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Getbig Main Boards => Politics and Political Issues Board => Topic started by: MB_722 on June 23, 2009, 01:51:01 PM
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Obama: Stop Filling Administration w/ RIAA Insiders
# By David Kravets Email Author
# April 2, 2009
Nearly two dozen public interest groups, trade pacts and library groups urged President Barack Obama on Thursday to quit filling his administration with insiders plucked from the Recording Industry Association of America.
The demands came a week after the Justice Department, fresh with two RIAA attorneys in its No. 2 and No. 3 positions, announced the administration’s support of $150,000 in damages for each music track purloined on a peer-to-peer file sharing program. The administration, moreover, has just declared as classified the inner workings of worldwide intellectual property trade pact. And Hollywood is urging Obama to embrace internet filtering as the content industry seeks to cut internet access to repeat copyright violators.
Still, Obama has yet to fill the all-important role of copyright czar, a new cabinet-level position approved by Congress late last year. Other unfilled vacancies dealing with intellectual property rest in the Patent and Trademark Office, the United States Trade Representative and the State Department.
Groups such as Public Knowledge, the Electronic Frontier Foundation, the Consumer Electronics Association, the Wikimedia Foundation and, among others, the American Library Association, are demanding Obama to look outside the content industry when filling up his administration.
"In selecting these officials, we ask you to consider that individuals who support overly broad IP protection might favor established distribution models at the expense of technological innovators, creative artists, writers, musicians, filmmakers, and an increasingly participatory public," the 19 groups wrote (.pdf) Obama Thursday. "Overzealous expansion and enforcement of copyright, for example, can quash innovative information technologies, the development and marketing of new and useful devices, and the creation of new works, as well as prohibit the public from accessing and using its cultural heritage."
The group are: American Association of Law Libraries, American Library Association, Association of Research Libraries, Center for Democracy and Technology, Computer and Communications Industry Association, Consumer Electronics Association, Consumers Union, EDUCAUSE, Electronic Frontier Foundation, Entertainment Consumers Association, Essential Action, Home Recording Rights Coalition, Internet Archive, Knowledge Ecology International, NetCoalition, Public Knowledge, Special Libraries Association. U.S. Public Interest Research Group, Wikimedia Foundation.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-stop-fill/ (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-stop-fill/)
Obama Taps 5th RIAA Lawyer to Justice Dept.
President Barack Obama is tapping another RIAA attorney into the Justice Department.
Monday’s naming of Ian Gershengorn, to become the department’s deputy assistant attorney of the Civil Division, comes more than a week after nearly two-dozen public interest groups, trade pacts and library coalitions urged the new president to quit filling his administration with lawyers plucked from the Recording Industry Association of America.
The move makes it five RIAA lawyers Obama has appointed to the Justice Department.
Gershengorn, left, a partner with RIAA-firm Jenner & Block, represented the labels against Grokster (.pdf) and will be in charge of the DOJ Federal Programs Branch. That’s the unit that just told a federal judge the Obama administration supports monetary damages as high as $150,000 per purloined music track on a peer-to-peer file sharing program.
In addition to Gershengorn, the other Jenner & Block attorneys appointed to the Justice Department include:
*Donald Verrilli, associate deputy attorney general — the No. 3 in the DOJ, who unsuccessfully urged a federal judge to uphold the $222,000 file sharing verdict against Jammie Thomas.
*Tom Perrilli, as Verrilli’s former boss, the Justice Department’s No. 2 argued in 2002 that internet service providers should release customer information to the RIAA even without a court subpoena.
*Brian Hauck, counsel to associate attorney general, worked on the Grokster case on behalf of the record labels.
*Ginger Anders, assistant to the solicitor general, litigated on the Cablevision case.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-taps-fift/ (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-taps-fift/)
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Obama: Stop Filling Administration w/ RIAA Insiders
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-stop-fill/ (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-stop-fill/)
Obama Taps 5th RIAA Lawyer to Justice Dept.
http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-taps-fift/ (http://www.wired.com/threatlevel/2009/04/obama-taps-fift/)
This is really fcuking bad.
Information sharing over the net is what won Obama the election.
That time it was messaging.
But now he's shutting down the non-commercial file sharing.
So the big fat companies can prevail with their commercial file sharing?
The only ones that can stay alive are anonymizing services - but they are - you guessed it: Commercial!!!! >:(
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This is really fcuking bad.
Information sharing over the net is what won Obama the election.
That time it was messaging.
But now he's shutting down the non-commercial file sharing.
So the big fat companies can prevail with their commercial file sharing?
The only ones that can stay alive are anonymizing services - but they are - you guessed it: Commercial!!!! >:(
We are being proven right 100%.