Hitting Hard
Piracy laws just got tougher.
URL:
http://www.entrepreneur.com/magazine/entrepreneur/2006/june/160058.html
The government is cracking down on those who threaten
intellectual property rights. Consider the Family Entertainment and
Copyright Act of 2005, which says anyone caught making an
unauthorized recording at a movie theater can be sentenced to up to
three years in jail. The same goes for those convicted of
infringing on any copyrighted work "being prepared for
commercial distribution."
In October, the Sentencing Commission toughened prison sentences
for people convicted of illegal file swapping. Now, violators can
get 10 to 16 months in jail for uploading a pirated file--even if
no one downloads it.
Then there's the Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement
Act making its way through Congress, which asserts that piracy of
intellectual property is being used to finance terrorism. The law
would establish an enforcement network aimed at purging counterfeit
and pirated goods from the international supply chain.
Still in committee, the Intellectual Property Protection Act
would make "attempting to infringe a copyright" a crime.
Those convicted would have to compensate the copyright holder for
losses and possibly serve jail time. It's yet another sign of
the government's hardening attitude toward piracy.
Knowing that those making a business of distributing stolen
works will have to watch out is good news for businesses that
create these works in the first place.
Jane Easter Bahls is a writer in Rock
Island, Illinois, specializing in business and legal
topics.
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