Congress Covets Copyright Cops

Published: 30 July 2001 y., Monday
A draft of next year's budget includes plans to hire far more Justice Department attorneys and FBI agents who are charged with placing more pirates in prison. This comes one week after Attorney General John Ashcroft spoke in Mountain View, California, about the threat of online piracy. In the same week, geek protesters demanded the release of Dmitry Sklyarov, a Russian programmer arrested on felony copyright charges. That's exactly what should be happening, according to a Senate committee report. In an apparent reference to the prosecution, it says: "The committee is aware that the FBI has launched an initiative to investigate violations of federal copyright laws protecting certain marketed software applications. The committee supports FBI efforts..." The Senate has earmarked $10 million for copyright prosecutions, enough money for 155 agents and attorneys in the fiscal year starting in October. That's up from a current $4 million allocated for 75 positions. Copyright holders, who applauded the prosecution of Sklyarov on charges of violating the controversial DMCA, said they hoped the additional cash will put more DMCA pirates and copyright thieves behind bars.
Šaltinis: wired.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Net Access Through The TV Looking Glass

At last week's Western Cable Show, Microsoft's Ultimate TV and America Online's AOLTV made it clear that the future is here. more »

Net use growing for campaign news

Readers prefer traditional news outlets to campaigns’ sites more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

Antivirus firm says Shockwave virus spreading quickly

An email computer virus that comes concealed as a Net movie hit several U.S.-based companies Friday afternoon, leading at least one antivirus company to upgrade its threat assessment from "medium" to "high" risk. more »

Two-way pager designed by AOL

America Online Inc. unveiled a two-way paging device designed for access to AOL e-mail and instant messaging services. more »

Internet use rising fast in Europe

Japan attempts online expansion to boost lagging economy more »

Expert Confirms WAP Users' Fears

In a report published Thursday, usability expert Jakob Nielsen has confirmed what WAP users have long suspected -- WAP doesn't work. more »

Europe Taking Part in Holiday E-Commerce

Forrester Research expects European consumers will spend 2.6 billion Euros online during the 2000 holiday season more »

Pentium 4 fails to outpace Athlon, testers say

Intel's initial Pentium 4 chips released Monday don't provide a real performance advantage and are often slower when compared with the fastest Athlon chips from Advanced Micro Devices, benchmark testers and analysts say. more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »