Senate Bill S.978 has the Internet in a Frenzy
Article for TrekWeb By Michael Yamazaki
Washington, DC, USA – A bill that continues the government’s war on the internet, was introduced in July. The bill, known on the internet as S.978 or the Klobuchar Copyright Amendment Bill, also known as the “10 Strikes Law,” will add “live performances” to the already existing copyright infringement laws. In this “10 Strikes Law,” ten-or-more live performances, according to the bill, of any copyrighted materials will be subject to fines, up to five years in prison, and a Federal felony on the violator’s record.
While the bill is mainly targeted at uploaders and streamers of movies onto sites like YouTube and Justin.TV, the implications of this bill are much more far-reaching. Video game content, which is protected under the Fair Use Law (which states that a transformative or derivative work made from copyrighted material is OK under the law, as long as the work does not remain 100% in-tact; for example, karaoke covers, video game trailers and reviews, and fan films), will no longer be allowed to be “publically performed,” as this law will now override the Fair Use Law.
Fan films, most of which use copyrighted music, names and ideas, are also in jeopardy. While previously, Paramount Pictures (a subsidiary of CBS Entertainment and VIACOM Communications Corporation) gave an “OK” to fans to make STAR TREK fan media (so long as it does not turn a profit), VIACOM has signed on as a co-sponsor of this bill in an apparent move to rescind its previous Fair Use licenses. Online video hosting websites, such as YouTube, will now become responsible for removing any content that contains a copyrighted idea or material, and the infringer (the makers) and the violators (the viewers) will now be held liable on a Federal level.
Producers of popular STAR TREK fan films could not immediately be reached for comment, though the attitude towards S.978 seems to be fairly passive. While there has never been a court hearing based on the Fair Use law, S.978’s provisions eliminate the Fair Use’s “Gray Area” that many producers of fan films, and video game trailers, reviews, playthroughs, etc., have taken advantage of.
While the House of Representatives debate the National Debt Crisis that’s looming on the horizon, a vote on S.978 may not be coming soon. However, according to a political analysis, this bill is, indeed, expected to pass. This could very well mean that the future of fan-made entertainment is, indeed, very bleak.
For information on S.978, you can see the public release on OpenCongress’s website, the address is here:
http://www.opencongress.org/bill/112-s978/showAlso, a comprehensive analysis on S.978 and its impact on the gaming industry is located on YouTube, here:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hytigOSjJxc