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Senate outlaws common technologies used for nefarious purposes

By Mary E. Tyler on June 29, 2004 (8:00:00 AM)

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Today, according to a fictional press release we just received, the U.S. Senate has introduced a bill banning the following items: whetstones, car wax, permanent markers, and MP3 player cases in their continuing fight against copyright infringement.

As we all know, whetstones can be used to sharpen knives, and well, knives can be used to open the shrink wrap on CD cases in preparation to the act of music piracy. "Whetstones are a prime contributary (sic) cause of music piracy in the US today," said Senate majority leader Thom Dasher (R-Mars). "We have to restrain the technology before it puts the valuable American intellectual property industry on the rocks. Once there are no whetstones, there will be no more opening CDs, ergo, no piracy. Blunt knives, see?" When asked if people wouldn't just sharpen their knives with other abrasives, Dasher had no comment, but an eerie light appeared in his eyes and he wandered off muttering, "Abrasives, hmmm...."

Car wax helps keep pickup trucks in shiny working order, and pickups can be used to carry (and play!) pirated CDs burned by the unscrupulous. Lawmakers are now targeting makers of products which contribute to pickup users using their trucks to carry such contraband. "I tune my truck... dad near ever week," says pickup owner Billy-Lloyd George of Nawfuk News, Virginia. "Without my tuneup kit, I reckon I'd just have to junk ol' Betsy."

Once they finish targeting car wax, lawmakers plan to attack other contributory technologies: vinyl textiles (seats), truck dealers, and "the criminals who make those springy things you exercise your hands with," elucidates Majority leader Bill First-Ask-Later (D-Uranus). "You can use those to practice gripping the stick shift They contribute to infringement by thousands of people. I feel strongly that they should be outlawed. Those thingies are dangerous!"

Permanent markers with sharp tips can be used to jot down protected lyrics and label pirate CDs. They must go, according to Dasher and First-Ask-Later. The U.S. Justice Department is reportedly preparing a companion suit against major retailers of permanent markers, including market leaders Hallmart and Tarjhay.

And of course, we all remember the iPod Murder. Hey it was a hoax, but who cares! They should be outlawed because they make murders like this probable. "Those little players are killers and our Senate is going to take care of the threat by making it real darn hard to use one, legally or illegally," said a record company executive who refused to be named. "I said to Senator Dasher just the other day, 'Remember, the next time you pick up a common household item, it could be used for nefarious purposes!'"

"We applaud the Senate," said RIAA spokesperson Hilarious Rosinbag. "They are finally taking the plight of musicians everywhere seriously." Unnamed record company executives seemed elated that profits would be rising precipitously, at least 35%, allowing them to pass on another hundredth of a percent of the profits to artists and musicians.

(Said artists and musicians could not be reached for comment as most of them were late for their day jobs.)

The Senate should be commended for their courageous stand against whetstones, detailing kits, permanent markers, and MP3 player cases. By scapegoating technology and rolling back progress to guard against common household items which just might be used to facilitate infringement, we become a freer and better nation.

"Who cares what SCotUS says," chortled Senator First-Ask-Later. "If it contributes to infringement, we should stamp it out. Those manufacturers have responsibilities even if they can't control how their technology will be used. This is America, we can do this kind of thing when money talks.

"The business of America is business, you know. The next thing we're going to work on is changing the motto on money. Next year it'll read, 'In God we trust, all others must pay royalties.'"

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on Senate outlaws common technologies used for nefarious purposes

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Stop! Don't reply to this story!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 30, 2004 01:00 AM
Unless you have written to your Senators and Representative first! This bill cannot be allowed to pass. Write a letter (on paper) and get it in the mail today. Write it in your own words. You can use the EFF sample as a guide and then print three letters and envelopes, put a stamp on them and drop them in the mail. Now! Today!

Sample letter:
http://action.eff.org/action/index.asp?step=2&ite<nobr>m<wbr></nobr> =2918

Find your representatives:
http://action.eff.org/legdirectory/index.asp

Then come back and comment. I already sent my letters, did you?

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Re:Stop! Don't reply to this story!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 30, 2004 01:17 AM
you realize that this was a joke right?

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Re:Stop! Don't reply to this story!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 30, 2004 03:15 AM
You realize that this isn't a joke, but is a parody of the Induce Act (S.2560) currently under consideration in the Senate, right?

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Joke? No, parody

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on June 30, 2004 03:56 AM
The article is really a parody of the bill introduced in the US Senate last week, "The Inducing Infrigement of Copyright Act." If it becomes law, this bill would make manufacturers of products capable of being used to infringe copyright liable for any infringement done by the purchasers of said product.

The infringement liability for producing a VCR would be HUGE! This bill, is NOT a joke. It is real. It must be fought. Read the links I gave. Decide for yourself if you want your next music player or camcorder squashed before it can be invented.

They wanted to get rid of fair use and freedom of content out right but everybody yelled. Now they are attacking it indirectly. They successfully outlawed reverse engineering of encryption (See DMCA). Now they want to make it too risky to develop content management and creation products. Fair use and content freedom are fine with them if you have no tools to exercise them!

The satire of this article is ridiculously funny but Senate Bill S.2560 is just ridiculous (worthy of ridicle), not funny!

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sue

Posted by: SarsSmarz on June 30, 2004 01:20 AM
They don't need to ban things. They should just give the RIAA more power to sue anybody over anything they feel like. Since nobody ever goes to trial, the RIAA is truly judge, jury and executioner.

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The Kids

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 01, 2004 05:59 PM
Would somebody please think of the children?!?

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Dictionary anyone?

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 02, 2004 11:44 AM
...fictioanl press release...do you guys read what you write?
Fictional:
1. a) An imaginative creation or a pretense that does not represent actuality but has been invented.
b) The act of inventing such a creation or pretense.

      2. A lie.

      3. a) A literary work whose content is produced by the imagination and is not necessarily based on fact.

                  b) The category of literature comprising works of this kind, including novels and short stories.

      4. Law. Something untrue that is intentionally represented as true by the narrator.

This means it ISN'T REAL

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It is a parody of a REAL bill!

Posted by: Anonymous Coward on July 07, 2004 10:53 PM
Read this here:

http://action.eff.org/action/index.asp?step=2&ite<nobr>m<wbr></nobr> =2918

This newsforge article is an exageration of a REAL bill in the Senate now! I really wish newsforge would have done a real article on the real bill before doing this one. Go read this link. Act on it!

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