Association of American Publishers (AAP)
The Association of American Publishers (AAP) is a national trade association
representing the U.S. book publishing industry. AAP represents more than 300
commercial and non-profit member companies, university presses, and scholarly
societies that publish books and journals across a broad range of interests.
AAP’s members include leading educational publishers, who produce textbooks and
other educational and testing materials covering the entire range of educational
and professional needs. In addition to their print publications, many AAP
members are active in the emerging market for e-books, while also producing
computer programs, databases, and a variety of multimedia works for use in
on-line, CD-ROM and other digital formats. AAP’s programs and activities cover
a broad range of issues of interest to publishers, including protecting and
strengthening intellectual property and exploring challenges and opportunities
related to new technology. In 1994, AAP launched the Digital Object Identifier
(DOI), which focused on content identification (discussed more fully above), as
part of a broader copyright management initiative. Through its Open eBook
Standards Project and other efforts, AAP promotes the development and use of
standards and requirements in the areas of DRM metadata and numbering that will
enable an open and competitive marketplace for eBook commerce on a large scale.
More information on AAP is available at:
http://www.publishers.org.
Business Software Alliance (BSA)
The Business Software Alliance (BSA) is an international organization
representing companies in the software, hardware and Internet sectors. BSA’s
priorities are enhancing trust and security in cyberspace, reducing software
piracy, promoting strong policies for intellectual property protection and free
trade, and educating the public about sound software management practices. The
BSA is committed to working on technological solutions for protecting digital
content on-line, but as innovators, software and hardware makers BSA member
companies are also committed to letting the market lead. Thus, BSA participates
in cross-industry efforts to develop technological protection measures to
protect copyrighted works within a broad framework of shared objectives –
protecting content, promoting consumer choice, and fostering innovation. More
information on BSA is available at:
http://www.bsa.org.
Interactive Digital Software Association (IDSA)
The Interactive Digital Software Association serves the business and public
affairs needs of companies that publish video and computer games for video game
consoles, personal computers, handheld devices and the Internet. IDSA members
collectively account for more than 90 percent of the entertainment software
sales in the United States in 2002, and billions more in export sales of
American-made entertainment software. More information on IDSA is available at:
http://www.idsa.com.
International Federation of the Phonographic Industry (IFPI)
International Federation of Phonographic Producers (IFPI) is an international
organization comprised of 1500 record companies and distributors in 76
countries. IFPI describes its priorities as fighting music piracy, promoting
fair market access and adequate copyright laws, and helping to develop the legal
conditions and the technologies for the recording industry to prosper in the
digital age. IFPI has been closely involved in the discussions between the
recording industry and the technology and consumer electronics sectors known as
the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI), which is discussed below. More
information on IFPI is available at:
http://www.ifpi.org.
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA)
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and its international
counterpart, the Motion Picture Association (MPA), serve as the voice and
advocate of the American motion picture, home video and television industries,
domestically through the MPAA and internationally through the MPA. MPAA
represents the largest producers and distributors of filmed entertainment: Buena
Vista International, Inc; Columbia Tristar Film Distributors International,
Inc.; Paramount Pictures Corporation; Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation;
Universal International Films, Inc.; and Warner Bros., a division of Time Warner
Entertainment Company, L.P.
The MPAA pursues an active agenda to confront digital piracy and facilitate the
viability of a legitimate marketplace for high-quality digital entertainment,
including promoting technological protection systems. Currently, the MPA’s three
primary goals are: (1) implementing a “Broadcast Flag” to prevent the
unauthorized redistribution of “in-the-clear” digital over-the-air broadcast
television, including its unauthorized redistribution over the Internet, (2)
plugging the “analog hole” that results from the fact that protected digital
content can easily be converted into analog form and then reconverted to
unprotected digital form, making it subject to widespread unauthorized copying
and redistribution, and (3) putting an end to copyright infringement on
so-called “file-sharing” services on peer-to-peer (p2p) networks. As noted
above, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) currently is conducting a
rule making on the Broadcast Flag. More information on the MPAA is available at:
http://www.mpaa.orgg
Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA)
The Recording Industry Association of America is the trade group that
represents the U.S. recording industry. The mission of RIAA is to foster a
business and legal climate that supports and promotes its members' creative and
financial vitality. RIAA’s record company members create, manufacture and/or
distribute approximately 90% of all legitimate sound recordings produced and
sold in the United States. In support of this mission, the RIAA, among other
things, works to protect intellectual property rights worldwide, conducts
industry and technical research, and monitors domestic and international legal
and public policy issues affecting the U.S. recording industry. RIAA has been
closely involved in the discussions between the recording industry and the
technology and consumer electronics sectors known as the Secure Digital Music
Initiative (SDMI), which is discussed below. More information on RIAA is
available at: http://www.riaa.org
Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA)
The Software & Information Industry Association (SIIA) is a trade association
representing over 1,400 high-tech companies that develop and market software and
electronic content for business, education, consumers, the Internet, and
entertainment. SIIA members represent a wide range of business interests.
Numerous SIIA members create and develop new and valuable encryption
technologies, use encryption technologies to protect their proprietary content,
and purchase or license software and information products and other content and
services that utilize encryption technologies. As a result, SIIA and many of its
members are actively involved in issues relating to the protection and use of
encryption technologies and the relationship between research and development
activities relating to encryption. More information on SIIA is available at:
http://www.siia.net.
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