Groups Urge Senate Not To Turn The Justice Department Into Hollywood’s Private Police Force: “As we noted earlier this summer, Senator Patrick Leahy had introduced a companion bill to the House’s dreadful Pro-IP bill, except that Leahy’s bill went further. Beyond just adding a ‘Copyright Czar’ position to the White House, it would authorize the Justice Department to start prosecuting civil copyright infringement lawsuits. In other words, it would have the government act as the private police for of the entertainment industry. This is scary stuff. Beyond already handing out unnecessary gov’t granted monopolies, the gov’t would now be using taxpayer money to settle business disputes from an industry that was only in trouble because it stubbornly refused to update its business model.
It’s difficult to see why taxpayers should be paying FBI agents to protect one industry’s obsolete business model.
A bunch of special interest groups made that argument to Senators this week, noting that it was a pure gift to Hollywood — pointing out that all of the companies and groups in the industry already have their own enforcement arms, and it made little sense to have the FBI take part in private business disputes. Hopefully, there are still enough Senators who haven’t been convinced by the propaganda provided by the entertainment industry on this issue to recognize what’s actually at stake here.
(Via Techdirt.)