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Television Media Your Rights Online

20 Lawmakers Want to Kill Your Television 633

Macki writes "As previously mentioned, the Broadcast Flag is back before congress. There are 20 law makers currently supporting the bill. The insane thing about it is the fact that no one supports the bill except a handful of entertainment companies. Probably not even the employees of the entertainment companies. It's bad enough they want to break our televisions, but the way that they are subverting democracy is just astounding. Danny O'Brien at the EFF has done a spectacular job deconstructingthe MPAA/RIAA's efforts to ramrod this through, and more importantly, the motivations of the members of congress who are helping them."
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20 Lawmakers Want to Kill Your Television

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  • by ackthpt ( 218170 ) * on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:22AM (#13764073) Homepage Journal
    WASHINGTON D.C., The Senate is forming a committee to look into why it is a bad idea to have foxes in charge of the henhouse. Barbara Boxer (D-CA) stated, "In the interests of diversity, we don't really understand why this should be any kind of problem and we'll work dilligently with foxes and chickens to see what can be done to have them live together in harmony." A Festus Fox was unable to give a comment as his mouth was currently full of feathers. No chickens have been found to provide their point of view. The chickens total lack of cooperation so far is seen as an attempt on their part to block progress in the matter.
  • by bennini ( 800479 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:31AM (#13764145) Homepage
    already slashdotted. i cant see the article even. try the cache [google.com].
  • by Peyna ( 14792 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:33AM (#13764158) Homepage
    It's bad enough they want to break our televisions, but the way that they are subverting democracy is just astounding

    Okay, now with this issue there might be an exception here, but there is a reason we don't have a true democracy in the United States: people are stupid. That's why we pick representatives to do the voting for us. It's not because it would be inconvenient to have a popular vote on every issue, it's because the framers were smart enough not to trust the public with such power.

    Think of all the things that the majority of people in the U.S. hold as being a "good thing" for the country that would probably end up being disasterous. If slavery and civil rights were held to a popular vote, there's a good chance the laws never would have passed.

    So please, before you trash Congress for against "the will of the people," bear in mind that is exactly why Congress exists; so that when the time is appropriate, Congress can go against the majority of the people in order to protect the minority.

    I make no claim as to the application of my statements to this particular article. Just a general remark about the issue raised by the article summary.
    • by GungaDan ( 195739 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:38AM (#13764196) Homepage
      You missed a critical point: "people are stupid. That's why we pick STUPID representatives to vote STUPIDLY for us."

      • And then they don't want to take a side. So they recommend a referendum where the voters choose instead.
        • by Jim_Callahan ( 831353 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @01:59PM (#13767088)
          Actually, when it's a real issue, they make sure Joe Idiot.. uh, i mean Public... is out yelling about abortion or evolution or some other issue that was pretty much settled half a century ago and is relatively unimportant. Then they go do what they feel is right while no one is watching. Unless they're corrupt, in which case they do whatever they feel will benefit them most while no one is watching. In all honesty, I figure this is a marginally better system than the referendum/initiative nonsense, corruption notwithstanding: just look at some of the shit that California has passed under referendum.
      • by Flamingcheeze ( 737589 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @10:37AM (#13765281) Homepage Journal
        "As democracy is perfected, the office of president represents, more and more closely, the inner soul of the people. On some great and glorious day the plain folks of the land will reach their heart's desire at last and the White House will be adorned by a downright moron." -- H. L. Mencken
    • by bogado ( 25959 ) <bogado.bogado@net> on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:47AM (#13764260) Homepage Journal

      So please, before you trash Congress for against "the will of the people," bear in mind that is exactly why Congress exists; so that when the time is appropriate, Congress can go against the majority of the people in order to protect the minority.


      In this case the will of the unprotected minority (RIAA, MPIAA, *IAA, Disney, Sony, Exon, name other deep-pocket industry here) is being bravely defended by those braves congressmen and congresswomen. Going against every single individual interest and battling those evil, terrorist backed, so called "fair uses". They must be heroes , risking their career to fight for such noble and unjust-iced minority.
    • by thefirelane ( 586885 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:50AM (#13764284)
      Congress can go against the majority of the people in order to protect the minority.

      Just a nit pick, it isn't Congress's role to go against the will of the majority. They are supposed to represent this will. Protecting of minority from the majority is the job of the judicial branch... such action is currenly refered to as "judicial activisim" by the people making the laws, even though it is exactly what they are supposed to do.
      • Just a nit pick, it isn't Congress's role to go against the will of the majority. They are supposed to represent this will. Protecting of minority from the majority is the job of the judicial branch.

        There is no law requiring a congressman to represent the will of his/her constituency. The definition of what would constitute adequate representation would be too subjective to capture in law. Instead, what motivates politicians to be in tune with the people's will is mostly their desire to be re-elected.
      • I don't think you're being specific enough -- it's the House of Representatives that's meant to be closer to the will of the people. The Senate is meant as a counterweight to that tendency [constitution.org]:

        The necessity of a senate is not less indicated by the propensity of all single and numerous assemblies to yield to the impulse of sudden and violent passions, and to be seduced by factious leaders into intemperate and pernicious resolutions. Examples on this subject might be cited without number; and from proceedings w

    • by hackstraw ( 262471 ) * on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:51AM (#13764298)
      If slavery and civil rights were held to a popular vote, there's a good chance the laws never would have passed.

