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[DMCA-Activists] Fwd: [IP] Public Knowledge Sees Content Companies Seeki


From: Seth Johnson
Subject: [DMCA-Activists] Fwd: [IP] Public Knowledge Sees Content Companies Seeking 'Full Regulatory Control' Over Consumer Tools
Date: Mon, 15 Mar 2004 19:27:37 -0500


-----Original Message-----
From: Dave Farber <address@hidden>
Date: Mon, 15 Mar 2004 17:05:06 -0500
Subject: [IP] Public Knowledge Sees Content Companies Seeking 'Full 
Regulatory Control' Over Consumer Tools


Delivered-To: address@hidden
Date: Mon, 15 Mar 2004 16:55:50 -0500
From: mnemonic <address@hidden>

For Immediate Release
March 15, 2004

Contact:  Art Brodsky
                 202-518-0020 (o)    301-908-7715 (c)
                  address@hidden

Public Knowledge Sees Content Companies Seeking
'Full Regulatory Control' Over Consumer Tools

The content industries and their allies are attempting to use the
Federal 
Communications Commission (FCC) proceedings on the broadcast flag and
on 
setting new rules for "plug and play" devices to assert widespread
control 
over digital and analog media, according to Public Knowledge.

In a March 15 filing with the FCC on the broadcast flag, Public
Knowledge 
said, "We have concluded from reading the full range of submissions in
the 
broadcast-flag and plug-and-play proceedings that full regulatory
control 
over all the ways consumers use content is precisely what certain
content 
holders want."  Had such controls been in effect in 1976, when the
video 
cassette recorder (VCR) was invented, "devices such as the VCR, the
TiVo 
personal-video recorded, and Windows-based 'media PCs'' would have been
drastically hindered on their way to market - if allowed at all,"
Public 
Knowledge said in its filings.

Public Knowledge also argued that content companies are attempting to
"roll 
back the impact of the Supreme Court's decision" in 1984 that allowed
the 
VCR to be used to record television programming for later viewing.  In 
reply comments in the plug-and-play proceeding governing the use of 
cable-ready devices, Public Knowledge said it was inconsistent for
content 
companies to argue they want to extend controls over analog content as 
well.  Such requests to the Commission call into question the FCC's
central 
assumption that digital content is more subject to piracy, Public
Knowledge 
said.

Public Knowledge also filed briefs March 15 with the U.S. Appeals
Court, 
D.C. Circuit, opposing the FCC's attempt to delay court consideration
of 
Public Knowledge's court challenge to the broadcast flag rules.

"It makes no sense to delay court proceedings on the broadcast-flag
rule," 
said Mike Godwin, senior technology counsel of Public Knowledge.  "The 
Commission has already concluded it has jurisdiction to issue these
rules, 
and none of the agency's other proceedings relating to content
protection 
even question that jurisdiction," Godwin said, adding that "Now is the
best 
time for a court to step in and address whether the FCC is headed down
the 
wrong road."  Full texts of the comments and briefs will be available
later 
at www.publicknowledge.org.

In addition to filing its own comments with the FCC and launching the 
public-interest group lawsuit challenging the broadcast flag rule,
Public 
Knowledge has worked with Internet entrepreneur Scott Rafer to organize
a 
filing by about two dozen Silicon Valley companies which argues that
the 
broadcast-flag proceeding poses a threat to software innovation overall
and 
to open-source software in particular.  Rafer, CEO of Feedster, a blog
and 
news search engine, said the level of interest from companies which
hadn't 
participated before "is a great first step to having consistent, rich 
participation by Silicon Valley companies in the regulatory process."

Public Knowledge is a public-interest advocacy and education
organization 
that seeks to promote a balanced approach to intellectual property law
and 
technology policy that reflects the "cultural bargain" intended by the 
framers of the constitution. More information available at: 
<http://www.publicknowledge.org>http://www.publicknowledge.org



Art Brodsky
Communications Director
Public Knowledge
(202) 518-0020  ext 103 (o)
(301) 908-7715 (c)
1875 Connecticut Ave., N.W.
Suite 650
Washington, D.C.  20009

-- 
--------------------------------------------------------------------
"I speak the password primeval .... I give the sign of democracy ...."
            --Walt Whitman Mike Godwin can be reached by phone at
202-518-0020
His book, CYBER RIGHTS, can be ordered at
        http://www.panix.com/~mnemonic .
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