EFFector Vol. 20, No. 11 March 13, 2007 editor@eff.org
A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation
ISSN 1062-9424
In the 417th Issue of EFFector:
- Action Alert - Reform the PATRIOT Act and Stop the Abuse of Surveillance Powers!
- EFF Kills Bogus Clear Channel Patent
- American Studios' Secret Plan to Lock Down European TV Devices
- Yochai Benkler, Cory Doctorow, and Bruce Schneier Win EFF Pioneer Awards
- Senate Committee: Broadcasting Treaty Must Be Limited
- Microsoft Attacks Innovators, Not Just Google
- News Round-Up: Sunshine Week Celebrates Public's Right to Know
- Turkey Takes Away, Then Restores Access to YouTube
- miniLinks (9): Free Speech Ain't Free
- Administrivia
For more information on EFF activities & alerts:
http://www.eff.org/
Make a donation and become an EFF member today!
http://eff.org/support/
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effector: n, Computer Sci. A device for producing a desired
change.
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* Action Alert - Reform the PATRIOT Act and Stop the Abuse
of Surveillance Powers!
The FBI has blatantly abused a key PATRIOT Act provision
and knowingly violated the law to spy on Americans'
telephone, Internet, and other personal records, as
documented in a report released by the Justice Department
last week. Congress must rein in this egregious behavior,
but it can't stop there -- the Bush Administration's
unprecedented pattern of disregarding the law stretches far
beyond the examples in this report. Tell Congress to defend
your privacy now:
http://action.eff.org/site/Advocacy?id=283
Before PATRIOT, the FBI could use so-called National
Security Letters only for securing the records of suspected
terrorists or spies. But under PATRIOT, the FBI can use
them to get private records about anybody without any court
approval as long as it believes the information could be
relevant to an authorized terrorism or espionage
investigation.
According to the Justice Department's Inspector General,
the FBI's misuse of its authority included issuing NSLs to
spy on people who weren't the subject of any existing
investigation whatsoever. The FBI also lied to Congress and
underreported its use of NSLs by many thousands. Worse
still, the FBI has ignored its own lawyers' advice and
intentionally evaded PATRIOT's thin bounds, improperly
requesting and obtaining personal records through so-called
"exigent letters" that Congress never authorized.
That's only a sampling of the horror story painted by the
report, and, had Congress not ordered the Inspector General
to review the FBI's activities last year, these abuses
might have never been revealed. From the moment PATRIOT was
passed, we said the NSL power was ripe for abuse and
unconstitutional, and it's clearer than ever that Congress
should repeal PATRIOT's expansion of NSL powers and reform
the PATRIOT Act as a whole.
Moreover, Congress must broadly investigate the
Administration's use of surveillance powers, including the
NSA's massive and illegal domestic spying program. Congress
and the American public have been kept in the dark about
such clear violations of the law and Americans' privacy for
far too long. Immediate and thorough oversight hearings are
necessary to uncover the truth and hold the Administration
accountable.
Take action now:
http://action.eff.org/site/Advocacy?id=283
EFF press release about the report:
http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2007_03.php#005152
For a brief summary of PATRIOT's expansion of the NSL
power:
http://www.eff.org/patriot/sunset/505.php
For the Inspector General's report:
http://www.usdoj.gov/oig/special/s0703b/final.pdf
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* EFF Kills Bogus Clear Channel Patent
Patent Busting Project Wins Victory for Artists and
Innovators
San Francisco - The U.S. Patent and Trademark Office (PTO)
has announced it will revoke an illegitimate patent held by
Clear Channel Communications after a campaign by the
Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF).
The patent -- owned by Instant Live, a company formerly
owned by Clear Channel and now owned by Live Nation --
covered a system and method of creating digital recordings
of live performances. Clear Channel claimed the bogus
patent created a monopoly on all-in-one technologies that
produce post-concert digital recordings and threatened to
sue those who made such recordings. This locked musical
acts into using Clear Channel technology and blocked
innovations by others.
However, EFF's investigation found that a company named
Telex had in fact developed similar technology more than a
year before Clear Channel filed its patent request. EFF --
in conjunction with patent attorney Theodore C. McCullough
and with the help of Lori President and Ashley Bollinger,
students at the Glushko-Samuelson Intellectual Property
Clinic at American University's Washington College of Law -
- asked the PTO to revoke the patent based on this and
other extensive evidence.
