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By Maura Corbett
Posted on ZDNet News: Aug 27, 2007 4:00:00 AM

I'll bet you can recite most of the copyright warnings that appear on your screen when you pop in a DVD, or at the end of football game, can't you?

At the very least, we all know that when the warning signs appear, what follows are a few very-important-sounding sentences noting the dire consequences of unauthorized use of what we're about to see. We don't necessarily understand it, but we know it's bad. And if we were to believe what they tell us, discussing Barry Bonds' homeruns around the water cooler would put us all in jail.

Did it ever occur to you that, in many cases, these serious, ubiquitous warnings may not actually be accurate?

Perhaps they've just been around so long that they've been accepted as fact, but in many cases, as very recently pointed out by the Computer and Communications Industry Association, they are at best misleading and, at worst, flat-out wrong.

Consumer rights in the digital age are not frivolous.

The group filed a formal complaint with the Federal Trade Commission earlier this month against some of the worst offenders--among them, NBC Universal, Major League Baseball and the National Football League--alleging that the statements used by these corporations often include gross misrepresentations of federal law and characterize as unlawful acts that are explicitly permitted by law. NBC Universal immediately characterized the complaint as "frivolous," which pretty much sums up how the company feels about the rights of its consumers.

Consumer rights in the digital age are not frivolous. We have them, we should protect them, and U.S. copyright law guarantees them. Consumers may copy, distribute, perform and transmit portions of a publication or work provided that such use constitutes "fair use," which is a legal way of saying that we can enjoy limited and nonlicensed use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holder.

Fair use is not merely a nice concept--it is a federal law based on free speech rights under the First Amendment and is a cornerstone of the creativity and innovation that is a hallmark of this country.

However, with the advent of the digital age, fair use has gone missing. Warnings attached to movies, sports broadcasts and other media often provide wildly misleading information about consumer rights under copyright law. For example, warnings on many Universal DVDs state, in part, that "any unauthorized exhibition, distribution or copying of this film or any part thereof (including soundtrack) is an infringement of the relevant copyright and will subject the infringer to severe civil and criminal penalties."

This statement is simply untrue--the federal copyright statutes specifically allow unauthorized reproduction for criticism, commentary and other purposes. Just recently, the NFL threatened the media by withholding press credentials for any organization that showed more than 45 seconds of a game.

This is not the way forward. We should not permit rights holders to use copyright law to create new powers for themselves. Even as we urge consumers to respect the law--and we should--large copyright owners have the same obligation.

Scaring their customers is not educating them. Misleading and threatening them, at the end of the day, hurts everyone, including the copyright holders themselves. Copyright law was never intended to serve as a big stick for the rights holder to wield against the freedom of information and ideas. We hope the FTC agrees.

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  • Most Recent of 22 Talkback(s)
Oh, yes you can say anything about anybody
In the USA, every citizen, resident and visitor can say anything about anybody. That is the essence of free speech. Most other countries and regimes can prosecute folks for saying what they think and ... (Read the rest)
Posted by: Ngallendou Posted on: 08/28/07 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
I totally agree  kcredden2 | 08/27/07
Cornerstone of the creativity and innovation that is a hallmark of USA  mighetto | 08/27/07
I was speaking to a patent lawyer, recently.  I am Gorby | 08/27/07
Article is exactly right.  cjcoats | 08/27/07
Not holding my breath ...  terry flores | 08/27/07
What can you expect when  maldain | 08/27/07
Disclosure?  dunraven | 08/27/07
Re: Disclosure?  none none | 08/27/07
You are absolutely right  Ole Man | 08/27/07
Copyright Disclosure or Golden Rule  madrucke@... | 08/27/07
Golden Rule  djt34175@... | 08/28/07
Finally, Someone sticks it to them!  sheng.long@... | 08/27/07
As this article speaks of the sports scams...  rmfenn@... | 08/27/07
Yep, vote with your wallets, many people do...  Old Timer 8080 | 08/27/07
You said it Bro!  Ole Man | 08/27/07
What is Fair Use?  Patanjali | 08/27/07
and fair use covers personal copy's of content you paid for. you seemed to  SO.CAL Guy | 08/27/07
Oh, yes you can say anything about anybody  Ngallendou | 08/28/07
But...Who's beed sued for Fair Use?  Sickthing | 08/28/07
Re: But...  STDog | 08/28/07
LETS TALK!!!!!!  mikeholli | 08/28/07
Regardless of dire warnings: We have the RIGHT to Copy Digital Media  XweAponX | 08/28/07

What do you think?

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