As French lawmakers completed the text of a new copyright bill early Friday morning, supporters of open-source software claimed
a victory of sorts, while others lamented the coming criminalization of peer-to-peer (P-to-P) software.
Measures in the bill could force companies using DRM to publish details of the system, letting other manufacturers to develop
interoperable systems. The measures are widely seen as aimed at companies such as Apple Computer Inc. By refusing to disclose
details of its FairPlay DRM system, Apple effectively shuts out competitors from developing digital music players that can
play music downloaded directly from its iTunes Music Store, or from selling DRM-protected music that will play on an Apple
iPod.
Deputies will vote on the bill, "Authors' rights and related rights in an information society," on Tuesday. If they approve,
it will go on to the Senate for its final reading. The government is pushing the legislation through under emergency procedures
that allow it to dispense with the usual third and fourth readings by deputies and senators.
The National Assembly wrapped up its discussion of the bill at 3.55 a.m Paris time, finishing with a flurry of amendments
that pro-open source lobbyists said preserved programmers' right to work around DRM (digital rights management) systems to
ensure interoperability between proprietary and open-source systems. Earlier drafts of the bill would have punished such activities
with a three-year prison sentence and a fine of €300,000 (US$360,000).
Ligue Odebi, a group representing broadband Internet users, described the effect of the bill on its members as "repressive"
for the way it treats P-to-P software. The bill will render illegal the development, distribution or use of P-to-P software
for purposes other than collaborative working, research purposes, or the exchange of noncommercial works.
If Internet users are found to have traded illicit files, though, the bill sets a fine of €38 per infraction for downloading,
or €150 per infraction for uploading. The bill calls on the Council of State to determine what level of trading constitutes
an infraction.
If Internet users are found to have traded illicit files, though, the bill sets a fine of €38 per file downloaded, or €150
per file uploaded.
This is a corrected version of the story.