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The industry continues to push legislation that would outlaw new, innovative devices that consumers use to listen to satellite radio and digital terrestrial radio.
It is because of efforts like this that
After years of fighting entertainment industry-supported legislation, litigation and business practices intended to limit the rights, technological innovation and free expression of consumers, there was no better time for industry groups and public interest organizations to fight back.
Predictably, critics from the entertainment industry like the Recording Industry Association of America's
These are rights that the entertainment industry will tell you do not exist--witness the
The collective amnesia the entertainment industry has about its past and recent attempts to limit consumers' rights and technological innovation is nothing short of startling. Beginning with the piano roll at the start of the 20th century, continuing with radio, TV, the VCR, MP3 players and digital video recorders (remember Replay TV?), entertainment companies have tried either to legislate or litigate innovative new technologies out of existence.
Today in Congress, the
As if their legislative campaign was not enough, the record companies are suing XM Radio because it permits consumers to easily record the music they pay for, and Hollywood is suing Cablevision because it provides a TiVo-like service in which the programs you choose to record reside on its servers. Even though the unanimous Supreme Court victory in the
Particularly over the past 10 years, the entertainment industry has been on a relentless march towards ever longer and stronger copyright. Copyright terms can last a century or more; circumventing technological protection measures is a criminal act, even if done for lawful reasons; and penalties for infringement are such that entrepreneurs (and even good-size companies like XM) put their futures at risk defending them.
These changes in the law have had little effect on commercial pirates, but have instead enriched a handful of huge media companies. At the same time, our society and our culture have suffered--the public domain has shriveled, free expression has been chilled by overzealous copyright lawyers, and the functionality and interoperability of digital technology and media have been compromised.
Bringing balance back to copyright law is more important than ever, as increasing numbers of Americans become creators themselves by using digital tools to engage in social commentary and civic discourse online. Our communications system has never been so democratic--but it will not stay that way if our copyright laws are used to preserve the business models of old, centralized "command and control" media. It is time for the next Congress to revise our copyright laws to reflect the realities of today's digital culture.
Biography
Gigi B. Sohn is the president and co-founder of Public Knowledge, a Washington, D.C.-based advocacy group.
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