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FC: Entertainment lobbyists have new opponent: Verizon and Baby Bells
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 27 Aug 2002 15:58:40 -0400
http://news.com.com/2008-1082-955417.html?tag=politech
Why telecoms back the pirate cause
By Declan McCullagh
August 27, 2002, 12:00 PM PT
ASPEN, Colorado--The copyright wars on Capitol Hill have
begun to drift into the political equivalent of trench warfare, with
Hollywood and the music industry pitted against hardware makers,
electronics manufacturers, and ragtag activists at nonprofit groups.
Now consumers have a powerful new ally. Verizon and other
telecommunications giants have ordered their phalanx of lobbyists to
oppose the entertainment industry's demands for new copyright laws.
The company is also fighting the Recording Industry Association of
America's request for information about a subscriber.
So at the center of the copyright scrum, you'll find Sarah Deutsch.
The 41-year-old Deutsch, a vice president and associate general
counsel at Verizon, represented her employer during the negotiations
over the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) copyright
treaties and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). These days,
she is marshaling the opposition to proposals in Congress that would
permit attacks on peer-to-peer networks, boost technology used for
digital rights management, and grant more power to copyright holders.
CNET News.com sat down with Deutsch, who was recently in town for a
Progress and Freedom Foundation conference, to talk about this looming
confrontation over digital copyright law.
Q: The Recording Industry Association of America wants you to reveal
the name of a subscriber who's an alleged peer-to-peer pirate, but
you're saying they're not following the appropriate legal procedure.
What's the dispute?
A: Verizon looked carefully at the subpoena. This is different from
anything they had sent us in the past. (Those) always applied to
material residing on our system or network (instead of a peer-to-peer
node). It created a very difficult policy issue for us. We understand
that RIAA has a problem and needs this information. At the same time,
we have an equally legitimate concern that they comply with the proper
legal process. We believe this is a very important case of first
impression and should not be rushed.
[...]
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