[CONTACT]

[ABOUT]

[POLICY]

EFFector org Publication of the Ele

Found at: gopher.meulie.net:70/EFFector/effect15.05

                                                                         
EFFector       Vol. 15, No. 5       Feb. 14, 2002       editors@eff.org  
                                                                         
A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation      ISSN 1062-9424  
                                                                         
Happy Valentine's Day!


  * ALERT: FCC Official Says Industry Groups Should Decide Your Rights
  * Philips Alert Update
  * Barney's Attack Lawyers Still on the Loose; EFF Looking for other
    Victims of the Purple Dinosaur
  * Trial Date Set for Norwegian Teen; Jon Johansen Prosecuted Under
    Computer Security Law
  * Exchange Ideas with Larry Lessig at EFF Benefit Dinner
  * Visit EFF at the RSA Conference
  * Administrivia

For more information on EFF activities & alerts: http://www.eff.org/

To join EFF or make an additional donation:
  http://www.eff.org/support/
EFF is a member-supported nonprofit. Please sign up as a member today!

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


ALERT: FCC OFFICIAL SAYS INDUSTRY GROUPS SHOULD DECIDE YOUR RIGHTS

TELL THE FCC WHAT YOU THINK

Electronic Frontier Foundation ACTION ALERT

(Issued: February 14, 2002 / Expires: March 1, 2002)



EFF is troubled by a recent suggestion by an FCC Commissioner that your
negotiation. EFF believes that this attitude toward consumers' rights is
out of place, and should not go unchallenged.

Commissioner Kevin Martin, one of the five top officials of the agency
that

    The movie studios, broadcasters, cable industry, and consumer
    electronics industry need to reach an agreement on how digital
    content will be protected, and what rights consumers will retain to
    make personal recordings.
   
Emphasizing the high priority he placed on such an industry consensus,
the Commissioner continued:

    If further progress is not made soon, the Commission may need to
    become more directly involved.
   

What YOU Can Do Now:

We encourage you to write to FCC Commissioner Kevin Martin -- and, if you
like, to the other Commissioners -- to share your views. Feel free to use
the EFF's sample letter below as a starting point for your comments. Let
the recipient(s) of your communication know that you are concerned about
the idea that industries should decide what rights the public will have.


Sample Letter:

You can use this sample letter to Commissioner Martin as a starting point
for your own comments:

Commissioner Kevin J. Martin
Federal Communications Commission
Washington DC 20554

Fax: (202)418-0232
E-mail: kjmweb@fcc.gov

    Dear Commissioner Martin,
   
    I am troubled by your Feb. 1, 2002 remarks before the Federal
    Communications Bar Association, during which you are quoted as having
    said "The movie studios, broadcasters, cable industry, and consumer
    electronics industry need to reach an agreement on how digital
    content will be protected, and what rights consumers will retain to
    make personal recordings."
   
    This appears to suggest that my home recording rights and my rights
    to use digital television technology should be decided by a few
    industries meeting behind closed doors. I am concerned that this will
    not adequately protect my rights as a consumer, nor the rights of
    technologists working to build innovative new products. As I
    understand it, broadcasters and technology companies wouldn't even be
    considering these anti-consumer "copyright protection" technologies
    but for threats from movie studios to withhold movies from digital
    television. While copyright law may be important, it should not give
    one industry the power to hold up new television technologies and
    erode my legitimate fair use rights.
   
    In short, I'm not prepared to trust my digital fair use rights and
    the future of television to an "industry consensus" made up of movie
    studios and the industries that they browbeat into submission. I urge
    the Commission to reject this approach. The Federal Communications
    Commission has an independent responsibility to the public to protect
    our rights in new communications media. I hope you will represent the
    public interest on this matter, rather than simply industry
    interests.
   
    Sincerely,
   
    [Your name & address]
   

Background:

Traditional analog television broadcasts are soon scheduled to be phased
out and replaced with new higher-quality digital television broadcasts.
Digital TV broadcasts have already begun in many cities, and the FCC
anticipates a complete transition in which analog broadcast television is
eliminated before the decade is out.

