Copyright law
Copyright law
Posted Nov 12, 2020 22:16 UTC (Thu) by ldearquer (guest, #137451)In reply to: Copyright law by rsidd
Parent article: The RIAA, GitHub, and youtube-dl
OK, that explains a lot to an ignorant folk like myself.
Does it mean, in US, it is not legal to - just saying - record with a camera whatever is being played on your own TV set, on your own home, through your paid subscription or whatever, to keep a copy for yourself?
To me it sounds like forbidding nose picking :)
Posted Nov 12, 2020 22:55 UTC (Thu)
by himi (subscriber, #340)
[Link] (3 responses)
As the experience with CSS on DVDs demonstrates, it doesn't even have to be an effective mechanism, and it doesn't have to give any consideration to other parts of copyright law which might make it entirely legal to work around the mechanism - basically, they can take you to court and demand large sums of money (based on penalties intended to deter commercial pirates), and you then have to make a positive case to justify your particular personal use case.
Posted Nov 13, 2020 2:56 UTC (Fri)
by Cyberax (✭ supporter ✭, #52523)
[Link] (2 responses)
What they _can_ do is suing the software publisher that created the tools to work around CSS.
Posted Nov 15, 2020 23:23 UTC (Sun)
by himi (subscriber, #340)
[Link] (1 responses)
The current state of the law is quite significantly different to what it was back in the early 2000s, not because of amendments to the written law, but due to the build up of case law and precedent.
Posted Nov 16, 2020 8:39 UTC (Mon)
by farnz (subscriber, #17727)
[Link]
The key change AFAICT (and I'm not a lawyer, nor based in the USA, so take this with a pinch of salt) is that case law has established that you need to show that damage exists before you can choose between actual damages and statutory damages. Statutory damages exist in US law to cover the case where the actual damages are hard to establish (pirates don't keep the greatest records), and it was a stretch to have them cover cases where no actual damages existed.
Posted Nov 15, 2020 5:05 UTC (Sun)
by giraffedata (guest, #1954)
[Link] (2 responses)
The "fair use" exception for making copies for personal use is for making an additional copy of something of which you already own a copy. It doesn't cover creating a copy from a public performance. (It wouldn't cover making a copy of a friend's DVD for your own personal use either).
A famous court case shortly after the invention of the home video recorder tested the limits of that restriction and resulted in a ruling that you can't record a TV program even if you're just going to watch it once the next day and then delete the copy.
Posted Nov 15, 2020 5:48 UTC (Sun)
by Cyberax (✭ supporter ✭, #52523)
[Link] (1 responses)
Posted Nov 15, 2020 17:32 UTC (Sun)
by giraffedata (guest, #1954)
[Link]
You know, I read that Wikipedia article just before posting and between then and when I hit publish, I forgot the result of the case.
Good thing it does not disturb my main point, since the only reason that case went to the Supreme Court is that recording TV broadcasts generally isn't allowed.
Copyright law
Copyright law
Copyright law
Copyright law
No, you cannot legally make a copy of a TV broadcast under US copyright law, even for personal use.
Copyright law - making copies for personal use
Copyright law - making copies for personal use
You absolutely can. Time-shifting was ruled legal by the SCOTUS: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Time_shifting#History_in_th...
I stand corrected, and thank you for the correction.
Copyright law - making copies for personal use