Date: Thu, 05 Sep 2002 18:41:42 +0100 From: Ian Brown ian@fipr.org Subject: FIPR-Bulletin: Conference announcement: A Fair Deal on Copyright?
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A Fair Deal on Copyright?
http://www.fipr.org/events.html
WHAT: A mini-conference organised by The Foundation for Information Policy Research
WHEN: 5.30pm-7pm, Wednesday 25 September 2002
WHERE: The Hong Kong Theatre, Clement House, LSE, The Aldwych, London WC2A 2AE.
Hosted by the Department of Information Systems, London School of Economics
Admission: free.
Space is limited, so please RSVP to fairdeal02@fipr.org if you would like to attend.
PLEASE REDISTRIBUTE THIS FLYER UNTIL 25 SEPTEMBER - -- The Internet has presented a dramatic challenge to the existing copyright regime. Rights holders such as the music and film industry claim that their businesses are losing many millions of dollars each year to file-swapping networks such as Napster and its successors. One of their main responses has been to lobby for changes in copyright legislation to restrict the ability of consumers to extract and exchange content on-line.
The UK government is now holding a consultation on legislation to update UK law in this area, based on the European Union's recent Copyright Directive. This would criminalise certain copyright infringements and circumvention of technology that controls access to media such as DVDs.
Would the draft legislation properly balance the incentives given to content creators through copyright, with the benefits to society of the free exchange of information? What effect will criminalising "circumvention technologies" have on computer and Internet security? Will authors, musicians and film-makers needing to sample previous works become criminals?
At this conference you can debate the issues with speakers from the Patent Office and open source and library communities, and hear how well similar US legislation has worked in practice.
Speakers:
The Patent Office: Intro and Q&A on the copyright consultation Julian Midgley, FIPR: Problems with the draft legislation Toby Bainton, Society of College, National and University Libraries: The effect on the UK's libraries Barbara Simons, Association for Computing Machinery: Where the United States went wrong on copyright
Background:
The Copyright Directive (2001/29/EC) - UK Implementation, The Patent Office: http://www.patent.gov.uk/about/consultations/eccopyright/index.htm
Critique of the Proposed UK Implementation of the EU Copyright Directive, Julian Midgley: http://uk.eurorights.org/issues/eucd/ukimpl/critique_uk_impl.html
ACM briefings on the US Digital Millenium Copyright Act: http://www.acm.org/usacm/IP/#copyright
Media contacts:
Ian Brown, Director, FIPR: ian@fipr.org / 07970 164 526 Ross Anderson, Chair, FIPR: rja@fipr.org / 01223 33 47 33 - -- (c) FIPR September 2002. This e-mail may be copied freely in whole or in part.
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