[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 89 (Tuesday, June 21, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Page S3968]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
FELONY STREAMING
Mrs. FEINSTEIN. Mr. President, I rise to address S. 978, legislation
passed by the Judiciary Committee last week that would increase the
penalties for willful copyright infringement by ``streaming.'' I would
like to explain why I voted ``pass'' on the bill at the Judiciary
Committee markup, and to express what my concern is.
First, I very much appreciate the intent behind this legislation, and
commend Senators Klobuchar and Cornyn for bringing it forth. Online
infringement of copyrights has had a very serious, detrimental, effect
on the entertainment industry, which is based in large part in my State
of California. Those who willfully infringe copyrights for the purpose
of commercial advantage or private financial gain deserve to be
punished like the thieves that they are.
But in doing this, we must make sure that the punishment is
proportionate to the crime. This bill simply copies the penalty
structure from the current law that makes larger scale illegal
downloading a felony. That law makes ``the reproduction or
distribution, including by electronic means''--i.e. downloading--a
felony punishable by up to 5 years imprisonment, if it involves: 10 or
more copies; with a total retail value of more than $2,500; and within
a 180-day period.
This bill just replicates that penalty structure, with the additional
element of an alternative ``fair market value'' threshold. It makes
willful infringement through ``public performances by electronic
means''--i.e. streaming--also a felony, subject to the same 5-year
maximum sentence, if it involves: 10 or more public performances;
within a 180-day period; with either a total retail or economic value
of more than $2,500; or total fair market value of licenses of more
than $5,000.
As I stated at the beginning, I have no problem with increased
punishment for large-scale infringers, whether they infringe through
downloads or through streams. The problem, though, with this structure
is that it treats streaming as being as serious as downloading. But a
download, in my view, is obviously much more serious, because it makes
a permanent copy of the song or movie or show, as opposed to the one-
time viewing or listening that streaming creates. This is very likely
why downloading was made a felony to begin with, while streaming
wasn't. Given that downloading is much more serious and damaging, to
have a moral consistency with the downloading penalties, the streaming
thresholds, at least in quantity, should be much higher.
Therefore, I hope to work with the bill's sponsors before this
legislation goes to the floor, to craft a more appropriate threshold,
which reflects the differences between downloading and streaming. As
the sponsors and the chairman of the Judiciary Committee, Senator
Leahy, have stated, there are other outstanding issues that they are
committed to addressing before this bill comes to the floor, and I hope
this concern that I have can be resolved in the same way.
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