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DMCA, The Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, is an amendment of the United States copyright law that was enacted in response to the exigency of increasing copyright infractions, particularly due to the growing ease of information sharing. Essentially, the DMCA updated U.S. copyright law to meet demands of the "Digital Age" and to make the U.S. compliant with requirements outlined at the World Intellectual Property Organization (WIPO) and treaties signed in 1996.

 

History

Overview of the legal provisions

Pros and Cons

Fandom

Music piracy

Academia

Sources

About Us

 

Responses to Professor Greg Downey's Questions

 

 

Why should you care about the DMCA? How could copyright law affect anyone but lawyers? Well, have you ever:

 

 

Or have you:

 

What about:

 

In the digital age, most people have encountered at least one of these situations. Copyright law like the DMCA plays a major role in what we are allowed to do with media (both legally and illegally obtained). It determines what technology is made available and what happens to those who break the rules. This wiki is an attempt to explore the origins and applications of the DMCA and how it affects our lives.

 

This Wiki is developed by a group of students as a class project.