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Proposed Bill in Tennessee Penalizes Schools for Allowing Piracy
Posted By Bryan Andrews On February 29, 2008 @ 8:15 am In External Articles | No Comments
An anonymous reader brings us an Ars Technica report about a proposed bill in Tennessee which would require state-funded universities to enforce anti-piracy standards. The universities would be forced to “[1] track down and stop infringing activity” or risk losing their funding. The U.S. Congress [2] requested last year that certain universities do this voluntarily. Quoting: “Efforts taken by universities thus far to deter and prevent piracy have had mixed results. The University of Utah, for instance, claims that it has reduced MPAA and RIAA complaints by 90 percent and saved $1.2 million in bandwidth costs by instituting anti-piracy filtering mechanisms. However, the school revealed that their filtering system hasn’t been able to stop encrypted P2P traffic and noted that students will find ways to circumvent any system. The end result, some say, will be a costly arms race as students perpetually work to circumvent anti-piracy systems put in place by universities.”
Source: [3] Slashdot
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URLs in this post:
[1] track down and stop infringing activity: http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20080225-tennessee-legislation-would-turn-schools-into-copyrigh
t-cops.html
[2] requested last year: http://politics.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=07/05/04/1639234&tid=98
[3] Slashdot : http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=08/02/28/2323257
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