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CEA's Gary Shapiro: P2P file swapping is both legal and moral



Some background:
http://www.ce.org/press_room/press_release_detail.asp?id=10027
http://www.ce.org/press_room/speech.doc
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-958324.html?tag=cd_mh

File photo:
http://www.mccullagh.org/image/d30-25/gary-shapiro.html

-Declan

---

Speech by Gary Shapiro, President and CEO of the Consumer Electronics 
Association.

The Campaign to Have Copyright Interests Trump Technology and Consumer Rights

We are at a critical juncture in history when the inevitable growth of 
technology is conflicting with the rising power and strength of copyright 
owners.  How we resolve this tension between copyright and technology will 
define our future ability to communicate, create and share information, 
education and entertainment.

Today I would like to share with you my views on this situation and the 
questions we must confront as we wind through this confusing, but historic 
maze.

There is no doubt that this era’s rapid shift to digital and other 
technology is changing the rules of the game. Reproduction, transmission 
and storage technology all are progressing exponentially, resulting in an 
unprecedented power to copy, send and save all forms of media. Reproduction 
technology has become incredibly cheap and reliable. Transmission 
technology, including satellite, cable, broadcast, wired or wireless, and 
often connecting through the Internet, has linked everyone at ever 
increasing speeds and competitive pricing. Storage technologies also 
quickly have expanded in capacity as total storage media costs have plummeted.

With each new technology, the fears of the music and motion picture 
industries have grown. With television and the VCR, it was going to be the 
end of movies. With CDs and cassettes, it was the supposed harm from 
real-time transfers and one-at-a-time copies. Today’s technologies make 
these perceived threats seem naïve and harmless. With high-speed 
connectivity and the Internet, it’s not buying a CD and making a copy for a 
friend; it’s downloading from a stranger or making available thousands of 
copies with the touch of a keystroke.

The growth of reproduction, storage and transmission technology has 
terrified copyright owners. The RIAA claims that 3.6 billion songs are 
downloaded each month. The RIAA also estimates that $4.5 billion has been 
lost by the music industry due to pirating. And the motion picture industry 
also sees the writing on the wall. Fox Group CEO and News Corp. President 
Peter Chernin in an August 21 keynote speech at an Aspen conference claimed 
that Spiderman and the latest Star Wars movie were downloaded four million 
times following the weekend after their release.

Based on these and similar threats the content community has gone on a 
scorched earth campaign ­ attacking and burning several new recording and 
peer-to-peer technologies. They have used the Congress, media and courts to 
challenge the legality of technology and morality and legality of 
recording. In the same Aspen speech, Chernin attacked computers as 
untrustworthy and the Internet as primarily used for pornography and 
downloading.

I believe that hardware and software companies have a mutual interest in 
working together, so that they can sell more products. For years, consumer 
electronics companies have been working with both the recording and motion 
picture industries on developing technological measures that meet the needs 
of both industries. For instance, the DVD standard includes anti-copying 
protection. It also includes an anti-fast forward technology designed to 
ensure copyright warnings are shown, but instead is being used to require 
consumers to sit through movie previews. CE companies also have provided 
digital interfaces that allow consumers to share content among their own 
devices while restricting unauthorized redistribution to the Internet. By 
protecting content at the source, content providers can be assured their 
intellectual property rights are respected, while consumers can enjoy 
unimpeded personal use. However, source protection should not be used to 
mislead consumers to purchase CDs that can only be played on certain CD 
players.

Indeed, despite the cooperative efforts, the copyright community has 
declared war on technology and is using lawsuits, legislatures and clever 
public relations to restrict the ability to sell and use new technologies. 
Lawsuits have shut down file-sharing services like Napster and Aimster, and 
threaten peer-to-peer networks like KaZaa and Morpheus. They unsuccessfully 
challenged the legality of MPs recorders in the Diamond Multimedia case. 
They have challenged as illegal ReplayTV, a TIVO-like device, which allows 
television programming to be sorted and stored on a hard disc and which 
allows a consumer to skip commercials. In fact, one TV executive equated 
the skipping of commercials as “stealing” free broadcast television. The 
RIAA has announced that it will start suing individuals who engage in file 
sharing and has subpoenaed Internet access provider Verizon to identify a 
downloading subscriber.

At the urging of the content community, Congress has stepped into the act. 
Legislation has been introduced which requires all technologies to be 
shaped by a government-mandated copy protection system. Other legislation 
allows any copyright owner to seek and destroy the posting of copyrighted 
products on P2P networks via personal computers connected to the Internet. 
Still other legislation would allow a content owner to insert an embedded 
watermark into the work to determine if there was infringement and, at the 
content owner’s discretion, disable the device, even if, upon subsequent 
determination, the use was lawful.

