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NY DeCSS Case: Final Briefs Online 157

Iambic Pentametor writes "Defendants' brief is here and plaintiffs' is here. Openlaw has very comprehensive coverage including an ongoing discussion commenting on the briefs. The decision by Judge Kaplan is expected probably within a week."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

NY DeCSS Case: Final Briefs Online

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  • by FascDot Killed My Pr ( 24021 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:27AM (#866692)
    I wonder if net filtering software allows its users to look at "online briefs"
    --
  • Go DeCSS! Down with the RIAA! Go Linux! Down with the MPAA! Go Napster! Down with the MPAA! Go Open Source! Down with Amazon.com! Go Barnes and Noble! Down with Closed Source! Huzzah! Huzzah!
  • just in case deCSS party winds the case, when is the skinnable deCSS primary release comes out? :)
  • Are we having fun yet?
  • by Chairboy ( 88841 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:31AM (#866696) Homepage
    No matter what the ruling is, what could it do? Even if the websites are found against, all the court could do is assign some improbable damage figure that nobody would collect. The websites would appeal, and the legal system would have another go at it a year from now in appeals court.

    If Kaplan rules in favor of the defendants, does that mean that the aggressors will be forced to pay the legal fees of the defense? If not, this whole thing is a lose-lose situation.

    Even if the studios end up on the losing side, they just go play a couple rounds of golf and laugh about it over drinks. The defendants, on the other hand, will be stuck with hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

    This case is far from over. It hasn't gotten bloody yet.
  • *click* *click* *click*
    Are you still touching me?
    *click* *click* *click*
    My hovercraft is full of eels...
  • Even if the studios end up on the losing side, they just go play a couple rounds of golf and laugh about it over drinks. The defendants, on the other hand, will be stuck with hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

    I was under the impression that the EFF was representing the defendants.
  • specially if it will be the "Defendants' brief" and "plaintiffs'". how about the jury's? thats unfair!
  • by jyuter ( 48936 ) <jyuterNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:45AM (#866700) Homepage Journal
    Let me get this straight. The kid made a program for himself to see legally purchased DVDs, but since the program could be used for illegal piracy he was sued. By this logic, software makers could sue Gates for including the "copy" command as it could be used for piracy. Anyone remember copy *.* a: b:?



    Being with you, it's just one epiphany after another
  • by Lucretius ( 110272 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:45AM (#866701)
    Even if the studios end up on the losing side, they just go play a couple rounds of golf and laugh about it over drinks. The defendants, on the other hand, will be stuck with hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees.

    Well, there are more facets of this case than just the monetary value alone. As far as the legal fees go, I have to agree that the legal fees are pocket change for the studios whereas the EFF is most likely straining its resources to be able to pull this off.

    However, there is much more at stake here than just legal fees, and that is legal precedent. If the EFF wins in this case, the studios (and many other people) will lose out in potential profits and the EFF will have made a massive step forward in our rights to reverse engineering and fair use (something which is abused both by consumers and by the corporations in my humble opinion) -- and I suppose we could throw in free speech as well.

  • I've heard a lot about deCSS, I've heard a lot about Napster. Its all interesting stuff no doubt... well... okay no some of its damn dry and boring.

    Isn't slashdot about: "here's a new technology, here's a new idea, here's a new discovery, here's a review of the above."?

    Yes, court cases fall into this somewhat. Like: The idea that napster is liable for the actions of its users, or the idea that reversing/discovering and algorithm could be considered "criminal" by a country you don't even live in and may never have ever visited, and that you could get a ton of flak for it.

    But the fact that the case is now being decided uppon by the judge, is something people who wanted to track the case could get from reuters or cnn [ouch the bias, it hurts it hurts].

    I mean yeah, its great taht we're days from finding out, but this may be a case where people sort of figured we'd find out sometime, and when that happens it'd be interesting to know how it went down.

    I vote that US coporate conglomerates should have no right mandating how or punishing for the way someone elsewhere in the world thinks.

    -Daniel

  • by BaronM ( 122102 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:47AM (#866703)
    If MPAA loses this case on the intellectual property merits, could they change strategy and rely on UCITA to protect themselves? My reasoning is thus:

    1. UCITA legitimizes shrinkwrap/clickwrap agreements as enforceable contracts.

    2. DVDs are shrink-wrapped.

    3. Dvds are software (bits is bits, right?).

    Therefore, all MPAA has to do is start including a license agreement with DVD, which you accept by breaking the shrinkwrap, which states that you are voluntarily surrendering your right to use the software on anything other thatn a licensed playback device. Presto! Instant contract. And contract law trumps pretty much everything.

    Lawyers, am I right, or just blowing smoke?

  • better yet: diskcopy

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --

  • by Janthkin ( 32289 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:48AM (#866705)
    From the EFF brief:
    Plaintiffs allege that privately watching a purchased movie using a disapproved player is a violation of the copyright owner's legal rights; that the mere existence of a Linux DVD player which allows one to watch legitimate movies purchased anywhere on the globe is actionable. We hope that this Court will find that legitimate holders of copyrighted works have an unfettered legal right to privately experience those works (in addition to any fair use rights they may have).

    IANAL, but it seems that (indirectly) the EFF is also arguing against regional encoding, in addition to everything ELSE they cover. In essence, if you buy this disc, you should be able to watch it everywhere you'd could possibly desire to. This rocks. :)
  • We could hope it gets appealed to the Supreme Court and the DMCA is declared UNCONSTITUTIONAL. (Or can a federal judge make that ruling?)
  • by H3lldr0p ( 40304 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:50AM (#866707) Homepage
    To quote from the defendant's papers:

    We agree with plaintiffs and the Court that the authority of the copyright owner is a matter of law, not a matter of fact.

    Am I reading this correctly?

    That they actually acknowledge that copyrights, et. al. are actually legal fiction that is foisted upon the public at large?

    Wow.
  • by rjh ( 40933 ) <rjh@sixdemonbag.org> on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:50AM (#866708)
    No matter what the ruling is, what could it do?

    Short answer: Precedent. Already there's caselaw from the Sixth and Ninth Circuits which holds that, in some instances, computer source code can be Constitutionally-protected speech. These cases have revolved only around cryptographic code, though; DeCSS is the first case where computer source code, without any qualifications, has been presented as warranting First Amendment protections.

    If the judge rules (as I expect he will) that DeCSS possesses expressive content, a lot of the DMCA will be in jeopardy, and maybe UCITA, too. We (the hacker/geek community) will now have three different legal precedents to stand on in the event that future lawsuits are filed against us. "Don't like our programs?" we can say. "Tough luck! Free Software is Free Speech!"

    This will scare the hell out of half the intellectual-property lawyers in the country, and will make the other half giggle with delight.

    I don't like 2600. I think that Eric Corley/Emmanuel Goldstein is, mostly, a boil on the ass of the community. But if he gets the right to freely talk about DeCSS and how to circumvent access controls on DVDs (probably the only thing he and I will ever agree on), then I get the right to freely talk about things I find interesting which the Government would rather I didn't.

