Save Betamax! (important)
Oh no, am I not another one to post on his blog about saving Betamax?
Wait a second. What’s Betamax? From savebetamax.org:
Why Save Betamax?
The short version: We’re organizing a call-in day to Congress on September 14 to oppose new legislation that would undermine the Betamax decision (INDUCE Act). Sign up on the right.
Here’s why: The Betamax VCR died more than 15 years ago, but the Supreme Court decision that made the Betamax and all other VCRs legal lived on. In Sony vs. Universal (known as the Betamax decision) the Court ruled that because VCRs have legitimate uses, the technology is legal—even if some people use it to copy movies. Of course, the movie industry was lucky it lost the case against VCRs, because home video soon became Hollywood’s largest source of revenue. And the freedom to use and develop new technology that was protected by the Betamax decision set the stage for the incredible growth in computer technology we’ve seen in the last few decades.
Hollywood is Trying to Kill Betamax
The Betamax ruling is the only thing that protects your right to own a VCR, tape recorder, CD-burner, DVD-burner, iPod, or TiVo. It’s that important. But new legislation that’s being pushed through the Senate by lobbyists for the music and movie industries would override the Betamax decision and create a huge liability for any business that makes products which can copy sound or video. This legislation (formerly known as the INDUCE Act) would essentially give Hollywood veto power over a huge range of new technologies. And if they get this power, they’ll definitely use it. Even “compromise” drafts from the Copyright Office could make mp3-playing iPods ancient history; the music and movie industries want to force all content to go through their own restricted channels.
Is Congress Insane?
You might think so at first glance. Voters, technology experts, public interest groups, and electronics manufacturers all oppose these efforts to weaken Betamax. So why is it still happening? Because the major record labels and the movie studios– the same companies that opposed the Betamax ruling– make huge donations to the re-election campaigns of the Senators who are sponsoring this legislation. And most members of Congress assume this is a non-controversial issue, off the radar of most voters. If they can please their donors without a big fuss, they will. It’s bad policy, but until we start making noise, it’s smart politics.
I think I’m going to email the Texas senators about this… http://www.senate.com/state/tx.html
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This is what I automatically thought when I first read this: It’s interesting how we started establishing the notion of “rights.” We began with natural rights - right to life, liberty, property… And now we have claims of the right to own a VCR, iPod, etc. Some would argue that holding our wants on the same level as our absolute rights, trivializes the very notion of the term, “right.”
Therefore,
Debate is taking over my braaaaiiiiin.
=/
Anyhow. Have a nice day. =)
Well, it’s not so much about owning VCRs as it is about the entertainment industry trying to cripple technology because their business model is becoming obsolete.
i didnt read all that.. hehe but i can conclude that my response is “oh dear!”