Major ISP’s announce new copyright enforcement program will be overseen by RIAA lobbyist
JG Vibes
Activist PostFor years the RIAA and the MPAA have been hunting down BitTorrent users
in a scenario that is often compared to the candle maker cursing the
invention of electric light, or the horse and buggy operators sabotaging
random cars.
Every step of the way, the hive mind of the Internet was always a few
steps ahead of the powers that have sought to control it. However,
things are about to get a bit more complicated for people using
BitTorrent clients to download copyrighted material.
In an effort to curb online piracy, the MPAA and RIAA have teamed up
with five major Internet providers in the United States to launch the
Center for Copyright Information (CCI). The ISP’s who have signed on so
far are AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner, and Verizon.
Since the Internet service industry is highly regulated and cartelized,
that doesn’t leave many safe havens behind.
Major ISP’s will work with the copyright holders
to spy on downloaders and send them multiple warnings, threatening to
limit the users Internet access. It was even revealed in
leaked documents that cutting off access to popular websites has been discussed as a consequence for repeat downloaders.
In this new Internet regulation scheme the government has set up a
series of “checks and balances” as they often do, to put people’s minds
at ease and to assure the general population that nothing corrupt is
taking place. The primary oversight in this situation would be an
“independent expert” on copyright to provide an objective assessment of
the spying and accusations that will come about as a result of this
program.
In a blatant act of corruption,
Stroz Friedberg was chosen as the designated “technology expert”, and that he may be,
but was also involved with the RIAA’s head lobbying firm for half a
decade, bringing an obvious conflict of interest into the picture.
Between 2004 and 2009 Stroz Friedberg
lobbied extensively in Washington on behalf of the RIAA. This consulting job earned the
company more than half a million dollars ($637,000). Unsurprisingly the
CCI has already put forward a statement saying that “Stroz Friedberg
has completed its initial review of MarkMonitor’s methodologies and
found that the system is accurate and works properly”
The
online community is understandably alarmed by this appointment but the
mainstream media has been totally silent on this matter, although
CNN did recently report on the rollout of this new copyright enforcement system.
According to Torrentfreak, this sentiment is shared by University of Idaho Law Professor Annemarie Bridy, who
previously concluded that the copyright alert system lacks transparency and favors copyright holders.
“It’s a disappointing choice, particularly in light of CCI’s professed
desire to build public confidence in CAS and the fairness of its
processes. It would have been refreshing to see an academic computer
scientist or some other truly independent party appointed to fill that
important role,” Bridy tells TorrentFreak.
“CCI’s choice of a former RIAA lobbying firm makes it clear that the
copyright owner parties to the Memorandum of Understanding were more
interested in appointing someone they trust than in appointing someone
the public can trust,” she adds.
File sharing through bittorrent is a very mainstream phenomena, and this
new witch hunt against downloaders will most likely push people towards
using more private means of sharing files.
Following the implementation of this program there will undoubtedly be an increased interest in
TOR and similar browsers, which allow people to browse a deeper level of
the Internet in complete anonymity. It is only a matter of time before
people are pushed onto the last free corner of the Internet and create
an even more decentralized and user friendly way to share files.
Source:-
http://www.activistpost.com/2012/10/major-isps-announce-new-copyright.html