    That, to me, is the most important thing which is coming out of the 2600 trial. I don't give half a damn what happens to Goldstein. I give a damn what happens to me. And if the law will protect Goldstein, how much more will it protect me?

    This is the same logic Larry Flynt used in his First Amendment trial. It was good logic then, and it's good logic now.
  • That will not work for them. Why you ask, because the software will still be allowed to exist because of the older DVDs that are out there which should be able to "grandfather" the new licenses. Thats how I would take it atleast.

  • when do they file their boxers?

    ---

  • I think it's more like Copy II PC back on my old 8088. A lot of software relied on key disks back then (much like CDs today, but less durable). I used it to make backups of the key disks because it was an extreme hassle (and often impossible) to get replacement disks (especially as the software got older). However, Copy II PC could just as easily be used to make a copy for a friend.

    Anyone remember this?
  • I believe that's (part of) the point of the Supreme Court. Didn't the Supreme Courte rule the CDA unconstitutional?

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --

  • by evanbd ( 210358 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:55AM (#866713)
    Even better: WMP7. Windows Media Player 7 has one-click audio CD creation (or some such.. I haven't used it yet.). Should be able to go after them for promoting music piracy. I don't see HOW anyone is going to use this except to create copies of CDs or compilations of CDs. Granted, it may be for personal use, but people are saying that that's not legal... Sounds fun to me :)

    ---
  • breaking the shrinkwrap...Presto! Instant contract.

    Nope. A shrinkwrap license has never been tested in a serious court case. Given that the "shrinkwrap" approach runs counter to two major currents of contract law { (1) a contract is unenforceable if informed consent is absent (2) shrinkwrap license seems to violate consumer protection laws of many states} , I wouldn't bet that any of these shrinkwrap approaches would survive a serious legal assault
  • by Anonymous Coward
    Does the brief include the source? It would be very ironic!!
  • by DrQu+xum ( 218745 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @09:58AM (#866716) Homepage Journal
    Better yet, Gate$ should be sued for knowingly integrating VBScript in Outlook, as it could (and obviously has) lead to virus propagation and the loss of trillions* (why lose trillions when you could lose--BILLIONS? :) of dollars by companies whose servers and workstations were crashed.

    <cynicism=on>
    Of course, when individuals and small companies whine about losing money because of a large corporation's f**kup, nothing happens.
    When a big honkin' group (e.g. RIAA, MPAA) whines about possibly losing money because of a little program that subverts a monopolization technique, the consumer gets the shaft.
    </cynicism>

    *-blatant exaggeration, but if the MPAA/RIAA can do it, why can't I? :)
  • yeah well DVD manufacturers apply some weird licensing to their products that only allows them to be played on approved software or hardware. if you didn't go through the MPAA or whoever to get a DVD-decrypter license, they should be sued. this case decides whether they can make up that kind of licensing or not =)
  • by Sentsix ( 128268 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:00AM (#866718) Homepage
    This is actually pretty clear cut, with three possible outcomes:

    #1. Defendants Win:
    The immediate result is widespread beer-drenched parties thrown by open-source/hacker/free-speech types, who cook hamburgers and use the remaining charcoal to burn record execs in effigy. The following day not only is DeCSS available everywhere, it also has a user friendly interface and over 15,000 skins. Within 48 hours there are over 1,500 posts about the subject on slashdot.

    #1. Plaintifs Win:
    The immediate result is widespread beer-drenched parties thrown by anyone who receives money from the movie industry. During the party the execs start to plan a "Running Man" type picture staring the 2600 crew (which ends with "that bastard Goldstien" being eaten alive by his own computer. The following day there are several thousand people of varying ages either in jail, or on the run trying to avoid incarceration. Within 48 hours there are over 1000 posts about the subject on slashdot (There would be more, but there's only so much bandwidth out of Canada).

    #3. One side wins, the other appeals:
    The immediate result everyone bitches about the ruling at beer-drenched parties. The following day there are over 1,500 posts about this subject on slashdot.

    Bottom line? This lawsuit is nothing but a tool in the conspiracy by Hemos to raise Slashdot traffic. You heard it here first!

    The Midnight Watch - All the news that's fit to ridicule:
  • Then we fight ProCD again, arguing that copyright law and its necessary limitations on copyright holders' rights preempts contract. (ProCD was a distressing 7th Circuit case upholding a shrink-wrap license on a CD telephone database.)

    A win here would (ideally) say that First Amendment requires that copyright be limited by fair use. Then, the same limitations should apply whether that copyright was protected by code or by contract.

  • I purchased an ISA card back in the 286 days that would allow PCs to read MAC disks and copy any disk - heck I used it to make perfect copies of my Atari stuff.

    As I recall shortly after this product's release a suit was avoided by discontinuing this copy feature.

    Back then software makers were fewer, and you had to pirate based on word of mouth not leaching from some FTP site somewhere - now companies want more money than ever and have more money at their disposal to go after (and here's the key word) specific copying tools.

    By this I mean you can buy a CD Burner, and CDRs, and floppy disks by the arm-full and get really good at copying files (copy a:\. b: would be cleaner than the origonl poster, but as the one reply states diskcopy is cleaner), but those are all general purpose, multi-use types. When you start releasing software to copy a specific area of things (say Maxis' The Sims) you tend to set off the specific maker (Maxis) and they will most likely look at you in a less-than-positive way.

    In this case the things up for grabs to be copied are more than just one title but it still pokes in the ribs of a single entity.
  • You have an abnormally low user number for somebody so clueless. Defend your on-topicness. Tell why what you said has to do with the issue of the legality of DeCSS. Perhaps you should have drawn that out more in your post... if you weren't going for #1? Your post was basically worthless.
  • IANAL, but it seems that (indirectly) the EFF is also arguing against regional encoding, in addition to everything ELSE they cover. In essence, if you buy this disc, you should be able to watch it everywhere you'd could possibly desire to. This rocks. :)

    They should, but methinks it'd have to be appealed all the way to the World Court -- regional encoding is a violation of the world trade laws (don't ask me which ones). Anyone well-versed in international trade law please clarify.
  • copyright owner is a matter of law, not a matter of fact...... Am I reading this correctly?

    Careful here - lawyers don't mean what you and I mean by "fact" and "law." Substituting "adjudication" and "evidence" for "law" and "fact" gets closer to the conventional meanings.

    By way of example, consider the Microsoft anti-trust case. While the entire finding is merely the opinion of one man (Judge Jackson), the findings of law are appealable, but the findings of fact basically are not.

  • I believe they did -- but my question was whether *only* the Supreme Court can declare a law unconstitutional, or can a federal judge (or circuit court of appeals judge, for that matter) can also declare laws unconstitutional. I fell asleep during 9th grade civics class at that time. :)
  • but I couldn't help noticing that the defendant's arguments are much more compelling than the plaintiff's. The plaintiffs come off sounding like a bunch of whiners whereas the defense actually makes a cogent case for free speech and fair use. BTW - I don't own a DVD player nor have I ever watched a DVD item.

