Start: 2008/02/09 - 1:00pm
End: 2008/02/09 - 3:00pm
- Take Action: Digg this story.
- Join us 2/09/08 at the Boston Public Library.
- Take action at your own library! Customize our flyer.
DefectiveByDesign.org will be taking action this Saturday at the
Boston Public Library to demand that they remove DRM technology from
their collection! We will be gathering outside the entrance at the
main branch of the Boston Public Library (700 Boylston St., Boston MA
02116) from 1pm until 3pm on Saturday, February 9th, 2008.
If you can't join us, we encourage you to take action against any
library in your area that has DRM technology infecting its collection.
You can customize our
flyer and pass it
out to the local patrons and librarians in your area.
The Boston Public Library (BPL) has DRM on
its ebooks, audio books, music, and videos. These DRM systems sit
between you and the item and restrict how and for how long you can
access the information. For example, they may shut off your access to
an audio book after seven days or tell you that you can't move the
book from your laptop computer to your desktop. This also means that
library patrons will be forced to use certain proprietary operating
systems to access library materials, because patrons have to use
something that is compatible with the DRM chosen by the BPL.
We have asked them before to
remove DRM, but they did not listen or respond to our requests. Now,
with president Bernard A. Margolis being ousted, we are demanding that they
also oust all DRM technology from the library, and establish a policy
for the new president to abide by -- a policy that repsects user
freedom.
The BPL is funded by Massachusetts tax dollars and it is mandated by
law to serve as the library of last recourse for the Commonwealth.
Margolis's choice for bringing technology that locks digital ebooks
and audio books was one that goes against the public's interests. We
believe that the Trust is not acting in good accord with their legal
mandates, which are
1) to develop, maintain, and preserve comprehensive collections of a
research and archival nature to supplement the library resources of
the Commonwealth, and
2) to provide to all citizens of the Commonwealth access to the
reference and research collections of the Boston Public Library.
The BPL is going down the wrong path if they wish to "preserve
comprehensive collections" over time. DRM uses a proprietary and
secretive format that can in no way guarantee them control over their
collection, and this means that DRM materials can not be archived or
preserved for future generations. In February of 2006, the Libraries
and Archives Copyright Alliance in the United Kingdom cited "grave
concerns about the potential use of DRMs by rightholders to override
existing copyright exceptions," and concluded that it may be
impossible to archive many collections in the future, becase "[i]t is
probable that no key would still exist to unlock the DRMs."
The BPL Trust has acted irresponsibly toward their second mandate, to
provide "all citizens of the Commonwealth access to the reference and
research collections of the Boston Public Library." Although they
provide you with access to DRM materials, the BPL does not hold the
key to unlocking them on their own--it requires you to go through a
third party to get the DRM unlocked. This is unnecessary,
irresponsible, and reprehensible. The only keys that should prevent us
from accessing the collection are the keys to the doors of the
library, and those keys should ultimately be in the hands of the BPL
Trust. With DRM, the BPL does not hold the keys to its collection, and
they do not have the power or control to grant us access to it.
Sharing this sentiment is the British Library, who, when speaking to
the All Parliamentary Internet Group in 2006, warned that the adoption
of DRM technology would "fundamentally threaten the longstanding and
accepted concepts of fair dealing and library privilege and undermine,
or even prevent, legitimate public good access."
The real motive behind DRM technology schemes is to increase profits
for those who impose them, but their profit is a side issue when
millions of people's freedom is at stake; desire for profit, though
not wrong in itself, cannot justify denying the public control over
its technology and its libraries. Defending freedom means thwarting
DRM. Join us in demanding that the BPL Trust and libraries worldwide
eliminate DRM from their collections.
We'll report back on the success of our action here in Boston -- Be
sure to tell us about your local actions too!
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