musicNEWS:
Congressman Wants To Jail Student Music Downloaders.
03-23-03
antiGUY
.
It appears that the RIAA and MPAA have found
yet another friend in the federal government of the United States.
Wired.com reports that during a recent
hearing of the Subcommittee on Courts, the Internet and Intellectual Property,
congressman John Carter (Rep Tx) said that jailing college students who
download copyrighted material would help stop piracy.
This news comes on the heals of a story
that we reported on February Download An MP3, Go To Jail For 3 Years.
(see story)
where we reported that lawmakers and the Justice Department were apparently
planning to utilize a little known law called the No Electronic Theft
(NET) Act, to begin procecuting file traders. That law was passed by Congress
and signed by Bill Clinton in 1997 with very little notice from the media.
But last July, 19 members of Congress wrote a letter to Attorney General
John Ashcroft urging him to "to prosecute individuals who intentionally
allow mass copying from their computer over peer-to-peer networks."
Sen. Joseph Biden, D-Del., Rep. James Sensenbrenner, R-Wis., and Sen. Dianne
Feinstein, D-Calif were among the 19 politicians urging the Attorney General
to start taking action against online file swappers due to their concern
over the "staggering increase in the amount of intellectual property pirated
over the Internet through peer-to-peer systems."
Now according to the Wired.com story congressman
John Carter is ready to move forward with plans to jail student file swappers
using the law. "What these kids don't realize is that every time they pull
up music and movies and make a copy, they are committing a felony under
the United States code," Carter said in an interview. "If you were to prosecute
someone and give them three years, I think this would act as a deterrent."
Some university officials dont like the
idea and claim that they have increased their efforts to help stop illegal
file swapping on university run networks.
"I can't see turning millions of college
students into criminals," Graham Spanier, president of Pennsylvania State
University was quotes as saying in the Wired.com story. "We'd have to build
a lot of new prisons to hold the lawbreakers engaged in piracy of copyrighted
materials."
Carter isnt looking to lock up all student
file swappers but believes that arresting a few college students would
set an example for other students and as Wired.com reported go a long
way toward bringing home the message that sharing and duplicating copyrighted
materials is wrong.
"Sometimes it takes the shock value of
someone actually being punished," Carter said. "In this particular instance
it might also send a message to these kids that are operating on these
networks that, 'Hey, I better stop.'"
Carter, a former Texas district judge,
predicts that if a few students were arrested for file swapping then "That
information sent out to kids would be a real eye opener. I think you would
have a 50 percent falloff, at least, of these people.
He adds, "I'm not out to get the kids,
I'm out to get their attention." And some headlines, he didnt add.
Click
here to read the full Wired.com story.
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