9 comments

  • andrekandre 34 minutes ago

      > In a voice vote earlier this week, the House of Representatives passed H.R. 6028, the “Legislative Branch Agencies Clarification Act.”
    
    wow, i had always assumed actual laws have to pass a recorded vote, but its not true...

    from wiki:

       > In Congress, "the vast majority of actions decided by a voice vote" are ones for which "a strong or even overwhelming majority favors one side", or even unanimous consent. Members can request a division of the assembly (a rising vote, where each sides rise in turn to be counted), and one-fifth of members can demand a recorded vote on any question, after the chair announces the result of a voice vote.
    
      > It is estimated that more than 95 percent of the resolutions passed by state legislatures are passed by a unanimous voice vote, many without discussion; this is because resolutions are often on routine, noncontroversial matters, such as commemorating important events or recognizing groups.
    
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Voice_vote#United_States
    • Computer0 18 minutes ago
      Oh and the biggest bullshit about this is it removes one’s ability to hold their local representatives accountable. I just assume the worst!
  • anigbrowl 2 hours ago
    Odd that the article doesn't mention parties at all, although perhaps this was in an attempt to avoid accusations of partisanship that might ensue from stating facts.

    Anyway, a quick look at https://www.congress.gov/bill/119th-congress/house-bill/6028... indicates that all 4 sponsors of the bill are Republicans. The Actions tab seems to indicated that the bill got only 12 minutes of debate before being passed,; I hope this is an artifact of how the page is updated rather than the actual time spent on considering it.

    • bigstrat2003 1 hour ago
      The article doesn't mention parties because it's irrelevant. A bad bill is bad on its merits, not because of who has brought it about.
      • Grombobulous 3 minutes ago
        The identity of the people who crafted the bill is the second most relevant thing besides the bill itself.
      • colonCapitalDee 20 minutes ago
        Ignoring power politics doesn't make them go away
      • thereisnospork 54 minutes ago
        For those of us at home who need to decide which team to root for its very much relevant when and what bills a party sponsors.
  • OutOfHere 50 minutes ago
    Anything that destroys copyright is a good thing. It is a societal evil.
    • tadfisher 21 minutes ago
      This bill very much does not do that. It does the opposite, in fact. I encourage you to re-read the article.
  • panny 1 hour ago
    I usually agree with the EFF on things, but after reading their linked https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/05/us-copyright-offices-d... I couldn't disagree more. An LLM is a predict the next word algorithm. If the model is overfitting, it's basically copy paste. There have been several documented instances where that happened and full GPL code, including headers and attribution were copy/pasted by the "AI."

    AI is essentially copy paste with more steps. The part that AI companies use to defend this is ?how are we supposed to decide how much each author deserves? They try to wave this away, but their own model can tell them. Their models work off of weights. They can determine how much each work contributed based on those weights, so it's dishonest for them to argue it isn't possible. The way the models are engineered now don't make this possible, but that's intentional and we can all recognize that. They throw up their hands and claim it's not possible because they simply don't want to pay.

    The most infurating thing however is how AI companies sidestep the IP rights of authors, but then claim to own those IP rights when their own generated output leaks. Anthropic filed DMCA takedowns on the leaked claude code repos, claiming ownership over something they explicitly have stated is almost entirely AI generated as part of their marketing. They take code, mix it up just enough to scrub away the GPL or whatever license belongs on it, then try to claim ownership of the result, in spite of the Copyright Office repeatedly stating that AI generated works have no copyright protection at all.

    • anematode 1 hour ago
      Agreed. Moreover, the authors of copyright law could never have anticipated this type and scale of abuse. Maybe the companies are legally in the right, maybe not, but that's irrelevant for the question of whether it's ethical. The EFF's post definitely goes against their mission to "ensure that technology supports freedom, justice, and innovation for all people of the world."
  • jeremyjh 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • shimman 4 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • relyks 4 hours ago
        Yes, but saying just "congress" implies both chambers passed it
        • shimman 2 hours ago
          No, you would say passes both houses of Congress in that case.

          Just don't like the immediate dismissal of the people's House when it comes to government affairs. When Congress does something it's important, regardless of the house it originates from.

