then you probably know that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998
criminalized breaking encryption, such as on a DVD, for any reason.
BUT....the law also had a teeny little clause in it that said that if your
creative work is being hampered because you can't crack encryption for fair
use reasons, then you can ask for an exemption. In the last six years,
professors, students and documentary filmmakers, as well as ALL
noncommercial creators, have won exemptions! But they have to be renewed
and NOW IS THE TIME. Seriously, by Dec. 1. Do you have a reason why you as
a professor/teacher need to break encryption? Please tell "Vicki Phillips"
<[log in to unmask]>. Do you have a reason as a maker to break
encryption? Please please don't hesitate, go to
http://documentary.org/DMCAStories and tell your story or just write
[log in to unmask]****
**
--
Pat Aufderheide, University Professor and Director
Center for Social Media, School of Communication
American University
3201 New Mexico Av. NW, #330
Washington, DC 20016-8080
www.centerforsocialmedia.org
[log in to unmask]
202-643-5356
Order *Reclaiming Fair Use: How to Put Balance Back in Copyright*, with
Peter Jaszi. University of Chicago Press, 2011.
Sample *Reclaiming Fair Use! * <http://centerforsocialmedia.org/reclaiming>
Early comments on *Reclaiming Fair Use:*
"The Supreme Court has told us that fair use is one of the "traditional
safeguards" of the First Amendment. As this book makes abundantly clear,
nobody has done better work making sure that safeguard is actually
effective than Aufderheide and Jaszi. The day we have a First Amendment
Hall of Fame, their names should be there engraved in stone. --Lewis Hyde,
author, *Common as Air: Revolution, Art and Ownership*
“*Reclaiming Fair Use* will be an important and widely read book that
scholars of copyright law will find a ‘must have’ for their bookshelves. It
is a sound interpretation of the law and offers useful guidance to the
creative community that goes beyond what some of the most ideological books
about copyright tend to say.”—Pamela Samuelson, University of California,
Berkeley School of Law
"If you only read one book about copyright this year, read *Reclaiming Fair
Use. *It is the definitive history of the cataclysmic change in the custom
and practice surrounding the fair use of materials by filmmakers and
other groups." --Michael Donaldson, Esq. Senior Partner, Donaldson &
Callif, Los Angeles.
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Screen-L is sponsored by the Telecommunication & Film Dept., the
University of Alabama: http://www.tcf.ua.edu
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