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Congress Raises Broadcast Flag For Audio
CNET ^
| 3/2/06
| Declan McCullagh
Posted on 03/03/2006 1:36:32 PM PST by steve-b
Digital radio receivers without government-approved copy-prevention technology likely would become illegal to sell in the future, according to new federal legislation announced Thursday.
Rep. Mike Ferguson, a New Jersey Republican, said his bill--which would enforce a so-called "broadcast flag" for digital and satellite audio receivers--was necessary to protect the music industry from the threat of piracy....
(Excerpt) Read more at news.com.com ...
TOPICS: Technical
KEYWORDS: copyprotection; copyright; copyrightlaw; digitalaudio; digitalradio; fairuse; interference; meddlingv
What the hell is it with the current crop of "Republicans"?
1
posted on
03/03/2006 1:36:37 PM PST
by
steve-b
To: steve-b
Nothing...they're just following the "money trail" like all no-good politicians....
2
posted on
03/03/2006 1:40:13 PM PST
by
lgjhn
To: steve-b
New Jersey Republican just sounds so RINO.
The Supreme Court Betamax decision has had Hollywood howling for decades. Home taping is legal. Except under the DCMA, which is probably unconstitutional because it would make it a crime to circumvent copyprotection even once a work lapsed into the public domain (decades/century from now).
3
posted on
03/03/2006 1:46:36 PM PST
by
weegee
("Republicans believe every day is the Fourth of July, but Democrats believe every day is April 15.")
Comment #4 Removed by Moderator
To: Individual Rights in NJ
Then he's not a RINO, he's a damn sellout.
5
posted on
03/03/2006 1:53:37 PM PST
by
steel_resolve
(Praise the Lord and Pass the Ammo.)
Comment #6 Removed by Moderator
Comment #7 Removed by Moderator
To: Individual Rights in NJ
I do the same (XM radio). And you can hardwire it to your computer or FM it to your FM stereo/amp and record it that way.
I have set my PC to record for several hours at a time (to mp3).
And plan to load it into my ipod. Can put it on CDs as well.
Thought about streaming the audio to the other pcs in the house, too.
8
posted on
03/03/2006 2:24:08 PM PST
by
dhs12345
To: steve-b
without government-approved copy-prevention technology
Are they serious?
For one copy protection scheme last year, a 12-year-old had a 'crack' posted on the Internet 30 minutes after that copy protection scheme was released.
9
posted on
03/03/2006 2:40:46 PM PST
by
TomGuy
To: Individual Rights in NJ
It is people doing exactly what you are doing that this congresscritter wants to prohibit.
LLS
10
posted on
03/03/2006 2:58:12 PM PST
by
LibLieSlayer
(Preserve America... kill terrorists... destroy dims!)
To: TomGuy
Check out the DMCA. They will take everything from you if they catch you. It is draconian to the bone!
LLS
11
posted on
03/03/2006 2:59:33 PM PST
by
LibLieSlayer
(Preserve America... kill terrorists... destroy dims!)
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