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Encryption Security

Interview with DeCSS Lawyer 191

Feed Mag currently is running an interview with Martin Garbus. Garbus is going to be the lead litigator in the attempt to stop the gag order on 2600 regarding the dicussion of DeCSS. Garbus is one extremely intelligent man, and the interview really shows that.
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Interview with DeCSS Lawyer

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  • by delmoi ( 26744 )
    The authors of viruses can be prosecuted because that code may present a real danger.

    Actually, writing a virus isn't illegal, but releasing a virus is. When they finally found the guy who wrote CHS, he wasn't prosecuted because he only wrote it, someone else put it out there. Of course, this was in Taiwan, not the US. And the US is pretty anal about enforcing 'anti-hacking' laws

    Think about it like building a bomb. Designing the bomb would be like writing the code, building the bomb would be like compiling it. But you aren't breaking the law until you blow something up.
  • by ajs ( 35943 ) <ajs.ajs@com> on Friday May 26, 2000 @06:19AM (#1047761) Homepage Journal
    The now famous line "the Internet interprets censorship as damage and routes around it"[1 [american.edu]] puts this all in a little context. We are a culture of theft because our (and I mean this globally) laws are designed around the idea that copying a document without permission is theft. The Internet has a real hard time, technically, with the idea of NOT copying documents. Let's look at some examples:
    • When I, a publishing Web site, release a document (let's say my photograph) what happens to it? Well, some hapless fool comes along with his browser and tries to download it. It is coppied from disk to memory. Ok, that one's handled by court precident. The copy is considered to be legally a form of viewing, and is legal. Now it's coppied to the network card. A little greyer, but still arguably viewing. Now it's sent across the network (this is assuming that my image fits in a single packet). On the network it is treated just like any other IP packet. It may be coppied by routers (not really accounted for by precident, but probably fair use). It may be dropped and I will re-transmit (a second copy without request... that makes for interesting cocktail conversations after the BAR meeting). It may be recieved by multiple targets. WHOA! What's that? Well, there's nothing to stop me from using a multicast address as my src. Is this legal? I simply do not know. What if I'm caching it in a proxy? What if I'm mirroring it in order to view off-line?
    • Ok, so what about that evil Gnutella? Well, it's just another network, right? If I download copyrighted material, it's illegal copying, right? What about gnut? gnut downloads things at random and re-offers them for download! That'll be a fun case. Gnutella also allows for a kind of file sharing that no one has really exploited. You could easily build a totally caching Gnutella client that will serve requests for everything you download. This seems like a mistake until you realize that if everyone does this, then bandwidth will no longer be an issue. You can figure out who to download from based on ping times, and in most cases, you will be reducing backbone traffic. If the clients get a lot smarter, gnutella ma soon become the next killer app of the Internet, and it would certainly challenge many ideas of copyright....

  • More on point, you can be held responsible for yelling "Fire!" in a crowded theatre, but you can not be prevented from yelling it in the first place. Prior restraint is greatly discouraged by the Supreme Court.

    Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
  • Oh yes, the good old days. I still remember how excited I was the day I went out and upgraded to a 2400 bps modem. Almost as exciting as the day I upgraded to a 40 MB hard drive.

    But still, nothing compares to finally getting enough cash saved up (i was a poor college student back then) to go out and buy a monitor that could display, of all things, COLOR!

    It's almost sad, in a way. I love the fact that the technology has come as far as it has, but I do miss those days. None of the new toys coming out today seem as interesting and fun as that first color monitor did.
  • None of the new toys coming out today seem as interesting and fun as that first color monitor did.

    You'll have to wait until real 3D displays come out. It can take a while though.

    As a user of glasses I'm wondering why there isn't small semi-transparent SVGA displays integrated in my lenses. Imagine: one 640x480 display for each eye - true flicker-free 3D. And you could watch those displays while doing other things because you could see through them.

    Back to the topic I wouldn't try to compare DeCSS to VCR because DeCSS doesn't allow you to save anything, it just decrypts data files of special kind. On the other hand right to quote (from DVD) could be one good argument.
    _________________________

  • Actually looking around the net shows that you can get imported DVD-RW drives now (unfortunately most consumer level DVD players can't play these, but new ones will be able to) for about $3500+ now. Media is about 50 dollars a pop. Now I'm sure this will come down (if they even manage to sell these in the US). And the key to all this is I have never conclusively been shown that you need anything special to duplicate a DVD byte by byte. And if you duplicate it will it still play? It is still my understanding that the encryption on the DVD is about "Content Protection", not "Copy Protection."

    Now in respect to you already paying a tax on that media. That is not true. Computer CD-R media is quite a bit cheaper than Audio CD-R media. Why? Because your not paying a tax on the Computer CD-R media. Nor did I pay a tax on my hard drive to store movies on. So the MPAA/RIAA isn't getting their percentage of it, and their pissed off.

