House Attempts to Change Copyright Protection
would further crack down on intellectual property violations, and create several new government positions with the power to enforce the new law.Bill H.R. 4279 would create a special section in the Justice Department to deal with copyright violation and some provisions would add substantial powers to punish copyright violators, like seizing:
"any property used, or intended to be used, to commit or facilitate the commission of a violation … that is owned or predominantly controlled by the violator or by a person conspiring with or aiding and abetting the violator in committing the violation."The DOJ is not fond of the measure, as it would force how they handled copyright infringement prosecution, though many business groups, particularly in movies and music, are soiling themselves in their collective excitement. But I'm not sure if the squeals of delight would continue if they thought through the problem and considered whether their own property might be impounded if they were violating copyright. Can you say massive numbers of web and database servers? But I suspect it's an issue of the sheerest optimism to think that any writer could get the powers that be to turn these penalties onto the business forces that lobby so heavily.
I also find it interesting that Conyers is involved. Could this be his mea culpa for sponsoring that bill, at the behest of the NWU/UAW, that would have allowed writers to take part in collective bargaining?
Labels: copyright, legislation, politics



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