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[infowar.de] US-Gesetzentwurf will Hacken von Peer-to-Peer-Netzwerken erlauben
Infowar.de, http://userpage.fu-berlin.de/~bendrath/liste.html
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... wenn der durch diese Aktivitaeten verursachte Schaden 250$ nicht
uebersteigt. Es trifft also eindeutig nur die kleinen PC-Besitzer.
Da duerften dann neben den Infokriegern von NSA und DoD also die ersten
legalen Cyber-Soeldner im privaten Bereich, vor allem in der
Plattenindustrie, entstehen. Ich vermute allerdings, dass das Gesetz
nicht durchkommt.
RB
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-945923.html?tag=politech
Could Hollywood hack your PC?
By Declan McCullagh
July 23, 2002, 4:45 PM PT
WASHINGTON--Congress is about to consider an entertainment
industry proposal that would authorize copyright holders to disable
PCs used for illicit file trading.
A draft bill seen by CNET News.com marks the boldest political effort
to date by record labels and movie studios to disrupt peer-to-peer
networks that they view as an increasingly dire threat to their
bottom
line.
Sponsored by Reps. Howard Berman, D-Calif., and Howard Coble, R-N.C.,
the measure would permit copyright holders to perform nearly
unchecked
electronic hacking if they have a "reasonable basis" to believe that
piracy is taking place. Berman and Coble plan to introduce the
10-page
bill this week.
The legislation would immunize groups such as the Motion Picture
Association of America and the Recording Industry Association of
America from all state and federal laws if they disable, block or
otherwise impair a "publicly accessible peer-to-peer network."
Anyone whose computer was damaged in the process must receive the
permission of the U.S. attorney general before filing a lawsuit, and
a
suit could be filed only if the actual monetary loss was more than
$250.
According to the draft, the attorney general must be given complete
details about the "specific technologies the copyright holder intends
to use to impair" the normal operation of the peer-to-peer network.
Those details would remain secret and would not be divulged to the
public.
The draft bill doesn't specify what techniques, such as viruses,
worms, denial-of-service attacks, or domain name hijacking, would be
permissible. It does say that a copyright-hacker should not delete
files, but it limits the right of anyone subject to an intrusion to
sue if files are accidentally erased.
[...]
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