  • by rjh ( 40933 ) <rjh@sixdemonbag.org> on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:06AM (#866726)
    Every United States judge, without exception, is authorized to decide whether or not laws which come before them are Constitutional. The lowest magistrate (the lowest rung on the Federal judicial ladder) can declare laws unconstitutional (they never do this, of course--small worm, big freakin' hook, all that). District judges (the next ladder up) do it more often than magistrates do. Appellate judges are where the real judicial power is exercised; 99.9% of all judicial cases in the United States end at the appellate level.

    We hear about Supreme Court decisions because the Supreme Court's jurisdiction is the entire United States, plus all of its territories and holdings. Appellate decisions only affect a few states; District and Magisterial decisions only affect the district in which they preside.

    For instance, in Bernstein v. US, coming out of California District Court, District Judge Marilyn Patel declared certain portions of the ITAR/EAR to be unconstitutional. The very instant Judge Patel entered her ruling, those unconstitutional portions of ITAR/EAR were annulled--in fact, the instant she entered her ruling, those portions of ITAR/EAR were retroactively declared to have never existed. (Legally, unconstitutional laws are void "ab initio"--"from the very beginning". It's as if the laws were never passed.)

    At some level of the Executive Branch, it was decided to appeal this decision. It went from a California District court to the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals, which covers most of the West Coast. The Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals affirmed Judge Patel's ruling. Suddenly, those portions of ITAR/EAR were null and void throughout the entire Ninth Circuit.

    Had the Executive Branch appealed the decision to the Supreme Court, and the Supreme Court heard the case, and the Supreme Court affirmed Judge Patel's ruling, those portions of ITAR/EAR would have become null and void throughout the entire United States, its territories and holdings.
  • True, there has not be blood drawn. But remember, sharks don't eat lawyers -- professional courtesy.

    But, part of large corporate strategy is to run up legal bills. This seems like Mattel's legal strategy. If MPAA sends a nasty note to an ISP, they will shut down the site just to avoid spending thousands on a lawyer.

  • Let me get this straight. The kid made a program for himself to see legally purchased DVDs, but since the program could be used for illegal piracy he was sued. By this logic, software makers could sue Gates for including the "copy" command as it could be used for piracy. Anyone remember copy *.* a: b:?

    Could they sue Gates? No. Why? Gates is rich.

    --

  • http://www.netcraft.com/whats/?host=www.mpaa.org

    www.mpaa.org is running Microsoft-IIS/5.0 on Windows 2000

  • Ah, sorry, I miss read your posting. I think I read "Federal" as "Supreme".

    Sorry.

    Bill - aka taniwha
    --

  • by dazedNconfuzed ( 154242 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:21AM (#866731)
    Plaintif's points:
    - Defendant didn't prove that DeCSS is widely available
    - Defendant didn't prove that DeCSS would become widely available
    - Plaintiff will be really annoyed if defendant wins.

    Defendant's points:
    - DeCSS provides additional fair use of legitimately obtained copyrighted products
    - Nobody has EVER challenged the right of the purchaser to reasonably use a purchased work
    - Plaintiff has not shown in any way that DeCSS has affected DVD piracy
    - The DeCSS program is a 1st-Amendment-protected description of a scientific process.

    Sounds like a slam-dunk for the defense.

  • IANAL, but your logic is unassailable. As a practical matter, UCITA has thankfully only been adopted in one state [MD?VA?}, and it's applicability would depend on the applicable state law.

    As a more fundamental matter, even with UCITA shrink wrap contracts may still be invalid. You didn't know and couldn't know the licence before you agreed to the sale, so you never agreed to those terms, hence they are not part of the contract.

    Now UCITA tries to get around this by declaring the agreement occured after you opened the shrink wrap because you have the right to return it. Fair enough, but only if returns of opened media are accepted. They are not!

    So if you are truly worried about a EULA, or somesuch, go to a discounter such as BestBuy. Be on your best behaviour. Get the package/work and ask if you can open it prior to sale. The store will tell you no. Buy it anyways. Open it, read the EULA and try to immediately return it for cash. They will say no. Show them the return clause. They will still say no. Say thank you.

    IANAL, but the EULA is now no longer applicable to you. The company did not honor it's own EULA and cannot maintain the fiction that you agreed to the EULA because they gave you an opportunity to object.

  • Could they sue Gates? No. Why? Gates is rich.

    First thing you learn in law school: don't sue poor people.

  • So let's say the studios do exactly as you describe, and are even able to get the shrinkwrap contract upheld in court. So what? DeCSS would still be legal; only the USE of it would be illegal, and that ammounts to an unenforcable law anyway (it'd be like if pot possession was legal, but smoking it was illegal).
    If the EFF/2600 win this case, it will set precedents that software is speech, and reverse engineering is OK. Those precedents are the reason this case is so important.
  • It's interesting that both briefs spend most of their time trying to persuade the judge that their own interpretation of the DMCA is correct. The MPAA claims that anything that allows decryption is a tool for circumvention of copyright protection, and prohibited by the DMCA. The defense claims that decryption for fair use purposes is not a violation of copyright, and thus cannot be considered circumvention of copyright protection.

    Unfortunately, the statute could easily be read either way...

    It's pretty obvious that it's in the best interest of the MPAA (and other copyright-holding entities) to have as much control as possible over those purchasing and using their content. They have no incentive, financial or otherwise, to preserve the fair use rights of the public.

    The interpretation of DMCA advocated by the MPAA's counsel hands them that control on a silver platter, and allows them to prevent both copyright infringement and fair use with the same protection tool.

    That's the basic fault of the DMCA: it doesn't make any clear distinction between prevention from copyright infringement and prevention of legitimate fair use of copyrighted material. This is what needs to be fixed, either through the courts or through the Congress.

    All we need is something that preserves the legislative protection for tools that protect copyright without affecting fair use, but removes the protection for tools that prevent both infringement and fair use. Maybe like this (of course, IANAL):

    No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively prevents infringing access to a work protected under this title. This prohibition shall not apply to technological measures that limit or restrict fair use of the work [as defined elsewhere]
  • Quoted from the plaintiff's closing:

    In fact, the evidence shows that the Linux argument is a red herring: DeCSS was developed for and runs under the Microsoft Windows operating system. Further, one of the creators of DeCSS, Jon Johansen, admitted that he first provided DeCSS to an Internet Relay Chat ("IRC") room, called "#pcdvd," which is not limited to users of the Linux operating system. (Tr. 632:9-14, 633:1-4 (Johansen)).

    What crap is this? Is the lawyer that said it completely uninformed or does he just assume the judge and everyone else to be... The whole idea behind DeCSS was to let people watch dvds on linux, but since the player only works with windows, the necessary decryption (DeCSS) would sorta HAVE to happen with windows and not linux...

    Furthermore, the guy also argues that since Johansen first provided DeCSS to an IRC chat and since IRC is not limited to linux that the whole linux fair use thing was just a cover for the nasty, sneaky little hackers...

