RIAA Gets Tennessee Law To Force Universities To Filter Networks For Copyrighted Content
from the the-riaa-never-sleeps dept
After more than a decade of watching the entertainment industry (mainly the RIAA and the MPAA), one thing I've learned is that the organization never gives up in pushing its legislative agenda. If there's a setback in one area, you can be sure that others from the organization are eagerly pushing the exact same rules through some other angle. The typical MO is that they try to get federal legislation passed in their favor. However, if that fails, they switch to the fallback plans which involve international treaties and state laws. Both of these are great because they tend to get a lot less scrutiny. State laws are a bit of a pain, because you have to get a few of them approved to create the "groundswell" that makes other states jump on board, but changes to state laws can often pass through under the radar.That appears to be what's happening in the effort to force universities to install filters monitoring their networks for any unauthorized transmissions. You may recall that the RIAA pushed strongly to get Congress to pass laws requiring filters. Basically, the entertainment industry first flat-out lied (yes, lied) about how big a problem file sharing on campus was, and that got some Congressional Reps (with plenty of campaign contributions from the entertainment industry) to introduce legislation punishing universities if they didn't filter their networks. Widespread outcry against that legislation helped water it down, but it appears the industry just moved on to state legislatures.
The RIAA is now celebrating the fact that Tennessee has passed legislation that requires universities to install filters if they've received at least 50 DMCA requests. Considering the massive number of DMCA notices that the RIAA has been known to file, this is hardly a large hurdle. The law will cost Tennessee taxpayers nearly $10 million in the first year, and another $1.5 million each year -- based on the state's own estimates. And for what? To put in filters that won't work, just to try to prop up an obsolete business model from legacy players in an industry that needs to learn how to adapt to the market?
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Filed Under: copyright, filtering, tennessee, universities
Companies: mpaa, riaa
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The only solution ...
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for everyone else...oh right they get screwed as usual
bad laws get passed
innocents get sued/expelled/bankrupted
universities pay for upkeep and installation of filters
network expansion is restricted by the use of such filters
riaa still doesn't make more from sales
riaa still doesn't 'lose' less from piracy
piracy doesn't go down
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Re:
Real Ignorant Arrogant Assholes
; )
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Wow
Remember to always use PeerGuardian and DL away.
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Easy to fix
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A.
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Re:
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At least I'm finally off their networks; good grief.
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Oh - ok.
It all makes so much more sense now. Thank you.
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Re: Re:
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RIAA
JR
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Re: RIAA
Please google 'RIAA' and it is all over the net how much they hate their customers. They are driven by one thing and one thing only, money. And they will extract it any way they possibly can. Including getting legislators at any level to pass laws where it sues public funds to enforce their private agenda.
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Re: Re: RIAA (typo)
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Tennessee
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Re: Tennessee
Fun fact: you're the one paying for this.
Also: it doesn't matter, really, who wrote it. Find out who voted for it and campaign to have them removed in the next round of elections.
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Re: Tennessee
http://www.zeropaid.com/news/9845/Tennessee+Governor+Signs+Campus+Piracy+Bill+into+Law/
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$10 mil ?
If you use figures in your argument, you might be able to explain them, or tell us were you saw these numbers. What government source?
JR
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Re: $10 mil ?
http://www.legislature.state.tn.us/info/Leg_Archives/105GA/bills/FiscalNotes/SB3974.pdf
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details
http://oit.utk.edu/copyright/blocked/
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Tax CDs
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RIAA, death and taxes - what they all have in common
Our tax dollars are not only saving billionaire bankers from their own bad habits, they're also helping to bail out the recording industry. Does the RIAA really truly need our help? I don't think so.
More here: http://blogs.computerworld.com/riaa_tax
cheers,
dt
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-every file on internet is legal, or isn't it?
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