[game_preservation] Status of DMCA exemption relevant to game preservation
Andrew Armstrong
andrew at aarmstrong.org
Fri Jan 9 19:49:52 EST 2009
Interesting, and if I was in the USA I'd really want to help. I hope you
get some support for putting comments forward for this! It's a real
shame circumventing "DRM" or "copy protection" is special for software,
sigh. (It's like taking your cake and eating it too).
Shall I post this on the blog?
Andrew
Henry Lowood wrote:
> I am forwarding an important e-mail from our Library of Congress
> project group from Rachel Donahue at UIUC. Some of you probably know
> that the original exemption discussed before was spearheaded by the
> Internet Archive (with the point of the spear being our own Simon
> Carless, past chair of the SIG), with some support from Stanford and
> others. One of the many problems with DMCA is that these exemptions
> only last three years (I believe), which is ridiculous. Anyway,
> please read Rachel's note. Maybe there is someone here who will want
> to take up the cause and look into what can be done in the short
> time-frame available, if anything at all is feasible.
>
> Rachel's note:
>
> A new set of DMCA exemptions is up for approval. Unfortunately, the
> old exemption that we semi-relied on:
>
> "Computer programs and video games distributed in formats that have
> become obsolete and that require the original media or hardware as a
> condition of access, when circumvention is accomplished for the
> purpose of preservation or archival reproduction of published digital
> works by a library or archive. A format shall be considered obsolete
> if the machine or system necessary to render perceptible a work
> stored in that format is no longer manufactured or is no longer
> reasonably available in the commercial marketplace."
>
> Has not made the list of proposed classes, and I'm not sure that old
> exemptions are automatically considered for renewal. There's a
> procedure for "untimely submissions of proposed classes based on
> exceptional or unforeseen circumstances," but it requires a petition
> and a good defense of why it couldn't have been submitted eariler and
> why it should be considered after the deadline.
>
> There are a few relating to computer programs and literature that we
> may want to consider commenting on. The comment period closes
> February 2, 2009. All of the proposals, and the comment submission
> form, are available here:
>
> http://www.copyright.gov/1201/
>
> One thing in our favor is that, "this rulemaking addresses only the
> prohibition on the conduct of circumventing measures that control
> "access" to copyrighted works," and all other activities continue to
> be covered by section 106/fair use. That doesn't save us from
> contract law, but it does make preservation actions a bit less
> legally grey.
>
> Cheers,
> Rach
>
> Rachel Donahue
> Graduate Assistant
> Maryland Institute for Technology in the Humanities
> University of Maryland, College Park
> College Park, MD
>
>
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