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Subject: IP: Respected British Scientist Resigns from US-Based Conference-Planning Committee: EFFector 14.15: Uproar Around the World over Sklayrov Arrest; More!
>Respected British Scientist Resigns from US-Based Conference-Planning >Committee > > Citing Fear of Prosecution under DMCA > > UK scientist & programmer Alan Cox, a key member of the USENIX Annual > Linux Showcase (ALS) planning committee, has resigned in the wake of > the arrest of DEFCON presenter Dmitry Sklyarov and legal threats > against USENIX presenter Prof. Edward Felten & colleagues, under the > questionably-constitutional US "Digital Millennium Copyright Act" > (DMCA). Cox sent USENIX the following open letter of resignation: > > I hereby tender my resignation to the USENIX ALS committee. > > With the arrest of Dimitry Sklyarov it has become apparent that it > is not safe for non-US software engineers to visit the United > States. While he was undoubtedly chosen for political reasons as a > Russian it is a good example for the US public that the risk > extends arbitarily further. > > USENIX by its choice of a US location is encouraging other > programmers, many from Eastern European states hated by the US > government, to take the same risks. That is something I cannot > morally be part of. Who will be the next conference speaker slammed > into a US jail for years for committing no crime? Are USENIX > prepared to take the chance it will be their speakers? > > Until the DMCA mess is resolved I would urge all non-US citizens to > boycott conferences in the USA and all US conference bodies to hold > their conferences elsehere. > > I appreciate that this problem is not of USENIX making, but it must > be addressed. > > Alan Cox > > Similar resignations of non-US members of US conference- and other > event-planning bodies are increasing, with many more expected. It is > thus crystal clear that the DMCA is having one of the most palpable > "chilling effects" in American history on perfectly legal expression. > EFF remains very concerned about such "secondary effects" of this > legislation, and is committed to seeing it undone. > > [Sources: Linux World News & NewsForge For archives see: http://www.interesting-people.org/
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