www.trustedtestimonials.com. Click to view this web site\'s Trusted Testimonials. UIA Member Services We Provide
Patent Attorney
Patent Search
Apply for a Patent
Trademark Application
Contact Information

Digital Millennium Copyright Act


Written by Gene Quinn
Patent Attorney & Intellectual Property Expert
President & Founder of IPWatchdog, Inc.

Tell A Friend!



In February 1993, President Clinton formed the Information Infrastructure Task Force (hereinafter referred to as IITF) to articulate and implement the Administration’s vision for the National Information Infrastructure. The IITF, chaired by then Secretary of Commerce Ronald H. Brown, was made up of high level representatives of Federal agencies that are engaged in advancing the development of information technologies. The IITF organized itself into three committees: (1) the Telecommunications Policy Committee; (2) the Committee on Applications and Technology; and (3) the Information Policy Committee. The Information Policy Committee established a Working Group on Intellectual Property Rights, which was chaired by then Assistant Secretary of Commerce and Commissioner of Patents and Trademarks Bruce A. Lehman. The purpose for the existence of the Working Group on Intellectual Property Rights was to study, analyze and make recommendations on appropriate changes to United States intellectual property law and policy. Ultimately, the efforts of the Working Group on Intellectual Property lead to the adoption of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Since its enactment in 1998, the DMCA has been lauded by the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America and other industry groups. As one might expect, that which keeps the entertainment industry happy is fodder for criticism by academics and those who embrace fair use rights. Although it can hardly be argued that there needs to be some protection provided for copyright owners in this digital era, the DMCA has rather uniformly been criticized by industry outsiders as unwise, unconstitutional and an ill conceived regulatory scheme.

Brief History of the DMCA

In September of 1995, the Working Group on Intellectual Property Rights issued a White Paper entitled “Intellectual Property and the National Information Infrastructure.” This White Paper represented the Working Group’s examination and analysis of intellectual property law, focusing primarily on copyright law and the effectiveness of Title 17 of the United States Code in the context of the National Information Infrastructure. This White Paper was the first step forward in reviewing and rethinking the applicability of US intellectual property laws in the digital age.

The White Paper recognized the difficulty the law faces, even intellectual property law, in keeping pace with changes in technology. This is true even for copyright law, which had a major overhaul in 1976, less than twenty years prior to the formation of the Working Group. At the time of the Copyright Act of 1976, special care was taken when drafting the statute so that it would be flexible enough to be applied to future innovations, but technology has a way of out pacing even forward thinking, flexible statutes. By the mid 1990s the Copyright Act was in need of some significant assistance if it was going to maintain relevance in the digital age, and it was necessary for Congress to step in and fashion the rules necessary to cope with the changing technological landscape.

The Working Group on Intellectual Property predicted that the ease of infringement and the difficulty of detection and enforcement would cause copyright owners to look to technological solutions, in addition to legal solutions, in order to protect their copyrightable works. But for every technology that can be created to protect information, there is a technology waiting to be created, and which will be created, to counteract the protection provided. With this in mind, the Working Group suggested that Congress make rather significant changes to the Copyright Act, and provide legal protection for copyright owners wishing to employ technological measures to protect their works.

The suggestions of the Working Group took on new meaning when in December of 1996, a Diplomatic Conference was convened in Geneva, Switzerland under the auspices of the World Intellectual Property Organization (”WIPO”). This conference was called for the purpose of negotiating new multilateral treaties to protect copyrighted material in the digital environment and to provide stronger international protection to performers and producers of phonograms. The conference produced two treaties, the “WIPO Copyright Treaty” and the “WIPO Performances and Phonograms Treaty,” which were adopted by consensus by over 150 countries.

In July 1997, the Clinton Administration submitted the treaties to the Senate for ratification and submitted proposed implementing legislation to both the House and the Senate. As the treaty implementation bills worked their way through Congress, it became apparent that both bills faced significant opposition from many private and public sector interests, including libraries, institutions of higher learning, consumer electronics and computer product manufacturers, and others. The debate on the treaty implementation legislation highlighted the dual priorities of promoting the continued growth and development of electronic commerce, while at the same time protecting intellectual property rights. Both Congress and the Clinton Administration used these international treaties as an excuse for passing a broad, sweeping changes to U.S. copyright laws that were urged by the entertainment industry , despite the fact that such changes to U.S. copyright law were not required by the treaties themselves.

