Don't Let Retraction Distract From The Simple Fact: GOP Copyright Policy Brief Was Brilliant
from the don't-forget-it dept
While there's been plenty of attention paid over the weekend to the fact that the Republican Study Committee (RSC), the conservative caucus of House Republicans, pulled its report on copyright reform after some entertainment industry lobbyists hit the phones/emails late Friday/early Saturday (and, no, it wasn't directly to RSC, for the most part, but to "friendly" members asking them to express their "displeasure" with the report to the RSC leadership). But we shouldn't let that distract from the simple fact that the report was brilliant -- perhaps the most insightful and thoughtful piece of scholarship on copyright to come out of a government body in decades. You can still read the whole thing as uploaded to Archive.org.Some people have set up a petition at Change.org asking the RSC to republish and stand behind the policy brief. Others are saying you should contact your own Representatives directly and ask them to support the report. For example, Dave Weinberger wrote a wonderful letter to his own Representative, telling him that he should take a look at the report, and that he should use it as a starting point "for a conversation this country very much needs."
It seems unlikely that the RSC will bring it back, despite the quality of the report. But one hopes that the massive outpouring of support (seriously, just check Twitter) will lead politicians from both parties to recognize that sensible and smart copyright reform is a topic that gets people excited -- and one thing they're sick of is decades of both parties simply falling all over themselves to distort copyright to favor a few dominant Hollywood players.
Because the GOP has chickened out, we're going to try to do a series of posts analyzing the various aspects of the report, starting with the three myths about copyright it debunks, followed by four policy recommendations, to see if we can further the discussion. Look for those posts in the coming days and weeks.
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Filed Under: copyright, copyright reform, gop, policy, policy brief, republicans, rsc
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Unless those people are willing to throw millions of dollars at the politicians, I doubt they'll care. :(
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Recording FUD & the GOP report
If the gatekeepers believed their own FUD statistics about the necessity of draconian copyright laws, I doubt they would have mounted such a spirited call for the retraction.
In the end, it seems to be "all about the benjamins" (
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Despite the foot-in-mouth retraction, I'm glad it was released, even momentarily. You can't un-say something like this, and hopefully it keeps generating these kinds of conversations we so sorely need to have.
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Petition Quality
I'm disappointed, however, in the quality of the petition linked here. Frankly, it is very poorly worded. I would be hard-pressed to take it seriously as a result of the incompetence portrayed by its content.
Can we possibly create a new one with more clear and effective wording? The reason I'm posting this here is because the TechDirt link will likely have tremendous impact, and I don't want that impact to go to waste.
I don't care who owns the petition, but decent content would most definitely enhance its impact.
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Because the GOP wants Hollywood votes?
Hahaha, don't be silly. That would be too much thought.
Hollywood has $$$$.
Also, Republicans would never kowtow since it's no 'Merican enuff. They think it's ornemental or sumthin'.
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Oh, I think the politicians care. It's just they care more when money helps to grease the bearings their opinions and moral compasses are attached to.
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Perhaps you read a different report from the one I read.
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By comparison for how these papers don't matter, FDR when originally campaigning for his 1st term for president wasn't promising ANY of the big government things associated with him. Quite the opposite, he was promising stuff like balancing the budget and cutting the national debt. But then FDR took office, and became known as one of the biggest pro-big government presidents ever.
And no, the situation didn't really change from when he campaigned and by the time he got into the office, the great depression started several years before he took office. FDR simply said and promised one thing in his speeches and policy papers, and then did another thing.
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If we can get some money behind this it will force the government to accept the right bribes this time, and then Hollywood can complain that they did not have enough money to blackmail the government into giving them there way. Just imagine giving each senator 1 million each in a check on the house floor to vote for this change,I would love to see Hollywood's faces when they realised they had lost by a group using there tactics against them, then maybe we could start getting money out of politics when Hollywood starts complaining how it was money that changed the laws for the citizens interest and not the monopolists.
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"Republicans" picking winners and losers, is all.
Take a moment for Mike "Streisand Effect" Masnick and click:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect
Actual unsolicited testimonial: "Until I read Techdirt.com, I didn't know what shameless self-promotion was!"
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Really PublicKnowledge?
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Re: "Republicans" picking winners and losers, is all.
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Voters trump money. Every time. Every single time. If the voters speak, no amount of money will change that.
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Re: Really PublicKnowledge?
Calls have MUCH more impact than emails.
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I actually don't think that's true. As far as I can tell, the core of the suggestions could be done well within our existing agreement.
But, really, we shouldn't let international agreements from over 100 years ago stop us from doing what's right.
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These agreements are not set in stone, they are not immutable.
It becomes clear from reading the report that it is perfectly clear if you stop believing the hype they are doing much more harm than good. That the law has been pushed, twisted, and abused to benefit only corporations. This agreement which was supposed to benefit creators and society is now focused solely on corporations who acquire these rights and wield them as weapons against innovation, inspiration, new ideas, or anything they fear.
