
Privacy
Notice |
Statement by Senator Dianne Feinstein
On Cornyn-Feinstein Legislation to Crack Down on Video and Audio Piracy
November
13, 2003
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Senator
Feinstein, Senator Cornyn and Actress Bo Derek are working
to stop the piracy of audio and video entertainment.
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Washington, DC
- U.S. Senators John Cornyn (R-Texas) and Dianne Feinstein (D-Calif.)
announced legislation today to crack down on video and audio piracy,
which is having an increasingly damaging impact on the entertainment
industry. The following is Senator Feinstein's statement:
"First,
I want to thank Senator John Cornyn for his work on this issue,
and for working with me on protecting the rights of all copyright
owners to control their work. America's copyright industry is
one of our most important economic engines; in fact, the creative
process is so important that our Founding Fathers actually put
copyright protection into the U.S. Constitution.
CONSTITUTIONAL
PROTECTION:
Article
I, Section 8 of the Constitution provides that: "The Congress
Shall have Power To...promote the Progress of Science and useful
Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the
exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."
This clause, important enough to be included in the Constitution
of the United States, indicates how important our Founding Fathers
found copyright protection to be. In order to promote the progress
of the arts and sciences; and this would include books, music,
scientific inventions, medical discoveries, movies, computer software,
and so on – Congress is granted the right to give exclusive
control over those things, for limited time, to the those who
create them. And this legislation we announce today simply helps
give them those creators that protection.
The
Bills Major Provisions
There
are two main points:
- First,
the bill makes it a federal crime to videotape movies in theaters
without authorization. It may surprise you to know that only
four states: New York, California, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin,and
the District of Columbia have laws against walking into a movie
theater and using a camcorder to record a movie. That leaves
46 other states with no laws against what is essentially the
theft of property. Walking into a movie theater and surreptitiously
videotaping a movie is clearly wrong, clearly inappropriate,
and it is something that should clearly be illegal.
-
Second,
the bill makes it easier for prosecutors to convict individuals
who put pre-released material on the Internet or for aggrieved
parties to file lawsuits. This would include songs that have
not yet been released to the public, movies still in theaters,
software not yet in stores, and so on. The point is that there
is no legitimate purpose for a person taking copyrighted material
not legally available to the public in any form, and putting
it on the Internet for free distribution without authorization.
Current law requires that a prosecutor, or plaintiff in a
civil suit, prove ten illegal downloads or $2,500 in damages.
But this is difficult to prove, and often prevents charges
from being brought. This legislation says that anyone who
uploads pre-released, copyrighted material should clearly
know that it might be downloaded ten, a hundred - even millions
of times, for an incalculable cost. By removing the proof
of damages requirement from the law, we make it easier to
catch and punish those individuals who are stealing pre-released
material and giving it to the public for free. These are simple
issues, but I realize the solutions are not always simple.
Some claim that people might accidentally make copyrighted
music available on the Internet through peer-to-peer software,
or that others may not realize that the
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Senator
Feinstein, Jack Valenti president of the Motion Picture
Association, Senator Cornyn, and Bo Derek watch a pirated
version of a recently-released film.
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material
they are sharing is copyrighted at all. As a result, it is
sometimes hard to reach consensus on these issues, even though
I think it is quite clear that most people who use peer-to-peer
networks to distribute music, movies, or other material know
that what they are doing is wrong, and that it is illegal.
Either way, this bill should not be a hard sell. We only deal
with two things - videotaping a movie, which everyone realizes
is wrong, and distributing material that has not even been
publicly released.So I again thank Senator Cornyn for his
work, and I look forward to working with him to get this passed."
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