The most recent and scary development is that the United States Department 
of Justice is threatening to jail millions of Americans who use file- 
sharing services. In a presentation at the Progress and Freedom 
Foundation’s Aspen Summit on August 21, Deputy Assistant Attorney General 
John Malcolm said that peer-to-peer sharing is piracy and a criminal offense.

With this pronouncement, along with similar euphemisms by the media, it is 
clear that the copyright community has reshaped the debate. All of a 
sudden, the downloading of a song to sample an artist’s wares, behavior 
most Americans between 13 and 25 engage in regularly, has been likened to a 
criminal act.

Consider the clever public relations campaign of the content community. 
They’ve changed the simple language that describes the acts at issue. It 
used to be called “taping”, “reproducing” or “downloading”, and advocates 
on both sides would call it “unauthorized reproduction” or “unauthorized 
taping”. Then somehow this use of technology shifted to the more pejorative 
and sinister “copying”. The word “copying” sounds bad. It got you in big 
trouble in high school on a test. “Copying” is a sister to “plagiarism” 
which is especially bad.

But in the past few months, Hollywood and the music industry have shifted 
to different words. They now only talk about downloading as “piracy”. They 
call it “stealing” and always use analogies to shoplifting products out of 
a store. The Justice Department has adopted this approach. “Stealing is 
stealing is stealing,” said Malcolm in Aspen.

At the same conference, Chernin echoed these themes and used the words 
“piracy”, “shoplifting” and “stealing” repeatedly to describe downloading. 
He even declared that those who disagree with his views on copyright are 
either “amoral or self-interested”.

Another way copyright owners have distorted the debate is to tie in 
downloading with our national goal of broadband deployment. They argue that 
broadband demand will not grow until this issue is resolved. Indeed, 
Senators Holling’s legislation is called “The Consumer Broadband and 
Digital Television and Promotion Act”. Yet broadband deployment has little 
to do with songs and movies, and more to do with fast Internet speed, 
always- on convenience, exchanging home videos, interactivity on the web 
and a range of potential uses for education, medicine, business, shopping 
and gaming. Yet, some legislators have become confused and convinced by 
Hollywood that there is a connection between broadband and copyright.

A third way that the copyright community has reshaped and redefined the 
debate is almost biblical in its reach. The entire theme of the copyright 
community is that downloading off the Web is both illegal and immoral.

But is it either? I submit it is neither.

Despite the assertions of the Justice Department, downloading is not illegal.

First, fair use rights are guaranteed to consumers by statute, and applied 
judicially on a case-by-case basis. This means that, while some consumer 
practices ultimately could be adjudicated as either fair use or 
infringement, there is scant basis for challenging them as criminal.

The music and film industries claim that there is no such thing as fair use 
"rights" in an attempt to disparage the term. They say that fair use is 
only an affirmative defense to copyright infringement and therefore not a 
right. But various recognized "rights" only may be asserted as affirmative 
defenses in a lawsuit. For example, in a slander suit, one may assert the 
First Amendment right but only as an affirmative defense; this does not 
diminish the fact that the right exists.

Second, time after time, practices of individuals that were initially 
equated with "piracy" or "theft" have been shown to be neutral or 
beneficial to copyright owners, and have either been tolerated or accepted 
as fair use. Think of the VCR and the Supreme Court decision holding that 
its use to tape full movies is fully legal.

Third, the 1997 NET Act's requirement of a total retail value of $1,000 per 
infringement should be taken seriously as a barrier to bringing cases 
against ordinary consumers. This law should not be re-interpreted, after 
the fact, as a criminal enforcement vehicle against consumer-to-consumer 
recording and "swapping" practices.

Downloading is not immoral either. To make downloading immoral, you have to 
accept that copyrighted products are governed by the same moral and legal 
principles as real property, thus the recent and continuous reference by 
the copyright community to label downloading as stealing. But the fact is 
that real and intellectual property are different and are governed by 
different principles. Downloading a copyrighted product does not diminish 
the product, as would be the case of taking and using tangible property 
such as a dress. At worst, it is depriving the copyright owner of a 
potential sale. Indeed, it may be causing a sale (through familiarity) or 
even more likely, have no impact on the sale. My son often will become 
familiar with artists through downloading their music on the Internet and 
then go out and buy the CD.