I do not think they went far enough in the analysis, leaving out how the rightholders have crafted a system that prevents the pursuit of a global market. This is detrimental to the business model now, but it allowed them to kill any idea that might challenge their domination of the market. Instead of patching a broken system, it is time to start over and the suggested system is a first good step but needs more global consideration to reflect the fact we are in a new century and that far removed from the start.
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It was so weirdly good.
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Well of course not. Take a look at who owns the majority of mainstream media. They are basically the same people who pressured to RSC to retract the report.
But, I'm not convinced it matters. The SOPA/PIPA protests where virtually ignored by the MSM right up until the very end and even then they spun it as "those pesky internet kids who want free stuff are up in arms!".
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Re: "Republicans" picking winners and losers, is all.
Wow...
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Re: "Republicans" picking winners and losers, is all.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20111208/12500917012/riaa-doesnt-apologize-year-long-blog-cen sorship-just-stands-its-claim-that-site-broke-law.shtml
HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA HA
*thought I had forgotten ootb?
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Some Problems with the Whole DJ Section
First of all, "DJ's" is a possessive noun, in as far as "DJ" can be considered proper usage. At the least, it should be written "DJs" or more correctly as "disc jockeys." If they want to use it as a verb, it is "deejay" or "deejaying."
Just saying, if you're going to present this kind of stuff in the capital of the country, get the details right.
Second, deeming the US DJ market as "retarded" is, well, retarded. The main reason remix/sample culture may seem more stagnant in the US (and I see little proof that this is in fact the case) is because this sort of stuff has been mainstream here for almost forty years. Kids in the Bronx were tearing apart the foundations of American music back in the late '70s; that method of music creation simply doesn't have the same impact it once did.
Kids on the internet, who are a little more sheltered from their own culture, may think "mash-ups" are new art, but they betray their own lack of engagement with that outlook. "Blending" records dates back at least to the '60s with people like John Oswald.
But seriously, comparing our scene with Turkey?! I know Turkish DJs who would knee-walk across glass to get a shot at the US market.
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No there hasn't.
Nobody gives a flying fuck about this except crazed anti-copyright zealots like yourself and others here.
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Rightsholders have proven themselves to be unworthy of the power that laws hand them. If the claim is that pirates are whiners who have their binky taken away (whatever the hell that means) the same is applicable to rightsholders.
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Get it right.
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At least the GOP seems to realize that they need to update some policies to start winning again, so they are at least entertaining new controversial ideas to see how the voters respond....
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I suspect this is a 'stalking horse'
If the voters go for it then claim it was your idea all along and proceed to implement it. As many have said, people who vote have far more power ultimately than those who bribe; if you don't get the votes you won't get the bribes anyway. If enough voters clamour for this it could be the start of something enormously beneficial to the whole of mankind. This really could be big. All you American voters should shout very loudly and continuously in favour of this, as I am quite certain receptive ears will be listening in high places. If these politicians get enough votes they will not need bribes.
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Re: Some Problems with the Whole DJ Section
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Copyright
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back to smelling your own farts even in a room that could not smell worse, wow, just wow.
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back to smelling your own farts even in a room that could not smell worse, wow, just wow.
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you will get zero votes if you have zero money, (your mom might vote for you)..
policy and integrity wins votes, but to get ANY votes at all (to run) you need MONEY..
if you cannot understand that voting IS ALL ABOUT MONEY, then you really have not been paying attention Mr Masnick..
or you prefer to distort the truth, you know the FACTS to suit your own biases, again, no unexpected, it's just what you do..
but if all you have is a hammer in your toolbox, after awile everything starts to look like a nail.
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it's information for the sake of information, it would probably have been used (or still could be) to develop counter arguments, or for alternatives suggestions.
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Re: Re: Really PublicKnowledge?
sorry probably gave way to much credit for emails or 'internet' partitions, it's probably more like a 10% NEGATIVE effect..
so knock yourself out with that partition, go your hardest, i wish you all the luck you can get.. you REALLY need it..
and when you have a poorly worded petition, that people are not even happy to sign EVEN IF they agree with it, you have a MAJOR problem..
masnick, your trying to push a sloppy shit uphill with a pointy stick on a hot day, blindfolded..
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yea, all the big media companies all got together to 'cover it up' !!!!!!..
you need to go back to your uni-bomber style hut and have a bit of a rest..
do you honestly believe that anyone (except the pirates and mike, king pirate) gives a flying fuck about this issue, do you think anyone cares ?? (except those who want the big media companies to make good things for them to steal)..
