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Axing Sex, Swearing From Films Violates Copyright: Court
CBC ^

Posted on 07/10/2006 8:14:23 AM PDT by steve-b

Deleting swearing, sex and violence from films on DVD or VHS violates copyright laws, a U.S. judge has ruled in a decision that could end controversial sanitizing done for some video-rental chains, cable services and the internet.

The ruling stemmed from a lawsuit brought by 16 U.S. directors — including Steven Spielberg, Robert Redford and Martin Scorsese — against three Utah-based companies that "scrub" films.

Judge Richard P. Matsch decreed on Thursday in Denver, Colo., that sanitizing movies to delete content that may offend some people is an "illegitimate business."

The judge also praised the motives of the Hollywood studios and directors behind the suit, ordering the companies that provide the service to hand over their inventories....

(Excerpt) Read more at cbc.ca ...


TOPICS: Culture/Society; News/Current Events; Technical
KEYWORDS: copyright; copyrightabuse; hollywood; lawsuit
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To: Hendrix

Modification of copyrighted material already gets used to not pay people for it. Just earlier this year some CD (I forget which one, some band I don't like) was re-issued for an anniversary edition, inbetween when the album first came out and this anniversary edition the original drummer had left the band and angered the other members so for the re-issue they deleted his drum tracks and had someone else redo them all, end result is he doesn't get any royalties for the re-issue CD because he doesn't appear on it. Once you allow anybody to modify copyrighted material before the sale then the question of who gets paid becomes wide open.


261 posted on 07/10/2006 10:28:41 AM PDT by discostu (you must be joking son, where did you get those shoes)
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To: steve-b

That's reasonable. It's up to the people who make the movies to decide. If they allow cleaner versions to be adapted, they broaden their potential audience. If they are satisfied whith less market, that should be their choice.


262 posted on 07/10/2006 10:29:26 AM PDT by 3niner
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To: FreedomCalls

As long as all temporary copies are deleted so there's no element of redistribution then there's no problem. Once you own a legal copyright to the material what you do with it, as long as it's not unlicensed distribution, is your business.


263 posted on 07/10/2006 10:31:02 AM PDT by discostu (you must be joking son, where did you get those shoes)
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To: discostu

"But it's a red herring argument because that's different than what you're trying to support with it."

What is a red herring argument? You use the word "it's". What are you referring to?


264 posted on 07/10/2006 10:31:51 AM PDT by Hendrix
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To: antiRepublicrat
All of them, unless they're operating illegally. They pay a high per-copy price for that privilege. That's why replacement costs for lost movies are higher than what you'd pay to purchase a movie at the local store.

Er, no. If I'm running a video store in Badtasteville with a rental license for two dozen copies of Leonard: Part 6 and Joe Blow just can't bear to part with his copy and fails to return it, I still have the license, and can bring my count back up to twenty-four by acquiring another copy without any new license payment. If I bill Joe Blow a premium over and above the purchase price, that's a separate issue (and had better be in the rental agreement).

265 posted on 07/10/2006 10:32:59 AM PDT by steve-b ("Creation Science" is to the religous right what "Global Warming" is to the socialist left.)
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To: steve-b

"Whether or not it's good public policy to expressly add such a loophole to the exclusivity granted to copyright holders is an ordinary political question, not a Constitutional-law question.
"

While you are technically correct, the likelihood of Congress passing such a law is miniscule, at best. The Constitution intended that the work of artists and inventors be protected from unauthorized copying.

That's the bottom line. Yes, the Congress might have the authority to set the limits to that protection, and they have done so, many times. Most recently, it was to extend that protection far beyond the lifetime of the original artist, in the case of copyright.

I'm quite certain that there is no will in Congress to dilute copyright law to the degree being discussed. As I pointed out, if a third party can remove or edit some parts of a work, then redistribute it, that editing could also be to add something to the work. Perhaps a scene of a buck rutting with Bambi's Mom would be something that could be inserted. Since the film is animated, a good animation studio could do the job, copying the style of that Disney film. Then, they could edit the scene in and make new copies of the film.

Or, perhaps, someone could edit "The Passion of Christ," substituting English dialog into it. That dialog could pretty much say whatever the editor wished, even blasphemous dialog.

That's why we have copyright laws...to prevent such abuses against works of art and literature.

If you allow editing and redistribution of others' works, it can work both the way you want it to and in ways you would dislike.

That's why, in practical terms, such changes will not be made by Congress, nor signed by any President, even if it is technically possible.


266 posted on 07/10/2006 10:35:17 AM PDT by MineralMan (non-evangelical atheist)
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To: 3niner
"That's reasonable. It's up to the people who make the movies to decide. If they allow cleaner versions to be adapted, they broaden their potential audience. If they are satisfied whith less market, that should be their choice."

It should also be perfectly legal for a purchaser to alter a DVD any way he or she wishes, as long as it is not resold. Furthermore, it should be legal for companies to provide a service to alter DVDs after they have been purchased, and the people who make the DVDs should not have any say in it once it has been sold.
267 posted on 07/10/2006 10:35:23 AM PDT by Hendrix
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To: Lord_Baltar
If a person rips a DVD, edits it, then re-authors the DVD they are breaking the law.

If they charge someone money to do it, they are breaking the law.

You seem to be the only one here who believes this. The rest of us seem to agree that altering one's own, legal copy is legal.

Courts have held in many cases that anything may be copied for personal use (backup, etc.) without violation. The DVD's with copy protection seem to be, legally speaking, a new beast. No other material has been protectable in this way before, so the subject hadn't come up. It seems to me that the legal principle still applies: that anything done to copy a work strictly for the personal use of its owner and no other should be OK.

