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Old 09-10-04, 05:44 AM   #1
DeadMan3000
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Join Date: Oct 2004
Posts: 2
Default INDUCE act back on hold...indefinitely.

http://www.news.com.au/common/story_...E15306,00.html

US grapples with anti-P2P law
Ted Bridis in Washington
October 8, 2004

ENTERTAINMENT groups and consumer organisations have been unable to reach a compromise over a US Senate proposal aimed at manufacturers of peer-to-peer file-sharing software.

The Induce Act, strongly supported by Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Orrin Hatch, would make manufacturers of such software liable for inducing people to commit copyright infringement.

Consumer groups and some computer companies have complained that the bill's language is too broad and could apply liability to legitimate technology.

Sensing an impasse after weeks of acrimonious debate, Senator Hatch invited lawyers and lobbyists representing the sides to propose their own compromise. But the sides have agreed that a compromise was increasingly unlikely given the tight deadline, according to participants in the talks who spoke on condition of anonymity.

Senator Hatch cancelled plans to present the bill to the Judiciary Committee, and participants in the talks said there would likely be no movement on the proposal in the immediate future. Senator Hatch had previously said he intended to pursue the legislation next session if a bill wasn't approved. Senator Arlen Specter, is expected to take over as Judiciary chairman early next year.






The chief executive for the Recording Industry Association of America , Mitch Bainwol, acknowledged that negotiations needed more time.

"So long as illegitimate peer-to-peer services hijack a positive technology and intentionally offload their legal liability to America's kids, legislation will be a priority for the creative community," Mr Bainwol said.

In a letter late Wednesday, the Centre for Democracy and Technology, a Washington-based civil liberties group, urged Senator Hatch to delay action, saying the current proposals would "chill the development of legitimate consumer technologies".

In a separate letter, several consumer groups - including Public Knowledge, the Electronic Frontier Foundation and Consumer Union - cautioned Senator Hatch that divisive unresolved issues could have a "potentially enormous impact on innovation, creativity and competition".

Supporters of the Induce Act said it was necessary after a federal appeals court cleared manufacturers of file-sharing software of liability for large-scale copyright infringement committed by customers.

That court effectively limited entertainment companies and others to suing users of such software individually.

The Associated Press
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