Geeezzz you would have thought if it was such an important issue that SOME PARTY would have mentioned it ONCE or twice during the recent election you had !!! did they..
did any party even mention copyright reform to try to get elected ??
no, and you dont have to be too bright to work out why !!!
but you obviously have to be somewhat brighter than Masnick and his ilk.
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Given you arrived with your diarrhoea postings flogging the same decaying topic no wonder there is a "wow, just wow" smell. Given this is an electronic medium - any smell you are going on about is from yourself.
Nut up, put on your big boy pants, and either provide actual substantive responses (instead of repeating the same insults topic after topic) or just go away.
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I believe it is a plank in the US Pirate Party platform.
Just because a discussion didn't make prime time TV doesn't mean a mention didn't happen.
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you just wait, one day masnick will get a run on the board, then you'll see that all these years and years and years and years of 'hard' 'work' will have all been worth it..
wont that be a glorious day indeed, it will be a complete vindication of Masnicks life and career to date !!!! crowning glory, allah ackbar.. !!!
I mean all the masnick watchers have seen the huge effects and massive benifits his work has done to change the face of copyright... oh wait..
perhaps "the man" masnick himself would like to detail the huge impacts his years of effort has had on the industry.. sweeping reforms, laws changed, peoples attitudes altered !!! (all 6 of em)..
(if you do something for years and years and years, and it's not working, do you keep doing it??? or try something elese ?? )
I guess in masnicks case, as long as Google keep slinging him some 'cash for comment' the rest is not important, it cant be, because if it was, he would have actually made a different.
click bait are not facts...
why dont you tell us what your achieved masnick,, im sure it wont take more than a few seconds.. probably NO time at all !!!!!!
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and btw: how did they do in the recent elections in the US ?? alot of popular support ?? many votes, and seats ? anything ???
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Wait. You are comparing me to the uni-bomber in semi-psychotic, non-capitalized ranting comment like that? I could almost picture the spittle flying onto your screen as you typed.
So tell me, why is it so important to you to discredit this report at all costs?
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Re: Re: Re: Really PublicKnowledge?
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When the trolls come out on this level of offensive you know you've struck a nerve. This report could be at best a game changer, and at the very least a springboard to start an open conversation about a subject that sorely needs it. This conversation scares the living shit out of the content industry. When you consider the amount of time and money they've poured into purchasing prior legislation and trade agreements, nothing could be a worse return on their investment than an open debate. IP law is so ridiculously one-sided that any level of real debate could only result in reducing the current terms.
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I did not realize that in your head posting facts is "getting someone".
killer blow !!!
Any 'killer blow' here is a mirror into your own headspace because all I did was post a fact. Rather sad that you see a 'fact' as a 'killer blow' to your worldview.
In the interest of facts - a URL to a press release. http://pirate-party.us/news/article/uspp-condemns-retraction-gop-report
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Poor, poor darryl. How miserable it must be to live a life where your mouth is the same as your asshole.
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If this topic brings out such venom attempting to poison the conversation pit that must mean Techdirt is far more of an influence maker than it appears to be at 1st glance.
When the 1 million to shut up for a year fee is paid, we'll know Mike made the big time.
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YOU KILLED MY DOG! YOU BASTARD!!
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Re: Re: Some Problems with the Whole DJ Section
The only exception is when there are periods: M.D. gets the apostrophe, DJ and TV do not.
Anyway, I do agree that the "DJ industry" section was weakly argued and given way too much space. The technical illegality of most DJ mixes is just one of many ways in which copyright acts in opposition to culture; it would be better to just talk about that subject and use DJing, remixing, re-editing, and sampling as examples.
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Dude. The meds are your friends. Remember this. Ok? The....Meds....Are....Your....Friends.
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Re: Recording FUD & the GOP report
Since then Chris Dodd must have been having screaming nightmares about this very day. Suddenly their is a view on copyright law in Congress not put there by the entertainment industry. Certainly they will bring in all their forces to quickly erase this hated document with a "move along, nothing to see here"
I am very enthusiastic about this call for copyright reform when this is no greedy document taking control or seizing resources. This is simply addressing real problems that exist and adding in something called "fairness". We should certainly get behind this document when it could be many years before something else pops up like this if we don't. This is the type of copyright reform we want to see and since this documents is pure genius then it would prove very hard indeed for any sane person to mount arguments against this.
I do strongly believe that we do hold power to enable such copyright law reform. Only a few years ago I would not have expected to see such reform in my lifetime but out of our annoyance and anger look what amazing things we have already achieved. Even if this document fails there has already been big gain here but if you truly believe that a major reform of copyright law is due then just maybe a big reform of copyright law is due.
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If they screw the funders too hard they're out of campaign even though they could have gotten votes, if they screw voters too hard with empty promises, all the campaign money in the world won't get them back in the seat of power.
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GOP on CR
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One thing that I would change
That sounds fair to me. What do you think?
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(Spoken as a fantasy game fan ;)
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