      Great examples of some of the better laws in the country :) Prohibition is missing though.

      So please, before you trash Congress for against "the will of the people," bear in mind that is exactly why Congress exists; so that when the time is appropriate, Congress can go against the majority of the people in order to protect the minority.

      So, these poor rich people get protected and everybody else gets punished. I think that this is the subverting that the gp was talking about.
    • I am so tired of people saying if we had a true democracy then stupid things would result because look at the stupid people. My answer is maybe you are one of those STUPID people? And maybe you happen to be one of those biased people who thought, "If it was up to me I would fix things".

      You see I live in a country that has true democracy and it is called Switzerland. In fact true democracy works well because believe it or not there are "STUPID" swiss! People who say, "it's because the framers were smart
      • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @10:01AM (#13764932)
        You see I live in a country that has true democracy and it is called Switzerland. In fact true democracy works well because believe it or not there are "STUPID" swiss! People who say, "it's because the framers were smart enough not to trust the public with such power" are in fact saying, "An elite number of people know what's good for the masses!". Let's carry this thought through and call it what it is namely fascism.

        Interestingly enough, the Swiss Germans make up the majority of Switzerland; so in any direct vote they would get to decide what is best for everyone. When I lived there one of the complaints I heard from my Italian and French Swiss friends was that if the German Swiss decided something was good it became law at the national level.

        While direct democracy can work well it starts to break down as people become less homogeneous and have varying views of what is good based on their cultural norms. Even a country as small as Switzerland is not a country of only cows, Heidis, and chocolate or watch makers.

        Speaking of Heide, Switzerland was the last European country to give women suffrage; and unless it has changed they still can't vote in some local (largely ceremonial) elections.

        It's wonderful and interesting country to live in, but the reality is very different than the popular image (in the US at least) most people have of Switzerland.

        The US has true democracy on a local level to a limited extent - we vote on laws directly, as well as many revenue issues. Some states allow citizens to overturn or create laws via popular referendum as well (CA falls to mind). We just don't do it on a national level; as a republic with limited federal powers that's probably not a bad idea considering it would concentrate power in a few very populous parts of the country.
        • The US has true democracy on a local level to a limited extent - we vote on laws directly, as well as many revenue issues. Some states allow citizens to overturn or create laws via popular referendum as well (CA falls to mind). We just don't do it on a national level

          Nor should we. We are a federation of sovereign States here, not one big centralized republic. Basically a bunch of little countries that work together as one big country on certain matters. If we were a direct democracy....we simply wouldn't

      • by uujjj ( 752925 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @10:12AM (#13765038)
        We have the same direct democracy here in California. We have a voters guide that often tops 200 pages, plus local voting guides ranging from 50 to 200 pages. And it is kind of fun getting to vote on all the nit-picky details of how the state is run. We've given ourselves plenty of tax cuts :)

        Unfortunately, when people in the rest of the country need an argument against direct democracy they simply say "California" and everyone on the other side shuts up. Pity, they're missing out on the fun of figuring out what all the school funding formulas and bond measures and criminal statute amendments and auto insurance regulation schemes mean.
      • If a country like the US switched to true democracy yes in the first decade all hell would break out because people would vote based on silly ideas. HOWEVER, after people realize that their vote counts people will vote differently.

        That's a nice thought, but it isn't even slightly true for the USA.

        You do not understand how spoiled we are here.

        In just a couple of years, our country would be in ruins. We'd have new laws that cap gas prices, lower taxes, public lynchings, zero unemployment laws, no s
      • In a true democracy you have many issues, and several failings. The issues are pretty much hashed out a millions times: population, voting complexity, time for responses, etc. The failings have also been fairly well discussed, too. The biggest is the inability to avoid the "tyranny of the majority".

        Going your way, you end up without States rights, with a watered down local level, and a massive Federal government. This is exactly what happened after the 17th amendment passed, which called for the direct
    • Yeah, because Switzerland, as a country where the people vote directly on many issues is a great example of democracy gone bad, wheras the USA...

      Oh wait.
    • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:28AM (#13764622) Homepage
      Okay, now with this issue there might be an exception here, but there is a reason we don't have a true democracy in the United States: people are stupid.

      No, even if you had a nation of 300 million geniuses, it is impossible for them to make informed decisions on every subject of national interest. There's simply not enough hours of the day with the current load, imagine if 300 million people were to submit their own suggestions. You need some kind of system to both reduce the caseload and the number of manhours per case spent in total. Feel free to suggest a better system. I don't want half my day answering votes, and at the end of the day still have "You have 143,242 unanswered votes", 99% of which will be highjacked by some rally. And most of those polls should be modded to "-1, Troll".
      • by jandrese ( 485 ) *
        Plus, 95% of what Congress does is mind numbingly dull and uninteresting for normal folk. I mean how are the "masses" supposed to vote on the regulation of the prices of Lettuce?
    • people are stupid

