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Showing posts with label
Copyright Act
.
Show all posts
Showing posts with label
Copyright Act
.
Show all posts
Saturday, March 19, 2011
Obama Proposes Harsh New Copyright Laws for Internet
Do Obama's Proposed New Copyright Laws Go Too Far? (Part I)
Obama Administration IP Czar Victoria Espinel
David Makarewicz,
Contributing Writer
Activist Post
On Tuesday, the White House's Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator, Victoria Espinel, provided Congress with a White Paper (available for download
here
), outlining a series of the Obama Administration's recommended legislative changes to combat online piracy and counterfeiting. Significantly, the recommendations include making it a felony offense to stream infringing content and giving Federal agencies wiretapping authority to obtain evidence of criminal copyright and trademark offenses.
Read more »
Thursday, March 17, 2011
New Proposal to Wiretap Suspected Infringers Raises Privacy Concerns
This is Part II of a series of articles analyzing specific aspects of the Obama Administration's White Paper (available for download
here
), recommending legislative changes to combat online piracy and counterfeiting. Click
here
for if you missed our overview of the White Paper in Part I.
David Makarewicz,
Contributing Writer
Activist Post
One of the most troubling recommendations in the White Paper is the Obama Administration's request for Congress to grant its enforcement agencies the power "seek a wiretap for criminal copyright and trademark offenses." This would require Congress to amend the Wiretap Act, which does not currently include copyright and trademark infringement among the offenses that justify a privacy invasion as extreme as a wiretap.
In order to preserve the private nature of communications, the Wiretap Act (as amended by the The Electronic Communications Privacy Act of 1986),
18 U.S.C. § 2511
, makes it generally illegal for anyone, including the Government, to "intercept, any wire, oral, or electronic communication." However, the law has carved out certain exceptions to this rule under which the Government can request permission to intercept certain communications for a limited time.
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