Does the FCC’s plan to “Unlock the Box” inadvertently unlock piracy?
• October 15, 2016 • 10 CommentsPosted in Government Regulation, Public Policy Issues in Cyber Law
Tags: anti-circumvention, anticircumvention, applications, apps, cable, cablecard, Chairman, circumvention, communication, competition, competitive navigation device, congress, Copyright, copyright infringement, copyright law, copyright office, criminal law, cybercrime, damages, digital millennium copyright act, Discrimination, DMCA, electronic frontier foundation, enforcement, entertainment, FCC, Federal Communications Commission, federal law, File Sharing, Government Regulation, infringement, intellectual property, internet, internet protocol, IP, judgment, licensing, litigation, Markey, media, misuse, money, movies, MVPDs, notice of proposed rulemaking, NPRM, online copyright infringement liability, online copyright infringement liability limitation, online infringement, P2P, piracy, pirate, pirate box, pirate boxes, pirates, Regulation, remedies, remedy, rights, satellite, security, Senator, set top box, statutes, technology, telecommunication, television, Theft, United States, Virtual theft, Wheeler
Responses to Principle Blog