    The fair use of DeCSS is pretty obvious, and i sure hope the judge doesnt ignore it, after all, that would mean that maufactuers of CD burners, dual tape deck stereos, and vcrs can now be sued because their products can be used for "illegal duplication of copyrighted work", even though they have a whole lot of other fair uses as well...

  • by Ketzer ( 207882 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:24AM (#866737)
    From the MPAA's brief:

    Indeed, defendant Corley (and other defense witnesses) established that: (1) the Content Scramble System ("CSS") is a technological measure that effectively controls access to, and copying of, plaintiffs' copyrighted works...

    I would say "not so effectively controls..."

    Anyway, I don't have any one specific point, just some thoughts.

    My first impression is that the MPAA's looks like a professional legal brief, while the EFF's looks like a dull web-page.

    They cite that they have been damaged by DeCSS, because it takes from them: the assurance of protection that CSS gives to their valuable, copyrighted digital content released on DVDs.

    That's pretty weak. Much like demanding that your neighbors go around handcuffed. Sure, it restricts them from doing some things, (like watching DVDs on Linux) but it affords you the assurance of protection from being punched.

    They follow this by pointing out the threat, as they see it: That with increasing compression techniques (in particular DivX) and hard drive space, movies may find their way into rapid free circulation.

    They have a bit of a point there, in a few years, compressed mpeg video may be tossed around like mp3s are now. I don't think that mp3s have eliminated the CD market, nor do I expect DivX to eliminate the DVD market. At the least, there's a bunch of people out there with CD players and DVD Players who don't have bitchin' computers hooked up to the net via broadband and equipped with a terabyte of drive space. Unfortunately, this is a practical argument, not a legal one. As a geek, I keep looking at it from a technological standpoint. As soon as they show you the information, (movie or song) it's yours. You can screen capture video and record audio. It's really that simple. Sure, DeCSS is much more convenient, but it's not going to make a difference as far as copying goes.
  • so fine. we'll see what happens in m2 though won't we.

    The first line of your post is "2600 rocks. First Post, btw." I somehow suspect the "Offtopic" moderation will hold up in m2.

    And I don't have to post anonymously cuz I can't lose karma. :-P

    --

  • With how often the MPAA espouses brilliant statements about how easy it is to find pirated movies on the internet, I found the following section of their legal brief particularly funny:

    Defendants introduced no evidence to quantify the number of web sites on which the DeCSS software program is available. Although they elicited some testimony that typing the character string "DeCSS" into a search engine retrieves "a few hundred hits" (Tr. 1099:23-1100:2 (Appel)), that speculation proved to be highly misleading. As was made clear by defendants' expert, Dr. Appel -- who has specialized knowledge in browser technologies -- search engine results, by their nature, are grossly overbroad, since they do not distinguish between the appearance of articles about DeCSS or about this case, or the use of DeCSS as an acronym, on the one hand, and the appearance of the actual DeCSS software program on the other hand. (Tr. 1111:3-1112:19 (Appel)). Indeed, the only evidence of the number of sites on which DeCSS appears was elicited by plaintiffs' cross-examination of Dr. Appel, who estimated that only 20% to 30% of the 100 to 200 sites he reviewed from his own, independent search on the Internet actually made the DeCSS program available for download. Id. See also Tr. 127:15-128:6, 137:16-138:25 (Shamos, describing search that revealed "a huge number of pages that made reference to the string DeCSS," but that he only saw "a handful . . . between five and ten" which contained the source code and one with the object code). Dr. Appel explained that this results from the fact that any Internet search for "DeCSS": (1) would not provide information about the number of sites that actually have DeCSS source or object code; (2) would report sites that "just mention" DeCSS, but neither have the program nor link to the program on another site; (3) would commonly report multiple entries for different pages of the same site; and (4) would be driven by the appearance of the character string -- "DeCSS" -- that was typed in, rather than report the actual number of sites that are posting or linking to DeCSS in one form or another. (Tr. 1111:3-1114:12 (Appel)).

    Are they claiming that they base their piracy statistics on actually downloading every pirated movie on the 'net??
  • Testimony concluded Tuesday in Universal v. Corley with Judge Kaplan's statement that he believed computer code, whether source or executable, is expressive speech protected by the First Amendment. This is a huge advance for the defense, although the question remains whether the speech can be prohibited under a form of intermediate scrutiny.

    **Cha-Ching**

    Me thinks that will be a very monumental statement in cases like this to come. That is one critical issue that has never really been ironed out byy the courts. Not being a lawyer, I'm not sure how much weight this has, but it may be big.

    -Pete

  • Click here [cnet.com] for a recent Cnet story on how the MPAA doesn't have any evidence of pirating.
  • I know this is just being peckish, but, what if the license were just under the (transparent) shrink-warp, text side up, so that you COULD read the license before purchase? It could be as simple as a standard license printed on the DVD jacket. Continuing my earlier train of thought, might this remedy one of the most frequently sighted defects of shrink wrap licensing?
  • You forgot one of the Plantiff's points:
    - Plantiff has really expensive lawyers and at one point paid the judge's rent.
  • (1) a contract is unenforceable if informed consent is absent

    This is similar to warranties/disclaimers on the back of a receipt -- null and void if your attention is not drawn to them before purchase.

    This is true...unless it can be shown that the individual would have known about the contract. In this case, the first couple of DVDs you buy, you could get away with it...but after that, you know what to expect when you open the shrinkwrap! Therefore, a shrinkwrap license is valid, provided you've seen one before!

  • Think about it: If I'm allowed to de-encrypt DVD's to play them on my computer, then I should be allowed to de-compile software to port it to other operating systems, right? I should be allowed to distribute this de-compiler at large so that people can run their software under unintended operating systems? I don't hardly think so.
  • This is true...unless it can be shown that the individual would have known about the contract. In this case, the first couple of DVDs you buy, you could get away with it...but after that, you know what to expect when you open the shrinkwrap! Therefore, a shrinkwrap license is valid, provided you've seen one before!

    Err....I don't think so. There's nothing to guarantee that the shrinkwrap in one DVD is exactly the same as in another DVD. Maybe you could get away with saying that for the same DVD, but even then, the licenses may change.
  • Yeah, I'm enjoying the karma freeze. Sig 11 hasn't been too active since then though...

    kwsNI
  • With respect [to Prof. Touretzky], the law does not treat instructions to machines in the same way as it treats political or academic discussions of those instructions, just as it distinguishes between illicit dealing in firearms and literary discussion of committing a crime. No matter how clever one may be in converting code to English or translating it into any other language, DeCSS itself (whether as an executable utility or in source code) is still just a set of unscrambling instructions to a machine, as inexpressive as the numeric combination to the locks to a bank vault. See also Universal City Studios, 82 F. Supp. 2d at 222 ("Executable computer code of the type at issue in this case does little to further traditional First Amendment interests.") And since Professor Touretzky's testimony established that the source code can be readily converted to object code which, in turn, can be used to create the executable utility, the DeCSS source code is just as much a "technology," "device" or "component, or part thereof" within the meaning of the DMCA as is the executable utility. See 17 U.S.C. 1201(a)(2). [excerpt from the plaintiffs' brief, at II. B.]
    --
  • "Could they sue Gates? No. Why? Gates is rich."