Major movie studios have increasingly claimed that this technical
transition is slowed because of "inadequate protection" provided to
copyrighted works when they are transmitted over the air. The studios
themselves are making the decision to withhold their popular content, but
they have advanced the idea that the new high-definition digital format

This position shows movie studios' abiding suspicion of home recording --
a distrust expressed in the studios' efforts to ban the VCR, and a
companies like SONICblue, which have created new personal video recording
technologies (like ReplayTV). Over two decades ago, the major motion
Sony from selling its new Betamax VCR; the case was ultimately decided by
the Supreme Court, which permitted the Betamax and similar devices to be
t gives consumers too many abilities.

The movie industry and representatives from other industries have formed
a consortium called the Broadcast Protection Discussion Group (BPDG).
This group is contemplating ways to ban all digital video devices (TVs,
VCRs, PC-based TV tuners, and many more) which can receive digital
television signals without imposing restrictions chosen by Hollywood.
BPDG's work could result in plans to outlaw many innovative devices
already on the market, even though these devices simply receive free
over-the-air TV signals. Hollywood seems to hope for a regulatory
be banned.

Unfortunately, such an outcome is possible. Copyright anxieties are
Will consumers be trusted with the next-generation VCR? The FCC and
Congress are eager to facilitate the transition to digital TV; if
convinced that home recording posed an unacceptible risk to the studios,
they might find an "industry consensus" on technology restrictions very
appealing.

Commissioner Martin's statements were the first public indication that
the FCC is aware of and may endorse the efforts of groups like the BPDG.
But the lack of public involvement in these industry negotiations is


For more information on this issue:

How to contact the FCC:
  http://www.fcc.gov/contacts.html

Home page of FCC Commissioner Kevin J. Martin:
  http://www.fcc.gov/commissioners/martin/

Background on industry Broadcast Protection Discussion Group:
  http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/HDTV/

Copy Protection Technical Working Group, the parent organization of BPDG:
  http://www.cptwg.org/

The inside story of Betamax (how studios sought to ban the VCR):
  http://www.hrrc.org/html/inside_betamax.html


About EFF:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is the leading civil liberties
organization working to protect rights in the digital world. Founded in
most linked-to Web sites in the world:   http://www.eff.org/


Contacts:

    Seth Schoen, EFF Staff Technologist
      schoen@eff.org
      +1 415-436-9333 x107
   
    Fred von Lohmann, EFF Senior Intellectual Property Attorney
      fred@eff.org
      +1 415-436-9333 x123
   
                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------



consumer letters being sent not directly to Philips but rather to the
third-party company they've hired to manage their website. Thus, we have
updated the contact information provided by the alert:
  http://www.eff.org/alerts/20020206_eff_philips_alert.html

                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


BARNEY'S ATTACK LAWYERS STILL ON THE LOOSE

EFF LOOKING FOR OTHER VICTIMS OF THE PURPLE DINOSAUR

EFFector readers will recall that in July, 2001, EFF received an
unfounded "cease and desist" letter from the attorneys for the Barney the
Dinosaur franchise, claiming that an obvious parody contained in a
newsletter hosted in an EFF Archive violated trademark and copyright law.
EFF's attorneys responded with a letter explaining the First Amendment
attorneys to stop using phony legal threats to try to silence critics.
The two letters were republished in EFFector Vol. 14 No. 14:
  http://www.eff.org/effector/HTML/effect14.14.html

EFF never received a response from Barney's attorneys, but we were
from threatening any more people.

Unfortunately, Barney's attorneys are apparently still at it. EFF has
learned of another threat made to another obvious parody website, using
the publisher.

EFF believes it may be time to take positive action to stop Barney from
We are looking for any other people who have received cease and desist
letters from Barney's attorneys, to see if this is an ongoing effort or,

Cindy Cohn, EFF's Legal Director, at cindy@eff.org immediately.

We thought Barney wasn't SUPPOSED to scare people.

                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


TRIAL DATE SET FOR NORWEGIAN TEEN

JON JOHANSEN PROSECUTED UNDER COMPUTER SECURITY LAW

A trial date of June 3, 2002, has been set for Norwegian teenager Jon
Johansen's criminal trial for developing DeCSS, software that can decrypt
DVDs. The case will be heard by a three-judge panel of the Oslo City
Court and is expected to last approximately six days.

