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RL32035
Copyright Law: Digital Rights Management Legislation
August 02, 2004
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Summary:
Digital Rights Management (DRM) refers to the technology that copyright
owners use to protect digital media. This report surveys several of the DRM bills
that were introduced in the 107th Congress and those that are pending in the 108th
Congress. Generally, the bills are directed at two separate goals. One goal is to
increase access to digitally-protected media for lawful purposes. The other attempts
to thwart digital piracy and would do so by enhancing civil and criminal sanctions for
digital (and traditional) copyright infringement and educating the public about the
rights of copyright holders.
Although no bills were enacted during the 107th Congress, two of the bills
focusing on access have been reintroduced in the 108th Congress. Representatives
Boucher and Lofgren reintroduced their bills from the 107th Congress. They are H.R.
107, the "Digital Media Consumers' Rights Act of 2003" and H.R. 1066 ,
respectively. H.R. 1066 is renamed the "Benefit Authors without Limiting
Advancement or Net Consumer Expectations (BALANCE) Act of 2003." And
Senator Wyden introduced S. 692, a labeling disclosure bill entitled the "Digital
Consumers Right to Know Act."
S. 1621, the "Consumers, Schools, and Libraries Digital Management
Awareness Act of 2003," addresses several DRM issues. It would prohibit the
Federal Communication Commission from establishing mandatory technology
standards and require disclosure requirements for access controlled digital media and
consumer electronics. It also addresses the subpoena process by which copyright
owners acquire personal information about suspected infringers. And H.R. 4586, the
"Family Movie Act of 2004," which was reported favorably by the House Judiciary
Committee, would amend the law to expressly authorize the in-home use of filtering
technology designed to edit out sexual, violent, or profane content in movies
available for consumers' home viewing.
Bills addressing piracy include H.R. 4077, the "Piracy Deterrence and Education
Act of 2004"; S. 1932, the "Artists Rights and Theft Prevention Act of 2004"; and,
S. 2237, the "Protecting Intellectual Rights Against Theft and Expropriation Act of
2004." S. 1932 and S. 2237 have been passed by the Senate. Because digital
transmission poses the greatest distribution risk to entertainment content owners,
these bills attempt to thwart the initial unauthorized copying and/or uploading to the
Internet. Hence, sanctions for illegal distribution of pre-release commercial works
and surreptitious recording of movies in theaters are emphasized. On June 22, 2004,
S. 2560, the "Inducing Infringement of Copyrights Act of 2004" was introduced in
the Senate. This bill would add a new section to the Copyright Act defining
intentional inducement of copyright infringement as an express form of statutory
infringement.
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Available Versions:
January 05, 2005
October 01, 2004
August 02, 2004
May 28, 2004
December 18, 2003
October 16, 2003
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