House Approves Bill To Require Universities To Offer Students Music Services
from the mandatory-Napster? dept
Late last year, we wrote about a bill that would put pressure on universities to put in place an official approved music subscription service or risk losing federal financial aid support for students. This is a bizarre piece of legislation, as it effectively props up Napster and RealNetworks by basically requiring universities to sign up for such a service, even if they don’t want to. Despite widespread criticism of the bill, the House has now approved it, even leaving out a promised amendment promising that failure to obey wouldn’t threaten financial aid. Supporters of the bill claim that it wouldn’t actually be used to cut off financial aid, but if that’s the case, why include it in this bill at all? It would basically be a requirement without any repercussions for ignoring. At the same time, no one has clearly explained why universities should be required to sign up for a private music subscription offering. What possible public policy reason could there be for such a thing?
Filed Under: congress, copyright, file sharing, music subscriptions, universities
Companies: napster, realnetworks
Comments on “House Approves Bill To Require Universities To Offer Students Music Services”
To ensure that their networks are not used to facility illegal behavior?
Re: Public Policy
> To ensure that their networks are not used
> to facility illegal behavior?
Well, if that’s what you think is the public policy basis for this law, then it’s still a mystery why this law is necessary, since the law does nothing to stop illegal file-sharing.
The fact that my university is forced to sign up for Napster doesn’t mean I as a student am going to *use* it. I could still just as easily use Bitorrent or Limewire or some other unapproved service.
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And the students can’t download movies? How about software? Is the MPAA going to force a law requiring netflix subscriptions? How about a mandatory MSDN subscription for all students? This still won’t stop anyone from downloading illegal music. What if someone has an iPod or some other non-napster/rapcity player? Do the universities have to pay the $0.99 to use the song on a device that is for that service?
Sorry for the small rant but this is just a really stupid law.
In case someone doesn’t know, an MSDN subscription allows the user to download pretty much anything made by Microsoft with a monthly fee of about $2000. (It’s how I got Vista)
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A monthly fee of $2000? What a bargain! Where do I sign up?
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Here
I didn’t do it, the company I work for has one and I was deemed the Vista tester, so I’m not completely sure how but there is a link on the right side to “Find out more”.
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I believe an MSDN account is about $2000/year, not month.
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So why don’t ISPs have to do the same thing?
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To ensure that their networks are not used to facility illegal behavior?
Can you explain how this law does that? Because I don’t see that at all.
Less Regulation in Action!
Businesses, so they say, want to throw off the shackles of onerous government regulation since it destroys free enterprise. So what do business actually due, they buy legislation from the Congressional supermarket to guarantee a revenue stream. I guess the concept of free enterprise really translates to corporate welfare.
cant see haow this will work
A lot of students dont live on campus and have a independent internet link or seperate ISP not on the university network. So how is this going to stop students being able to use unautherised sites.
can you spell L O B B Y
Signs you might need new Representatives
1) They pass laws screwing over the educational system of the country because the recording industry said, “will you if we line your pockets?”, and they reply “yes”.
Wow. Fantastic busineesmodel!
It’s only a matter of time before the liquor lobby does the same!
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The liquor lobby doesn’t need the help.
We’re a nation of ignorant sheep led by corrupt fools. What did you expect?
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AGREED
I'm gunna be RICH!
I think I’ll start a music subscription service. I’ll charge each university a thousand bucks a year to enable all their students to stream as much music as they want. The schools will LEAP at my offer because it’s so inexpensive. I don’t think I’ll need too much bandwidth because the music will consist of 78’s recorded from gramophones.
@11
Great point! What happens if all of the sudden there is a massive trend in college students that get their own wine or beer processing kits and use them in their dorms? Anheuser-Busch or Seagram is going to buy legislation requiring that universities pay for free booze because of bootlegging?
You say it yourself, you can’t stop pirating, so just get people to pay for music in different ways. Hell, maybe they actually do listen to the “free” model. This is just another one of those things that take advantage of free.
You really don’t think free is free, do you?
Set up
At the risk of sounding paranoid, if this were to become law, it would just be a set up to allow certain people to deny education to others. It really has nothing to do with music per se, and has everything to do with control of higher education in the country.
what a sham
I think there’s one thing that we can all agree on is that we need to fire pretty much everybody in government, wipe the slate clean, and start fresh. There are so many inconsistent, idiotic laws that it blows the mind. What amazes me is that we consistently see the same schmucks in the same office for decades. Let them know laws like this will not be tolerated, vote!
The inevitable result of a runaway government
This is an astoundingly absurd law, but we only have ourselves to blame. We ask Congress to fix every little ache and pain in our society so why wouldn’t they stick their noses in this too? You cannot have a selectively big government. It will either pervade your entire life or it won’t.
There are exactly 18 things that Congress is ALLOWED to do according to the Constitution (Article I Section 8) yet somehow they’ve managed (at our demand) to insinuate themselves into every conceivable area of life. Section 8 does not include a single mention of music or sports yet we have this absurd law and congressional hearings on steroids in baseball. It says nothing of health care or education yet we have untold numbers of laws regulating (and ruining) those industries. Somehow I don’t think that’s what Jefferson, Washington, Madison, et. al. had in mind when they crafted our amazing elegant Constitution.
Our country abandoned its constitutional foundation years ago so this should surprise no one.
Re: The inevitable result of a runaway government
The good news is there’s a clear opportunity to make some money selling “George Bush Toilet Paper”. It’s coarse, doesn’t absorb well, and has the Constitution printed right on it.
Re: The inevitable result of a runaway government
> Our country abandoned its constitutional foundation years ago
> so this should surprise no one.
Very well said.
Uhm, a bit ridiculous.
Give’em an inch, and they’ll take a mile. Once they get their foot in the door, they’ll attempt to pry it wide open. Absurd, I say.
The only equally bizarre answer I could have to this news is that possibly they are trying to prevent the downloading of viruses/spyware by giving college students the music they will find a way to pirate on unsafe peer to peer networks.
I thought a little bit of how ridiculous laws have become in recent years, particularly in very recent times. I do hope the Federal Government has taken a history class or two because laws like these cause people to massively rise up against their governments.
RE: MSDN
Why not just get the Action Pack from Microsoft which costs $259 per year ang gives you 10 legit licenses of most MS products including servers, office, and OS?
Some ppl will never learn!
Isn’t this the kind of business practice that got the Mafia in all sorts of trouble?
whiskey tango foxtrot
Nevermind the public policy reason for this bill. What’s the business case for requiring a music subscription? Universities are in the business of educating their customers, not supplying them with industry approved music.
At what point does the dumb pipe lose its safe harbors protection? How many services can they pile on before they are liable for their user’s actions?