Johansen was criminally charged on January 9, 2002, by Norwegian
authorities, acting on a complaint filed by entertainment industry
attorneys against the teen and his father. Indicted under Norwegian
Criminal Code Section 145.2, which outlaws breaking through security
measures of another to access data one is not entitled to access,
Johansen could face two years in prison if convicted.

The case is unique in that Johansen was not charged under copyright law
but under a statute that is primarily used to combat computer
trespassing. Johansen claims that reverse engineering a DVD that he had
legally purchased is not a violation of the law. DeCSS was created to
build a DVD player that could run on the Linux computer operating system.

Johansen is represented by Norwegian attorney Cato Schiotz with the Oslo
law firm Schjodt & Co. EFF is helping to collect donations to pay for
Johansen's defense at the following link:
  http://www.eff.org/support/jonfund.html

attorneys. If you would like to donate to EFF, you can do so at:
  http://www.eff.org/support/

For more info on the Johansen case, see:
  http://www.eff.org/IP/DeCSS_prosecutions/Johansen_DeCSS_case/

                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


EXCHANGE IDEAS WITH LARRY LESSIG AT EFF BENEFIT DINNER

As the first benefit dinner was a great success, we have decided repeat
the experience to accommodate those who couldn't make it the first time
around.

You are invited to join Stanford University Law Professor and Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) Board Member Larry Lessig for an intimate
conversation regarding his new book over dinner and drinks. This exchange
of ideas will take place on Tuesday, March 5th, at 7:30 p.m. in San
Francisco, and will benefit EFF's work to protect rights in the digital
age.

corporate power strangling public interest online. He argues that these

Larry will engage a dozen interested people at the upscale new Japanese

Seated on cushions around a low wooden table, you will have the chance to
mportant cause, as the money raised from this unusual evening will go to
furthering the work of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.

The evening includes the opportunity to talk with Larry about his
thoughts for the future and how we can affect it, your dinner and drinks,
and a signed copy of "The Future of Ideas."

The cost is $500. As there are only 12 available seats, space will fill
up quickly.


                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


EFF AT THE RSA CONFERENCE

Come see the EFF at the RSA Conference 2002, February 19-21 in San Jose.
The EFF booth will be there, along with new goodies for the cryptography
community. Stop by and say hi!

Where:
Booth #1447
The San Jose McEnery Convention Center
San Jose, California 95113 USA

For more information:
  http://www.rsaconference.com/

                                 - end -                                 

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


ADMINISTRIVIA

EFFector is published by:

The Electronic Frontier Foundation
San Francisco CA 94110-1914 USA
+1 415 436 9333 (voice)
+1 415 436 9993 (fax)
  http://www.eff.org/

Editors:
Katina Bishop, EFF Education & Offline Activism Director
Stanton McCandlish, EFF Technical Director/Webmaster
  editors@eff.org

To Join EFF online, or make an additional donation, go to:
  http://www.eff.org/support/

Membership & donation queries: membership@eff.org
General EFF, legal, policy or online resources queries: ask@eff.org

Reproduction of this publication in electronic media is encouraged.
Signed articles do not necessarily represent the views of EFF. To
their express permission. Press releases and EFF announcements & articles
may be reproduced individually at will.

To subscribe to or unsubscribe from EFFector via the Web, go to:
  http://www.eff.org/signup/mailserv.html

To subscribe to EFFector via e-mail, send to majordomo@eff.org a message
BODY (not subject) of:
  subscribe effector
The list server will send you a confirmation code and then add you to a
nstructions will be in the confirmation e-mail).

To unsubscribe, send a similar message body to the same address, like so:
  unsubscribe effector

(Please ask listmaster@eff.org to manually remove you from the list if
this does not work for you for some reason.)

To change your address, send both commands at once, one per line (i.e.,
unsubscribe your old address, and subscribe your new address).

Back issues are available at:
  http://www.eff.org/effector

To get the latest issue, send any message to effector-reflector@eff.org
(or er@eff.org), and it will be mailed to you automatically. You can also
  http://www.eff.org/effector/current.html

-------------------------------------------------------------------------


AD: