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Librarian of Congress: Six Classes of Non-infringing Circumvention Defined

July 26th, 2010 No comments

Quoting Statement of the Librarian of Congress Relating to Section 1201 Rulemaking:

Section 1201(a)(1) of the copyright law requires that every three years I am to determine whether there are any classes of works that will be subject to exemptions from the statute’s prohibition against circumvention of technology that effectively controls access to a copyrighted work. I make that determination at the conclusion of a rulemaking proceeding conducted by the Register of Copyrights, who makes a recommendation to me. Based on that proceeding and the Register’s recommendation, I am to determine whether the prohibition on circumvention of technological measures that control access to copyrighted works is causing or is likely to cause adverse effects on the ability of users of any particular classes of copyrighted works to make noninfringing uses of those works. The classes of works that I designated in the previous proceeding expire at the end of the current proceeding unless proponents of a class prove their case once again.

This is the fourth time that I have made such a determination. Today I have designated six classes of works. Persons who circumvent access controls in order to engage in noninfringing uses of works in these six classes will not be subject to the statutory prohibition against circumvention.(emphasis added)

The fifth class would seem to bear on the 5th Circuit ruling mentioned in our previous post.

(5) Computer programs protected by dongles that prevent access due to malfunction or damage and which are obsolete. A dongle shall be considered obsolete if it is no longer manufactured or if a replacement or repair is no longer reasonably available in the commercial marketplace…

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5th Circuit Soft on DMCA?

July 26th, 2010 No comments

Judge Garza of the New Orleans based 5th Circuit has ruled that circumventing software protection is not per se a violation of DMCA. Courthouse News reports:

General Electric did not infringe on a power supplier’s digital copyrights when it used protected software unlocked through a hacked security key, the 5th Circuit ruled.

“Merely bypassing a technological protection that restricts a user from viewing or using a work is insufficient to trigger the (Digital Millennium Copyright Act’s) anti-circumvention provision,” Judge Garza wrote for the New Orleans-based court.

“The DMCA prohibits only forms of access that would violate or impinge on the protections that the Copyright Act otherwise affords copyright owners.”

The ruling represents a parting of the way with the current prevailing view in most of the nation’s courts, according to author and digital rights activist Cory Doctorow. Such a split, says Doctorow, is often the precursor to seeing the ruling challenged in the Supreme Court. Doctorow also points out that Judge Garza’s ruling, which might otherwise be viewed as a victory for proponents of a less rigid enforcement of the DMCA, is nonetheless a victory not of an underdog hacker but instead is an example of a large and powerful corporation prevailing. Quoting Doctorow’s July 25th post at boingboing.net,

What’s more, the defendants here are General Electric, not hackers in black t-shirts or sketchy offshore Xbox-modchip vendors (theoretically the law shouldn’t care if the defendant is a hobo or a billionaire, but in practice, billionaires usually get better precedents, and not just because they can afford better lawyers).

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