    First law of lawyerism, don't sue poor people. - Steve Dallas, Bloom County (I think so anyways...)

    My .02
    Quux26

  • by Yardley ( 135408 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:38AM (#866750) Homepage
    http://bioinformatics.u csf.edu/bwtaylor/dvd/LOC_109_RFC.txt [ucsf.edu]

    It is difficult to identify any idea that the Supreme Court has rebuffed so repeatedly as the movie industry's overly agressive interpretation of intellectual property rights. Movie industry credibility on copyright should be treated like the tobacco industry on health matters: listen to what they say and believe the opposite.

    Normally, one would expect a Federal Judge to identify such clear overreaching. The collective market power of the MPAA studios bears down on the DVD player market, forcing an unwanted licence down the throats of any would be competitor. The violation of antitrust laws, and the misuse of intellectual property are so obvious it shocks the conscience.

    Sadly, the judge in the NY DVD case refuses to recognize these arguments, but, as he admits, his former law firm was responsible for advising Time Warner on DVD antitrust matters while the Judge practiced there. Despite this, Judge Kaplan refuses to recuse himself. No reasonable person could believe that such a judge would repudiate the prophylactic antitrust work of his own firm, and any hope of a fair judgement must be abandoned. The recent precedent in Panama v. American Tobacco Company, No. 99-30685 (5th Cir. 7/20/2000) on a very similar recusal situation only confirms that the judge should have stepped down. Fortunately, the integrity of the process the Copyright Office has been using is beyond reproach.


    http://bioinformatics.u csf.edu/bwtaylor/dvd/LOC_109_RFC.txt [ucsf.edu]

    --
  • by Anonymous Coward
    There wasn't a DMCA back then, however.

    That's what this issue is about. Fair use really isn't the issue in this case at all. The thing that's going to nail the defendants, is the DMCA provision that disallows circumventing copy protection measures (the anti-reverse-engineering clause). Brain-dead law, yes, but I don't see this judge overturning it.
  • I think that rule only applies to ambulance chasers who want to get money for their clients who are to stupid to avoid obvious hazards. It doesn't make much sense to sue rich people who can afford lawyers if you're just trying to push around people who want to do something you don't like.
  • Could they sue Gates? No. Why? Gates is rich.

    First thing you learn in law school: don't sue poor people.

    Corrollary: Poor people can't hire lawyers to fight back...
  • by Janthkin ( 32289 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @10:46AM (#866755)
    Think about it: If I'm allowed to de-encrypt DVD's to play them on my computer, then I should be allowed to de-compile software to port it to other operating systems, right? I should be allowed to distribute this de-compiler at large so that people can run their software under unintended operating systems? I don't hardly think so.

    Actually...maybe. And do you know why? Because you don't BUY software in the same way you buy a DVD. You only LICENSE the software. Now, you'll have to the EULA (which may or may not be legal; that one's still up in the air) as to whether or not it restricts your access to the software to a particular platform. But if reverse engineering is legal (always has been; still will be, if the EFF is successful w/this), and all your software does is operate WITH the software you received (you're not rewriting/reselling the original software), fair use seems to cover this.

    Oh, and example: Hmmm....how about Connectix? All they do is make an emulator that (effectively) ports software from one platform to another. It's been tried, it's legal, and Sony can't do anything about it.
  • ...are on line here [cortland.edu].
  • Isn't slashdot about: "here's a new technology, here's a new idea, here's a new discovery, here's a review of the above."? Yes, court cases fall into this somewhat. Like: The idea that napster is liable for the actions of its users, or the idea that reversing/discovering and algorithm could be considered "criminal" by a country you don't even live in and may never have ever visited, and that you could get a ton of flak for it. But the fact that the case is now being decided uppon by the judge, is something people who wanted to track the case could get from reuters or cnn [ouch the bias, it hurts it hurts]. I mean yeah, its great taht we're days from finding out, but this may be a case where people sort of figured we'd find out sometime, and when that happens it'd be interesting to know how it went down.

    First, a disclaimer: I live in the United States. There. I said it.

    Now, the meat: Yes, /. is about technology. And new ideas. And reviewing same. But what else is covered in "stuff that matters"? Frankly, a hell of a lot. First, most readers are from the United States: simply a fact of being the most connected country at present, with a larger population than many. Further, /. is hosted/posted in the U.S. (not too far from where I'm sitting, actually). This increases the average of American stories over, say, Australian ones (although we do get those, too). Now, I wasn't following this trial that closely; transcripts bore me, as they are overfull of procedural nonsense to be an interesting read. (Wasn't always true; the Scopes' Monkey Trial transcripts aren't bad.) So I was glad to find this story here, and glad to read the two briefs, and MORE glad to get a chance to discuss them with the intelligent people who frequent /.. That's what this site is about, isn't it? A chance to discuss w/other geeks those things that affect (portions of) the geek community? I think the DMCA certainly applies, at least to the couple of us who live in the U.S.

    It's been said before, but I'll say it again: if you don't want to hear about it, then don't read it. Hyperlinks don't click themselves (mostly...).
  • by konstant ( 63560 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @11:17AM (#866767)
    As I read the opening statements of these two briefs a feeling of sadness came over me. The MPAA brief argues rigidly from the form and intent of the DMCA, while the defendants resort to disputing the DMCA's power to render mechanisms of fair use illegal. It was interesting to note that the term "fair use" wasn't present even once in the DMCA's brief.

    But sadly, this is all largely irrelevant to our freedoms. It may be that the defendants will win this round, and the Court will permit them and others to engineer and distribute "devices" that subvert copyright protections. But nothing in this case will mitigate the central issue: if CSS hadn't been so weak, we would all still be constrained to the MPAA's anemic idea of consumer rights.

    In other words, what good will a victory here do us if IP owners like the MPAA simply protect their materials with strong encryption that isn't likely to be broken by sloppy redistributors? Remember that Jon Johansen only managed to crack CSS because a private key was accidentally left in the clear!

    This is an important case as it sets precedent and could determine the viewpoint of future courts, but if this issue never returns to the courtroom because the MPAA does it right in CSS2.0, then what will it have really bought us?

    -konstant
    Yes! We are all individuals! I'm not!
  • read this posting [slashdot.org] basically a judge can rule a law unconstitutional in thier juristiction. Ie a district judge effects a district, a circuit judge covers a circuit (which usually covers several states). And the supreme court can make a law unconstitutional for the whole country.
  • You're mostly right. Both sides are trying to convince the court their interpretation is right. BUT the defendants are also saying, "and if it's not that way, it's unconstitutional!"

    There are a few snags in the defendants' case, though. They claim that there is no proof DeCSS has been used for piracy... Yeah, right... Of course, there are also legitimate uses. I, for one, downloaded it to read the source and learn about encryption--I don't even have a DVD player.

    But then, none of this affects me, since I'm in Canada (*smirk*).
  • Just finished reading plaintiffs arguments. It is worth noting that "Trade Secret" dose not appear in that document at any point.

