Joho the Blog
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« Bush non-counting of civilian deaths earns him the silver || Back to Blog | Hyperlinks v. Hierarchy » January 04, 2006
The remarkable Seth Johnson, corresponding secretary of New Yorkers for Fair Use, has put together a set of resources for people interested in how the US delegation to WIPO is leading one particular battle in the War against the Internet. Our representatives are pushing to create a new right, based on a right granted broadcasters 44 years ago. Before you could copy or reproduce in any form material that you found on the Web, you would have to get the permission not only of the copyright owners but of whomever published the content online. This would apply even if you were reproducing material in the public domain. "Webcasters" (i.e., anyone who posts anything on the Web) would be granted this control automatically for 50 years after they post any content. Creating this new right would require that digital rights management be installed everywhere. Yahoo is the most visible promoter of the proposal, according to an excellent article by James Love, which concludes:
Here is Seth's list of resources:
1) James Love: The UN/WIPO Plan to Regulate Distribution of Info
on the Net Next Readings Letter to Congress Seeking Public Consultation Statements from Most Recent WIPO Meeting on Broadcasting Treaty Chile Proposal Other Analyses IP Justice [1] [2] Link Pages http://www.cptech.org/ip/wipo/bt/ [Tags: digitalRights copyright warAgainstTheInternet SethJohnson wipo] Posted
by D. Weinberger at January 4, 2006 09:19 AM
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