But the real ticking time-bomb in the DMCA is Section 1201, the "anti-circumvention" rule, which makes it a felony (punishing by a 5-year prison sentence and a $500k fine) to help people tamper with "access controls" that restrict copyrighted works.
This rule means that if a company designs its products so that you have to remove DRM to use them in legal ways, those uses become felonies. DMCA 1201 is how Apple and John Deere make it a felony for anyone except them to fix their products.
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But from the very first days, it was clear that DMCA1201 was NOT about preventing copyright infringement, it was about enforcing business models. The first users of this law were DVD manufacturers who wanted to stop the public from "de-regionalizing" their DVD players.
The manufacturers and studios had cooked up a racket where they would sell DVDs at different prices in different countries, and they didn't want Americans shopping for cheap DVDs in India.
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Likewise the early consoles that also took advantage of DMCA 1201. If you own a Sega Dreamcast and I write a game for your Sega Dreamcast and sell it to you, we are doing copyright right: a creator and an audience member exchanging creative works for money.
But Sega - and the App Store businesses it spawned up to and including Apple - used DMCA 1201 to make it a felony for creators to sell their works to audiences without cutting the device manufacturer in for a commission.
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Now that everything has software in it, DMCA 1201 can be brought to bear on an ever-widening constellation of devices, from medical implants to kitchen appliances, from printer ink to insulin pumps.
My novella Unauthorized Bread is fiction, but the DRM abuses in it are deadass real:
The metastasis of DRM is a gift to monopolists, who can corral customers, independent competitors and toolsmiths into arrangements of their design.
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When the Napster Wars began, the RIAA represented the Big Six record labels. Today, it represents the Big THREE labels, as an entire realm of human endeavor stretching back to a time before language itself is now the near-exclusive purview of three giant corporations.
They are tightening the noose. Yesterday, the RIAA sent a DMCA 1201 takedown notice to Github demanding the removal of youtube-dl, a venerable and popular tool for format-shifting Youtube videos.
https://github.com/github/dmca/blob/master/2020/10/2020-10-23-RIAA.md
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As Parker Higgins documents in a brilliant, scathing thread, the complaint is a masterwork of legal shenanigans, claiming that because someone COULD infringe an RIAA member's copyright by saving a Youtube video, Github MUST remove tools that permit this.
https://twitter.com/xor/status/1319738279772770308
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The RIAA's lawyers don't mention the millions of hours of public domain Youtube videos that archivists have preserved using youtube-dl, nor the Creative Commons licensed videos that are unambiguously lawful to download with youtube-dl.
Nor do they mentions the limitations to copyright that sometimes make it lawful to download ANY video from Youtube.
DMCA 1201 isn't just a charter to transform your commercial desires into legal obligations, it is also a powerful censorship tool.
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Copyright trolls have long figured this out: DMCA 1201 is a superweapon for getting content removed from Google and elsewhere: if you assert that someone who recorded you doing something abusive is violating 1201, that video goes down and STAYS down, with no counternotice.
DMCA 1201 is a goddamned dumpster fire, a surefire recipe for techno-corporate dystopia. EFF is suing to overturn it. That trial can't come fast enough:
https://www.eff.org/cases/green-v-us-department-justice
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@pluralistic I'm someone who the region-locking has inconvenienced!
My family moved from the US to NZ, and I have DVDs from both regions. It was hard to find a DVD player that wouldn't refuse to play some of those.
Now I've dug those DVDs out of storage & De-CSS is handling them beautifully! There was a tiny added hurdle upon install due presumably to it's questionable legality, but otherwise everything just works!
@alcinnz @pluralistic Can you imagine the looks of my kids when I told them that there was no legal way for us to play the DVD they got as present?
“But dad, your laptop has a DVD drive!” — “It does, but it runs GNU Linux, so we would have to use libdvdcss, which would take me just a few minutes, but we cannot do this, because it would circumvent ineffective DRM. Let me tell you about the time when you could get codes of that on a T-Shirt while tens of thousands of teens got sued”.
They just design their devices so that after the repair is complete, you need an unlock code to get the system to recognize new parts. Bypassing the unlock code defeats an "access control" and is thus a literal crime.
But there's no copyright infringement here! Swapping a new part into a phone, a tractor or a ventilator is not a copyright infringement. And yet, it is still a (criminal) copyright VIOLATION. DMCA 1201 lets companies felonize ANY conduct that is adverse to their shareholders.
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