      I don't think it is a matter of stupidity (the writer is excluded, right?) as much as a matter of not caring or being unaware. People in general don't react to things until they become a crisis, i.e. ignoring their diet until they get heart disease, building in 100 year flood plains, slowly trashing the environment, watching their freedoms get whittled away, etc. It is hard to think for the long term (look at most US companies) and the people who may be aware of this bill will not sto

  • Already dead (Score:5, Insightful)

    by lovebyte ( 81275 ) <lovebyte2000@gma ... minus physicist> on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:33AM (#13764168) Homepage
    For me, like for many people here, TV is already dead.
    • Re:Already dead (Score:5, Insightful)

      by TooMuchEspressoGuy ( 763203 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:07AM (#13764413)
      Seconded. I haven't owned a television in years, and I don't plan to in the future unless there is some way to cut down on or eliminate commercials.

      Seriously, 20-25 minutes of commercials in an hour is just insane. I'd be more than happy to pay an extra fee to the cable company or to the owners of the 2-3 channels I would actually watch to have them eliminated.

      • Re:Already dead (Score:3, Informative)

        by cybpunks3 ( 612218 )
        Thank Reagan for that. He loosened restrictions on the ratio between commercials and content. So hourlong shows are really more like halfhours shows.

      • Re:Already dead (Score:3, Insightful)

        by _Sharp'r_ ( 649297 )
        Guess what? They have these really neat boxes now that let you record tv shows to a hard drive and skip the commercials while watching them at your leisure. I understand there are lots of people who make them now, commercially or home grown.

        It's also nice for watching football games, where you can watch a full game in an hour, since you can just skip the between-plays waiting times.

        So no need to watch any more commercials and no need to be tied to a broadcast schedule.
  • by ewg ( 158266 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:34AM (#13764171)
    If you'll excuse me, I have to go renew my library card...
  • Slashdotted Link (Score:5, Informative)

    by Mad_Rain ( 674268 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:35AM (#13764173) Journal
    Since I'd really like to know who the CongressCritters are who are supporting this, I found a link off the webpage to a letter of support: pdf here [eff.org].In case that's slashdotted moementarily, heres the list of representatives

    Charles Pickering
    Edolphus Towns
    John Shimkus
    George Radnovich
    Mike Ferguson
    Marsha Blackburn
    Mary Bono
    Bart Gordon
    Joe Terry
    Ed Whitfield
    Bobby Rush
    Vito Fossella
    Elliot L. Engel
    John B. Shadegg
    Albert Russell Wynn
    Michael F. Doyle
    Charles A. Gonzalez
    Charles F. Bass
    John Sullivan
    Frank Pallone, Jr.

    You can look up what disctricts they're from at www.house.gov, and contact them any way you see fit. Let 'em have it! ;)
    • Just to Clarify (Score:5, Informative)

      by pavon ( 30274 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:59AM (#13764909)
      The "There are 20 law makers currently supporting the bill" link in the summary is incorrect. The twenty Senators listed on that site are the ones in the Commerce Commitee who will be voting on the Senate version of the DTV bill, and may or may not support the broadcast flag.

      This article, however, was about a new push to get the Brodcast flag added to the DTV bill in the House Committee on Energy and Commerce [house.gov], in particular in the Telecommunications and the Internet Subcommittee [house.gov]. The way that legislation works now-a-days is that there is rarely an opportunity to get a bill ammended when it goes before congress. All the formulation and ammending of bills happens in committee, and then the house and senate usually just give it an up or down vote without any modifications (but after a great deal of grand-standing). So these are the people who have the most influence on the final wording of the House version of the DTV bill. If you have representatives from your state in this committee you should definiately write them. Even if you don't it won't hurt to pick someone from the subcommittee and write them anyway.

      The representatives listed by Mad Rain, above, is the correct list of supporting representatives - 20 of the 57 members of the House Commerce Committee. If they are in you district, they are the people you should writing letters of disgust, and let them know you will be voting against them in the next election.

      In addition if your Senator is on the Senate Commerce Committee [senate.gov] and you haven't written them yet on the broadcast flag, then you should, as they will be dealing with this issue as well.

      Lastly if your senators and representatives are not on any of these committees you should write them anyway in case the bill makes it out of committee. Since we dont know an exact number for this bill yet, it helps if you know in what capacity they will be working with the bill, to help them identify what bill you are talking about. Keywords - Digital Television Bill, Broadcast Flag, Commerce Committee.

  • The insane thing about it is the fact that no one supports the bill except a handful of entertainment companies. Probably not even the employees of the entertainment companies. It's bad enough they want to break our televisions, but the way that they are subverting democracy is just astounding.

    Are we to believe that companies support something but their employees (whould would benefit from the additional revenue by keeping their jobs) somehow do not support the idea? How long could any of us stay at a c
    • Are we to believe that companies support something but their employees (whould would benefit from the additional revenue by keeping their jobs) somehow do not support the idea? How long could any of us stay at a company if we consistently opposed our bosses ideas?

