[AI] Imprisoning the consumer behind a digital firewall

2012-05-25 Thread Vikas Kapoor
The following article appeared in the Hindu editorial page on the implications 
of the recent act pertaining to CopyRight.

Imprisoning the consumer behind a digital firewall
 Srividhya Ragavan 



By introducing Digital Rights Management, the amended Copyright Act could 
compromise the legitimate rights of customers and stifle innovation
 
The Lok Sabha passed the Copyright (Amendment) Bill, 2012 on Tuesday and the 
media have highlighted some of its positive aspects, especially the provision 
for artists to earn lifelong royalty from the commercial use of their works. 

Sadly, a major amendment relating to the introduction of Digital Rights 
Management (DRM) has gone unnoticed. It is unfortunate that such a huge 
amendment which can impact the everyday lives of middle class Indians has been 
introduced without adequate debate and mostly only with industry inputs.

The power of DRM

DRM is like a software code used to manage the rights of copyright owners when 
any copyrighted material like books or songs are transmitted digitally. Unlike 
natural limitations built into the dissemination of hard copies, digital 
dissemination of copyrighted materials is quicker and easier. Hence, copyright 
holders use DRM technology as a self-help measure to prevent unauthorised and 
bulk digital dissemination of copyrighted materials.

These days, for instance, software comes equipped with inbuilt DRM programmes 
that tie it to a limited number of users or devices. A user who buys legal 
software cannot give a copy to a friend - the DRM ties the software to a single 
device or user. Similarly, DRM technology in modern DVD players - termed as 
Content Scramble System (CSS) - prevents users from copying the content. Even 
if a user copies a DVD, the disc will not play in a regular DVD player.

The Kindle example

The problem is such DRM measures can prevent fair-uses authorised under 
copyright laws like copying software from one's own laptop to desktop, or 
copying a DVD for private use. Therein lies the immense power that DRM can 
create over technology corporations. For example, Amazon's Kindle is a wireless 
electronic reading device where users can download books or other materials to 
save one the trouble of carrying bulky books. But, on July 17, 2009, users who 
bought George Orwell's Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four found that Amazon 
had automatically deleted copies of books from their Kindles overnight. DRM 
technology allowed Amazon to enter and delete files in each individual's 
Kindle. Reportedly, the copyright owners decided not to sell the content on 
Kindle. Well, if you had purchased a paper copy of the book, can the company 
send its employees to take it back from your house without explanation and 
prior authorisation while leaving the refund of the purchase price on your 
kitchen table?

Intellectual property misuse

Similarly, unlike in the case of a paper book that can be lent to a friend, an 
e-book will become accessible only to a user whose user name and password match 
- thus affecting the resale rights of the user. Further, in the United States, 
the use of DRM to protect materials that are in the public domain has led to a 
new line of cases cited for intellectual property (IP) misuse that has 
competition law impact. For instance, Lexmark Inc. equipped its printer refill 
cartridges with a DRM code that instructed the printer to only recognise 
Lexmark cartridges. It prevented customers from purchasing cheaper generic 
refill cartridges. Importantly, Lexmark held no IP rights over the printer 
cartridge and hence should be amenable to market competition. Competitors who 
broke the DRM code were sued for circumvention of technology - which is a 
violation in India under section 65B of the present Copyright (Amendment) Bill, 
2012. Notably, in the U.S., it took years for the court to rule on Lexmark's 
misuse of IPR because its DRM did not protect any intellectual property. In 
India, technology companies will get the same level of powers - and 
unfortunately, unlike the U.S., there are no NGOs like the Electronic Frontier 
Foundation to fight such misuse.

In the U.S., DRM measures have also been criticised as having a propensity to 
slow the pace of development - a move that the Joint Parliamentary Committee 
did not take full cognisance of. 

For example, ReplayTV and TiVo were recording devices that allowed users to 
record TV programmes while automatically deleting advertisements. (Imagine the 
pleasure of recording a cricket match without the advertisements.) Turner 
Broadcasting (with other studios) sued the manufacturers, asserting copyright 
violation. The courts forced both device manufacturers to remove the 
record-by-removing-advertisements feature on the grounds that it altered the 
original programme. Consumers, of course, were the ultimate losers but so was 
the new technology.

The treaties

For countries like India, it is important to create research opportunities to 

Re: [AI] Imprisoning the consumer behind a digital firewall

2012-05-25 Thread Lissy Verghese
Sad,
Democracy giving way to industrial dictatorship?

