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Copyfight
October 14, 2004
Senator McCain shows spine on IP; defends controlling your own TV/DVREmail This EntryPrint This Entry
Posted by Jason Schultz

STATEMENT OF SENATOR JOHN McCAIN

CHAIRMAN, SENATE COMMITTEE ON
COMMERCE, SCIENCE, AND TRANSPORTATION

OCTOBER 11, 2004


THE INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY PROTECTION ACT

• Mr. President, I wish to briefly remark on H.R. 2391 and H.R. 4077, a package of bills referred to as the “Intellectual Property Protection Act of 2004.” I have objected to the further consideration or passage of these bills by unanimous consent.

• From the text of the bills that have been available to date for Senators to review, I believe that one part of this broad legislation, the Family Movie Act, may actually harm consumers while appearing to help them. To be clear, I support the stated goal of the Act’s authors: immunizing from legal challenges a technology that enables parents to skip offensive material from prerecorded copies of films and television. While I applaud the merits of their stated intent, I fear that the very exemption designed to achieve this laudable goal simultaneously creates an implication that certain basic practices that consumers have enjoyed for years -- like fast-forwarding through advertisements -- would constitute criminal copyright infringement. I note that Consumers Union and Public Knowledge, as well as a host of others parties interested in protecting consumers, share my concerns.

• Americans have been recording TV shows and fast-forwarding through commercials for more than thirty years. Do we really expect to throw people in jail in 2004 for behavior they've been engaged in for more than a quarter century?

• I look forward to working with my colleagues in this chamber to address not only these concerns, but also the uncertain liability created for manufacturers that bring other innovative and pro-family products to market in the face of continual threats of extinction from powerful interests who seek to thwart their entry.

• Mr. President, for these reasons, I do not intend to remove my hold on these bills until I am satisfied that consumer interests have been protected in this legislation.


Category: IP Abuse

COMMENTS
Alexander Wehr on October 14, 2004 01:23 PM writes...

and yet NOTHING against the imprisonment of virtually EVERYONE under the age of 27.

I'm so happy he's so concerned about people being able to skip commercials.. I guess since there are no commercials in prison it's perfectly ok to throw people in there right?

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TRACKBACKS
TrackBack URL: http://www.corante.com/cgi-bin/mt/mt-tb.cgi/5005
As Jason Schultz has reported on Copyfight, Senator John McCain (one of the few politicians I personally respect) is standing up against poor legislation that aims to deprive consumers of our fair use rights. A choice quote: > From the text of the bil... [Read More]

Tracked on October 14, 2004 10:28 AM

Killing digital viewing from Eternal Gaze: exploring advanced moving image
Just as we are on the verge of space-shifting viewing (to go with the 'time-shifting' all but necessary now in a post-VCR era where we have multi-channel time-starved modern worklives), the Hollywood studios want to stop it. The flurry of proposals in ... [Read More]

Tracked on October 15, 2004 10:24 AM

Remember when I suggested that Republicans might be more prone to copyright sanity than Democrats? Perhaps I was on to something. Consider a recent Senate exchange that was caught by Jason Schultz and Frank Field. Senator John McCain (Republican from A... [Read More]

Tracked on November 15, 2004 10:07 AM




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