      Yup. I work for the software industry, and quite honestly, I want them to stop adding the ineffective over priced copy protection mechanisms, region lockouts on consoles, and irritating licence agreements. I presume a lot of people who work fo


      • I may agree with some of your points but if I put this The actual cost to me of piracy is not that great. My job is fairly secure whether we have piracy or not, as long as it stays at manageable levels. Any sales related bonus is really fairly insiginificant. into a memo and sent it to my boss I'd be let go quicker than you can say EULA.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      "How long could any of us stay at a company if we consistently opposed our bosses ideas?"

      In an idealistic world people would not work for a company whose ideals conflict with personal interests.

      In the real world people will do almost anything to get paid.

      It's easy to walk out on a job when you live in your Mom's basement.

      It's not so easy when you work in a tight job market and have a family to support.
    • by Schweg ( 730121 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:50AM (#13764286)
      Look at it this way. A small group of companies, representing a small percentage of the economic output of this country, want specific legislation passed to support their particular business model and choice of technology. Why should they get to prevent the technology companies from coming up with different models for distributing and protecting content, and prevent consumers from choosing those technologies and models that they are willing to accept?

      Yes, they have copyrights, and those should be respected. But if the movie companies don't feel that current distribution methods allow their copyrights to be respected, then they don't have to distribute them. Of course, they'll lose a lot of money if they refuse to distribute. But rather than doing the hard work of researching alternate models, and compromising with technology companies and consumers, they want to be able to dictate to everyone else. Why should they be allowed to have this power?

    • "Free network television is not in the bill of rights."

      Neither is commercial television. Nor televisions. Neither is the right to make a profit from television.

      I'm not sure what your point is... that unless something is in the bill of rights, we have no rights to it?

      Look, I get what you're saying, that its "their" material, they can broadcast it anyway they like. And it might surprise you to know that I agree with you. But at the same time, I'm not sure why the government is spending time and effort to
      • Re:Good point (Score:5, Insightful)

        by MemeRot ( 80975 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:36AM (#13764689) Homepage Journal
        Their "threat" is so transparently false that it makes me laugh. Broadcasting companies are threatening to stop broadcasting? If they don't get their way, they'll just close up shop, lay everyone off, liquidate their assetts and cease to be? Right. Do you think their shareholders would support them getting out of broadcast television?

        They're like a 4 year old threatening to hold their breath until they die if they don't get the candy bar they want. They cannot do it, period. Sorry kid, no candy bar for you.
  • by ettlz ( 639203 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:35AM (#13764178) Journal
    OK, now do the RIAA/MPAA/whatever-AA really lose that much money due to fileswapping, piracy, video-taping, etc., that it is even financially worth all this bad PR? Or are they just run by a bunch of outright bastards who like being thought of as professional killjoys?
  • Kill TV's?? (Score:2, Funny)

    by Jugalator ( 259273 )
    Let me guess... Mr. Sweaty Armpits is backing these guys?
  • by Richthofen80 ( 412488 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:38AM (#13764198) Homepage
    The insane thing about it is the fact that no one supports the bill except a handful of entertainment companies

    The number of people who support a piece of legislation is irrelivant in terms of whether a law is right or wrong. At some point in our nation's history it was only a handful of people who wanted to:
    • free the slaves
    • allow women to vote
    • legalize abortion


    There are plenty of reasons not to vote for this law, but that line of reasoning isn't one of them.

    (fyi, do not mistake this comment as support for the law)
  • by Anita Coney ( 648748 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:39AM (#13764204) Homepage
    "Never get between an American and his TV set." If Congress passes this bill, there will be hell to pay.
    • by surprise_audit ( 575743 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:21AM (#13764554)
      Maybe there will be hell to pay, but by the time it really begins to bite the average American, the bill will have sat unopposed for a number of years. How many TVs and VCRs actually honor the broadcast flag already? None, or very few, because the legislation isn't there to support or demand it. How long will it take to get enough market penetration to make a difference? Years, because a new TV isn't something that you absolutely *have* to have every year.

      I predict that if the broadcast flag gets passed, it'll be far enough in the future before it really takes effect, that the broadcasters will have a fair chance of claiming, "but it was always there, we just didn't turn it on"...

  • by Mysticalfruit ( 533341 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:39AM (#13764206) Homepage Journal
    We may be a motivated army of geeks, but we're no match for American apathy.

    It won't be until Bubba goes out and buys one of those nice new Sony DVD writing PVR's and he tries to save his lastest [Nascar race | Jerry Springer | Reality TV show] to DVD that the broadcast flag will hit him in the face.

    Then suddenly the shit will hit the fan and it'll be too late.
  • by iainl ( 136759 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:39AM (#13764208)
    The broadcast flag won't do a thing to break your TV. Your TV shouldn't have to care one way or the other about the thing.

    What this breaks is your PVR, by making it unlawful for Best Buy (or whoever) to sell you one that will record something they don't want you to. That doesn't stop you watching TV.

    So they're not killing your home entertainment centre per se, just transporting it back to those lovely 1970s, where video recorders don't exist and the only way to watch something is to do so when they want to broadcast it. Which is pretty rubbish, admittedly.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      They're not lying. It breaks your TV. If your TV needs to support the broadcast flag to display content, and your TV doesn't support it because it was made before this law was passed, what do you think will happen?
    • by UnknowingFool ( 672806 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:56AM (#13764878)
      The broadcast flag won't do a thing to break your TV. Your TV shouldn't have to care one way or the other about the thing.

