Jul. 04, 2006

EFF prefers litigation to legislation
ANICK JESDANUN
Associated Press

http://www.mercurynews.com/mld/mercurynews/business/technology/14965625.htm


SAN FRANCISCO - A year after moving its headquarters to Washington, D.C., 
the Electronic Frontier Foundation was already in the hot seat.

Before Congress was a proposal to require telecommunications companies to 
build their networks in a way that would let law enforcement easily wiretap 
calls. The EFF and other civil-liberties groups were naturally opposed.

But then the EFF struck a deal, agreeing to support legislation known as 
the Communications Assistance for Law Enforcement Act, or CALEA, in 
exchange for additional privacy protections. The bill became law in late 1994.

Many EFF supporters complained about that compromise, and the organization 
left for San Francisco the following year and soon returned to its roots in 
litigation. In a parting that wasn't entirely amicable, some EFF staffers 
stayed behind to form the Center for Democracy and Technology, or CDT, to 
help shape legislation.

By shunning compromise, the EFF is left in a position of challenging what 
it considers bad laws rather than preventing their passage in the first 
place. But the EFF says it'll have it no other way.

"It's in the nature of Washington organizations to regard keeping a place 
at the table with paramount interest," EFF co-founder and board member John 
Perry Barlow said. "You know you're going to deal with them another day, 
and you're very inclined to compromise, make deals."

Better to stay out of lobbying completely, EFF executive director Shari 
Steele said.

The EFF is reopening a Washington office on Aug. 1 to tackle Freedom of 
Information Act and other cases, but Steele said the two attorneys there, 
hired from the Electronic Privacy Information Center, won't engage in 
lobbying this time.

Many of EFF's supporters say they'd like to see the organization at the 
lobbying table, but acknowledged that even a noncompromising stance can be 
useful in starting discussions that another group could complete.

"You sort of need to be aggressive just to get the dialogue going," said 
Mike Godwin, a former EFF staff attorney and CDT policy fellow now at Yale 
University.

As litigators, the EFF has won several battles along the way:

_In May, the EFF won for online reporters and bloggers a California appeals 
court ruling that they are entitled to the same protections as traditional 
journalists. The court rejected Apple Computer Inc.'s bid to identify the 
sources of leaked product information.

_The group recently joined in negotiating a settlement with Sony BMG Music 
Entertainment to give millions of consumers free song downloads to 
compensate them for flawed anti-piracy software on compact discs. The EFF 
was one of several to bring lawsuits.

_The EFF affirmed critics' rights in 2004 to circulate internal memos that 
appeared to expose security flaws in Diebold Inc.'s electronic-voting 
machines. A federal judge said Diebold had improperly used copyright claims 
to order the documents removed.

_The organization took on government efforts to treat encryption technology 
as military weapons and won a federal appeals court ruling in 1999 
declaring that computer code is speech that can be freely posted online. 
The government has since relaxed export restrictions as well.

The EFF also has lost some:

_A federal appeals court sided with Hollywood studios in 2002 and ordered 
the publisher of a hackers magazine to remove links to a Norwegian teen's 
software for decrypting and copying DVDs. EFF attorneys had unsuccessfully 
argued that publishing the software was free speech.

_Last summer, the U.S. Supreme Court ruled that the entertainment industry 
can file piracy lawsuits against technology companies caught encouraging 
customers to steal music and movies over the Internet.

Although two lower courts had ruled that technology with legal uses - in 
this case, file-sharing software - shouldn't be barred simply because 
others can use it to commit crimes, the high court ruled that its 1984 
decision on which those rulings were based doesn't mean courts should 
"ignore evidence of intent to promote infringement."

Fred von Lohmann, the EFF attorney who handled the file-sharing case, said 
he'd rather see the EFF battle in the courts than before Congress, noting 
that the judiciary can be an important place where laws get shaped.

"We have armies of lobbyists now watching in Washington and the states," he 
said. "We don't really have that in the court system where just as 
important laws are made."

To learn more about EFF see http://www.eff.org/


================================
George Antunes, Political Science Dept
University of Houston; Houston, TX 77204
Voice: 713-743-3923  Fax: 713-743-3927
antunes at uh dot edu



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