"Bogus patents like this one are good examples of what's
wrong with the current patent system," said EFF Staff
Attorney Jason Schultz. "We're glad that the Patent Office
was willing to help artists and innovators out from under
its shadow."
The Clear Channel patent challenge was part of EFF's Patent
Busting Project, aimed at combating the chilling effects
bad patents have on public and consumer interests. The
Patent Busting Project seeks to document the threats and
fight back by filing requests for reexamination against the
worst offenders.
"The patent system plays a critical role in business and
the economy," said McCullough. "Everyone loses if we allow
overreaching patent claims to restrict the tremendous
benefits of new software and technology development."
For the notice from the Patent Office:
http://www.eff.org/patent/wanted/clearchannel/notice_of_intent_to_cancel.pdf
For more on EFF's Patent Busting Project:
http://www.eff.org/patent
For this press release:
http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2007_03.php#005155
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* American Studios' Secret Plan to Lock Down European TV
Devices
EFF Exposes Standards Jeopardizing Innovation and Consumer
Rights
San Francisco - An international consortium of television
and technology companies is devising draconian anti-
consumer restrictions for the next generation of TVs in
Europe and beyond, at the behest of American entertainment
giants.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is the only public
interest group to have gained entrance into the secretive
meetings of the Digital Video Broadcasting Project (DVB), a
group that creates the television and video specifications
used in Europe, Australia, and much of Asia and Africa. In
a report released today, EFF shows how U.S. movie and
television companies have convinced DVB to create new
technical specifications that would build digital rights
management technologies into televisions. These
specifications are likely to take away consumers' rights,
which will subsequently be sold back to them piecemeal --
so entertainment fans will have to pay again and again for
legitimate uses of lawfully acquired digital television
content.
"DVB is abetting a massive power grab by the content
industry, and many of the world's largest technology
companies are simply watching," said Ren Bucholz, EFF
Policy Coordinator, Americas. "This regime was concocted
without input from consumer rights organizations or public
interest groups, and it shows."
Despite recent record profits, American movie and
television studios insist that new technologies could ruin
their industry. In past battles against innovation, these
same studios sued to block the sale of the VCR and the
first mass-marketed digital video recorder in the U.S.
Having failed in those efforts, they have now turned to
creating technical standards that, when backed by law, are
likely to restrict consumers' existing rights and threaten
the future of technological innovation.
With DVB, the plan begun by entertainment companies in the
U.S. has now gone global. EFF's report is aimed at alerting
European consumer groups and consumers about the dangers
posed by the proposed standards and providing informational
resources for European regulators.
"DVB members' active indifference, even hostility, to user
rights is shameful," said EFF Staff Technologist Seth
Schoen. "When American studios ask for regulatory support
for restrictions pushed through the DVB Project, public
officials must stand up for consumer rights, sustain
competition and innovation, and tell Hollywood to back
off."
For the full report:
http://www.eff.org/IP/DVB/dvb_briefing_paper.php
EFF's 2005 Submission to the U.K. Department of Media,
Sports and Culture:
http://www.eff.org/IP/DVB/dvb_critique.php
For this press release:
http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2007_03.php#005156
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* Yochai Benkler, Cory Doctorow, and Bruce Schneier Win EFF
Pioneer Awards
Mark Cuban, Fred von Lohmann Square Off at Ceremony in San
Diego
San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is
pleased to announce the winners of its 2007 Pioneer Awards:
Professor Yochai Benkler of Yale Law School, writer and
Boing Boing co-editor Cory Doctorow, and security
technologist Bruce Schneier. The award ceremony will
feature a debate between Mark Cuban -- HDNet Chairman and
NBA Dallas Mavericks owner -- and EFF's Fred von Lohmann on
copyright, YouTube and the future of Web 2.0.
The 16th annual Pioneer Awards will be held at 7:30 p.m.,
March 27, at the Manchester Grand Hyatt in San Diego in
conjunction with the O'Reilly Emerging Technology
Conference.
Professor Yochai Benkler of Yale Law School researches the
effects of laws on information, knowledge, and culture in
the digital world. Benkler's important contributions
include a theoretical explanation of how the Internet has
allowed decentralized groups to produce things like
technologies and bodies of knowledge more efficiently than
any centrally organized corporation or trade-based
marketplace could. After the publication of Benkler's most
recent book, "The Wealth of Networks," Lawrence Lessig
called him "the leading intellectual of the information
age."
