Congress Must Make Clear Copyright Laws To Protect Consumers

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CONGRESS MUST MAKE CLEAR COPYRIGHT LAWS TO PROTECT CONSUMERS
[SOURCE: Wall Street Journal, AUTHOR: Walter Mossberg]
[Commentary] Consumers won't be a party to the Viacom-YouTube case any more than they were in the room when the latest major copyright law was passed by Congress. That law, the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act, was enacted at the behest of record labels and movie studios. Their purpose was to stop people from using computers and the Internet to distribute digital copies of material to which they didn't hold either the copyright or a distribution license. We need a new digital copyright law that would draw a line between modest sharing of a few songs or video clips and the real piracy of mass distribution. We need a new law that would define fair use for the digital era and lay out clearly the rights of consumers who pay for digital content, as well as the rights and responsibilities of Internet companies. If you don't like all of the restrictions on the use of digital content, the solution isn't to steal the stuff. A better course is to pressure Congress to pass a new copyright law, one that protects the little guy and the Internet itself.
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