      One of the implications of the original broadcast flag in conjunction with digital TV was that all devices used to view the signal were affected. For new TVs, that meant they had to incorporate technology that would not allow the signal to re-record as well as accept digital reception. Had the broadcast flag not been struck down, it would mean that you could not buy a new TV without the flag. As for old TVs, they would not be a problem.

  • Kill Television ? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by rainer_d ( 115765 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:40AM (#13764214) Homepage
    More power to them.
    Today's TV is just a nuisance. It makes people dumb, fearful and lethargic.
    20% of US-Americans are functional illiterates - it wouldn't hurt if they switched off the TV-set and took a book in their hand.

    Rainer
    • Too true (Score:5, Insightful)

      by panurge ( 573432 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:04AM (#13764390)
      People criticise fine art and serious musicians for being elitist, but television and the recording industry show what happens when you have a non-elitist entertainment industry. Specifically, you get crap. Lots of it. I'm amazed at the apparently intelligent people who denounce anything that might restrict advertising or business as "communism" when nothing could be more typical of Communist regimes than a constant outpouring of propaganda produced by the rulers and aimed at the mob, with the intention of keeping the mob quiet, obedient, nad ignorant of who pulls their strings.

      At one point the Internet looked like providing a fix, at least for the literate, in terms of supplying information. But even there the good stuff is increasingly subject to Gresham's Law - it's being buried under the piles of shit. And now that Rupert Murdoch has suddenly discovered the interthingy, and is moving the centre of his empire to the US, it won't get better any time soon. But cheer up! The Roman Empire ran on panem et circenses; it's just a social cycle and eventually it will collapse. Probably when the barbarian hordes from China invade, steal all the electronic goods, and put the population of the US to work building giant terracotta statues.

      • People criticise fine art and serious musicians for being elitist, but television and the recording industry show what happens when you have a non-elitist entertainment industry. Specifically, you get crap. Lots of it.

        Don't tell me that you think 80% of "fine art" and "serious music" isn't CRAP, also.

        And despite your opinion that the television industry is spewing out nothing but crap, I somehow manage to keep my DVR's somewhat large hard drive full of interesting programming from week to week.
  • by eno2001 ( 527078 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:40AM (#13764216) Homepage Journal
    If you're a do-it-yourselfer like me, those days are quickly coming to an end in the US. They don't want a producer society, they want a consumer society. It's good for their pockets. But they are not going to be able to stop people with the intelligence to be able to do this stuff on their own. The GNU Radio Project [gnu.org] is a perfect example. It might eventually be "illegal" but for no good reason other than the supposed protection of intellectual property which is also a crock. I plan to be experimenting with this stuff myself since... science is not a crime.
  • by john.r.strohm ( 586791 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:49AM (#13764275)
    You write letters, as in black print on white paper, in a real envelope, with a real stamp, to your Congresscritters, explaining that you oppose this, you think it is a really bad idea, and you want them to vote AGAINST it.

    You send three letters, at a minimum: one to each Senator from your state, and one to the Congressman who represents you.

    You get all your friends to do the same thing.

    E-mail WON'T CUT IT. They KNOW that e-mail takes no effort, compared to sending an actual physical letter.

    If any of the Congresscritters sponsoring this travesty are from your state, whether they represent you or not, you also send them letters.

    The letters should be short, polite, to-the-point. They should not use profanity, they should not use 1337-speak, they should not make any kind of threat, not even the threat to vote against them in the next election if they support this. (That last threat is implicit in the fact that you sent the letter.)

    The vast majority of Congresscritters *NEVER* hear from "The Folks Back Home". The corollary is that every actual physical letter they receive indicates at least 100 voters who feel the same way, but didn't bother to write a letter. (Every phone call is assumed to indicate 10 voters.)

    You almost certainly will receive a reply to your letter. It may or may not indicate that anyone actually read it. If you do not receive a reply, you send more letters, to the State party headquarters, complaining about that clown in Washington who can't be bothered to answer mail from constituents. Those letters also get read, and said clown will hear about it from the guys who made his election happen.

    And anyone who thinks that these things can't be fixed should re-read the results of the 1994 mid-term elections.

    • You are certainly correct if this was 9/10/2001. After 9/11 and the anthrax scare, most congressmen ask their constituents to use email or call their offices since snail mail literally takes weeks to be processed and delivered.

      I would say to be most effective, you should call, fax, and email in that order.
  • I had read the title as 20 Online Lawnmowers Want To Kill Your Television

    Obviously I need a shot of coffee...
  • is how short-sighted can these industries be?

    the motion picture industry has just come to the conclusion that their paying customers are tired of junk. the tv industry is suffering also, largely due to junk. people are walking away from movies and tvs to computer (and other) entertainment. and these industries are so entrenched that rather than adapt to what people want, they are alienating their customers.

    it's not just money. it's power also. many years ago (before vcrs
  • by gnalre ( 323830 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:56AM (#13764339)
    Last time I looked I was'nt suppossed to be able to view DVD's outside my region. Funny thing is the manufacturer left some "test functions" around which allowed me to do this.