Cory Doctorow is an activist, writer, blogger, and public
speaker about copyright, digital rights management, and
electronic freedom. As a co-editor of the Boing Boing blog,
he highlights critical technology issues for more than a
million readers a day. Doctorow has lectured around the
globe and has been nominated for Hugo and Nebula Awards for
his science fiction novels. Doctorow is currently the
Canadian Fulbright Chair at the USC Center on Public
Diplomacy. He was EFF's European Affairs Coordinator until
December of 2005.
Bruce Schneier is an internationally renowned security
technologist acclaimed for his criticism and commentary on
everything from network security to national security. His
books -- including the highly influential "Secrets and
Lies" and "Applied Cryptography" -- his monthly newsletter,
and his security blog have reached hundreds of thousands of
people with candid and lucid analysis of security issues.
Schneier has often testified before Congress on security
policy.
"This year's award winners have all provided important
analysis and criticism of our digital world, educating the
public on how electronic systems really work and what it
means to us and our future," said EFF Executive Director
Shari Steele. "I'm thrilled to honor Yochai, Cory, and
Bruce. They are truly pioneers of the electronic frontier."
Since 1991, the EFF Pioneer Awards have recognized
individuals and organizations that have made significant
and influential contributions to the development of
computer-mediated communications and to the empowerment of
individuals in using computers and the Internet. Past
winners include World Wide Web inventor Tim Berners-Lee,
Linux creator Linus Torvalds, science fiction writer Bruce
Sterling, and Wikipedia founder Jimmy Wales, among many
others.
Benkler, Doctorow, and Schneier were nominated by the
public and then chosen by a panel of judges. This year's
panel includes Kim Alexander (President and founder,
California Voter Foundation), Esther Dyson (Internet court
jester and blogger, Release 0.9; founding chairman of
ICANN; former chairman of EFF), Mitch Kapor (Chair, Open
Source Applications Foundation; co-founder and former
chairman EFF), Drazen Pantic (Co-director, Location One),
Barbara Simons (IBM Research [Retired] and former
presidentACM), James Tyre, (Co-founder, The Censorware
Project; EFF policy fellow) and Jimmy Wales, (Founder,
Wikipedia; co-founder, Wikia; chair emeritus of the
Wikimedia
Foundation).
The Pioneer Awards are sponsored by Gold sponsor Sling
Media, the world's leading digital lifestyle company
offering consumer services and products. The Pioneer Awards
are also sponsored by bronze sponsors JibJab,
(www.jibjab.com) MOG, (www.mog.com) and Six Apart
(www.sixapart.com).
Tickets to the Pioneer Awards ceremony are $35. If you plan
to attend, RSVP to events@eff.org. You can also pay for
your tickets in advance at:
http://secure.eff.org/pioneerfundraiser . Members of the
media interested in attending the event should email
press@eff.org.
For more on attending the Pioneer Awards:
http://www.eff.org/awards/pioneer
For this release:
http://www.eff.org/news/archives/2007_03.php#005149
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* Senate Committee: Broadcasting Treaty Must Be Limited
Eighteen months ago, we heard that the controversial
proposed WIPO Broadcasting Treaty was not on the radar of
U.S. congressional representatives. That has changed,
thanks to your letters, and much hard work by a broad
coalition of public interest groups, libraries, tech
industry groups and consumer electronics corporations.
Recently, the Chairman and the Ranking Republican Member of
the key Senate Judiciary Committee weighed in. They sent a
letter to the Register of Copyrights and Director of the
U.S. Patent and Trademark Office, which make up the U.S.'s
delegation to WIPO, expressing their concern with how the
current rights-based treaty draft will impact U.S. law and
stakeholders, and urged the U.S. delegation to advocate at
the next WIPO meeting in June for a revised treaty with a
"significantly narrower scope."
Read more about the letter here:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005144.php
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* Microsoft Attacks Innovators, Not Just Google
In a high-profile speech and an op-ed in the Financial
Times, Microsoft has gone out of its way to attack Google,
claiming that Google's Library Project "systematically
violates copyright" and that YouTube "knowingly tolerates
piracy."
There is something more important here than just the latest
spat between these industry titans: the proper relationship
between copyright and innovation. In these screeds against
Google, Microsoft comes out in favor of "collaboration" --
in other words, asking permission of affected copyright
owners before innovating. It attacks Google for
"unilateralism" -- in other words, innovating without
asking permission first. Microsoft frames the question this
way: "should business models that are built on the backs of
others' intellectual property choose a path that respects
IP, or a path that devalues it?"
Of course, that's a loaded question, as it assumes that
"respecting IP" is equivalent to "asking permission before
innovating." Let's consider all the businesses that are, to
a lesser or greater extent, built on the backs of
copyrighted content:
* MP3 players, iPods
* televisions and TV antennas
* photocopiers
* stereos, speakers, headphones, CD players
* audio cassette recorders
* TiVo, VCRs
* public libraries
* reading glasses
* art gallery audio tours
The common thread between all of them? None of these
businesses asked permission from -- or paid a penny in
royalties to -- copyright owners. In several of these
cases, there had to be lawsuits in order to defend that
principle, just as Google is doing now in several of its
lawsuits.
And it's lucky for Microsoft that prior innovators were
willing to go out on a limb and fight for the freedom to
innovate without asking permission first -- otherwise
Microsoft would have had to ask permission from all the
world's websites before it launched Internet Explorer
(built on the backs of all the websites, without asking
them permission, don't you know).
Of course, there's nothing wrong with voluntarily
undertaking to do more than copyright law requires, as
Microsoft has with its book search product, with the Zune,
and with its proposed video service. But it's something
else altogether to say that "respect for IP" requires such
a thing. In many cases (such as Google's Library Print
Project), it does not.
Remember, if Google wins the Google Library Project
lawsuits, the fair use principle it establishes will
benefit everyone, including those who want to scan books to
compete with Google. Microsoft's "collaborate" principle,
in contrast, will benefit only those companies who are big
enough to get big copyright owners to answer their calls --
a world in which Microsoft will have an unfair advantage.
So kudos to Google for standing up for fair use. And shame
on Microsoft for suggesting that only those who
"collaborate" are entitled to innovate.
For this post and related links:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005146.php
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* News Round-Up: Sunshine Week Celebrates Public's Right to
Know
Government accountability supporters throughout the country
are preparing to celebrate the public's right to know
during Sunshine Week (March 11-17), and it looks like
Congress may have the same idea. On Monday, Reps. William
Lacy Clay, Todd Russell Platts, and Henry Waxman introduced
a bipartisan bill, H.R. 1309, to make several requester-
friendly changes to the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA),
which hasn't been significantly updated since 1996. The
amendments recently got a thumbs-up from the House
Committee on Oversight and Government Reform and could be
on the House floor as early as tomorrow.
Read more about the bill here:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005150.php
Projects like EFF's FOIA Litigation for Accountable
Government (FLAG) project have been working hard to use
statutory tools like FOIA and the Privacy Act to uncover
the misuse of technology by the state. Josh Richman's
overview of FLAG's work in several of Sunday's papers
highlights the work our Washington office does, from
uncovering the edges of the warrantless wiretapping program
to probing the connections between the NSA and Windows
Vista's development:
http://www.insidebayarea.com/oaklandtribune/ci_5412346
EFF's work monitoring Washington developments in the world
of technology are helped by many other dedicated sites,
like OpenCRS, which distributes the fascinating, but
previously restricted, Congressional Research Service
reports, and OpenSecrets, which can illustrate Washington
connections that are otherwise obscure. (Want to know why
Bill Frist was so keen on the audio flag? Inquire within.)
Researchers, coalition groups like Open The Government, and
the politicians behind H.R. 1309 help keep the tools of
exposing government sharp and relevant.
Meanwhile, across the Net, hackers and activists have been
working to extract, sift, and present whatever information
federal and state governments do provide in a way that
ordinary citizens can use. There's now a wealth of sources
to choose from, from the amazing work by the volunteer-run
GovTrack.us, to the new OpenCongress that builds on
GovTrack's database and more, to the many new APIs that can
stitch all of this data together.
For more information about these sites:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005154.php
C-SPAN announced last week that its videos of Congressional
hearings, White House briefings, and other federal events
will be freely available for noncommercial copying,
sharing, and posting, so long as attribution is included.
According to the C-SPAN press release, the move recognizes
that we're in "an age of explosive growth of video file
sharers, bloggers and online citizen journalists."
