- Microsoft Windows chief decries standards grandstanding
- The 5 best, and 5 worst, features of Google Chrome OS
- Federal government using PS3 to crack pedophile passwords
- 10G Ethernet cheat sheet
- Top 10 free Windows tools for IT pros, at a glance
"Illegally download copyright music from the Internet once, or even twice, and you get a warning. Do it a third time, and
your computer gets destroyed. That's the suggestion made by the chairman [Sen. Orrin Hatch, R-Utah], of the Senate Judiciary
Committee at a Tuesday hearing on copyright abuse."
- The San Jose Mercury News, June 18, 2003
I was going to write this column as an ethically persuasive letter to Hatch about his thoughts (for want of a better word) on how to reduce copyright infringement, but the more I thought about it the clearer it became that I would be wasting my time.
The point of such a letter would have been to present an organized, cogent argument intended to get him to reconsider his position by explaining the facts. I now realize that would be pointless.
You see, the senator's position is (how can I put this nicely?) completely ignorant. It also is unethical, impractical and a breach of trust, and smacks of a politician sucking up to a rich and powerful lobby.
Yes folks, unless there is something that we don't know - such as the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) mafia made him say those things under the threat of torture - it looks a lot like Hatch is about as deep a thinker as, say, Mr. Ed. Either that or the senator has simply lost his mind.
Last week at the judiciary hearing on copyright issues, Randy Saaf, CEO of MediaDefender, (described as "a secretive Los Angeles company" that has some technology to detect and slow the transfer of pirated music) commented that "No one is interested in destroying anyone's computer."
Hatch immediately interjected: "I'm interested!" and went on to say that damaging someone's computer "may be the only way you can teach somebody about copyrights."
According to the Mercury News, Hatch rampaged on: "If we can find some way to do this without destroying their machines, we'd be interested in hearing about that, [but if] that's the only way then I'm all for destroying their machines. If you have a few hundred thousand of those, people would realize [the seriousness of their actions]."
Wow. This is the chairman of the Senate Judiciary Committee? Talk about uninformed and short-sighted. What happens when the copyright police make a mistake and toast the wrong person's system? And who will be the copyright police? And . . . well, I could rant on, but you get the idea.
Comment