    Even if the broadcast flag is made legal, it won't be worldwide so manufacturers outside the US(i.e.99% of them) will have to support both modes and therefore there will be a loophole and a way of turning it off.

    Unless the RiAA and MPAA are going to go around raiding houses to find these illegal devices I cannot see this working
  • Think: Civil War Era (Score:5, Interesting)

    by argoff ( 142580 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @08:58AM (#13764354)
    The truth is that history is repeating itself here, I know this sounds off topic - but a few paragrapshs down I'll explain some more. The speculative industrial stock bubble in 1850 is very similar to the speculative internet stock bubble in 2000. The "war against indians" is very similar to the "war against terrorisim" - back then advances in transportation technology exposed us to indian culture in a very fast and dramatic way causing a culture clash, today the internet has exposed many unfree cultures arround the world to US culture in a very dramatic way to them and some have reacted by lashing out at us.

    Back then it was about controlling the labor market (slavery) in the industrial era, today it is about controlling information in the information age. Back then they screamed bloody murder that people were stealing their property rights as industrialists wanted to use available labor without giving a damn about who alledgedly "owned it". Today many industires and individuals want to just be able to use information at their disposal to provide effective services, without being microregulated with a zillion tons of content restrictions. (like google's guntenberg project, apple's ipod, to name a few out of thousands)

    The speculative advances of the industrial revolution also caused a period of growth followed by a deflationary adjustment. Today, the housing and every other market is way over saturated in debt - and the writing is on the wall. (watch out for a major economic "adjustment")

    There were even people who desperately tried to get the slave states to get along with the free states who naievely didn't understand the nature of slavery or that the forces that would drive the industries apart were far greater than the ones that bound them together. Today there are all these people who are desperately trying to cling to the copyright system, even though any sincere thought will show it's pretty much DOA, and should be DOA.

    So yes, the way congress is acting shouldn't be any supprise. Renember how they extended slavery to last forever for all colored people, renember how they punished people for simply teaching others how to read. Funny how copyrights have effectively been made to last forever, and copyright violations can be punished worse than rape.

    There are some important differeces though. First you can't controll information with physical violence, but you can attempt to controll it with BS, threats, lawsuits, brow-beating, etc .... Second, there is no nicely divided north and south. Instead it is more like a division between tech and content industries. Third, copyrights are not the only information people are trying to controll - "money" is a way of storing information about value and transaction costs. The Fed and some large financial institutions are definitely trying to controll it, and all hell is about to break loose in the market place as well as the copyright space. Fourth, there is compelling reason to believe that no government will be on the side of freedom this time until the battle is all over. A flaw of democratic government is that it is often more accountable to the media than it is to securing freedoms.
  • by pridkett ( 2666 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:01AM (#13764369) Homepage Journal
    You might be interested to follow the money trail behind there. There are two major money sources behind this legislation (well, probably more, but it takes time to mine OpenSecrets [opensecrets.org]): The national association of broadcasters and the national cable and telecommunications association. Together these groups have given over $300,000 to the people who signed this letter over the past two election cycles. That's an average of more than $15,000 per congressman. It's scary that I can buy a congressman's support on a bill for less than the cost of my Mazda. Of particular note is how representative Upton, the man who the letter was directed to has already received over $35,000 in this and the previous election cycle from these interests.

    More analysis and complete listings can be found at this entry [wagstrom.net] in my weblog.

    Anyway, so in response, I called my congressman, Mike Doyle (PA-14), and asked to speak to the tech person to understand his position on the broadcast flag. It's important to note that not all legislators who signed the letter support the flag on the same level. I was informed that Doyle supported it to keep copy protected content off the internet, but still wanted to allow time shifting and burning to DVD, copying to PSP etc. Good, but misguided. If your legislator takes this stance, I highly suggest referencing the Darkent Paper [stanford.edu] from Microsoft Research. Basically, it says that DRM will fail in these endeavors. Also, when you call, try not to sound like a loony. Being able to cite specific examples of how it will hurt you is good (e.g. I travel a lot and this will prevent me from watching shows on my PSP or are you willing to explain to grandma why she can't tape Monday night football to watch it the next morning because she can't stay up past 10pm).
  • by Futurepower(R) ( 558542 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:10AM (#13764438) Homepage
    The U.S. government is for sale to whomever has money: Unprecedented Corruption: A guide to conflict of interest in the U.S. government [futurepower.org].

    It's not just the broadcast flag.
  • by Wansu ( 846 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:24AM (#13764586)

      It's bad enough they want to break our televisions, but the way that they are subverting democracy is just astounding.

    There's nothing new about this kind of subversion. Lawmakers are already ignoring their constituents on issues such as the Iraq war, immigration and the economy. They have been bought off by corporate interests. The United States is being cannibalized to generate profits for big corporations.
  • by coffii ( 76089 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:37AM (#13764693)
    ...but not my TV!
  • this is good news (Score:5, Insightful)

    by idlake ( 850372 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:44AM (#13764766)
    If Congress doesn't deliver a Broadcast Flag pronto, warns the letter, content producers will abandon free, over-the-air broadcast TV.

