From: Catherine Copetas Date: Wed, 14 Nov 2001 17:05:24 -0500 This event is not sponsored by CPSR/Pittsburgh. Please contact Catherine Copetas with questions. A GREAT DEBATE: ARE COMPUTER PROGRAMS PROTECTED SPEECH? ------------------------------------------------------- Friday, 30 November 2001 1:30 pm - McConomy Auditorium, University Center Featuring: MICHAEL SHAMOS Distinguished Career Professor; Director, Universal Library; and Principal Systems Scientist, Language Technologies Institute, School of Computer Science DAVID TOURETZKY Principal Scientist, Computer Science Department School of Computer Science Moderated by: PETER SHANE Distinguished Service Professor of Law and Public Policy H. John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management, and Director of the Institute for the Study of infomration Technology and Society (InSITeS) Sponsored by SCS in cooperation with the Heinz School. ABSTRACT -------- Several U.S. courts have held that computer programs are the product of human expression and therefore are subject to the free speech protections of the First Amendment. However, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), passed in 1998, makes it illegal to distribute computer programs that circumvent copy protection mechanisms used by copyright owners to control distribution of their works. Which interest should win, the First Amendment or the Copyright Act? The first judicial test of the anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA occurred in the summer of 2000 in federal court in Manhattan in "Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes", 111 F. Supp. 2d 294 (S.D.N.Y. 2000), the famous DeCSS case involving the right of a journalist to post code on his website capable of breaking the encryption used in Hollywood DVDs. Two Carnegie Mellon professors form SCS testified as expert witnesses in that case, but on opposite sides. Michael Shamos, on behalf of the plaintiffs, explained the methodology of decryption and the risks to copyright owners of readily available circumvention code. David Touretzky, testifying for the defendants, gave the court a convincing argument that computer programs are speech and that a program can take many forms, ranging from literal English words through high-level programming languages and down to bitstrings. The court found for the plaintiffs and enjoined the journalist from posting the code. The case is now on appeal to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals, with a decision expected very soon. In a CMU exclusive, the two professors, who clearly have diametrically opposed views on the subject, will debate the question face-to-face for the first time. SPEAKER BIOS ----------- MICHAEL I. SHAMOS is Distinguished Career Professor in the School of Computer Science at Carnegie Mellon University, where he serves as Co-Director of the Institute for eCommerce. He has been associated with Carnegie Mellon since 1975, teaching in SCS, MCS, HS&S and GSIA. Originally a theoretical computer scientist, his early work centered on algorithms in computational geometry now involves electronic payment systems and experimental mathematics. Dr. Shamos has been an intellectual property attorney since 1981 and now acts as Special Counsel to Reed Smith, LLP, a large general-practice firm in Pittsburgh. He has been an expert witness in recent Internet cases involving the Motion Picture Association of America and the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. DAVID S. TOURETZKY is a Principal Scientist in the Computer Science Department and the Center for the Neural Basis of Cognition, and a long-time Internet free speech activist. Dr. Touretzky testified on the nature of computer programs as speech as an expert witness for the defense in Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes, commonly known as the "2600" DeCSS case. To illustrate his position, he maintains the controversial Gallery of CSS Descramblers web site -- despite legal threats from the Motion Picture Association of America. MODERATOR --------- PETER SHANE is theDistinguished Service Professor of Law and Public Policy in the H.John Heinz III School of Public Policy and Management. He is also Director of the Institute for the Study of Information Technology and Society. He is primary investigator also for Community Connections, an interdisciplinary research and outreach project funded by the Hewlett Foundation, which is exploring how Internet technology can best be used to promote civic engagement among all Americans. At the Heinz School, he has taught both telecommunications law and a seminar on the Internet and the Future of Democracy. Prior to joining the faculty in the Heinz School, Professor Shane as the Dean of the Law School at the University of Pittsburgh. A noted legal educator, Professor Shane has been a teacher of constitutional and administrative law since 1981. His specialties include separation of powers law and the application of law to the presidency, as well as telecommunications law. From 1994 to 1998, he served as dean at the University of Pittsburgh School of Law, having previously taught for 13 years at the University of Iowa College of Law. He has been a visiting faculty member at the Duke, Boston College, and Villanova Law Schools. In December, 2001, he will become the inaugural holder of the "foreign chair" for the University of Ghent LL.M. program on the law of Europe in comparative perspective.