The 1994 act is the copyright law of New Zealand; it was significantly updated by the Copyright (New Technologies) Amendment Act 2008.
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act did not add any categories of protection to the existing law.
The 2004 amendment to the Copyright Act sought to clarify aspects of the existing law, and how they apply to digital works and the internet.
1998.
Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
A copy of the digital millennium copyright act is always readily available on the government website. There are two other places that make the terms a little easier to read, which is on the wikipedia website, and the digital millennium copyright act website.
Depending on context, the answer to this could be copyright law generally, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Digital Rights Management, or any number of things.
The current law is Copyright Act 1994 as amended.
The Digital Theft Deterrence and Copyright Damages Act
No, under the digital millennium copyright act this constitutes as piracy.
The Copyright Act 1994 is still in effect, although it was significantly updated by the Copyright (New Technologies) Amendment Act 2008. The duration of protection under the act varies slightly by the type of work, but is generally the life of the creator plus 50 years. See the link below for details.
The current act is from 1994, but New Zealand has had copyright laws since 1842, only two years after the Treaty of Waitangi.
Digital Millennium Copyright Act - according to http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/DMCA