    Obviously, that means that we should, under no circumstances, deliver a Broadcast Flag; we really need the bandwidth for more useful purposes. For example, if we use those channels for WiFi or WiMax, then Internet access becomes easier and people can choose what to watch, as opposed to having ABC and NBC show them bad television with worse advertising mixed in.
  • Details... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by AB3A ( 192265 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:50AM (#13764826) Homepage Journal
    First, very few households get broadcast TV any more. I have seen numbers as low as 20%. Most housholds have cable.

    Second, what about the mantra that if you don't want people to record things, then don't send it on the radio spectrum? Cable companies can ask you to sign terms of agreements for viewing their broadcasts. They could put broadcast flags in their transmissions if they so choose --and there isn't much that anyone can do about it except not subscribe.

    Ultimately I don't think producers and broadcast networks realize that it is their very own throats they are cutting. Those people who have a life do not schedule them around television broadcasts any more. That's what VCRs and TiVO are for. If too many programs have this flag, those who sell advertising will notice that the circulation isn't as wide as it used to be. And then guess what: It will not get used.

    Television shows aren't free. If the distributors choose to stop airing this stuff because they can't get the broadcast flag, that's their business. Are we so far gone that we're back to bread and circuses to keep us passified? I say let Congress pass this bill. It will be an interesting experiment. I can't wait to see how much illiterate hate mail the congress critters get because kids can't watch their cartoons on TiVO, housewives can watch their soaps, and those with little imagination can't watch their gussied up game shows we call "reality television"...

    I think this is a lot of hooey over nothing. Nobody's got the guts to use a broadcast flag. I dare these guys to do this to this to a program for one year. It'll never survive.
  • by Doc Ruby ( 173196 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @09:57AM (#13764891) Homepage Journal
    8 of these 20 senators are up for reelection in 2006, more than the percentage of the entire Senate (40% vs 33%). Call their office, ask how they'll vote, decide whether to vote for them to represent you for the next 6 more years, and tell them that you and all your Internetted friends are voting that way next year. That's the only way to influence them, short of sending them sacks of cash bribes^Wcontributions, or finding them in bed with a dead girl (or live boy). If you really want to make a difference, don't just call them with consistent, effective talking points [publicknowledge.org]. Send them a paper letter. Because plenty of these neanderthals don't have any idea what a "broadcast flag" is, and probably think they're voting for some kind of "wrap myself in the American flag" rule that scores votes among the blindly patriotic.

    Republicans:
    Conrad Burns - Montana 202-224-2644
    Trent Lott - Mississippi 202-224-6253
    Kay Bailey Hutchison - Texas 202-224-5922
    John Ensign - Nevada 202-224-6244
    Olympia Snowe - Maine 202-224-5344
    George Allen - Virginia 202-224-4024

    Democrats:
    Bill Nelson - Florida 202-224-5274
    Maria Cantwell - Washington 202-224-3441

    Senator John McCain - Arizona 202-224-2235 is running for president in 2008. Call his office, too, and tell him whether you and all your Internetted friends nationwide will be voting for him.

    Senator David Vitter - Louisiana 202-224-4623 just stood up for his partymate Bush's failure to protect his state before, during and after Hurricane Katrina. He's not running, but he's so vulnerable that he doesn't need to hear that rich, smart people are against him, along with the poor evacuees and victims.

    Senator John Sununu - New Hampshire 202-224-2841 is the most powerful telecom senator. Call his office and tell them what his "tech constituency" thinks of his votes to protect us from being regulated into media vassals.

    Go ahead and call any of the rest of them, if they represent you. That means they represent you, not the interests of some out-of-state media cartel that's just ripping you off:

    Republicans:
    Chairman Ted Stevens - Alaska 202-224-3004
    Senator Gordon Smith - Oregon 202-224-3753
    Senator Jim DeMint - South Carolina 202-224-6121

    Democrats:
    Ranking Member Daniel K. Inouye - Hawaii 202-224-3934
    Senator John D. Rockefeller IV - West Virginia 202-224-6472
    Senator John F. Kerry - Massachussetts 202-224-2742
    Senator Byron L. Dorgan - North Dakota 202-224-2551
    Senator Barbara Boxer - California 202-224-3553
    Senator Frank Lautenberg - New Jersey 202-224-3224
    Senator E. Benjamin Nelson - Nebraska 202-224-6551
    Senator Mark Pryor - Arkansas 202-224-2353
  • by jmichaelg ( 148257 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @10:29AM (#13765193) Journal
    Subverting democracy is an old tradition. When Congress was voting on funding the trans-continental railroad, Collis Huntington (one of the founders of the Central Pacific) used a small telescope to get a closeup look at each congress man while Congress was in session. He was deciding which ones would be likely candidates to give bribes to so they'd support the railway. He must have been good at it because lots of congressmen got huge bribes in the form of Credit-Mobilier stock and Huntington, Stanford, Hopkins and Crocker ended up owning California for 40 years.

    Democracy has been subverted for ages and will continue to be. The only thing that keeps it rolling along is the electorate eventually gets pissed off enough and kicks the scoundrels out and installs new scoundrels. Rotating the bastards out is something akin to hitting the reset button - things work well for awhile until it's time to reset again.

