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To: DiViT who wrote (34930)8/4/1998 3:21:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Thanks for the humor Dave on a day that, well,
geocities.com



To: DiViT who wrote (34930)8/4/1998 4:46:00 PM
From: Jacques Chitte  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
ROFL
I was warned that if we break $16, it's no holds barred to the downside. AB's decision to shelter a whole pot of cash is looking more&more to be crazy like a fox. Am I being overly optimistic if I ascribe to him the capacity to learn something?
Those engineers must be looking at their stock options about now and getting into a downright dangerous mood.



To: DiViT who wrote (34930)8/4/1998 9:40:00 PM
From: Peter V  Respond to of 50808
 
David, your request to search a single thread has been answered:

Message 5394552

It would be nice if it could go back more than four months, but it's better than what we had.

The subject number is found in the URL in the address line of your browser when you are looking at the overall thread (not an individual post). For this thread it is 1197.



To: DiViT who wrote (34930)8/5/1998 9:45:00 AM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
Congress passed the Digital Millenium Copyright Act, which implements sweeping changes to U.S. Copyright law. After it is enacted, there will be lots of battles over the interpretation and implications of this law..........

Congress clears copyright act

By Courtney Macavinta
Staff Writer, CNET NEWS.COM
August 4, 1998, 3:10 p.m. PT

In a landmark move, Congress passed
legislation today to safeguard copyrights for music,
software, and written works on the Internet and to
outlaw technologies that can crack devices
protecting this property.


The Digital Millennium Copyright Act was
approved by a House voice vote today. The act
was passed by the Senate in May.

Both chambers will have to reach a compromise to
iron out the differences in the bills before the
legislation is sent to President Clinton for his
signature.

The bill implements treaties signed at the World
Intellectual Property Organization's Geneva
conference on digital information and copyrights in
December 1996.

"With the growth of electronic commerce having
such a profound impact on the economy, the
[House] Commerce Committee has engaged in a
wide-ranging review of the subject," Rep. Tom
Bliley (R-Virginia) said today on the House floor.

"This bill strikes an appropriate balance between
the goal of promoting electronic commerce and the
interests of copyright owners," he added.

The Net offers new, less expensive ways to sell and
distribute products, transactions at the core of the
growing e-commerce businesses of the software,
movie, and music industries. Lobbyists and
proponents of the bill argued that it's now easier to
share and sell unauthorized copies of songs,
computer applications, or books, and that
protections must be expanded online for
copyrighted information and products.

"Many countries around the world have not
updated their laws to protect creative works online
and have been looking to the United States for
leadership," Robert Holleyman, president of the
Business Software Alliance, said in a statement.
"We praise Congress for providing that leadership
today."

The bill passed by both chambers also carries a
handful of safe harbors that limit Net access
providers' liability for copyright infringements made
by their customers.


However, a controversial provision that was not
included in the WIPO treaties makes it a crime in
the United States to create or sell any technology
that could be used to break copyright protection
devices, such as encryption or digital watermarks.
Violators could be charged up to $2,500 per act of
circumvention.

The House bill approved today permits cracking
copyright protection devices to conduct encryption
research, but the Senate version doesn't allow this
activity. Critics say even with exemptions, the
provision could still hinder college students and
programmers from decoding encryption algorithms
to test the strength of the data protection
technology.


"[The bill] fails to further recognize that encryption
research is simply one aspect of security research,
and that research is different from actual practice.
While [the copyright act] may exempt encryption
research, it still criminalizes other crucial techniques
used in security research and practice," Purdue
University computer science professor Eugene
Spafford stated in a letter to Congress members
last Friday, which was signed by 50 nation's top
security researchers.


Copyright protection technologies also may be
bypassed for the purpose of product
interoperability and to let people gain access to
personally identifiable information that a database
company has collected about them.

Libraries and educators argued that this "black box
provision" would let intellectual property owners
build a "digital fence" around material researchers
can access under fair-use stipulations in existing
copyright law. The House version of the bill
requires the Commerce Department secretary to
conduct a study to determine whether fair-use
access to copyrighted materials would be stifled by
technological barriers. The study would cover the
first two years the law would be in effect.

The treaties were adopted by 157 delegates at the
WIPO's 1996 diplomatic conference. At that time,
delegates removed language from the treaties that
would have made Internet service providers and
telephone carriers liable for copyright infringements
that occur over their services.

Also rejected by WIPO members was the
so-called sui generis database treaty, which would
have allowed groups such as the NBA and
Lexis-Nexis to copyright information in their
databases.

Still, U.S. lawmakers took their own action to help
protect electronic data repositories' cash cows. In
May, the House passed Rep. Howard Coble's
(R-North Carolina) Collections of Information
Antipiracy Act, which would make it illegal to
extract information from a database and make it
available elsewhere--if such an act would "harm"
the database company's current or potential
business.

Furthermore, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
protects databases as well, with some exceptions.

"In that portion of the bill, we have added a
provision to preserve the Securities and Exchange
Commission's authority to ensure that the public has
full access to stock quotes," Rep. Bliley added.
"This is critical because some experts have
described [this] as being 'as necessary as oxygen'
to investors. Thus, the commission may, in the
future, takes steps to improve public access to all
market data, including both delayed and real-time
data."

Still, some contend new digital copyright legislation
is unnecessary.

A two-year study for the U.S. Copyright Office
released this month concludes that, historically,
intellectual property owners are too vigilant in trying
to protect their works when new technologies
emerge, and that laws are not the answer.

More.........
news.com