    Translation. They now accept that revers engineering a consumer product cannot no matter how difficult or complex constitute violation of a trade secret.

    Of course once you get to that point they need to *own* DeCSS in order to effect any copyright control. They can't actually claim to already own it ( see Trade Secret above ) so they might try to buy it ( Fat chance after Johnny boy got a medal from his president.

    The other arguments are just plain lame.
  • That's the basic fault of the DMCA: it doesn't make any clear distinction between prevention from copyright infringement and prevention of legitimate fair use of copyrighted material. This is what needs to be fixed, either through the courts or through the Congress.

    I think that what you propose is impossible. You cannot prevent piracy (by a technical means) without infringing upon legitimate fair use too.

    Piracy can only be prevented by

    1. Convincing people how stupid it is to bite the hands that feed them. (e.g. If sales of The Matrix 2 are too low, due to piracy, then there won't be a The Matrix 3.)
    2. Creating a deterrant by mercilessly and visibly prosecuting people after they have committed piracy.

    ---
  • Yes, originally DeCSS only worked because Xing didn't encrypt their player key, but there are now dvd decoders on the net that work by brute forcing a player key from the DVd you have in the drive. DeCSS was just the first step..
  • by beagle ( 99378 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @11:48AM (#866779)
    In other words, what good will a victory here do us if IP owners like the MPAA simply protect their materials with strong encryption that isn't likely to be broken by sloppy redistributors? Remember that Jon Johansen only managed to crack CSS because a private key was accidentally left in the clear!

    A victory here will make it clear to copyright holders that the DMCA is not meant to tip the scales of Fair Use versus Copyright protection so unfairly in their favor. That is one of the biggest problems with the DMCA: by placing this lame CSS encryption on DVDs, the MPAA is now trying to claim "effective control" over the contents of the DVD. Sure, they might get it "right in CSS 2.0," but that's not the point. The point is, prior to the DMCA, they never even HAD this much control.

    And they shouldn't have it today. Or ever.

  • by troyboy ( 9890 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @11:49AM (#866780)
    Section 103(d)(2)(B) of UCITA indicates that UCITA does not apply to agreements (licenses) to "create, perform or perform in, include information in, acquire, use, distribute, modify, reproduce, have access to, adapt, make available, transmit, license, or display: a motion picture, sound recording, musical work, or phonorecord" (emphasis mine). So, the Act explicitly keeps the DVD license issue out of its scope.
  • Nope. A shrinkwrap license has never been tested in a serious court case.

    They've been tested lots of times in federal Courts, and as you predict, mostly tossed. However, it is not settled law.

    Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., 655 F. Supp. 750 [ucsf.edu], (E.D. La 1987) [no contract & preempted]
    Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd., 847 F.2d 255 [harvard.edu] (5th Cir. 1988) [no contract & preempted]
    Step-Saver Data Sys., Inc. v. Wyse Tech., 939 F.2d 91 [harvard.edu] (3d Cir. 1991) [no contract]
    Arizona Retail Systems v. The Software Link, Inc., 831 F. supp. 759 [harvard.edu] (D. AZ 1993) [no contract]
    ProCD v. Zeidenberg 908 F. Supp. 640 [harvard.edu](W.D. Wis. 1996) [no contract & preempted]
    ProCD v. Zeidenberg 86 F.3d 1447 [harvard.edu] (7th Cir. 1996) [is contract, not preempted]
    Novell v. Network Trade Center, 25 F. Supp. 2d 1218 [harvard.edu] (D. Utah 1997) [no contract]

    While not a shrinkwrap/clickwrap case, the following strongly endorsed Step-Saver:

    Expeditors v. Official Creditors 166 F.3d 1012 [findlaw.com] (9th Cir 1999) [no contract]

    Note that there are two issues with a shrinkwrap copyright licence: (1) whether or not it is an enforcable contract and (2) is specific contract terms are "preempted" by Federal law in the Copyright Act.

    The Vault v. Quaid cases actually were decided under a Louisiana state law predecessor to UCITA, and were still not enforcable. The court ruled that the adhesion contract was enforcable only if Louisiana's law was valid and that it was invalid.

    The bottom line is that the 7th Circuit disagrees with the 3rd and 9th Circuits on whether the shrinkwrap terms are enforcable. The 7th Circuit disagrees with the 5th Circuit on the preemption issue.

    There is also a state law case from the Washington state Supreme Court that found shrinkwraps terms enforcable.

  • It is telling that plaintiffs define the requisite "authority" as being granted only when a consumer purchases a CSS equipped DVD and a DVD CCA licensed DVD player. This only gives the consumer the right to watch the DVD. However, nothing in the Copyright Act requires that the DVD player be authorized by the copyright owner.

    Slam dunk! Good work, Garbus.


    ---
  • We agree with plaintiffs and the Court that the authority of the copyright owner is a matter of law, not a matter of fact.

    Yes, this sentence can be confusing if taken out of context.

    What I believe is the point here is that MPAA has failed to establish any "authority model" that applies under DMCA, other than the confusing wording of the DMCA. In this law, "authority" is never defined, but is used in determining if a "device" does any "circumvention," thus distinguishing illegal use from legal use.

    If one looks only at the facts, defense does fine, because DeCSS can be used only with the title key and the player key and a valid DVD that the user purchases and wishes to play on a GNU/Linux machine.

    However, MPAA wants the interpretation to be just one clause of the law and therefore not include any consideration of "fair use," even when Congress deliberately put restrictive clauses in the DMCA for that very purpose.

    You can see the fallacy of doing that--look at the MPAA comparison of DeCSS to "keys" or the "numeric combination of a lock to a bank vault." Under plaintiffs' interpretation of DMCA, the physical key is equivalent to a string of numbers describing the key. They say that automobile manufacturers retain all rights to make keys to cars. They would say that a newspaper or a novel cannot publish the combination to a safe. What they are saying is that if any speech has any possible use under DMCA that they have not authorized in some way other than selling the keys, then the speech must be outlawed.

    So plaintiffs' argument is circular. They never explain how authority is conveyed, unless it is by the consumer purchasing a DVD with the title keys, and a player with the player keys--which you have to do in order to use DeCSS--or how DMCA could ever retain control over all use of the keys, as for example to prevent consumers in certain regions from playing DVDs they had purchased, or to buy only DVD-CCA-authorized players and not LiViD players.

    Defense retains the right to bring up these antitrust arguments later. I hope the DMCA is thrown out completely so MPAA cannot sue to restrain free speech and fair use in the future.

  • I have a demoronised [fourmilab.ch] mirror [quadium.net] of the MPAA brief on my site.
  • But if they do create such devices, the public could reject them, as they did Divx players, as being to constrictive and not worth buying. That said, I agree that technological means should not be allowed to violate consumer's rights any more than legislative means should be allowed to.

