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Senator Saxby Chambliss Responds to Broadcast Flag Issue
Rip-off 101: How Textbook Industry Manipulates Prices More Lies, Abuse, Other Reprehensible Practices from the Copyright Cartel Theme Design
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Friday, October 7, 2005Senator Saxby Chambliss Responds to Broadcast Flag IssueMy Senator called today. Georgia Senator Saxby Chambliss takes the side of consumers and will attempt to have the Broadcast Flag amendment attached to an upcoming reconciliation bill pulled out for open debate.[More...]
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Categories: Copyright, MPAA, Policy & Regulation Sunday, September 25, 2005Rip-off 101: How Textbook Industry Manipulates PricesThe textbook publishing industry is coming under fire for exhorbitant prices and abusive practices. We take a look at recent commentary on the state of the industry, a new research report that documents the state of the problem with corrective recommendations, and some innovative students who are fighting back. [More...]
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Categories: Business & Finance, Copyright, Education, Future of Print, Learning, Publishing Sunday, May 22, 2005More Lies, Abuse, Other Reprehensible Practices from the Copyright CartelA lecturer at Polytechnic University of Valencia UPV in Spain has lost his job and been asked to remove all record of his employment at the university for giving a lecture on the legal uses of P2P networks. Jorge Cortell has been lecturing on intellectual property at the university for five years. Earlier this month Jorge was asked to give a lecture on P2P as a part of Free Culture week. But Jorge made the mistake of telling Spains copyright cartel SGAE, the National Police, and the Attorney General in advance. During that conference I was to analyze the legal use and benefits of the P2P networks, even when dealing with copyrighted works (according to the Spanish Intellectual Property Law, Private Copy provision, and many research papers, books and court rulings). I was even going to use the network to "prove" that it was legal, since members of the Collecting Society "SGAE" had appeared on TV and newspapers saying that "P2P networks are ilegal" (sic) just like that, and to that extent I even contacted SGAE, National Police, and the Attorney General in advance to inform them about it. The aforementioned agencies informed their cohorts in the industry cartels and shortly Promusicae the Spanish equivalent of the RIAA and our very own MPAA were pouncing on the Dean, the University, and everyone they could find with threats, warnings, lies, and abuse to stop the lecture. The day before the conference, the Dean (pressured by the Spanish Recording Industry Association "Promusicae" as I found out later, and he recognized himself in a quote to the national newspaper El Pais, and even the Motion Picture Association of America, as another newspaper quotes) tried to stop it by denying permission to use the scheduled venue. So I scheduled a second one, and that was denied again. And a third time. Finally I gave the conference on the university cafeteria, for 5 hours, in front of 150 people. Once again we have morally reprehensible actions being used to stifle the spread of legal technologies, and justified on the claims of stopping piracy. Mr. Cortell was not engaged in piracy, nor was he promoting it. He was demonstrating the effective use of technology for legally sharing both copyrighted and non-copyrighted works. And once more we have examples that nothing the Copyright Cartel tells us can be trusted not their numbers, not their judgement of technology, not their interpretation of whats legal. Lawrence Lessig reports today on how Bilboard magazine legal affairs editor Susan Butler has written a piece grossly misrepresenting Copyright, Creative Commons, and an authors right to choose: As Creative Commons chairman and Stanford Law School professor Lawrence Lessig travels the world encouraging international adoption of Creative Commons, the movement has begun to arouse concern in the music business. Some industry leaders say that the group's approach -- applauded by many -- is in effect a Trojan horse that could erode copyright protection or harm unwitting artists. The Cartel has shown a complete lack of integrity, ethics, and honesty in their actions on Copyright, and they will continue to act this way as long as it works. We need to make sure our legislators know were watching, and we will no longer tolerate the making of bad legislation and support of corrupt business practices as a quid pro quo for nice contributions and rubbing elbows with stars. EFF has an action alert on the Broadcast Flag. Thats a good place to start. The lawyers and lobbyists are moving fast, but you can move faster. Tell your representative you don't want Hollywood to hobble your digital media devices, and knock out the Broadcast Flag for good.
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Categories: Copyright, Music, Technology |
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This Page was last updated: Wed, 02 Jul 2008 21:06:57 GMT
License: Unless otherwise expressly stated all original material, of whatever nature, created by Terry W. Frazier and included in this website, its related pages and archives, is licensed under a Creative Commons License, some rights reserved.
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