268 posted on 07/10/2006 10:35:56 AM PDT by TChris (Banning DDT wasn’t about birds. It was about power.)
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To: Hendrix

The end user paying someone to modify a DVD, that really has no bearing on the law you want passed. One is currently legal levels of modification, the other is a massive change to the very core concept of what a copyright is.


269 posted on 07/10/2006 10:38:02 AM PDT by discostu (you must be joking son, where did you get those shoes)
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To: discostu

"As long as all temporary copies are deleted so there's no element of redistribution then there's no problem. Once you own a legal copyright to the material what you do with it, as long as it's not unlicensed distribution, is your business.

"

Actually, as a consumer, you own the right to the COPY of the work you purchased. That has been extended to allow you to make a copy for your personal use.

In the case before this court, the defendant WAS redistributing COPIES of the work, not the original work, or even a faithful COPY of that work. By redistributing COPIES of the work, they were in violation of the copyright laws. It's that simple.


270 posted on 07/10/2006 10:38:04 AM PDT by MineralMan (non-evangelical atheist)
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To: steve-b

So what will they show on Airlines?


271 posted on 07/10/2006 10:38:08 AM PDT by freedumb2003 (Let them die of thirst in the dark.)
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To: freedumb2003

"So what will they show on Airlines?

"

Read the rest of the thread. Your question is answered several times.


272 posted on 07/10/2006 10:40:28 AM PDT by MineralMan (non-evangelical atheist)
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To: MineralMan

If Congress doesn't revisit the law, it will be because the law cited earlier in the thread already protects another method of getting the same result (special DVD player hardware and software that reads the unaltered original DVD and automagically skips the "naughty parts" based on a database listing). If that option didn't exist, I don't think the studios would have a chance of warding off a law that explicitly permits the creation of roll-your-own edited copies.


273 posted on 07/10/2006 10:41:48 AM PDT by steve-b ("Creation Science" is to the religous right what "Global Warming" is to the socialist left.)
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To: MineralMan
What we are really talking about is a very small technical distinction that does not amount to a hill of beans. It is current law that I can buy a DVD and alter it for my own purposes. I can (or should be able to) buy a DVD and take it to someone who will alter if for me. Therefore, as a practical matter, there is no real distinction from allowing companies to do this service before I buy it, if the buyer wants to buy the DVD with the service already added to it.

All the scare tactics about someone putting something in a Bambi movie is ridiculous. However, if someone wants to add something to a Bambi movie and the buyer wants it put in, I don't see a problem with that.

At a very minimum, the law should allow a business to sanitize a DVD AFTER it has been purchased by a buyer, if the buyer pays the business for the service. I have not read one argument that has any merit for why that should not be allowed.
274 posted on 07/10/2006 10:42:06 AM PDT by Hendrix
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To: MineralMan

Right but the idea put forth was you send your legal copy of a DVD to someone else to modify for you. Since they don't own that legal copy they would have to take steps to ensure they do not maintain a copy of the DVD. Basically the company would have to make it as if you were making it yourself, ie all copies of the original would either have to be destroyed or given back to you.


275 posted on 07/10/2006 10:42:06 AM PDT by discostu (you must be joking son, where did you get those shoes)
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To: Vaquero
I saw an edited broadcast edition of Animal House once.

They permanently changed Airplane on the DVD release. In the original (and on my VHS copy) Barbara Billigsly says "N*gga don' wan' no he'p, N*gga don' get no he'p." In the DVD they changed it to "Sucka don'..."

It ticked me off big time. I feel I should have the right to sue someone for changing the content that I paid for! What if they did that to "Blazing Saddles?"

276 posted on 07/10/2006 10:43:23 AM PDT by freedumb2003 (Let them die of thirst in the dark.)
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To: Hendrix

But that was not the case before this court, was it?


277 posted on 07/10/2006 10:43:43 AM PDT by MineralMan (non-evangelical atheist)
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To: MineralMan
"But that was not the case before this court, was it?"

I would ague that as a practical matter, it should not matter whether the buyer buys the product and then pays a business to sanitize it versus just having the service put in before it is bought. There is no real distinction from a practical standpoint. There may be the legal distinction, but the legal distinction is moot when as a practical matter it can be done the same way (I could buy the DVD and immediately ask the seller to alter it for me).
278 posted on 07/10/2006 10:46:20 AM PDT by Hendrix
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To: TChris

Sorry Chris, whether you and others believe it or not is, with all due respect, irrelevant. The laws are clear on all this.

Let me ask you, what do you know about the DVD Authoring process? Seriously.

Do you honestly think what these people are doing is are just simply editing? Do you really understand what all needs to happen to do this "simple editing"?

Again, people doing this are nothing more than Hackers.

Here, why don't you try and obtain a copy of DVD X Copy (Platinum, Silver, or Gold).

Oooops, you can't.

Why?

Because the Courts found that such software (used to make those "personal back-ups" circumvents the Copy Protections to make the copies.

BTW, did you know that DVD distributors pay BIG money for that Macrovision copy protection?

Sorry Chris, bottom line here, aside from the fact that this case had NOTHING to do with "personal back-ups", which renders that whole argument moot, what it DID cover was companies illegally copying, illegally remanufacturing, and then selling illegal copies of copyrighted material.

Do you REALLY defend that?


279 posted on 07/10/2006 10:46:57 AM PDT by Lord_Baltar
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To: MineralMan
Read the rest of the thread. Your question is answered several times.

If I read every thread before posting I would never get a post in. But sometimes I do read the articles... ;)

280 posted on 07/10/2006 10:47:10 AM PDT by freedumb2003 (Let them die of thirst in the dark.)
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