  • by Royster ( 16042 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @01:08PM (#866802) Homepage
    A quote from the defendant's brief:
    The definition of circumvention reveals that to circumvent, one must be acting without the authority of the copyright holder. Any statement that a buyer does not have the authority to decrypt, because the DMCA prohibits decryption without authority, is a circular argument and thus invalid.


    The participants on the Openlaw [harvard.edu] discussion list have spect a lot of time examining the meaning of the word "authority" in the context of the DCMA. In summary, the MPAA's authority model (player must be licensed) is fundamentally defective for several reasons. It dosn't operate with the authority of the copyright holder. The right is not limited in time as is copyright itself.

    Authority to view the work *must* pass with first sale.
  • Sadly, the judge in the NY DVD case refuses to recognize these arguments, but, as he admits, his former law firm was responsible for advising Time Warner on DVD antitrust matters while the Judge practiced there. Despite this, Judge Kaplan refuses to recuse himself. No reasonable person could believe that such a judge would repudiate the prophylactic antitrust work of his own firm, and any hope of a fair judgement must be abandoned.

    Judge Kaplan has been on the bench since late 1994. It is questionable whether the lawyer at Kaplan's former firm who gave Time Warner advice on DVD antitrust matters did so while Kaplan practiced there, and in any event there is no antitrust issue in the DeCSS litigation. The idea that Kaplan would throw this case simply because his partner possibly gave some advice to one of the parties on fundamentally unrelated questions six years ago is not only absurd but is also gratuitously insulting to Judge Kaplan.

  • People bitch constantly about Slashdot's bias as it is. If they were to start trying to induce action in /. readers, we'd have a ton of people screaming bloody murder. I, personally, would like to see such things done. I don't consider /. to be an unbiased news source. (Actually, I can't think of any unbiased news sources.) It says what it is, right up front. News for Nerds. Stuff that matters. It was created by a couple of college guys as a place where they could have discussions of stuff that was interesting and important to them. It doesn't claim to be an unbiased news agency, although it does seem to try to be fair usually, and has increasingly done so over time.

    I don't think /. should be held to the same standard that we should hold CNN or ABC to. They don't claim to exist for the same reason, and they shouldn't be treated the same. I think it would be fine for /. stories to include "what you can do" links and information. They aren't making anyone doing anything. They're just giving you useful links in case you decide to use them.

  • To answer your question, region coding is not mandatory. Non-region coded DVDs probably use 0 or 7 as the region to indicate that they're playable on all DVD players. (Don't quote me on the method of unlocking, I just know it's not mandatory)

    And just to be a nitpicky SOB, DVD players sold in New Zealand are required by law to be capable of playing DVDs from all regions.
  • by rjh ( 40933 )
    <RANT>

    Basically, because he's misappropriating the term `hacker' and promulgating this distorted vision of hackers as being malcontents, ne'er-do-wells and geeks.

    I once picked up a copy of 2600 just to see what the big fuss was about. When I leafed through it, I didn't find much that was, in my mind, hackish. There was an article about boxes and phreaking; about the NPA-NXX system of phone number allocation; about how to override the environmental controls of a Best Buy so to make everything a sweltering ninety-nine degrees.

    Even though there's a disclaimer that says "2600 does not endorse any illegal activities", it's still an inescapable conclusion that most of the articles which appear in 2600 are written by petty criminals--extremely petty criminals.

    There's hackish glory in knowing how phone numbers are allocated and how the NPA-NXX system works, or in knowing the security holes in a stock Solaris 2.7 installation, or--etcetera. Fill in the blank.

    I work in information security IRL, and I know a lot of these things. Some of my best friends know a lot of these things. Sometimes, we sit down and have a couple of beers and talk about exploits, and even do penetration tests--against boxes we own, in highly controlled environments.

    The typical 2600 article is written by, and for, frustrated techno-turks who have an axe to grind against society in some regard, and gets a vicarious thrill out of making a Best Buy a sweltering inferno for its customers. I don't see that there's anything commendable in that. I think people who do those things are criminals, hooligans and petty vandals--and I think those who encourage such behavior must shoulder some of the responsibility.

    Is it legal to encourage that sort of behavior? Yes. That doesn't mean it's right.

    The Oppenheimer defense ("I just built the damn thing, you're the one who's responsible for how you use it!") only works if (a) your creation has significant lawful use, and (b) you don't encourage irrational or illegal uses.

    2600 claims that it doesn't encourage these uses. I think that a thorough reading of any issue will quickly show that their disclaimer is there strictly for legal protection, and they don't mean a damn word of it.

    That's why I think Goldstein is a boil on the ass of the universe.

    </RANT>
  • We agree with plaintiffs and the Court that the authority of the copyright owner is a matter of law, not a matter of fact.

    A matter of law must be decided by a judge, a matter of fact must be decided by a jury. Agreeing with the plaintiff here means that they aren't asking for a jury's verdict on the authority of the copyright holder. Thus, they're agreeing that the judge's opinion is all that matters.


    If there is some hole in that statement, perhaps someone who is a lawyer can fill it?


    Nels

  • So according to the MPAA mentality and the DMCA, I can sell a rock collection that comes in a box, but you have to have a liscense to open my box. (DVD=Rocks, the box is the DVD player plus the key to unlock CSS). I have a copyright on the rock, lets say I put a logo on it or whatever. Then, when I sell my box, if someone just opens it without having a liscense, I could sue them for copyright infringement? Even though all they did was bypass my scheme to protect the rock?

    I urge every one of you to check out:

    Joint Study Required by Section 104 of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act [loc.gov]

    And especially Przemek Klosowski's submission.

    Good luck to 2600 and the EFF!

    Geist

  • I'd say it'd be much easier to protect C source than it would be to protect object code. The first thing you learn in first year CS is that all the higher level languages were invented to facilitate programmer to programmer communication more than to facilitate programmer to machine communication.

    Which is to say the number 1 reason high level languages were invented was to allow a programmer to come in 6 months after you leave the company and have a chance in hell of understanding what exactly you were doing with your code.

    In other words, a compiled program might be a device, but a C program is a book.

  • Plaintiffs overwhelmingly demonstrated the substantial threat to the value of their copyrighted material that can, likely has, and certainly will continue to, occur as a result of the circumvention of CSS. Plaintiffs have shown:
    • that DeCSS can be used with ease to make flawless, unencrypted copies of DVD movies;
    • that hard drive storage capacity on consumer PCs has been increasing at a rapid rate;
    • that compression utilities such as DivX can be used to reduce the size of decrypted movie files for transmission over the Internet or to make CD-ROM or VCD copies of the movies. Plaintiffs further established that, once a file is compressed by DivX, digital copies of that file can be transferred again and again to anyone connected to the Internet, without the need for the file to ever be compressed again;
    • that both the compression utility known as DivX and the instructions for utilizing DivX in connection with DeCSS to create transferable movie files are freely available over the Internet; and
    • the speed and ease of transfer of such files is increasing as high-speed Internet connections become available to rapidly increasing numbers of people.

    Uh-huh... So, this means that furnace heating oil should be made illegal... Who cares if it's primary purpose is to heat a house. You can:

    • combine it with fertilizer to make an explosive
    • Instructions for how to make the explosive are readily available
    • someone might use said explosive in an illegal way.

