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Politech
mailing list archives
FC: "Free Dmitry" protests still on; Publishers laud prosecution
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Sat, 21 Jul 2001 13:31:16 -0400
Politech archive on U.S. v. Sklyarov:
http://www.politechbot.com/cgi-bin/politech.cgi?name=sklyarov
"Pravda" article:
http://english.pravda.ru/usa/2001/07/18/10431.html
More-or-less master list of protest sites:
http://www.boycottadobe.com/pages/rallies.html
"Adobe Tries to Quell Protest":
http://www.wired.com/news/business/0,1367,45437,00.html
---
http://www.publishers.org/home/press/index.htm
for immediate release
July 19, 2001
Allan Adler, 202-220-4544
Amy Gwiazdowski, 202-220-4550
Publishers Hail Government Action Against Russian Ebook Hackers
Washington, DC: The nation's largest association of book and
journal publishers today hailed the actions of the U.S. Department
of Justice in arresting and charging a Russian cryptographer for
trafficking in software that was primarily designed to "hack"
technological safeguards that prevent unauthorized copying and
distribution of ebooks.
The actions at issue were taken in accordance with provisions of
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which was enacted by
Congress in 1998 to implement two international copyright treaties
that were adopted by the World Intellectual Property Organization
(WIPO) and endorsed by the United States and nearly 100 other
nations two years earlier. Among other things, the DMCA prohibits
the manufacture or distribution of products or services that are
primarily designed or produced to circumvent technological
protection measures used by copyright owners, thereby meeting the
treaties' requirement that signatory countries provide "adequate
legal protection and effective legal remedies against
circumvention" of such measures.
According to news reports and documents filed by the Justice
Department in the case, Dmitry Sklyarov is the alleged author of a
program, "Advanced eBook Processor," which was designed to unlock
and strip the technological protection measures from the "eBook
Reader" produced by Adobe Systems Incorporated. Sklyarov, who was
arrested a day after addressing a "hackers convention" in Las Vegas
on the subject of this software, is an employee of ElcomSoft, a
Russian software company that has allegedly been selling the
software through its website.
Pat Schroeder, President and Chief Executive Officer of the
Association of American Publishers (AAP), hailed the Justice
Department's actions as consistent with the DMCA's
"anticircumvention" provisions and the underlying Congressional
intent to promote the availability of books and other copyrighted
works on the Internet and in other digital formats.
According to Mrs. Schroeder, "It's only common sense to expect
that, if the public wants desirable books to be available online
and through other digital media like the Adobe Reader, the authors
and publishers who have the legal rights to commercially exploit
such works in the global digital marketplace must have reasonable
assurances that the market value of their works can be protected
from the extraordinary risks of illegal reproduction and
distribution that are made possible by the capabilities of digital
media. Congress understood this when it enacted the DMCA to help
promote the online availability of copyrighted works."
"Distribution of the means to strip ebooks of their access and
copyright protections is not a public service, any more than it
would be a public service to distribute the keys that unlock a
bookstore or public library," Mrs. Schroeder said. "It merely
facilitates theft, and makes it less likely that ebooks will soon
become a popular reading format."
The Association of American Publishers is the national trade
organization of the U.S. book publishing industry. AAP's 310
members include most of the major commercial publishing houses,
along with many small and medium-sized houses, university presses,
and scholarly societies. Among the Association's top priorities is
the protection of intellectual property rights in all media.
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