DMCA
Digital Millennium Copyright Act
Since they were enacted in 1998, the "anti-circumvention" provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act ("DMCA") have not been used as Congress envisioned. Congress meant to stop copyright pirates from defeating DRM restrictions (aka content or copy protections) added to copyrighted works and to ban the "black box" devices intended for that purpose.
In practice, the DMCA and DRM have done nothing to stop "Internet piracy." Yet the DMCA has become a serious threat that jeopardizes fair use, impedes competition and innovation, chills free expression and scientific research, and interferes with computer intrusion laws. If you circumvent DRM locks for noninfringing fair uses or create the tools to do so, you might be on the receiving end of a lawsuit.
EFF has fought hard against the DMCA in the courts, Congress, and other forums. Learn more through the links below, and take action now to support DMCA reform.
Deeplinks Posts
- August 15, 2008 DRM for Streaming Music Dies a Quiet Death
- July 29, 2008 In Memoriam: Ed Foster, 1949-2008
- July 03, 2008 Court Rejects Attempt to Expand the DMCA
- June 02, 2008 Prince Issues One Takedown Too Many
- January 24, 2008 Latest Test for DMCA Safe Harbors: Warner Sues SeeqPod
- December 22, 2007 LimeWire on 1 in 3 Desktops World-Wide
- November 28, 2007 Year-End 2007: Darknet Assumptions Still True
Press Releases
- June 11, 2008 Judge Shoots Down Universal's Bogus Infringement Allegations
- June 12, 2007 Spoon-Bending 'Paranormalist' Ramps Up Illegal Attacks on Online Critic
- June 11, 2007 Hollywood Continues Legal Battle Against Remote DVRs
- May 22, 2007 'Electric Slide' Creator Calls Off Online Takedown Campaign
- May 14, 2007 Universal Music Group Backs Off Claims to Michelle Malkin Video
- May 09, 2007 Malkin Fights Back Against Copyright Law Misuse by Universal Music Group
- March 14, 2007 DMCA Abuser Apologizes for Takedown Campaign
- June 20, 2005 Upholding the Legality of Reverse Engineering


