In our 635th issue:
The Office of the United States Trade Representative (USTR) has for years pressed for secret negotiations to obscure its efforts to add Hollywood-approved copyright provisions into international law. Now the White House is set to announce a new nominee for the position, and we have a chance to speak up. These tainted processes must be stopped if we are to ever work towards creating copyright regimes that balance the needs of creators and users. Sign this petition today and help us usher in a new era of transparency for the USTR.
In a long-anticipated decision, the Supreme Court held last week in Kirtsaeng v. Wiley that the first sale doctrine applies to works made outside of the United States. In other words, if you bought it, you own it: no matter where it was manufactured. That's a major victory for consumers--and also libraries, used bookstores, and all kinds of groups that depend on the right to lend or resell the goods they've legally purchased.
Thirty-seven digital rights groups and businesses have come together to urge the White House to defend privacy and promise to veto the dangerous cybersecurity bill CISPA. Such legislation poses a number of privacy risks to individuals, allowing levels of information sharing between companies and the government that supersede existing privacy laws. Privacy advocates aren't the only ones speaking out against CISPA; online companies like Reddit and Mozilla--as well as web hosts like Gandi and Namecheap--have chosen to stand up for their users' rights rather than support ill-defined legislation.
EFF Updates
Defend the Open Web: Keep DRM Out of W3C Standards
There's a new front in the battle against digital rights management (DRM) technologies. These technologies, which supposedly exist to enforce copyright, have never done anything to get creative people paid. Instead, by design or by accident, their real effect is to interfere with innovation, fair use, competition, interoperability, and our right to own things. That's why we were appalled to learn that there is a proposal currently before the World Wide Web Consortium's HTML5 Working Group to build DRM into the next generation of core Web standards.
Visualizing Google's Transparency Report
EFF is excited to announce a visual collaboration with SHARE Defense: a three-part series visualizing the data from over three years of Google transparency reports. Part 1 covers which countries are requesting data from Google; part 2 addresses how Google responds to these requests; and part 3 goes into depth on the relative numbers of requests from different countries.
Updating the Copyright Act? It's Up to All of Us.
The head of the U.S. Copyright Office has called for Congress to update U.S. copyright law. If Congress takes up the challenge, supporters of free expression and the promise of digital technology will have a great opportunity to forge a copyright law that reflects our fundamental values. Of course, a major reform of copyright law could lead the other way--back towards a world of more centralization, censorship, and technology regulation.
Oman's Sultan Qaboos Pardons Activists and Netizens
EFF is pleased to learn that Oman's monarch has pardoned "all dissidents jailed for defaming the ruler or taking part in protests." According to the Reuters news agency, "His Majesty Sultan Qaboos has issued a royal pardon for those convicted of defamation, information technology crimes and unauthorized rallies." Those "information technology crimes" included comments about the Sultan made on Facebook pages and blogs.
Google's Wi-Fi Snooping Settlement is Really, Really Awful
A recent settlement between 38 states and Google over the company's Wi-Fi snooping fiasco sure is puzzling. While the settlement, called an Assurance of Voluntary Compliance, does little to punish Google for slurping up massive amounts of content from wireless networks using its roaming Street View vehicles, it does require the company to carry out a gratuitous and poorly thought out song and dance regarding wireless security practices.
Victory for Transparency: Microsoft Releases Report on Law Enforcement Requests for User Data
In January of this year, EFF called for Microsoft to publish a report on government requests for Skype user data. Microsoft has answered that letter not only on behalf of Skype, but on behalf of the entire company, releasing a first transparency report covering all law enforcement requests and court orders received in 2012 related to all of their online and cloud services, including Hotmail/Outlook.com, SkyDrive, Microsoft Account, and Messenger.
AP v. Meltwater: Disappointing Ruling for News Search
A federal district judge in New York City issued a troubling ruling holding that an electronic news clipping service infringed copyright when it republished excerpts of news stories in search results for its clients seeking news coverage based on particular keywords.
miniLinks
Techdirt: "Rather than fix the CFAA, House Judiciary Committee planning to make it worse."
The House Judiciary has begun circulating a draft cyber-security bill that, instead of fixing the CFAA, expands it.
Public Knowledge: "A quick guide to the current phone unlocking bills"
There are currently three different proposals to make sure that you can unlock your phone, despite the Library of Congress's thoughts on the matter. Public Knowledge has put together a chart that runs through some of the pros and cons of each.
Gizmodo: "Everything wrong with digital copyright (and how to fix it)"
Gizmodo spoke with EFF's IP Director Corynne McSherry about how the DMCA is broken, and how we can work together to fix it.
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Editor:
Parker Higgins, Activist
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EFFector is a publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation.
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