The internet bullies at the RIAA are now saying that the DMCA ” isn’t working for content people at all.” Their solution? Pressure not only ISPs but engines like google, payment processors, and advertisers into policing users, too. Please just leave.
At the Technology Policy Institute’s Aspen Forum, poor, unfortunate RIAA President Cary Sherman said that ” The DMCA isn’t working for content people at all.” Bummer. He continued, ” You can’t monitor the whole infringements on the net. It’s simply unimaginable. We don’t be capable to search all of the places infringing content appears, resembling cyberlockers like [file-hosting firm] RapidShare.”
Instead of bobbing up with some reasonable alternative to the unreasonable aim of policing the total internet, the RIAA is going to just push on ahead, as they’re wont to do. In response to a query from CNET, Sherman said:
We’re working on [discussions with broadband providers], and we’d prefer to extend that form of relationship-not simply to ISPs, but [also to] serps, payment processors, advertisers.
So now it’s up to RapidShare and Google to confirm they’re not storing and cataloging copyrighted files? How absurd (see: Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act ) What if they have got little interest in doing that? Well, Sherman added:
…if legislation is an acceptable solution to facilitate that sort of cooperation, fine.
Apparently at dinner with a CNET reporter later within the evening, Sherman clarified that he wouldn’t wish to see a law passed without the cooperation of such services, but whatever. When bullies sense they’re losing power, they get desperate, and this latest push is nothing if not blindly and pathetically desperate. [ CNET ]
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