The United States Congress ultimately enacted The Digital Millennium Copyright Act, more commonly referred to as the DMCA, which was signed into law on October 28, 1998. The DMCA had as its primary purpose the goal of updating United States copyright laws with an eye toward making them more relevant and flexible given the ever changing digital information climate. The DMCA was divided into five sections, each having a different focus. Title I of the DMCA is the WIPO Copyright and Performance and Phonograms Treaties Implementation Act of 1998. Title II is the Online Copyright Infringement Liability Limitation Act, which creates limitations on the liability of online service providers for copyright infringement. Title III is the Computer Maintenance Competition Assurance Act, which creates an exception for making a copy of a computer program by activating a computer for purposes of maintenance or repair. Title IV contains miscellaneous provisions relating to distance education, the ability of libraries to make ephemeral recordings, webcasting of sound recordings, and the applicability of collective bargaining agreement obligations in the case of transfers of rights in motion pictures. Title V is the Vessel Hull Design Protection Act, which creates a new form of protection for the design of vessel hulls.

 

Additional Resources

DMCA Summary (prepared by the US Copyright Office)

The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (as enacted by Congress)

Overview of the DMCA (UCLA Online Institute for Cyberspace Law and Policy)

Rulemaking on Exemptions from Prohibition on Circumvention of Technological Measures that Control Access to Copyrighted Works (from the US Copyright Office)

Limitation of Liability for Online Service Providers (by Lutzker & Lutzker LLP)

DMCA Archive (Electronic Frontier Foundation)

Digital Millennium Copyright Act (Wikipedia)

viagra
free viagra
buy viagra online
generic viagra
how does viagra work
cheap viagra
buy viagra
buy viagra online inurl
viagra 6 free samples
viagra online
viagra for women
viagra side effects
female viagra
natural viagra
online viagra
cheapest viagra prices
herbal viagra
alternative to viagra
buy generic viagra
purchase viagra online
free viagra without prescription
viagra attorneys
free viagra samples before buying
buy generic viagra cheap
viagra uk
generic viagra online
try viagra for free
generic viagra from india
fda approves viagra
free viagra sample
what is better viagra or levitra
discount generic viagra online
viagra cialis levitra
viagra dosage
viagra cheap
viagra on line
best price for viagra
free sample pack of viagra
viagra generic
viagra without prescription
discount viagra
gay viagra
mail order viagra
viagra inurl
generic viagra online paypal
generic viagra overnight
generic viagra online pharmacy
generic viagra uk
buy cheap viagra online uk
suppliers of viagra
how long does viagra last
viagra sex
generic viagra soft tabs
generic viagra 100mg
buy viagra onli
generic viagra online without prescription
viagra energy drink
cheapest uk supplier viagra
viagra cialis
generic viagra safe
viagra professional
viagra sales
viagra free trial pack
viagra lawyers
over the counter viagra
best price for generic viagra
viagra jokes
buying viagra
viagra samples
viagra sample
cialis
generic cialis
cheapest cialis
buy cialis online
buying generic cialis
cialis for order
what are the side effects of cialis
buy generic cialis
what is the generic name for cialis
cheap cialis
cialis online
buy cialis
cialis side effects
how long does cialis last
cialis forum
cialis lawyer ohio
cialis attorneys
cialis attorney columbus
cialis injury lawyer ohio
cialis injury attorney ohio
cialis injury lawyer columbus
prices cialis
cialis lawyers
viagra cialis levitra
cialis lawyer columbus
online generic cialis
daily cialis
cialis injury attorney columbus
cialis attorney ohio
cialis cost
cialis professional
cialis super active
how does cialis work
what does cialis look like
cialis drug
viagra cialis
cialis to buy new zealand
cialis without prescription
free cialis
cialis soft tabs
discount cialis
cialis generic
generic cialis from india
cheap cialis sale online
cialis daily
cialis reviews
cialis generico
how can i take cialis
cheap cialis si
cialis vs viagra
levitra
generic levitra
levitra attorneys
what is better viagra or levitra
viagra cialis levitra
levitra side effects
buy levitra
levitra online
levitra dangers
how does levitra work
levitra lawyers
what is the difference between levitra and viagra
levitra versus viagra
which works better viagra or levitra
buy levitra and overnight shipping
levitra vs viagra
canidan pharmacies levitra
how long does levitra last
viagra cialis levitra
levitra acheter
comprare levitra
levitra ohne rezept
levitra 20mg
levitra senza ricetta
cheapest generic levitra
levitra compra
cheap levitra
levitra overnight
levitra generika
levitra kaufen





About the Author

Eugene R. Quinn, Jr.
President & Founder of IPWatchdog, Inc.
US Patent Attorney (Reg. No. 44,294)

B.S. in Electrical Engineering, Rutgers University
J.D., Franklin Pierce Law Center
L.L.M. in Intellectual Property, Franklin Pierce Law Center

Send me an e-mail

View Gene Quinn's profile on LinkedIn

Gene is a US Patent Attorney, Law Professor and the founder of IPWatchdog.com. He teaches patent bar review courses and is a member of the Board of Directors of the United Inventors Association. Gene has been quoted in the Wall Street Journal, the New York Times, the LA Times, CNN Money and various other newspapers and magazines worldwide