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View Full Version : Californian File Traders to get Jail Time


Jelsoft
March 19th, 2004, 12:58 PM
File Traders Face Jail Time, Fines with California Law (http://www.technewsworld.com/perl/story/33174.html)

By Jay Lyman
TechNewsWorld
March 18, 2004

"This is a natural extension of what's on the books for hard goods -- DVDs and videocassettes -- in virtually every state," MPAA senior vice president of state legislative affairs Vans Stevenson told TechNewsWorld

Internet civil libertarians are raising red flags over parallel bills in the California state legislature that would punish file traders of copyrighted materials with up to a year in jail, US$2,500 in fines or both if the users do not provide their real names and addresses with the title of the work.
A California State Senate bill introduced by Sen. Kevin Murray (D-Los Angeles) -- the same lawmaker who authored and promoted California's spam law that punishes illegal spammers with up to $1 million in fines per incident -- and a corresponding California Assembly bill from Kevin McCarthy (R-Bakersfield) both would impose the penalties on Internet users who share commercial recordings or audiovisual work electronically.

Electronic Frontier Foundation legal director Cindy Cohn said the bills -- which she described as "incredibly corrosive to basic privacy and security" -- would require even children to offer their names and addresses to share something that might arguably be fair use of a copyrighted work.
"The bills are essentially trying to create criminal liability for sharing even a single commercial audio or visual work on the state level -- something that was denied on the federal level," Cohn told TechNewsWorld.

Cohn indicated the biggest concerns about the legislation center on its harsh penalties and its potential effect on anonymity, which historically has been preserved on the Internet.

"As a society, do we really want to give people a year in prison for sharing a single song?" she asked.
Cohn added that the bills are "counterproductive to privacy" in their requirement for users, including children, to share real names and addresses. She said the bills contradict policy goals designed to prevent the growing problems associated with identity theft, spam and protection of children's identities.

"All of the other customs and precedents on the Internet go the other direction," she said. "Here, California is mandating that minors provide [names and addresses]."

Natural Extension of Law

Both bills are sponsored by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA), which contends that storing of a copyrighted work on a shared hard drive is the same thing as theft of a DVD from a brick-and-mortar store.
The movie industry group also claims the legislation is a normal state-level legal supplement to federal copyright law, which prohibits electronic sharing of protected works.

"This is a natural extension of what's on the books for hard goods -- DVDs and videocassettes -- in virtually every state," MPAA senior vice president of state legislative affairs Vans Stevenson told TechNewsWorld.

Omyn
March 19th, 2004, 01:13 PM
Now 10 year olds will be turned into hardened criminals.

What has the world come to?

DudeAsInCool
March 19th, 2004, 01:24 PM
Idiotic legislators.. but 2 guys dont make a law. This will be struck down..

shawners
March 19th, 2004, 01:34 PM
they can make it law all they want.. it still wont stop the world of downloading, if anything it will make them leechers.