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June 30, 2004

Responding to INDUCE: Forget the tech industry -- where's our response?

A couple of days ago we posted a couple of links to Dan Gillmor's and Andrew Orlowski's rather bitter lashings of the tech industry for failing to put their political might behind a united response to Orrin Hatch's INDUCE Act. Edward Felten followed them up yesterday with a smart argument explaining why big tech just might not care:

Giving the entertainment industry a veto over new technologies would have two main effects: it would slow the pace of technical innovation, and it would create barriers to entry in the tech markets..... Just to be clear, an entertainment-industry veto would surely hurt the tech incumbents. It's just that it would hurt their upstart competitors more.
If that's not a double shot of espresso to the noggin, I don't know what is.

Half of the email, trackbacks, and blogroll shouts we get to unmediated are from people who are also working on tools for creating decentralized or distributed media. These are the tools that will make it easier for everyday citizens to create, tag, and share media of all forms. These are also the kinds of tools that will be targeted by the INDUCE Act, in a guilt by innovation, so to speak.

So if there's anyone standing in direct line of fire of the INDUCE Act, it's us (and by extension, the communities we wish to empower.)

So I guess the only question now is: what do we say and how should we say it?

What I'm thinking about here isn't an individual response. You can already do that by faxing a letter to your House rep through the EFF or through savetheipod.com. I'm thinking about a group response from the "innovators" who may be most hurt by this legislation, to let Congress know who this is going to affect.

What format of message do we send to Congress? Do we need to be innovative about it? Is it a petition particularly from us? Are the EFF and savetheipod letters effective, and perhaps we should do more to raise awareness? A volley of short videoblog PSAs about the INDUCE Act, shared on p2p networks?

Get info:
EFF - Could the INDUCE Act Kill The iPod?
EFF - INDUCE Act = Hollings II?
Ernest Miller comments on the introduction of the INDUCE Act.


Posted by yatta at 05:58 AM