Government Reviews Impact of Copyright Technology
- 29 April, 2003 11:34
- Comments
Reforms to the Copyright Act that came into force in 2001 to address the impact of new technology are up for their three-yearly roadworthy certificate. As part of review announced by the federal government's attorney-general, the impact of a range of legal and illegal copyright cracking devices will come under the microscope.
Law firm Phillips Fox has been contracted to analyse the worth of the so-called "Digital Agenda" amendments over the next nine months. A statement from the attorney-general says that the "most controversial aspects" will come under scrutiny and key stakeholders are to be consulted in addition to a series of public forums, with technical, economic and legal aspects of the amendments to be considered.
As part of the review, Phillips Fox will research and analyse the economic impact of the act in relation to the markets of copyright holders, the use of technological protection measures and electronic rights management, and provisions that allow the decompilation of computer programs for specific purposes.
At the time of their launch, the reforms were touted as providing the legal framework to meet the challenges posed by emerging technologies and to "place Australia at the forefront of international developments in online copyright law."
Antipiracy groups that have launched actions or position papers in the last three months include the Australian Pay Television and Radio Association, the Business Software Association of Australia (BSAA) and Music Piracy Investigations (Australia Pty Ltd).
Research commissioned this year by the BSAA claims that a 10 per cent reduction in software piracy in Australia would create 7000 new jobs and inject more than $5 billion into the Australian economy, a figure that is widely viewed within the IT industry as somewhat over-optimistic.
Join the CIO Australia group on LinkedIn. The group is open to CIOs, IT Directors, COOs, CTOs and senior IT managers.
- Bookmark this page
- Share this article
- Got more on this story? Email CIO
- Follow CIO on twitter
- IDC MarketScape: Worldwide Managed Print Services 2011 Hardcopy Vendor Analysis
- Why Two Thirds of Enterprise Architecture Projects Fail
- Mobile Security: Don’t leave employees to their own devices
- Datacenter Efficiency with Oracle x86 Blade System Solutions
- 3PAR Storage: Tailor-Made for Virtual Infrastructures
-
Swedish e-commerce startup's execs linked to NYC sex crime
-
Face Time - Interview with John Brennan and Robert DiStefano
-
How to implement next-generation storage infrastructure for Big Data
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Pfizer's Future Depends on IT Transformation
-
Leveraging the Service Catalog to Scale Your MSP Business
When assessing an MSP’s maturity and prospects, one question provides more insights than any other: “What’s in your service catalog?” A well-defined service catalog can set the framework for growth. The lack of a service catalog can significantly impede an MSP’s ability to scale. This paper explores why the service catalog is so vital, and provides some practical guidelines MSPs can apply in order to ensure their service catalog provides maximum utility and benefit. -
Eight threats your antivirus won’t stop - Why you need endpoint security
News headlines are a constant reminder that malware attacks and data loss are on the rise. High-profile incidents that make big news might seem out of the ordinary. Yet businesses of every size face similar risks in the everyday acts of using digital technology and the Internet for legitimate purposes. This paper outlines eight common threats that traditional antivirus alone won’t stop, and explains how to protect your organisation using endpoint security. -
Magic Quadrant for Managed Print Services, Worldwide
Gartner's managed print services (MPS) Magic Quadrant is a useful starting point for identifying and evaluating MPS providers. It is intended for Gartner's client base of mainly midsize and large organisations, many of which operate throughout two or more regions, and some of which are truly global. Although not all MPS projects are multiregional or global at the outset, customers often choose to scale up one region at a time. In this way, they can manage their office printing in a unified manner globally. Read more.

















Comments
Post new comment