    Now don't get me wrong, I'm all for decss. I want very badly to not have to reboot to windows to watch dvd's on my laptop here. Why because I believe that after paying what I did for the DVD, I should get to choose what I view it on. Of course if you listen to the MPAA it's not because I wanna view it under linux, it's because I wanna pirate it and ship it out all over the planet. This is just as stupid as saying sue the gun maker because someone used a gun to kill someone with. Or sue GM cuz a car they build used by a drunk driver killed someone. Of course reality says that this is happening. I just think it's NUTS!

    Let's get down to the true heart of this case. The DVD group is afraid of losing control. They have a monoply control over the movies and the viewers. And it's being threatened.

    Plus on top of that, look around the net for movies in DivX/VCD/MPG/AVI etc. format. Last I checked 90% of them are movies that are currently in the theater, versus movies ripped from DVD. It appears that the appeal for these movies goes down once they are actually released on DVD.
  • Turns out the MPAA plaintiffs don't like this "open" idea so much. They've requested that Kaplan seal many of the documents and depositions to prevent posting on the Internet and review by the news media.

    According to an order [uscourts.gov] Kaplan signed today, the parties and interested members of the press will be in court on June 6 to argue this one.

    Openlaw [harvard.edu] will have as much detail as we can get.

  • >even putting destructive software one single,
    >stand-alone box that does not belong to you is a
    >crime, because you are damaging somebody's
    >property.

    Oh boy, the OEMs gonna be in trouble when somebody finds out they've been installing Windows all these years!

    (Sorry, couldn't resist.)
    --
  • You used to be able to do that with the haynes online manuals [haynes.com] bypassing their pay for password system.

    Unfortunately they stopped publishing online before we had to change engines and swap camshafts.

    Of course if they had come up with a better encryption in the first place . . .

    and the moral of the story IS.

  • No. Ultimately, the injunctions will be lifted and DeCSS will be freely available and publishable.

    The damage will be done when they get an interim injunction, while they "gather evidence".

    =====
    This message is brought to you by the numbers Thirty One, Thirty Three and Seven
  • So where do Python,Perl, and simple shell scripts fit?

    Is a script free speech 'cause it's text, or it not because it's executable?

  • Pillage and plunder pillage and plunder. When do we get on the rape and murder detail!
  • The lawyer seeems really smart. I didn't know that the linking think was still an issue, because there are literally thousands of links or places to download. This guy seems to have done his research. Hopefully he'll be able to help 2600 out on this. For example, all the decss code here [eyep.net].
  • I can second the recommendation of the Cryptome [cryptome.org] docs. Most of the docs related to this lawsuit are at their section on their DVD-DeCSS [jya.com] section. However, one interesting item is squirreled away here [cryptome.org].
    After having read many of the transcripts, I've gained quite a bit of respect for Judge Kaplan in the case. Garbus hasn't impressed me. He's mostly come off as evasive and ill-prepared.

    Damon

    Work as if you don't need the money,
    Love as if you've never been hurt, and
    Dance as if no one's watching.
  • In this sense, software is more like an invention to be pantented than a document to be copyrighted. If you invent a formula that tastes just like coke, or write a program that decodes DVD's, and do so using honest reverse-engineering methods, then you should be free and clear to do what you like.

    BZZZT!

    You've described a copyright, not a patent. If a process or device is patented, the patent owner owns it, even if you built it on your own from spare parts found in your back yard, with no reference to their designs. Period.

    Copyright on the other hand covers only the right to copy or create derivative works, so cleanroom techniques work around it. If you put a thousand monkeys in a room with typewriters, and they pound out the script to "Battlefield Earth" without having seen it before, it's yours! All you have to do is convince the judge that it's a coincidence.

    (Ok, I admit, it's unlikely it will be an exact copy. The monkeys would probably improve it.)

  • <conspirisy>What if the only reason that the MPAA fought/fights so hard against DeCSS is so that it WOULD become so well known? Free publicity, and correct me if I'm wrong, but don't they make much of their money on the selling of the DVDs themselves, not the players? EGAD, what crafty little schnooks...</conspirisy>

    Ok, ok, not very likely. Had to exercise my consipirsy center in the ol' brain.
  • Isn't this what got slashdot in trouble with MS? I mean, the only post that was clearly illegal was the one that posted copyrighted material... I'm not referring to the other ones. Won't someone get an injunction against andover/slashdot to try to remove that post?

    Erf...
    --
    Peace,
    Lord Omlette
    AOL IM: jeanlucpikachu
  • howbout a mailto link to an ftpmail server?
  • Code isn't much like novels or coffee makers.

