antiGUY's
RANTitorial
The RIAA & Congress Plan to Hack
Your PC.
10-07-02
antiGUY
Be afraid--be very afraid! The music industry
Gestapo is prepared to unleash a blitzkrieg against illegal mp3 trading
and Peer 2 Peer networking. When Adolph Hitler began to annex other sovereign
nations in the 30’s he found an unwitting accomplice in Great Britain’s
Prime Minister Neville Chamberlain. In fact, in Chamberlain’s quest
to maintain the peace he helped hand over Czechoslovakia to Hitler on a
silver platter, without a shot being fired.
A similar storm of cold warfare is occurring
right now in the music industry. The RIAA has found a willing ally in their
fight against online MP3 file sharing, the United States Congress.
Earlier this year Congressman Howard Berman
(D-Calif.) introduced a bill that in affect will allow copyright holders
or their agents (read RIAA) to become hackers. The bill H.R. 5211 also
known as the "Peer-to-Peer Piracy Prevention Act," gives copyright holders
a freer hand in battling the swapping of copyrighted material over the
web by placing some exemptions in current anti-hacking laws that limits
the copyright holders liability for taking actions to stop their material
from being traded online through Peer 2 Peer networks like Kazaa.
What exactly does that mean and why is
it that important? This bill if passed would give an organization like
the RIAA a “get out of jail” free card exempting them from criminal or
civil penalties if they sabotage a Peer 2 Peer network or the files that
are available through such a network that reside on a user’s computer.
This is yet the next battle in the war
against online music piracy. Don’t think it is a real war? Just look at
the Warner Music Group’s job posting for a new Chief Technology Officer;
part of the job description includes a curious responsibility called “P2P
Warfare”.
The five major record labels are very serious
about battling the proliferation of illegal mp3’s on the web. Through their
trade organization, the RIAA, they have already successful shutdown Napster
and other P2P companies and now they have a Congressman in their pocket
that is giving them a major new weapon to add to their arsenal.
Let’s look at H.R. 5211 and some of its
provisions and why the bill has some people up in arms.
“…a copyright owner shall not be liable
in any criminal or civil action for disabling, interfering with, blocking,
diverting, or otherwise impairing the unauthorized distribution, display,
performance, or reproduction of his or her copyrighted work on a
publicly accessible peer-to-peer file trading network, if such impairment
does not, without authorization, alter, delete, or otherwise impair
the integrity of any computer file or data residing on the computer of
a file trader.”
So basically this says that a copyright
holder can take some limited action in stopping their material from being
shared through a Peer 2 Peer network, as long as “such impairment does
not, without authorization, alter, delete, or otherwise impair the
integrity of any computer file or data residing on the computer of a file
trader.”
That doesn’t sound too threatening on the
surface, they can take steps to stop the trading but they can’t mess with
your files. But wait a minute there is a key phrase here, “without authorization”.
So in reality a copyright holder COULD “alter, delete, or otherwise impair
the integrity of any computer file or data residing on the computer of
a file trader”, as long as they have “authorization” to do so. Hum, these
politicians are slick, just look at this next excerpt that more or less
makes the “authorization” mute; “Actions taken by a copyright owner pursuant
to subsection (a) shall not be considered by a court for any other
purpose under this title, including in determining whether a particular
use of a work is infringing.” So basically this says that copyright
holders can not be taken to court if they take actions to “disable, interfere
with, bloc, divert, or otherwise impairing the unauthorized distribution,
display, performance, or reproduction of his or her copyrighted work on
a publicly accessible peer-to-peer file trading network”
Wait, they have more in this wonderful
bill that gives them a free reign to wage cyber warfare. The copyright
holder cannot take actions if it “causes economic loss to any person other
than affected file traders” and/or “causes economic loss of more than $50.00
per
impairment to the property of the affected file trader, other than
economic loss involving computer files or data made available through a
publicly accessible peer-to-peer file trading network that contain works
in which the owner has an exclusive right.”
