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Could singing fish novelties be hooked by a proposed law requiring anti-copying technology in digital devices?

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Could singing fish novelties be hooked by a proposed law requiring anti-copying technology in digital devices?

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Princeton professor Ed Felten thinks so. The computer scientist has launched a site, called Fritz’s Hit List, that points out devices that could be forced to carry anti-copying technology if Sen. Fritz Hollings’, D-S.C., Consumer Broadband and Digital Television Promotion Act (CBDTPA) passes. The bill, which is designed to thwart piracy, would restrict digital products that don’t carry government-approved security technology. So far, Fritz’s Hit List features a catalog of unlikely devices Felten said would be regulated under the law. They include common objects such as baby monitors and automobile navigation systems as well as seemingly innocuous toys such as the Shop With Me Barbie toy cash register, the Sony Aibo robot dog and Big Mouth Billy Bass. “That’s right, your favorite wall-hanging, singing, dancing, animatronic fish qualifies for regulation as a ‘digital media device’ under the Hollings CBDTPA,” Felten wrote on the site. “If the CBDTPA passes, any new Billy Bass will have to

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