Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998

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Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 definition - hacker

(legal term)

The protection of intellectual property rights from attack by cybercriminals is for many modern-day businesses as important as dealing with crack attacks on computer networks.

Enacted in October 1998, the DMCA was intended to implement under United States law certain worldwide copyright laws to cope with emerging digital technologies by providing protection against the disabling or by-passing of technical measures designed to protect copyright. The DMCA sanctions apply to anyone who attempts to impair or disable an encryption device protecting a copyrighted work, typically using the Internet.

A copy of the DMCA can be found at the Web page http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/ dmca.pdf.

See Also: Attack; Copyright Law; Hacker Quarterly Magazine (a.k.a. 2600); Intellectual Property (IP); Infringing Intellectual Property Rights and Copyright, Internet; Network.

Schell, B.H., Dodge, J.L., with S.S. Moutsatsos. The Hacking of America: WhoÂ’s Doing It, Why, and How. Westport, CT: Quorum Books, 2002.

Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary Copyright © 2006 by Bernadette Schell and Clemens Martin.
Published by Wiley Publishing, Inc., Indianapolis, Indiana.
Used by arrangement with John Wiley & Sons, Inc.

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MLA Style

"Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998." Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary. 2009

  • Your Dictionary. 5 July 2009
  • <www.yourdictionary.com/hacker/digital-millennium-copyright-act-of-1998>

APA Style

Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998. (2009). In Webster's New World Hacker Dictionary

  • Retrieved July 5th, 2009, from www.yourdictionary.com/hacker/digital-millennium-copyright-act-of-1998

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