Ronald Bultje writes:

> When they see that European laws don't work that way, they'll learn. Or
> not, and then they'll just go broke and these companies will stop
> existing.

Hitachi?  Toshiba?  Intel?  Sony?  Matsushita?  Apple?  IBM?

Sorry, this isn't some tiny startup with a crackpot technology idea.
Most of the companies in these meetings are in the Fortune 1000.
The lawyers working on this stuff are veterans of successful
legislative efforts like the Audio Home Recording Act and the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act -- these are people who have repeatedly
gotten legislation through the U.S. Congress in the past.  Sure, some
of the legislation they worked on was seriously flawed, and much of it
doesn't exist outside the U.S.  But it should be clear that copyright
and patent interests in the U.S. are having a powerful effect on
legislation in Europe.

None of this appears to have hurt the profits of any of these
companies at all.

Anyway, I'm here trying to draw attention to this because I really
think things like this are going to be bad for free software, not only
in the U.S., but eventually everywhere.

-- 
Seth Schoen
Staff Technologist                                [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Electronic Frontier Foundation                    http://www.eff.org/
454 Shotwell Street, San Francisco, CA  94110     1 415 436 9333 x107



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