        • righthand 4 hours ago
          Not necessarily. In the US traditionally the House Reps are referred to as congressmen (unlike the rest of the world) and the Senate, senators. So sometimes Congress is shorthand for the House. Though I agree it shouldn’t be.
          • enraged_camel 4 hours ago
            This is false. Traditionally, when only one chamber of Congress passes a bill, headlines explicitly state which chamber. "The House passed a bill that..." or "The Senate passes a bill that..."

            The OP is correct that Congress implies both chambers. Yes, "Congressman" or "Congresswoman" refers to House members. But the headline says "Congress".

          • anigbrowl 3 hours ago
            No
  • rayiner 4 hours ago
    [flagged]
    • dredmorbius 4 hours ago
      The author, Joe Mullin, is a policy analyst:

      <https://www.eff.org/about/staff/joe-mullin>.

      He's been working in that capacity with the EFF since at least 2018: <https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2018/02/ipr-process-saves-80-c...>.

      Your further objections are ... facile.

      • roenxi 3 hours ago
        It suppose I can see "executive power should be part of the executive branch" as a facile argument because it does seem basic and a bit tautological, but it is still quite a strong point. It needs to be addressed rather than just identified and dismissed.
        • bradleyjg 2 hours ago
          I suppose in that case you are wholly opposed to the regulatory system as legislative power should be part of the legislative branch?
          • roenxi 1 hour ago
            Well, probably in theory. I don't rate that on my top 50 issues I care about and haven't given the idea much thought. But having the legislative branch be responsible for the regulatory system does sound proper.

            The US executive branch has very limited decision making bandwidth and it should really be reserved for matters of war and peace.

        • stonogo 3 hours ago
          Except that's a bad summary of a bad argument. "Rulemaking" is what Congress is supposed to do.
    • anigbrowl 3 hours ago
      No surprise that you'd show up to shill for it.Your argument boils down to 'if it looks like an executive branch agency, then the Executive branch should have control over it' rather than accepting that Congress is free to set things up as it sees fit within the Constitutional constraints.
      • roenxi 2 hours ago
        Hypothetically, if Congress passed legislation saying "it looks like an executive branch agency, the Executive branch should have control over it" you'd consider that a generally reasonable position all else equal?

        If you concede that it looks like an executive agency then it actually seems quite proper that the executive control it.

        • anigbrowl 1 hour ago
          No. Congress can set up and modify different parts of the executive branch, but can also set up wholly independent agencies that are not parts of the executive branch. The current administration often argues (through legal filings or proxies) that such agencies are somehow illegitimate and the executive branch should have authority over everything. That idea isn't peculiar to this administration, they just seem to have gone all-in on 'unitary executive theory' because it provides arguments for consolidating as much power as possible in the office of the Presidency.
          • roenxi 1 hour ago
            The current administration doesn't seem to be involved in this. This appears to be Congress, on paper, saying that the executive should control something that looks like an executive agency.

            I can see how someone might disagree with that for various reasons (see the article) but in context "if it looks like an executive branch agency, then the Executive branch should have control over it" seems like a great argument and one that would probably carry in Congress, they have tended to put executive agencies under control of the executive in the past.

        • 8note 1 hour ago
          youd also have to consider that the executive branch isn't allowed to make decisions, so the copyright office couldnt actually do anything, unless congress specifically passed a law saying a certain work has or does not have copyright protections, and which specific protections.

          no more major questions doctrine

    • ai_critic 4 hours ago
      I don't think you've at all addressed why moving anything there towards the executive is desirable, especially given the capriciousness of the current executive.
    • dannyobrien 3 hours ago
      FYI: though EFF articles have individual named authors, they go through an extensive collective editing process. Every post will have had at least one domain-specific lawyer reviewer who signs off on it.
    • csb6 3 hours ago
      That is a rather narrow definition of checks and balances. The term can be applied to any group of organizations where each organization has power and interest to limit the power of the others.
      • rayiner 3 hours ago
        The article is talking about a bill that restructures a body in the U.S. federal government. In that context, “checks and balances” has a specific, well-known meaning. It’s like writing an article about Fedora 42 and using the term “kernel.” In that context, readers expect the term to be used in a specific way.
  • phendrenad2 3 hours ago
    I don't really understand the hypothetical problems here. "The copyright office head would be a presidential appointee, which could make the copyright office more political". I mean, I guess? Are people worried they're going to start selectively enforcing copyright law? But they don't enforce copyright law right now...
    • akamaka 3 hours ago
      It’s not hypothetical at all. The FCC is currently being used for political attacks: https://www.cnn.com/2026/05/28/media/abc-fcc-disney-licenses...

