Reverend
June 30th, 2003, 18:28 PM
The Electronic Frontier Foundation will formally announce today a campaign aimed at persuading American citizens to demand changes in the copyright laws.
The "Let the Music Play" campaign, said the EFF, will counter the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) bid to file thousands of lawsuits against people who use file sharing software.
Shari Steele, head of the EFF claimed that copyright law in the USA is out of kilter with the views of the American public.She said: "Rather than sue people into submission, we need to find a better alternative that gets artists paid while making file sharing legal".
The campaign will place adverts in a number of publications and attempt to make it easy for voters in the USA to write Congress politicians.
Senior lawyer Fred von Lohmann claimed: "Congress needs to spend less time listening to record industry lobbyists and more time listening to... 60 million Americans who use file sharing software today".
:arrow: View: EFF Homepage (http://www.eff.org/)
:arrow: source: The Inquirer (http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=10252)
The "Let the Music Play" campaign, said the EFF, will counter the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) bid to file thousands of lawsuits against people who use file sharing software.
Shari Steele, head of the EFF claimed that copyright law in the USA is out of kilter with the views of the American public.She said: "Rather than sue people into submission, we need to find a better alternative that gets artists paid while making file sharing legal".
The campaign will place adverts in a number of publications and attempt to make it easy for voters in the USA to write Congress politicians.
Senior lawyer Fred von Lohmann claimed: "Congress needs to spend less time listening to record industry lobbyists and more time listening to... 60 million Americans who use file sharing software today".
:arrow: View: EFF Homepage (http://www.eff.org/)
:arrow: source: The Inquirer (http://www.theinquirer.net/?article=10252)
