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14 Berkeley Tech. L.J. 519 (1999)
Intellectual Property and the Digital Economy: Why the Anti-Circumvention Regulations Need to Be Revised

handle is hein.journals/berktech14 and id is 527 raw text is: ELECTRONIC COMMERCE SYMPOSIUM

INTELLECTUAL PROPERTY AND THE DIGITAL
ECONOMY: WHY THE ANTI-CIRCUMVENTION
REGULATIONS NEED TO BE REVISED
By Pamela Samuelsont
ABSTRACT
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (DMCA) prohibits
the circumvention of technological protection measures used by copy-
right owners to control access to their works. It also bans devices whose
primary purpose is to enable circumvention of technical protection sys-
tems. The Clinton administration proposed these anti-circumvention
rules as implementations of U.S. obligations under the World Intellectual
Property Organization Copyright Treaty. However, the DMCA's provi-
sions are significantly broader than the treaty required. They violate the
Administration's stated goal of only imposing predictable, minimalist,
consistent, and simple regulations on the budding digital economy.
Although Congress heeded some concerns of digital economy firms
by crafting certain exceptions to authorize legitimate circumvention,
those exceptions are overly narrow and shortsighted. They should be
supplemented by a more general other legitimate purposes exception.
The DMCA's anti-device provisions are, moreover, overbroad and un-
clear, especially on the question whether it is legal to develop a technol-
ogy necessary to engage in a privileged act of circumvention (e.g., a fair
use). Either Congress or the courts will be forced to constrain the reach
of the anti-device rules so as not to undermine Congressional intent to
preserve fair uses and so as not to harm competition and innovation in
the information technology sector. Finally, though the DMCA provides
© 1999 Pamela Samuelson.
t Professor of Information Management and of Law, University of California at
Berkeley; Co-Director of the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology. This paper is an
outgrowth of work initially done for an Emory Law School conference on the law of cy-
berspace held in February 1996. The draft article produced for that conference entitled
Technical Protection for Copyrighted Works discussed a 1995 legislative proposal for
regulating the circumvention of technical protection systems. I am deeply indebted to
Benjamin Black who was my research assistant during preparation of this draft. He sub-
sequently collaborated with me on a derivative work of that paper. Although that project
was never completed, this article builds on the base of that collaboration. I am also grate-
ful for comments on this draft from Hal Abelson, Jonathan Band, Yochai Benkler, Julie
Cohen, Gideon Frieder, Joan Feigenbaum, Bob Glushko, Peter Huang, Laurel Jamtgaard,
and Kurt Opsahl.

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