[Ecommerce] vunet: Podcasters unite to challenge copyright landgrab
Manon Ress
manon.ress@cptech.org
Tue Sep 12 05:31:05 2006
http://www.infomaticsonline.co.uk/vnunet/news/2163983/podcasters-
unite-challenge
Podcasters unite to challenge copyright landgrab
Electronic Frontier Foundation rallies the troops
Will Head, vnunet.com 11 Sep 2006
A new broadcasting right proposed by the World Intellectual Property
Organization (Wipo) is being opposed by freedom organisation the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).
The Broadcast Treaty seeks to allow 50 years of copyright-like
control over the content of broadcasts, even when the broadcaster has
no copyright in what it shows, according to the EFF.
The campaign group is urging podcasters to sign a letter opposing the
treaty being extended to cover the internet.
"A TV channel broadcasting your Creative Commons-licensed movie could
legally demand that no one record or redistribute it, and sue anyone
who does," explained the EFF.
"TV companies could use their new rights to go after TiVo or MythTV
for daring to let you skip advertisements or record programmes in DRM-
free formats. "
Some countries also support expanding the treaty to cover the
internet. " That means that anyone who feeds any combination of
'sound and images' through a web server would have a right to meddle
with what you do with the webcast simply because they serve as the
middleman between you and the creator," said the EFF.
"If the material is already under copyright, you would be forced to
clear rights with multiple sets of rights holders. Not only would
this hurt innovation and threaten citizens' access to information, it
would change the nature of the internet as a communication medium."
The Broadcast Treaty also does not incorporate traditional fair use,
a legal defence to copyright infringement, according to EFF fellow
and author Cory Doctorow.
"Fair use does not apply to the broadcast right. It will have its own
rules for fair use, separate from copyright," Doctorow wrote on the
Boing Boing blog.
"You will have to pay your lawyer twice: once to make sure you've got
a fair copyright use, and again to make sure you've got a fair
broadcast right use. And you might get sued twice: once for violating
copyright and again for broadcast right violations."
Doctorow encouraged podcasters to fight the legislation and sign the
EFF open letter.
"If you are a podcaster, or better yet a podcasting organisation,
sign this letter now," he wrote. "It will be presented on Monday
morning to the Wipo committee that's creating the Broadcast Treaty in
Geneva. This is your best-ever chance to be heard."
EFF Joint Statement of Podcasting Organizations and Podcasters on the
Proposed Wipo Treaty
************************************************
Manon Anne Ress
manon.ress@cptech.org,
www.cptech.org
Consumer Project on Technology
1621 Connecticut Ave, NW, Washington, DC 20009 USA
Tel.: +1.202.332.2670, Ext 16 Fax: +1.202.332.2673
Consumer Project on Technology
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Tel: +41 22 791 6727
Consumer Project on Technology
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Tel: +44(0)207 226 6663 ex 252 Fax: +44(0)207 354 0607