Passing along an RFI from a group doing research/development on software
preservation and addressing copy-protection to enable access. You can
provide input via the link below or contacting Jessica directly.
-- 
Lee Courtney
+1-650-704-3934 cell

------------------
Jessica Meyerson <jess...@educopia.org>
Greetings Software Preservationists and Advocates:

A small team of librarians, lawyers, and law students is working on an
important legal project, and we need your help to learn more about software
preservation and hacking/cracking/circumventing digital rights management
(DRM). *Please read on, and take a moment to share any info you can using
the Google Form linked to below.*

As you may know, the Copyright Act includes a provision that prohibits
circumvention of effective technological protection measures that control
access to an in-copyright work. In other words, the law bars using hacks
and other tools to defeat encryption or other technological ways of
controlling access/use of copyrighted works, a category that includes
software.

Luckily, every three years the Copyright Office engages in a rule making
process <https://copyright.gov/1201/> to determine whether to grant
temporary exemptions to that prohibition. The Office is looking for lawful
activities that are unduly discouraged by the law. To support a request for
an expanded software preservation exemption, we need information about the
nature and extent of the difficulty that libraries and others face in
preserving software that is protected by TPMs.

As you may know, an exemption was granted in the last cycle for
preservation of video games, and the ALA and ARL have requested a renewal
of that exemption. We are seeking an expansion of that exemption to cover
all software, but we need to learn more about what kinds of software may be
affected.

*If you’d like to help, please visit this Google Form and share information
about software preservation challenges posed by the legal prohibition on
tampering with TPMs: *https://goo.gl/forms/h1s1NdjEahY9Ckgm1.


Thanks,

Brandon Butler
Director of Information Policy, University of Virginia Libraries

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