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Senate OKs anti-piracy measure

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  • Senate OKs anti-piracy measure

    Senate OKs anti-piracy measure

    Hollywood Reporter
    Thursday, February 3, 2005

    By Brooks Boliek

    WASHINGTON (Hollywood Reporter) - The third time could be the charm
    for legislation that would make it a federal crime to camcord a movie
    and would protect the manufacturers of players that edit out
    purportedly offensive content from movies.

    Although the Senate late Tuesday approved the Family Entertainment and
    Copyright Act (FECA) of 2005 -- a package of copyright bills -- for
    the first time in the 109th Congress, it twice passed the legislation
    in the 108th only to see it die at the end in a squabble over
    unrelated legislation.

    Included in FECA is the camcorder legislation, the Family Movie Act
    and legislation designed to make it easier for law-enforcement
    officials to combat the growing problem of music and movies being
    distributed on file-sharing networks and circulating on the Internet
    before they are released. FECA also contains a measure to reauthorize
    an existing program for the preservation of historically and
    culturally significant films.

    "This important, bipartisan legislation will crack down on what has
    become a growth industry in this era of rapid technological
    development: the theft and distribution of copyrighted material. I
    appreciate my colleagues moving this bill so quickly and urge our
    friends in the House to do the same," said Sen. John Cornyn, R-Texas.

    Sens. Cornyn and Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., Orrin Hatch, R-Utah, and
    Patrick Leahy, D-Vt., were the key boosters of the legislation in the
    Senate.

    While supporters of the bill hailed its passage, approval in the House
    could be more problematic even though the House approved different
    versions of the bill, according to industry sources. The House failed
    to approve the bill last year because of a dispute between Sen. John
    McCain (news, bio, voting record), R-Ariz., and House Commerce
    Committee chairman Rep. Joe Barton, R-Texas, over boxing-reform
    legislation. Industry officials hope the hangover from that fight and
    some resentment of the industry will not bring the current bill to a
    similar fate.

    Rep. Lamar Smith, R-Texas, a primary author of the legislation and
    chairman of the House's copyright subcommittee, has expressed hope the
    bill could move quickly there, too.

    "There is no word on that yet," said MGM chairman and CEO Alex
    Yemenidjian, who has aggressively lobbied for the bill. "It's long
    overdue. I hope the House can pass it quickly so we can start
    prosecuting these criminals."


    http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&u=/nm/20050203/en_nm/film_piracy_to_1
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