(legal term)
Can occur
online and thus falls in the broad-based category of “cyberspace theft.” An
example is copying anotherÂ’s work, such as songs, articles, movies, or
software, from an online source without being authorized to do so. In January
2000, one of the cases to make headlines in the United States was the Internet
free speech and copyright civil court case involving 2600: The Hacker Quarterly, Universal Studios, and
members of the Motion Picture Association of America. Here, legal issues
emerged around 2600Â’s alleged
violation of the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act (DMCA) when in November 1999 the hacker publication linked
to and discussed a computer program called DeCSS, which is DVD decryption
software. The complainants objected to the publication of DeCSS because, they
argued, it could be used as part of a process to infringe copyright on DVD
movies. In their defense, representatives of 2600
claimed that decryption of DVD movies is necessary for a number of reasons,
including to make “fair use” of movies. In the end, the hacker magazine lost
the case.
The social issue of infringing intellectual property rights
and copyright has drawn considerable debate from those who fight for freedom of
information and from those who fight against abuses of artistsÂ’ rights. For
this reason, during the 2004 U.S. Presidential campaign, the INDUCE Act, or
Inducing Infringement of Copyright Act of 2004, was proposed by Senator Orrin
Hatch (R-UT). If passed, the Act could have killed the market for digital music
devices such as Apple iPods, which copy music from usersÂ’ computers. The INDUCE
Act would have criminalized digital music technologies because they could be
viewed as inducing others to infringe copyright. When news about the INDUCE Act
surfaced, hacktivists went to work, constructing Websites such as www.Savetheipod.com
to motivate music lovers to send letters of opposition to Congress. The
electronics Industry and the Electronic
Frontier Foundation (EFF) also lobbied against it. The INDUCE Act met
its demise in October 2004, but if it had passed, this far-reaching piece of
legislation could have forced electronic companies and Internet services to get
permission for each new technology developed.
See Also:
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA); Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF); Hacker Quarterly Magazine (a.k.a. 2600).
Dixon, G. Proposed Act Could Have Killed Digital Music Devices. The Globe and Mail, December 4, 2004,
p. R12; Schell, B.H., Dodge, J.L., with S.S. Moutsatsos. The Hacking of America: WhoÂ’s Doing It, Why,
and How. Westport, CT: Quorum Books, 2002; Schell, B.H. and Martin, C. Contemporary World Issues Series:
Cybercrime: A Reference Handbook. Santa Barbara, CA: ABC-CLIO, 2004;
www.Savetheipod.com. Save the ipod, Stop the INDUCE Act. [Online, May 3, 2005.]
Savetheipod.com Website. http://www.savetheipod.com/index1.php.