? Wouldn't it be in their best interest? Who's gonna buy their precious electronics if the entertainment industry succeed in locking up all content? Yes, iPods are selling like hotcakes but what happens when they will only play (Apple proprietary DRM) AAC music files? Sales will fall off a cliff. Am I missing something here?

independentm...  
Date: December 23, 2005 @ 12:32 AM
IFeelFree, you are absolutely correct...

Unfortunately, the "electronics and computer industries" are still STUPID enough to think that the only provider of "content" is the RIAA/Hollywood.

OUR JOB is to SHOW them that that ASSUMPTION is WRONG!!!

(Yes, we have to rub their noses in it!)

independentm...  
Date: December 23, 2005 @ 12:33 AM
Folks, we STILL have work to do!

RaidHHI  
Date: December 30, 2005 @ 5:48 PM
Content creators who don't want to be locked into DRM based bullshit should team up with a ripping group, and/or acquire the tools and knowledge said groups have to do it themselves. You'll be much happier with your drm free results, and so will your audience. Almost everything will play an mp3. :)