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- 1. Users have the right to "time-shift" content that they have
legally acquired.
- This gives you the right to record video or audio for later
viewing or listening. For example, you can use a VCR to record a
TV show and play it back later.
- 2. Users have the right to "space-shift" content that they have
legally acquired.
- This gives you the right to use your content in different places
(as long as each use is personal and non-commercial). For example,
you can copy a CD to a portable music player so that you can
listen to the songs while you're jogging.
- 3. Users have the right to make backup copies of their content.
- This gives you the right to make archival copies to be used in
the event that your original copies are destroyed.
- 4. Users have the right to use legally acquired content on the
platform of their choice.
- This gives you the right to listen to music on your Rio, to
watch TV on your iMac, and to view DVDs on your Linux computer.
- 5. Users have the right to translate legally acquired content into
comparable formats.
- This gives you the right to modify content in order to make it
more usable. For example, a blind person can modify an electronic
book so that the content can be read out loud.
- 6. Users have the right to use technology in order to achieve the
rights previously mentioned.
- This last right guarantees your ability to exercise your other
rights. Certain recent copyright laws have paradoxical loopholes
that claim to grant certain rights but then criminalize all
technologies that could allow you to exercise those rights. In
contrast, this Bill of Rights states that no technological
barriers can deprive you of your other fair use rights.
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