So basically the copyright holder can “alter,
delete, or otherwise impair the integrity of any computer file or data
residing on the computer of a file trader,” as long as the economic loss
“per impairment” (read mp3) does not cause an economic loss of more than
$50.00. Individual mp3 files are hardly worth over $50.00 each and this
bill spells out “per impairment” which means per file.
If this bill passes, copyright holders
and their agents (RIAA) will be given a lot of legal leeway to sabotage
Peer 2 Peer networks and the files traded over them. The biggest concern
that opponents of this bill have voiced is the fact that this bill does
not specify what actions the copyright holders can take to stop their files
from being traded. It’s conceivable that they could, under the provisions
of this bill, launch a “legal” denial of service attack against Peer 2
Peer networks or worst flood those networks with virus files that are disguised
as MP3’s, that in effect could automatically delete all mp3’s on an end
users system as long as it leaves other files alone, because each individual
mp3 file’s value falls below the $50 threshold. But wait, even that value
doesn’t apply because the provisions in the bill that outline the cause
of action for those who were victims of “wrongful impairment” states, “If,
pursuant to the authority provided by subsection (a), a copyright owner
knowingly and intentionally impairs the distribution, display, performance,
or reproduction of a particular computer file or data, and has no reasonable
basis to believe that such distribution, display, performance, or reproduction
constitutes an infringement of copyright, and an affected file trader suffers
economic loss in excess of $250 as a result of the act by the copyright
owner, the affected file trader may seek compensation for such economic
loss.”
The user having an MP3 on their system
give the copyright holder a “reasonable basis” to believe that the user
is infringing, even if in reality the file is a legal copy from a CD the
user owns.
Another omission from the bill that is
a real concern for opponents of this bill is the fact that there is not
a provision in the bill that prevents copyright owners from placing malicious
files on a user's computer. Like the virus information above, conceivably
the copyright holder could place a “sniffer” program on the individual
user’s computer that would broadcast information about the user to the
copyright holders. For exapmle, which files he/she has on their system
and other useful information that could be used by the copyright holder
to track-down and take legal action against the file trader. If that doesn’t
scare you, then there is something wrong!
The only requirements on the part of copyright
holders is that they give the Attorney General prior notice that they are
going to take action under this bill and inform the violator or their ISP
prior to taking such actions. Here is how it is laid out in H.R.
5211
(c) NOTIFICATION REQUIREMENT.—(1) A copyright
owner shall not be liable under subsection (a) for an act to which subsection
(a) applies only if—
(A) the copyright owner
has notified the Department of Justice, in such manner as the Attorney
General shall specify, of the specific technologies the copyright owner
intends to use to impair the unauthorized distribution, display, performance,
or reproduction of the owner's copyrighted works over a publicly accessible
peer-to-peer file trading network; and
(B) the notification under paragraph
(1) was made at least 7 days before the copyright owner engaged in the
act.
(2) At the request of an affected
file trader or the assignee of an Internet Protocol address used by an
affected file trader, a copyright owner shall provide notice to the affected
file trader or assignee (as the case may be) of—
(A) the reason for impairing
trading in the computer file or data containing the copyrighted work of
the copyright owner;
(B) the name and address
of the copyright owner; and
(C) the right of the affected
file trader to bring an action described in subsection (d).
(3) The notification by
a copyright owner under paragraph (1) shall not be construed for any purpose
as an admission of an unlawful act.
Congressman Berman has defended his bill against
the wave of criticism it’s introduction caused. In a Q&A on his website
he states that the bill simply “allows copyright owners to protect their
property. The bill gives copyright owners, such as songwriters and
photographers, a limited safe harbor from liability when they prevent piracy
of their works through publicly accessible, peer-to-peer (P2P) networks,
like KaZaA, Morpheus, and Gnutella.”
Click
here for the conclusion of this rant, links to useful sites about H.R.
5211 and Voice your opinion in the Fan Speak section
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