      Those who are under attack happen to also be the biggest copyrighter holders, so this would open up a new avenue of attack.

      • ronsor 11 minutes ago
        > Those who are under attack happen to also be the biggest copyrighter holders, so this would open up a new avenue of attack.

        Don't threaten me with a good time

      • mohamedkoubaa 2 hours ago
        It's not hypothetical nor an unintended consequence. Most likely this is the point
      • XorNot 2 hours ago
        Conversely you're already not dealing with that, so the letter and spirit of the law are both being ignored and the American voter doesn't care.
        • WarOnPrivacy 2 hours ago
          > the American voter doesn't care.

          The American voter doesn't know because copyright misuse and malfeasance is on a long list of public-impacting topics that news orgs have rigorously ignored for generations.

    • hightrix 3 hours ago
      >Are people worried they're going to start selectively enforcing copyright law?

      Yes. Not only that, but to grant copyright protection only to those that are allied with/loyal to/bribe the current administration.

      This would have massive, far reaching effects.

    • plandis 35 minutes ago
      > Are people worried they're going to start selectively enforcing copyright law?

      Yes.

    • z3c0 3 hours ago
      Never gotten any emails from lawyers, I see.

      Copyright laws are heavily enforced, only selectively.

    • dyauspitr 3 hours ago
      Are you kidding? If there’s something in there they don’t like I don’t put it past this administration to break it internally and then make a case for shutting it down. This whole thing sounds very similar to the postal service situation…
      • vjvjvjvjghv 1 hour ago
        They will break the system and use it for their friends. No way they are shutting it down. There is way too much money to be made in selective enforcement.
      • roenxi 3 hours ago
        > Are you kidding? If there’s something in there they don’t like I don’t put it past this administration to break it internally and then make a case for shutting it down.

        Might be a win? The copyright system is one of the major suspects for why US industry ended up crippled and replaced by Asian labour refusing to respect US IP laws to their significant advantage. To say nothing of the corrosive influence on culture of locking down music and stories. The biggest IP success in the last 50 years seems to have been Open Source because they built a framework inside the copyright system to achieve the opposite outcome and build a thriving industry despite the lawyers trying to encourage them in alternative directions.

        The people defending the copyright system should have to keep making their case until they come up with something persuasive for how they're helping.

        • jaggederest 3 hours ago
          Tongue in cheek, but the copyright system should only last for 12 years, with one straightforward renewal, without specific reauthorization. Just like copyright in works, in my opinion
        • echelon 2 hours ago
          > The copyright system is one of the major suspects for why US industry ended up crippled and replaced by Asian labour refusing to respect US IP laws to their significant advantage.

          Expand on this.

          Wasn't it instead our desire to be the world's reserve currency and rely on cheap imports? You can't be both a net exporter and the world's top reserve currency.

          You have to run trade deficits if you want to export dollars.

          • roenxi 1 hour ago
            It comes down to comparative advantages more than anything else and the US raising the cost (in some sense outright banning) people from deploying good ideas in an industrial way seems like it'd be a significant comparative disadvantage to attracting investment. And a much bigger deal than the practical reality that the US imports more than it exports.

            Maintaining an import-dependent economy might be a factor, economies are complicated. But there isn't a fundamental reason that taking in more stuff than gets exported should mean that Asia has to be more successful. If anything, a country in a position to import more than it exports should be seeing big jumps in living standards, rather the gains going to a country notionally taking the bad end of the bargain. And there are some easy resolutions to being a net importer and while having a strong industrial economy - import raw materials, make stuff that isn't for export as an example.

        • z3c0 2 hours ago
          I mean, I agree with your general point that copyright might need to be reconsidered, but this doesn't seem like an attempt to reconsider it. It's rather transparently enabling further cronyism.
  • billfor 2 hours ago
    This is a one-sided article which does not discuss the opposing view, or the reason why they thought congress should appoint. Ironically, if this became law then it might have prevented Trump from removing the librarian as he attempted in 2025 (still pending in the supreme court). It also includes a term limit of 10 years.

    https://www.stoneslaw.net/legislative-branch-agencies-clarif...