    You cannot take judicial remedies for crimes that have not yet been committed. Just as equipment with legal purposes cannot be outlawed because they can ALSO be used illegally... (Lockpicks, for example.)

    The MPAA doesn't have a leg to stand on. If by some miracle they win this round, this will most certainly be struck down by a court of appeals (or the supreme court, if it gets that far.)

  • by rjh ( 40933 )
    Nah, it still holds together. The Oppenheimer Defense applies to just about anything. By your logic, I could come up with a way to synthesize smallpox in your basement, then take out a full-page ad in the New York Post with the instructions and a caption reading "HEY, IF YOU'RE A TERRORIST BENT ON ANNIHILATING THE WORLD, READ THIS!"

    After all, an ad has a significant lawful use... to be read, right?
  • I have a demoronised mirror of the MPAA brief on my site.

    I would have thought that this process would have had the same result as the analysis of Lord Dorwin's assurances in Foundation -- nothing would be left.
    /.

  • Judge Kaplan has been on the bench since late 1994. It is questionable whether the lawyer at Kaplan's former firm who gave Time Warner advice on DVD antitrust matters did so while Kaplan practiced there, and in any event there is no antitrust issue in the DeCSS litigation.

    The fact that there was overlap has been definitively established, and is not disputed by Kaplan. Why are you arguing this?

    First, regardless of whether "antitrust" is an issue, it's still way to close to home. Read the case cited in the original quote (Panama v. American Tobacco).

    Second, of course antitrust is an issue. The DVD-CCA is a trust weilding the market power of all major movie studios and is attempting to extend the copyright monopoly beyond it's statutory bounds to control the DVD player market.

    The idea that Kaplan would throw this case simply because his partner possibly gave some advice to one of the parties on fundamentally unrelated questions six years ago is not only absurd but is also gratuitously insulting to Judge Kaplan.

    The law says that a judge has a duty to proactively self-recuse if any reasonable person could believe that a conflict of interest exists. The law specifically prohibits judges from serving when a former partner was involved in a matter before them.

    In the tobacco case above, the judge was an officer in an association that submitted an amicus brief in a different tobacco case. The judge took no part in the actual writing of the brief other than being an officer. The appeals court ruled this was grounds for recusal.
  • by Kris_J ( 10111 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2000 @06:53PM (#866832) Homepage Journal
    How do copyright laws enable an entity to legally control how you experience a copyright work? Sure, copying someone's work without permission may be morally wrong, but how did we get from there to making playback of a legally purchased copy on a capable, but "unauthorised" device illegal? Will I have to register my eyes soon? Will it become illegal to wear red-blue 3D glasses in a movie theater? How was copyright law used to turn a simple purchase into a lease agreement?

    I think it's about time that copyright is thrown out on the basis that it's unworkable. China might even be able to get through history without ever having to implement copyright...

  • in any event there is no antitrust issue in the DeCSS litigation.

    How can you be so sure? The court excluded testimony intended to determine the facts on this very matter. What would you call the DVD-CCA but a "trust"?

    If you read the postings to the DVD OpenLaw forum, referred to above, you will see that the movie studios have historically been prone to misuse of copyright in restraint of trade, and there is plenty of precedent.

    Misuse of copyright in restraint of trade is a legitimate defense to copyright infringement charges, and DeCSS is alleged to be illegal because it enables such infringement.

    MPAA asserts that DMCA gives them authority to require all DVD players to be licensed, and any use by consumers of discs and players must be controlled by DVD-CCA licenses and "authority" (separate from first sale and fair use). If the automobile industry asserted similar control over keys to cars, and sought to jail consumers who "circumvented" the authority from their trust, don't you think that would be a matter of antitrust concern?

    But neither MPAA nor DVD-CCA will reveal these licenses. Judge Kaplan won't get into the matter because he is afraid testimony will force his recusal.

    Likely all this will be taken up at appeal. If you have any evidence to provide please do so at that time.

  • Magistrates are NOT Article III Judges, and are appointed for limited terms. They do not issue Orders that are binding, but Reports and Recommendations that, unless challenged, are typically rubber stamped by District Court Judges.

    The point you make, though, is quite accurate -- since Marbury v. Madison, it has been quite clear that judicial review may occur at any level in the Article III Judiciary. The confidence Article III judges have comes, in large part, from their lifetime tenure -- arguably extant for precisely that purpose.

    But don't get too hepped up by the trial court's remarks suggesting First Amendment limitations to the DMCA -- I have frequently seen judges intending to rule one way to begin by making statements suggesting he/she was leaning the other -- if only to seem more judicious.

    This may be particularly true here, where the judge has been asked to recuse himself on grounds of conflicts of interest and an allegedly strong prejudice against the defendants.

    Time will tell what word will come.
  • Looking at the OpenLaw debate (which I can follow only about two-thirds of, being a UK lawyer and unfamiliar with the DMCA) I note that in only a couple of days m'learned colleagues have posted pages and pages of pettifogging pedantry and debate.

    Ladies and gentlemen of the /. community, it is at times like these that I am truly proud of the legal community.

  • Just thinking out loud here, but: is there any precedent concerning the distributing of decompiled or reverse engineered code for proprietary software. Its not clear to me that to do this is illegal. Consider:

    1. The license agreement is a contract of adhesion, and therefore invalid in common law (except possibly, oddly, in Scotland). The software and its media are considered "yours" under conventional copyright law.

    2. The original source code, and the object code are considered copyright of the publisher. Additionally the original source is a trade secret.

    3. The reverse engineered or translated source, however, is your work, or the work of your software, albeit derived from the work of the original publisher.

    It seems the situation is analogous to a translation of a book into another language, or a "cover" of a piece of music by a different artist. Whats the legal situation of that ?
  • Yes, we were. B&N has the one-click suit against Amazon.com, remember?
  • An objective media report can be found here [yahoo.com], originally from law.com [law.com].

    -dB

  • The MPAA's DeCSS post-brief is really quite interesting. It shows how much power the DMCA really has. And its a lot.

    One point about this whole case is that the DMCA out laws devices that CIRCUMVENT encryption schemes that protect copyrighted works.
    DeCSS does not do this.
    DeCSS DECRYPTS the encrpytion scheme.

    DECRYPT does not equal CIRCUMVENT.


    Another interesting quote from the MPAA's brief is this :
    If DeCSS is "speech" immune from any regulation, then no device that can be embodied in computer software could ever be regulated by Congress. That is clearly not the case. Indeed, Congress intended that unlawful "devices" within the meaning of the anti-trafficking provisions would include any "technology measure" meeting the statutory definition, specifically including computer code.

    They are assuming what Congress meant something. Isn't that the court's job?

    Silly MPAA, greedy facism is for dictators!

    -Fred
  • Cool! I wasn't aware of that either.

    Somewhat open to abuse though I expect :-)


    "Give the anarchist a cigarette"

I have hardly ever known a mathematician who was capable of reasoning. -- Plato

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