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-------------------------------------------------------------- This story was printed from ZDNet Australia. --------------------------------------------------------------
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Fighting for the right to swap By Declan McCullagh, Special to ZDNet December 06, 2004 URL: http://www.zdnet.com.au/insight/software/soa/Fighting-for-the-right-to-swap/0,139023769,139168552,00.htm
That's not a trivial task for Corwin, the lobbyist for Kazaa's parent company. When making the rounds on Capitol Hill, Corwin, 54, is up against the dual political powerhouses of the Recording Industry Association of America and the Motion Picture Association of America. Vanuatu-registered Sharman Networks hired Corwin almost three years ago to be its lone representative in Washington, DC. Since then, Sharman has been fending off lawsuits and a slew of legislative proposals designed either to shutter the service or scare users away from it. Being an underdog is a switch for Corwin, who spent much of his career lobbying for the influential American Bankers Association, the Commercial Finance Association and the Independent Bankers Association of America, after a stint as a US Senate staffer. Now he's a partner at the Butera & Andrews lobbying firm. Kazaa is one of the largest and most successful file-trading networks. It boasts about 2.48 million users a day, roughly the same as eDonkey's claimed 2.54 million. CNET News.com spoke with Corwin about piracy, pornography and his experiences as a lobbyist.
Q: What's it like lobbying against the RIAA and the movie studios?
RIAA President Cary Sherman told Congress last year that pedophiles were using Kazaa to seduce children. Is that what you mean by hardball?
You wouldn't quibble with the claim that pornography is popular on peer-to-peer networks, would you?
And if a minor downloads Kazaa without a parent's knowledge?
Does your job ever get personal?
What differences do you see between the recording industry and the MPAA?
If Kazaa and its rivals become as slick and easy to use as Apple Computer's iTunes, do you honestly think that many people will still be buying music in a few years?
It's not well-known, but every major manufacturer of computer games has licensed their content for peer-to-peer distribution. Even though those same computer games are available for free elsewhere on peer to peer, people are plunking down $30 or $50 for them -- so they have a warranty and no worries about a bogus or harmful file.
Sharman Networks has sent repeated notices to Google complaining about links to the ad-free version of Kazaa called Kazaa Lite. Is it ironic for your client to threaten lawsuits over copyright violations?
And if someone offered Kazaa Lite but with a name of P2P Lite?
Even if it uses the same network as Kazaa?
Why do you think the Induce Act died in Congress this year, even though it had the support of the MPAA and RIAA? Page II: Kazaa's chief lobbyist, Philip Corwin, says Hollywood is sparing no expense to squash P2P. Neither Sharman Networks nor any of the other peer-to-peer companies were invited to participate in those negotiations. We were just labelled as bad actors, while other people talked about the method and timing of our execution.
Do you think the entertainment industry overreached by asking for too much?
I can't think of any precedent for parties in a legal case coming to Congress and saying, "We're losing the case under current law. Can you change the law so we can win?" I think it's very unseemly. (Ed. note: The Induce Act was designed in part to overturn court decisions saying that the Grokster and Morpheus file-swapping networks were legal to operate.)
That's a procedural objection -- if you had time to review the Induce Act and the legal case was over, would you still object?
It's clear that they'd like to create a new cause of action of secondary infringement that would penalise new technologies and business models. That's very dangerous. Hollywood with its very deep pockets would use a law like that to crush new companies that were guilty of nothing.
Could you ever agree with the idea that a company should be legally liable for inducing infringement on a peer-to-peer network?
Looking ahead, what do you think of the idea of imposing a new tax -- perhaps on Internet connections -- to compensate content owners for losses caused by piracy?
This is an issue for Congress to consider. When I first began lobbying for Sharman, we did write (a policy paper to) Congress to suggest what we called an intellectual property use fee.
The Senate approved a relatively modest package of copyright bills, but the House left town for Thanksgiving without voting on it. What happens next?
What's your take on the creation of the US intellectual property czar as part of the appropriations bill?
Also, I think there's a real question about whether we need to create a new federal bureaucracy. It doesn't just create a new post. It creates a whole new staff for that person. When you've already got people at the Department of Justice, at the State Department, at the Commerce Department, at the Copyright Office involved, there's a question about why we need a new office in government with new staff.
Look ahead to the 109th Congress that will take office in January. Your predictions?
Now there are better alliances between industry and (nonprofit groups, thanks to opposing the Induce Act). It'll make it much more difficult to push bad bills through in the 109th.
What are your views on Sen. Arlen Specter, who seems to be the next Judiciary committee chairman?
I'm sure you'd be delighted with more proposals from Hatch.
The Pirate Act got through the Senate without any hearings, without any committee markup, without any Senate floor debates. Ultimately that was not in the interests of the proponents of that legislation.
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