
MPAA shows how to videorecord a TV set
3 years ago
At the DMCA 1201 hearings at the Copyright Office at the Library of Congress, representatives from the MPAA showed a video demonstrating how users can videorecord a TV set. They argue this is an acceptable analog alternative to breaking copy protection on a DVD.
The hearings occur every three years to determine whether the Librarian at the Library of Congress (through direction of the Copyright Office) should create exemptions to the anti-circumvention provisions in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
In 2006, film and media professors were granted an exemption in order to break copy protection on DVDs so that they could utilize high quality video clips in classroom teaching. Up for consideration during the 2009 exemption hearings is whether this exemption should be extended to apply to faculty teaching in all disciplines, and whether the exemption should apply to students.
The hearings occur every three years to determine whether the Librarian at the Library of Congress (through direction of the Copyright Office) should create exemptions to the anti-circumvention provisions in the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
In 2006, film and media professors were granted an exemption in order to break copy protection on DVDs so that they could utilize high quality video clips in classroom teaching. Up for consideration during the 2009 exemption hearings is whether this exemption should be extended to apply to faculty teaching in all disciplines, and whether the exemption should apply to students.
MP4
00:04:18
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So many mise-en-abîme.
What happened to non-commercial fair use?
also, don't they see the glaring irony in this?
Even though the results of two different processes are identical, one process is legal but one is not; and they're defending this?
In giving this demonstration showing how easy it is to circumvent, aren't the MPAA effectively proving DVD DRM achieves nothing?
at 1:15... you can see this demonstration video is being played to the court on VLC.
your stunned silence means you are just as in awe as i am.
PS Is it me or does the image in the RSS feed look as if the woman in the background has her left breast hanging out? (img9.imageshack.us/img9/8470/mpaa.jpg )
The only equivalence i can come up with that is closely comparable would be if they were a pro-speed camera group and one of their lawyers pulled into the courthouse parking lot at 95 mph, yanked a four-wheel drift into the driveway, and double parked in handicapped parking... all while being watched live on the courtroom floor via security camera.
Intellectual Property is only abstract ideas, thoughts, and stories; not real property. The intellect is used to create real physical property like gadgets: computers, telephones, music players, etc. or inventions like cars and airplanes. First you have to have an idea to create something real. If you want to call that idea intellectual property for that purpose seems reasonable. But never for something that always remains abstract.
Intellectual Property in the sense used by the entertainment business is non-existent and cannot be stolen no more that I can steal someones vary thoughts right out of their head. This Intellectual Property is a fraud on is face.
RT
privacy-web.net.tc
If educators have to worry about litigation for showing video clips then the entire foundation for copyright law as laid out in the constitution is in complete rubble.
So, if you are a student of video arts, your teacher will not be able to show you clips from DVDs because it breaks DMCA.
But it is OK to cam record and show it ? Crappy video and sound you get is not protected by copyright laws then ?...
I still don't understand how MPAA got this much power over movie industry. There are too many constitutions that do nothing, yet control everything...