    These 20 congress folk [boingboing.net] who signed the letter need to be reminded who voted them into office. The bribes the MPAA and RIAA are paying had better be enough for them to live on once they're kicked out.

  • by themonkman ( 877464 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @10:57AM (#13765465)
    Here is a copy of the letter I sent to my states Representative (CA);

    Dear Congressman Radanovich,

    I understand that you are supporting a Bill set forth to require the use of the Digital TV Broadcast Flag. While this has no direct benefit to the users of digital tv, it comes as a worriesome revelation to those of us who use and enjoy analog tv, and have no intention of soon switching over and purchasing digital tv sets.

    I know that this bill is an effort to force people to purchase digital tv sets, and I know that Congress can't shut down analog television until 85 percent of American households buy digital sets. I feel that it is being done under a great amount of subterfuge in order to appease the MPAA in it's digital and IP copyright wars against those who choose to share digital media over the internet and other distribution channels. I feel that you've been fooled into thinking that this Bill will successfully regulate such use. In fact, it will have no effect on it seeing as how all pirated works of digital media are captured using analog computer capture cards and the analog out ports on their digital tv's and receivers. It also stifles the rights of Fair Use that some people choose to use in order to archive television shows for their own private home viewing, like the generations before us have done with no harm to the Film Industry.

    I emplore you to look deeper than the surface on this issue. While it may seem to protect big business, and clears up analog airways to be sold to cell companies, it clearly violates Fair Use, incorporates unfair DRM (Digital Rights Management), and forces the public to switch to digital tv sets prematurely when there is no good reason to. Even if it were harmful to grandfather such things as analog tv, removing it's potential for the good of the public is like banning classic cars who don't meet California Emission standards. This is akin to forcing classic car owners to sell or buy new cars simply so car manufactures can make more money and consequentially incorporates technology that inhibits the normal person from being able to service their own vehicles without extremely pricey computer equipment and toolsets.

    I do hope you rethink your stance on this issue, and look at it from all perspectives, not just that of the MPAA and big business, and what they have to gain from it. Always put the consumers demands and needs first, because it is us who keep your big business and supporters in operation. Businesses are here to provide service, not to ramrod us into litigations that deny our basic rights as customers, and those given to us under law. Big Business should be in servitude to the public, not the public in servitude to Big Business.

  • Misleading article (Score:5, Informative)

    by Cyphertube ( 62291 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @01:09PM (#13766656) Homepage Journal

    The problem is that the 20 people are not the people being linked to by the link. Those are senators. Yes, getting them to be opposed to broadcast flags is a good idea. But there's not point in flaming them, yet. (Even Trent Lott...)

    As linked to elsewhere, here are the jerks who have sold their souls to media:

    John Shadegg [house.gov], R-AZ, (202) 225-3361 [callto]
    Mary Bono [house.gov], R-CA, (202) 225-5330 [callto]
    George Radanovich [house.gov], R-CA, (202) 225-4540 [callto]
    John Shimkus [house.gov], R-IL (202) 225-5271 [callto]
    Bobby Rush [house.gov], D-IL, (202) 225-4372 [callto]
    Ed Whitfield [house.gov], R-KY, (202) 225-3115 [callto]
    Albert Wynn [house.gov], D-MD, (202) 225-8699 [callto]
    Charles Pickering [house.gov], R-MS, (202) 225-5031 [callto]
    Lee Terry [house.gov], R-NE, (202) 225-4155 [callto]
    Charles Bass [house.gov], R-NH, (202) 225-5206 [callto]
    Mike Ferguson [house.gov], R-NJ, (202) 225-5361 [callto]
    Frank Pallone [house.gov], D-NJ, (202) 225-4671 [callto]
    Eliot Engel [house.gov], D-NY, (202) 225-2464 [callto]
    Vito Fossella [house.gov], R-NY, (202) 225-3371 [callto]
    Edolphus Towns [house.gov], D-NY, (202) 225-5936 [callto]
    John Sullivan [house.gov], R-OK, (202) 225-2211 [callto]
    Michael Doyle [house.gov], D-PA, (202) 225-2135 [callto]
    Marsha Blackburn [house.gov], R-TN, (202) 225-2811 [callto]
    Bart Gordon [house.gov], D-TN, (202) 225-4231 [callto]
    Charles Gonzalez [house.gov], D-TX, (202) 225-3236 [callto]

    Find out who your representative is, and make sure these people get nailed.

  • Who's lying? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by crimson30 ( 172250 ) on Tuesday October 11, 2005 @01:34PM (#13766861) Homepage
    From the open letter:

    "The broadcast flag protects free, over-the-air digital television programming from unauthorized redistribution over the Internet without restricting the consumer's ability to copy programming or enjoy it anywhere within a personal at-home network."

    From wikipedia:

    "Possible restrictions include inability to save a digital program to a hard disk or other non-volatile storage, inability to make secondary copies of recorded content (in order to share or archive), forceful reduction of quality when recording (such as reducing high-definition video to the resolution of standard TVs), and inability to skip over commercials."

    So is the open letter lying outright? There seems to be a conflict here... what am I missing?

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