February 7, 2008 3:20 PM PST

House approves MPAA-backed college antipiracy rules

The U.S. House of Representatives on Thursday overwhelmingly approved a higher-education funding bill that includes controversial new antipiracy obligations for universities.

The 354-58 vote to approve the College Opportunity and Affordability Act leaves intact an entertainment industry-backed provision, which makes up just a tiny part of a bill that has ballooned to more than 800 pages.

It says higher-education institutions participating in federal financial aid programs "shall" devise plans for "alternative" offerings to unlawful downloading--such as subscription-based services--or "technology-based deterrents to prevent such illegal activity."

Leading university groups, such as the Association of American Universities and Educause, and fair-use advocates oppose those requirements, arguing they are overly burdensome, potentially expensive, and, at least by their interpretation, leave the implication that schools risk losing their financial aid for failure to comply.

"We reject the contention that campuses play a disproportionate role in the file-sharing problem," Steve Worona, Educause's director of policy and networking programs, said in a statement. "The requirements of the legislation will increase tuition costs and provide no value."

The bill's sponsors, for their part, insist that it's a "myth" that schools will lose financial aid funding if they fail to come up with the requisite plans. But university groups still say that's not the way they read the bill language, arguing that they find it unfathomable that such requirements would carry no penalty.

Major copyright holders, including the Motion Picture Association of America and the American Federation of Musicians, have applauded the provision.

"Piracy hurts ordinary, working musicians, but it also will hurt our nation's culture and its music fans if enough talented and hard working musicians cannot survive in the business," AFM President Thomas Lee said in a recent letter to the committee. "Hopefully, H.R. 4137 will become law and will help educate young Americans about the value and importance of copyright to the artists whose work they love."

It's possible that the section opposed by universities could be stripped out before the bill becomes law. The Senate passed a different higher-education funding bill last year, so the two sides will have to reconcile their differences before sending a final measure to the White House for the president's signature.

The university lobby successfully brought down a more burdensome antipiracy provision in the Senate counterpart bill last year. Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid ultimately yanked a proposal that would have required colleges and universities--in exchange for federal funding--to use technology to "prevent the illegal downloading or peer-to-peer distribution of intellectual property."

University officials don't object to all antipiracy obligations that Congress has proposed. They support a section, which shows up in both the House and Senate versions, that requires colleges merely to advise their students not to commit copyright infringement and to "report to their students annually on their policies and practices with respect to copyright infringement on campus networks."

And not all universities oppose the House bill in its current form. In a letter to the House Education and Labor Committee provided to CNET News.com, University of California Assistant Vice President A. Scott Sudduth said he believes the peer-to-peer file-sharing requirements strike "a reasonable balance between institutions' ability to educate and inform students of their responsibilities regarding copyright law, and institutions' inability to monitor content or control the ever-changing technologies associated with peer-to-peer file sharing."

Executives at Educause, which represents college network managers, argue that the additional obligations are "inappropriate" because their research shows that universities don't actually house a disproportionate part of the piracy problem. Even the MPAA has admitted recently that it had significantly overstated the damage caused by piracy at the nation's universities.

Update at 4:30 p.m. PST: "Now that the data produced by the MPAA, the lead advocate for this provision, shows that illegal file-sharing by students using university servers is a very small part of the larger file-sharing issue, this provision is the moral equivalent of using a bazooka to kill a fly," said Barry Toiv, a spokesman for the Association of American Universities.

In an attempt to respond to universities' concerns, Rep. Steve Cohen (D-Tenn.) intended to propose an amendment (PDF) to the House bill that would have said no higher-education institution "shall be denied or given reduced federal funding for student loan or other financial aid programs" because of failure to devise an antipiracy plan."

But Cohen ultimately withdrew that amendment because, according to his press secretary, he was dealing with tornado aftermath in his home district and could not be present during a key procedural vote. His press secretary said Thursday that she wasn't sure whether Cohen would attempt to offer the amendment when the House and Senate meet to reconcile differences in their competing bills. Educause, for the record, has said that amendment wouldn't do anything to change its concerns even if adopted.

