RIAA's Favorite Lawyer Tells Senate Committee He Hopes DOJ Can Focus More On IP
from the here-it-comes dept
We've been talking about how the various favorite lawyers of the big content lobbying organizations all seem to be ending up in the Justice Department. Some have pointed out that these lawyers will most likely be focused on other DOJ business, since IP issues aren't a major issue within Justice. They also point out that folks in the Justice Department have very little impact on policy. That may be true... but at the hearings to confirm Tom Perrelli as associate attorney general, he did talk quite a bit about IP issues, saying that he hopes the Justice Department will bring renewed focus on the issue, while noting that existing US intellectual property laws "don't seem to be addressing the problem." As a starting point, that's not a great sign, especially since he focuses on the supposed "problem" when it's not even clear that there is a problem. He claims it's "counterfeiting" and "piracy" but we've already seen that piracy isn't a problem -- smart business models address that. And, as for counterfeiting, both the OECD and the GAO have made it clear that any "problem" has been massively exaggerated by industry lobbyists -- such as those Perrelli used to work for.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Filed Under: associate attorney general, obama, tom perrelli
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Payback
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Re: Payback
btw, wasn't it BHO who swore lobbyists would not be welcome in his administration ? I guess change is change.
Someone ought to patent saying one thing and doing the complete opposite. They can't run a re-election campaign without all that cash from the lobbyists they swore they wouldn't succumb to.
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re-election campaign
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Re: re-election campaign
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Welcome to
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Just a gentle reminder
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True capatilisim
Because Capatilisim is only efficent when it's transparent
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Piracy is a HUGE issue
Smart Business plans or not, it is illegal to copy someone's music or movie or anything else without their permission. Get off your high horse and face the law...
I would actually welcome the justice department getting involved in the Copyright problem. At least then there will be checks and balances on who is charged and who is not.
As it is now the RIAA can slap a lawsuit on anyone they want, and to prove your innocence you will spend thousands on lawyers and have no way to recover those fees.
At least under the Justice Department, two things come into play, they will have to convince a prosecutor to prosecute you, and in addition you have the right to have an attorney appointed to represent you.
Granted moving this to the Justice Department is going to cost Tax Payers more money, but at least the extortion that the RIAA is using will go away. There will be less grandparents who are barely able to check email being accused etc...
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Re: Piracy is a HUGE issue
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Re: Piracy is a HUGE issue
Smart Business plans or not, it is illegal to copy someone's music or movie or anything else without their permission. Get off your high horse and face the law...
Problem implies someone is being *hurt* by it. Yet, as we've shown, smart business models mean that no one needs to be hurt. This shouldn't even be on the DOJ's radar.
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Re: Piracy is a HUGE issue
And ... in the bonus round ... they still have option of suing you in civil court (which is where it belongs in the first place).
The criminal case does nothing to mitigate the civil case.
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Re: Piracy is a HUGE issue
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Re: Piracy is a HUGE issue
"I would actually welcome the justice department getting involved in the Copyright problem. At least then there will be checks and balances on who is charged and who is not."
I never thought I would actually see someone write this and actually mean it, "I, for one welcome our new robot overlords."
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