This is fantastic news! A considerable helping of the
credit belongs to Carl Malamud, who responded to a
copyright kerfuffle involving House Speaker Nanci Pelosi's
use of C-SPAN hearing footage by writing an open letter to
C-SPAN's CEO Brian Lamb challenging him to open up the
archives to enable these kinds of public uses of C-SPAN
content. Several meetings later, it appears C-SPAN decided
to rise to the challenge.
Kudos to Carl, and kudos to C-SPAN. This is an amazing bit
of public service all around. (Full disclosure: EFF
represented Carl in connection with this issue, but we
hardly lifted a finger -- all credit goes to Carl.)
For more information and related links:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005148.php
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* Turkey Takes Away, Then Restores Access to YouTube
In January, Brazilian judges found themselves caught in a
hailstorm of criticism when attempting to prevent all
Brazilians from downloading a salacious video of a
celebrity. When a local ISP's only method of obeying the
order was blocking all of YouTube from Brazil, Brazilian
Net users rose up and complained. The decision was
overturned three days later.
This week, it was Turkey, whose Istanbul First Criminal
Court ordered Turk Telekom to redirect its users away from
YouTube to prevent them from seeing a video that poured
scorn on Turkey and the country's founder, Mustafa Kemal
Ataturk.
As in so many cases of government censorship online,
Turkey's reaction has affected the free speech rights of
thousands of innocent parties. Anti-Ataturk commentary
still exists on YouTube and elsewhere, yet the growing
legions of Turkish net users were denied access to tools to
share their own stories. As one of the four college
students who bravely petitioned the court Thursday, Kursat
Cetinkoz, said: "Banning access to the Website does not
punish those who did that (posted the videos) but the
citizens of the Turkish Republic."
It looks as if the court will restore access now that one
video has been removed. To YouTube's credit, the company
did not remove the video. The original poster appears to
have deleted it from his or her account.
The reaction in Turkey and fear of discovery and
retribution to the creator may have played its part in that
personal decision. For free speech online to grow, we need
to have not only network operators that cannot be
intimidated, but also sufficient safety for speakers'
anonymity. With Tor and other anti-censorship programs,
bypassing the court's censorship was straightforward -- and
publishing via anonymizers helps give intimidated speakers
the confidence to stand their ground.
For this post and related links:
http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/archives/005151.php
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* miniLinks
The week's noteworthy news, compressed.
~ Free Speech Ain't Free
Will Franken, RU Sirius, and more appear in an SF EFF
benefit.
http://www.10zenmonkeys.com/freespeech/
~ The Hidden Rules of Broadband
High-volume users of Comcast find themselves thrown off for
breaking an invisible limit.
http://www.boston.com/business/personaltech/articles/2007/03/12/not_so_fast_broadband_providers_tell_big_users/
~ Do the Record Labels Even Have a Digital Strategy?
"There's no plan, no sense of direction," one digital
retailer executive says. "They're just hoping somebody is
going to figure all this out for them."
http://www.reuters.com/article/musicNews/idUSN0925147620070310
~ "Pirates" Will Buy Tracks at 20-40 Cents
And price analog hole versions of digital tracks as 24
cents cheaper.
http://www.concurringopinions.com/archives/2007/03/whats_the_analo.html
~ Who Owns the Live Music of Days Gone By?
The New York Times on the licensing morass of live music
recordings.
http://www.nytimes.com/2007/03/12/technology/12video.html
~ The Big Brother State
Engaging video of the risks of CCTV and Trusted Computing
http://youtube.com/watch?v=jJTLL1UjvfU
~ Idaho Pulls Out of REAL ID, Alaska DMV Sued for
Supporting It
The rebellion against a national ID system spreads.
http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2007/03/another_state_p.html
~ Cybercrime Treaty: What It Means to Business
"Worldwide law-enforcement agencies, in other words, may
now avail themselves of the opportunity to outsource their
most expensive problems to you."
http://www.cioinsight.com/article2/0,1540,2100916,00.asp
~ Avi Rubin Demands Verifiable Voting
...on American Idol.
http://avi-rubin.blogspot.com/2007/03/american-idol-i-demand-recount.html
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* Administrivia
EFFector is published by:
The Electronic Frontier Foundation
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http://www.eff.org/
Editor:
Derek Slater, Activist
derek@eff.org
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