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Add a Comment (Log in or register) 18 comments (Page 1 of 1)
maybe if i didnt have to pay 5 figures a semester
by this1! February 7, 2008 5:24 PM PST
i would have some extra spending money to waste on the entertainment industry... this claus in the bill is ridiculous...
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MPAA and RIAA
by gumpman155 February 7, 2008 11:00 PM PST
I think the MPAA and RIAA are more like how the communist are in china. They want to bring our government down to the level of communist china. Liberals and Demacrats back these people and people clame to be republicans but are republicans only by name back them also. If liberalisem wasn't here in america then the MPAA and RIAA wouldn't be allowed to get away with all of the things they are doing. Vote republican and Vote for Mike Huckabee for President becasue he will put the RIAA and MPAA and the Commies and Liberals in thire place and give the american people back thire rights. Once again vote for Mike Huckabee for President 2009.
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800?
by Imalittleteapot February 8, 2008 12:40 AM PST
I think a bigger problem might be an 800 page bill. Who reads that? I don't think signing entire books into law is good for the country. I just don't know if it really needs to be that big or not because of the legal stuff because I'm not a lawyer or anything. However, sometimes I really feel like the Government passes way too many laws. I mean most laws are just a little bitty tiny restriction of freedom right? I know sometimes old laws get removed though. However, I really think we're on the wrong side of that line. Maybe a law where every Congress member that wished to vote on a bill voted by writing that bill out by hand and then signing it. Now that would be fun.
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Unfunded Mandate
by Renegade Knight February 8, 2008 7:52 AM PST
One more reason the cost of education is going up. What's the bigger picture? Noting more than lining the pockets of corporate media companies. If congress actually believed the rheteroic then the answer to this question would be yes. Do you think that Johnny Starving RockStar is on an indie lable is going to get much out of the deal? The answer is no. Congress is not doing this for the good of the country or the people or the universities. Must be something else they are doing it for the good of.
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Obscene Greed
by dougjake February 8, 2008 8:52 AM PST
The greed and ignorance of the AFM and MPAA are apparently infinite.
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about time
by oldguytoo February 8, 2008 9:41 AM PST
IF people, especially college students, would quit stealing music (via file sharing) the government, manufacturers and artist groups wouldn't have to step in and make laws to protect the artists, songwriters, labels, and law-abiding industries such as the music industry.
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I didnt think government officials could take bribes...Oh thats right
by zincmann February 8, 2008 10:10 AM PST
Special Interest group donations..If you dont think your government officials are being bought and sold by large corporations think again!
Reply to this comment
Can you say Fascism
by Jusgart February 8, 2008 10:12 AM PST
This Country is more and more being run by corporations and special interests then the people. We are being led by the corporations and not our best interests. ie: RIAA MPAA et al Ben Franklin said it well; Government should be afraid of the people: People should not be afraid the Government. Fascism: Is an authoritarian political ideology (generally tied to a mass movement) that considers the individual subordinate to the interests of the state, party or society as a whole. Fascists seek to forge a type of national unity, usually based on (but not limited to) ethnic, cultural, racial, religious attributes. The key attribute of fascism is intolerance of others: other religions, languages, political views, economic systems, cultural practices, etc. Various scholars attribute different characteristics to fascism, but the following elements are usually seen as its integral parts: corporatism, nationalism, statism, militarism, totalitarianism, anti-communism, populism, collectivism, autocracy and opposition to political and economic liberalism. It is time to take back our country and and have those we elect stand up for the people and not for special interest nor any other money grubing groups that want to repress our freedoms. It is time for us to be heard by all candidates running for office that we will pay reasonable prices for reasonable services, However, threats of lawsuits will cost ALL corporations more losses than they can recover by higher prices.
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Ruckus, anybody?
by lazypoet February 8, 2008 8:16 PM PST
Simply by providing students with a school email address such as student@university.edu or something, they can sign up for ruckus, which is free music downloads for college students (advertisement supported). It's not that tough.
Reply to this comment
Yeah
by knowles2 February 10, 2008 2:10 AM PST
perfectly legal, but from what I hear, have not bothered to check it out it provides nowhere near the amount the songs/films available from illegal places, and some time the quality is apparently even better on illegal services , so why change to paying/advertised service when it a inferior product, when they out perform the illegal services, ie free, same quality, same amount of content then people will switch and not a second before. Through it still not available in Britain, so this just from people who have used it that tell me.
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