On 5/25/12, Vikas Kapoor dl.vi...@gmail.com wrote:
 The following article appeared in the Hindu editorial page on the
 implications of the recent act pertaining to CopyRight.

 Imprisoning the consumer behind a digital firewall
  Srividhya Ragavan



 By introducing Digital Rights Management, the amended Copyright Act could
 compromise the legitimate rights of customers and stifle innovation

 The Lok Sabha passed the Copyright (Amendment) Bill, 2012 on Tuesday and the
 media have highlighted some of its positive aspects, especially the
 provision for artists to earn lifelong royalty from the commercial use of
 their works.

 Sadly, a major amendment relating to the introduction of Digital Rights
 Management (DRM) has gone unnoticed. It is unfortunate that such a huge
 amendment which can impact the everyday lives of middle class Indians has
 been introduced without adequate debate and mostly only with industry
 inputs.

 The power of DRM

 DRM is like a software code used to manage the rights of copyright owners
 when any copyrighted material like books or songs are transmitted digitally.
 Unlike natural limitations built into the dissemination of hard copies,
 digital dissemination of copyrighted materials is quicker and easier. Hence,
 copyright holders use DRM technology as a self-help measure to prevent
 unauthorised and bulk digital dissemination of copyrighted materials.

 These days, for instance, software comes equipped with inbuilt DRM
 programmes that tie it to a limited number of users or devices. A user who
 buys legal software cannot give a copy to a friend - the DRM ties the
 software to a single device or user. Similarly, DRM technology in modern DVD
 players - termed as Content Scramble System (CSS) - prevents users from
 copying the content. Even if a user copies a DVD, the disc will not play in
 a regular DVD player.

 The Kindle example

 The problem is such DRM measures can prevent fair-uses authorised under
 copyright laws like copying software from one's own laptop to desktop, or
 copying a DVD for private use. Therein lies the immense power that DRM can
 create over technology corporations. For example, Amazon's Kindle is a
 wireless electronic reading device where users can download books or other
 materials to save one the trouble of carrying bulky books. But, on July 17,
 2009, users who bought George Orwell's Animal Farm and Nineteen Eighty-Four
 found that Amazon had automatically deleted copies of books from their
 Kindles overnight. DRM technology allowed Amazon to enter and delete files
 in each individual's Kindle. Reportedly, the copyright owners decided not to
 sell the content on Kindle. Well, if you had purchased a paper copy of the
 book, can the company send its employees to take it back from your house
 without explanation and prior authorisation while leaving the refund of the
 purchase price on your kitchen table?

 Intellectual property misuse

 Similarly, unlike in the case of a paper book that can be lent to a friend,
 an e-book will become accessible only to a user whose user name and password
 match - thus affecting the resale rights of the user. Further, in the United
 States, the use of DRM to protect materials that are in the public domain
 has led to a new line of cases cited for intellectual property (IP) misuse
 that has competition law impact. For instance, Lexmark Inc. equipped its
 printer refill cartridges with a DRM code that instructed the printer to
 only recognise Lexmark cartridges. It prevented customers from purchasing
 cheaper generic refill cartridges. Importantly, Lexmark held no IP rights
 over the printer cartridge and hence should be amenable to market
 competition. Competitors who broke the DRM code were sued for circumvention
 of technology - which is a violation in India under section 65B of the
 present Copyright (Amendment) Bill, 2012. Notably, in the U.S., it took
 years for the court to rule on Lexmark's misuse of IPR because its DRM did
 not protect any intellectual property. In India, technology companies will
 get the same level of powers - and unfortunately, unlike the U.S., there are
 no NGOs like the Electronic Frontier Foundation to fight such misuse.

 In the U.S., DRM measures have also been criticised as having a propensity
 to slow the pace of development - a move that the Joint Parliamentary
 Committee did not take full cognisance of.

 For example, ReplayTV and TiVo were recording devices that allowed users to
 record TV programmes while automatically deleting advertisements. (Imagine
 the pleasure of recording a cricket match without the advertisements.)
 Turner Broadcasting (with other studios) sued the manufacturers, asserting
 copyright violation. The courts forced both device manufacturers to remove
 the record-by-removing-advertisements feature on the grounds that it altered
 the original programme. Consumers, of course, were the ultimate losers but
 so was