[wordup] Forget MP3 players: Hollings' CBDTPA regulates software too
Adam Shand
adam at personaltelco.net
Fri Mar 22 17:48:51 EST 2002
Via: politech at politechbot.com
As a bonus, here's a section-by-section summary of the bill:
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,51275,00.html
And a collection of info on the Consumer Broadband and Digital
Television Promotion Act (CBDTPA):
http://www.politechbot.com/docs/cbdtpa/
-Declan
---
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,51274,00.html
Anti-Copy Bill Slams Coders
By Declan McCullagh (declan at wired.com)
1:25 p.m. March 22, 2002 PST
WASHINGTON -- America's programmers, engineers and sundry bit-heads
have not yet figured out how much a new copyright bill will affect
their livelihood.
When they do, watch for an angry Million Geek March to storm Capitol
Hill.
A bill introduced this week by Sen. Fritz Hollings (D-South Carolina)
would roil the electronics industry by forcibly embedding copy
protection into all digital devices, from MP3 players to cell phones,
fax machines, digital cameras and personal computers.
But the Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act
(CBDTPA) would also wreak havoc on programmers and software companies
-- both those distributing code for free and those selling it.
No more than two years and seven months after the bill becomes law,
the only code programmers and software firms will be able to
distribute must have embedded copy-protection schemes approved by the
federal government.
To put this in perspective: The CBDTPA would, if enacted in its
current form, have the electrifying effect on computer professionals
that the Supreme Court's decision in Bush v. Gore did to some
Democratic Party members.
Legal experts said on Friday that the CBDTPA regulates nearly any
program, in source or object code, that runs on a PC or anything else
with a microprocessor.
That's not just Windows media players and their brethren, as you might
expect. The CBDTPA's sweeping definition of "any hardware or software"
includes word processors, spreadsheets, operating systems, compilers,
programming languages -- all the way down to humble Unix utilities
like "cp" and "cat."
"The definition will cover just about anything that runs on your
computer -- except maybe the clock," said Tom Bell, a professor at
Chapman University School of Law who teaches intellectual property
law.
[...]
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