Poking Holes in the DMCA

As we mentioned this morning, Blogcritics is involved with requests for exemptions from the DMCA with both Lawmeme and the EFF.

Lawmeme's Ernest Miller has turned in what I think is an extraordinary and highly logical request for an exemption from the DMCA prohibition on copying DVDs for any purpose, including fair use recording of small segments of a DVD for review purposes. Seeing that DVDs often contain material exclusive to the DVD - interviews, behind the scenes, background on the subject, outtakes, etc. - the fact that we can't legally host clips of these DVD-exclusive segments in conjunction with reviews is a grievous disservice to our readers and to the site.

Miller puts it better in the exemption request, quoted in a post on Lawmeme by Raul Ruiz here:

    "LawMeme therefore submits that in balancing the harms of inhibiting the core First Amendment values of comment and criticism by individuals in lawful possession of DVDs with the nonexistent harms to copyright holder motion picture studios, an exemption is justified in the case of ancillary audiovisual works distributed on Digital Versatile Discs (DVDs) using the Content Scrambling System (CSS) of access control. Alternatively, LawMeme submits that CSS is not an access control device and thus not subject to this rulemaking."

Um, what he said. Here is the section from the actual exemption request to which Blogcritics contributed (numbers refer to footnotes):

    For example, Eric Olsen's BlogCritics website (www.blogcritics.org) is a forum for independent reviewers to provide reviews of books, CDs and DVDs. The site is financed through ad revenues and associate's programs.38 If Eric Olsen were to circumvent CSS in order to add short clips to his reviews of ancillary materials on DVDs, his actions would make the website more attractive, increasing traffic (and therefore ad revenues) as well as likely increasing the number of sales through the site's associate programs. Such actions would therefore subject Mr. Olsen to potential criminal liability.

    Furthermore, the civil penalties are extraordinarily severe as well. Under 17 U.S.C. § 1204, violating the prohibition on circumvention of CSS results in a minimum fine of $200. That is for doing nothing more than excerpting a clip from a lawfully acquired DVD for purposes of comment and criticism. Fifteen seconds of fair use can cost a minimum of $200. For many, such an amount is significant enough to dissuade them from exercising their First Amendment rights.

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Article Author: Eric Olsen

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and former publisher of Blogcritics.org, and former publisher of Technorati.com, which both rule. He is now editor, co-founder, and CEO of The Morton Report.

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