The comparison to real property fails for several other reasons. Real 
property is subject to ownership taxes. Real property lasts forever and can 
be owned forever. A copyright can be owned only for a limited period of 
time. Indeed, the United States Constitution declares this. More, copyright 
law must bow to the First Amendment that expressly allows people to use a 
copyrighted product without the permission of the copyright owner. This 
concern contributes to the statutory and judicial concept of “fair use”. 
The First Amendment includes, not only the right to send, but also the 
right to receive. Indeed, in 1984, the U.S. Supreme Court in declaring the 
VCR a legal product, said that it could be okay to copy an entire 
copyrighted product. So if the Supreme Court expressly held that VCR 
copying in the home for non-commercial purposes is a legal activity, how is 
it suddenly labeled as “piracy” because the device is a computer?

The major record labels concede that they totally have failed to transform 
their business models in response to the Internet. But then they whine that 
they “cannot compete with free”, referring to the free downloading the 
Internet allows. While I am sympathetic to the radical shift of selling a 
CD with a one good song for $20 to a marketplace where consumers pick and 
choose which songs they want, I am not sure this is the correct approach. 
For one thing, you can compete with free. Purveyors of bottled water do it. 
America Online does it. Book retailers do it with libraries. Independent 
online music services say they can do it, if they can clear the rights.

The Beatles 1 album, which contained 30-year-old songs that could have been 
downloaded for free from Napster-like services from day one, but 
nevertheless sold some 26 million copies. Why? Because people were willing 
to pay for the quality of a CD over the often barely acceptable sound 
quality of a download using P2P services.

Of course, recording artists must make a living and should be paid. Most 
consumers likely would pay a reasonable amount for quality downloads, 
access to full catalogs and maybe some promotional items such as concert 
tickets or hidden tracks on a CD. Artists even can get new revenue from the 
Internet by identifying their fans and promoting their concerts, new 
releases and other products. But the music industry has made little effort 
to look at new business models or provide a viable and attractive 
alternative to the downloading services.

The recording industry and motion picture industry should stop complaining 
so much and look for technological solutions to its own problems.  Doesn’t 
it make more sense to protect content at the source, using technologies 
that maintain consumer expectations for personal use? Content providers 
would be served better by working with technology companies to deploy these 
solutions rather than suing everyone and lobbying Congress to legislate 
unreasonable and consumer-unfriendly mandates.

Despite a lack of hits and a recession, music and movie sales are holding 
their own. Compare this to real downfalls in other sectors from 
telecommunications to IT to broadcasting, and you must ask yourself if the 
Internet is actually a good thing for the copyright community.

So where does this lead us? I submit that policymakers should follow some 
basic principles:

First, do no harm. If we had previously heeded the concerns of the creative 
community, we would have no radio, no TV, no VCR, no computer, no e-mail 
and no Internet. Yet each of these technologies has enhanced the revenue 
stream for copyright owners.

Second, advances in technology should not be restricted. We cannot even 
imagine today what future advances we will choke off if we artificially 
restrict technology. If we can envision technology connecting the poorest 
in the world to medical information, to education and to a better quality 
of life, we should be careful about stifling its growth. Advances in 
technology also can supply tools to content providers to help them manage 
digital rights in a manner that takes into account consumers’ expectations.

Third, claims of harm should be greeted with great skepticism. Not every 
recording is a lost sale. It actually may represent a stream of future 
sales. Artists from Chuck D to Janis Ian to Courtney Love support home 
recording rights for practical business reasons.

Fourth, copyright owners have a high burden of proof before any technology 
should be restricted. Broadcasters and the motion picture industry have 
come close to making the case that redistribution of free, over-the-air 
broadcast television over the Internet is harmful to the concept of free 
over- the-air broadcasting. This is an area where careful legislation or 
regular legal review, respectful of consumer rights and expectations, may 
be appropriate.

Fifth, copyright owners should continue developing ways to protect their 
content at the source, rather than insisting that the burden should be on 
the device that plays it. Perhaps they should consider a more flexible 
business model that focuses on keeping honest people honest. But, the 
corollary here is don’t sell CDs that don’t work on many CD players.

Finally, any restrictions on technology should be narrowly crafted, define 
limitations on abuse by copyright owners and define legitimate consumer 
recording rights and expectations. For example, CEA supports the distance 
education bill presented by Congressman Darrell Issa of California and Rick 
Boucher of Virginia that addresses a specific IP concern rather than 
attempting to legislate through a one-size-fits-all approach. The Boucher- 
Issa bill reaffirms fair use rights and would amend the Copyright Act to 
ensure educators can use PCs and new technology to foster distance learning.

The collision course between copyright owners’ desire to preserve existing 
business models and the inevitable development of newer, better, faster and 
cheaper technologies need not be fatal. Our future is bright if we resist 
the temptation to restrict technology. Digital technology will foster a 
Renaissance of creativity. It will connect our world and soon allow 
everyone to have low-cost access to information, entertainment and 
education. If the play button becomes the pay button, our very ability to 
raise the world’s standard of living and education will be jeopardized.
\




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