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Fifth Annual At the Crossroads of Law & Technology
Conference and Mock Trial
Background
The digital revolution in information technology is several decades
old. But
some of the technological promises of that revolution are yet to
be fully
realized. This is most apparent, and most contentious, in the area
of High
Definition Television (HDTV). HDTV was conceived more than 30 years
ago
but is just now becoming widely available, partly through "technology
forcing"
by the Federal Communications Commission. Still, many in the broadcasting
and entertainment industries threatened to withhold or delay the
provision of
High Definition content to over the air, unencrypted digital TV broadcasting,
citing a concern that trustworthy technological and legal means of
protecting
copyrighted material are not yet in place.
In response to these industry
concerns, the FCC has adopted a technology
mandate (the "Broadcast Flag") for protecting digital broadcast
television.
Content producers and broadcasters will be able to embed a digital
code that
will mark particular programming "to be protected from unauthorized
redistribution." Starting July 1, 2005, all digital TV broadcast
receiving
devices sold in the U.S. will have to detect this flag and employ
a content
protection or digital rights management (DRM) system.
The Broadcast
Flag and related DRM and content protection technologies are
protected by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), which
imposes civil
and criminal liability on persons who "circumvent" such
technologies. Because
no consumer-grade DRM technology has yet survived circumvention,
the DMCA
is increasingly being used to provide legal protection for digital
content.
Students, even at such prestigious institutions as Caltech
and Loyola,
commonly engage in "academic pursuit of circumvention knowledge"
(sometimes called "hacking"). This process of testing DRM
systems is a
critical facet of computer security research. One such (hypothetical)
episode
provides the basis for the fifth annual At the Crossroads conference
and mock
trial. A student, his professor and school administration are prosecuted
under
the DMCA, but assert both technological and constitutional defenses
to their
innovative "learning exercises." Defendants are ably represented
by a team of
students from Caltech and Loyola. The prosecution is similarly
constructed.
Each side will present their arguments and expert witnesses.
The struggle
over the appropriate balance for intellectual property law is at
the
center of the 21st century information economy, and provides the
backdrop
for our Fifth Annual At the Crossroads conference and mock trial.
Admission
is free. 
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