    Here's a question: if you could start from scratch and define a new form of IP just to cover software, what would it look like?

    Here's my half-baked idea: short-duration copyright, with source code held in escrow as a condition of obtaining the protection (perhaps the source could be distributed with the program compressed and encrypted, and the agency granting the protection would release the decryption key after 5 years or whatever so you wouldn't be stuck with an unusable binary if the vendor disappeared).

  • While many of the libertarians on /. (including myself) may see the merit of the "code is free speech" defense, the fact is that it has little legal merit.

    I'm not a libertarian, but the code==speech has a great deal of legal merit. It has precedent in two different circuit courts (though not the circuit that the DeCSS case was filed in).

    Free Speech dosn't shield you from the effects your speech has ergo the "Fire in a theatre" canonical example. But it should shield you from prior restraint of speech in all but the most extreme situations. The judge realizes the speech implications of the case and has moved up the trial date from December to June or July. The preliminary injunction should also be lifted for this very reason. That motion has not been heard yet.

    Anomalous: inconsistent with or deviating from what is usual, normal, or expected
  • In the first sentence,"14k modem" is a measure of time past; read "7 years" or so... In this context, "now it takes 30 seconds" clearly makes sense, since "now" means with cable, adsl, etc.
  • Try reading a bit more of the history...

    No it's not the Cascading Style Sheets thing, its the basic _authentication_ algorithm.

    DF
  • Think of libel or slander; just because you have a right to free speech does NOT mean you are completely immune from responsibility for its repercussions. If you say something that is wholly untrue about someone, specifically for the purpose of defaming them, you are not going to be protected by any free speech rights. Similarly, if you write code specifically to destroy data, cost people money, and negatively impact their lives, you are likewise not going to be protected by any free speech rights.
  • Note - that was only the authentication algorithm.

    DF
  • Odds are, the computer you are using right now contains hardware that was reverse-engineered... and there's not a thing that IBM can do about it, because Compaq (and later other companies) did it legally.

    ... and they could, 'cause IBM neglected to patent it. Most of the parts for IBM PC's were already available, or contracted with non-exclusive contracts. The BIOS was copyrighted, so it could be legally reverse-engineered (the right to do so for software depends partly on the precedent of the suit IBM filed against Pheonix and Compaq), and IBM imagined the design of the PC was too complex to mimic economically. Big mistake :-). If they'd patented the device, they might still be in charge, and we'd by typing on Heathkits or Apples.

  • http://www.theregister.co.uk/000525-000013.html

    Heh. :) Amusing that the BBC got taken along that far, not to mention 80% of slashdot..

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:42AM (#1047786)
    Slightly off topic, but I wanted to submit this suggestion to /.'ers:

    Just wondering if any of you folks have considered
    ways which hackers/users could benifit from the draconian copywrite laws like DMCA. Here's one quick example:

    Host a website from which people can download, say, DeCSS. However to get to the code, viewers
    must agree to a click-through contract whereby
    they give up all rights to any motion pictures
    they (or those they represent) own. Thus MPAA could never view such a site.

    This is a far-fetched example but you get the idea. There are a lot of things which hackers would agree to which big corporations would not.

    I know this goes against the spirit of freedom in software, but until DMCA is repealed or found unconstitutional, we may find cause, in certain cases to "fight fire with fire"

    -C.M.
  • This isn't the X-Files

    That's right. This is /.

    Slashdot: The Truth is out there. But it's an AC post, nobody's moderated it up yet, and it's being buried in First Posts and petrified grits...
    -----
    The real meaning of the GNU GPL:

  • by Anonymous Coward
    I just got an offer in the mail to buy DVDs directly from a major motion picture company... I enjoyed gluing the postage-paid reply envelop to a brick and sending it back with the message: "Long live DeCSS" Several thousands of those would let the MPAA releazie the truth that they have declared war on their customers!
  • How could this possibly work, unless you had enough money to stand toe-to-toe with the MPAA? The fact remains that laws and rulings are for the most part bought, not voted or fought for, and unless you have the cash, you don't count. And if you DO have the cash, chances are you're just as big a problem as the people you're fighting.

    Gods, I sound like a communist.
  • This is possibly a stupid question.

    If I had the correct hardware (which I'm sure is expensive right now) couldn't I make an exact (bit for bit) copy of a DVD like you can do with a CD? I know I would still need a DVD Player/Decrypter to play it, but would it be any different from the original? The way I see it, DeCSS only restricts what you can use to play back a DVD (and also the ability to make digital conversions to other formats). If I have to compress a video to a format to distribute on a PC, is anyone going to notice that it went analog first? Furthermore, isn't it possible to use an encrypted DVD stream with a utility that makes it look like it's coming from a DVD?

    So, isn't the MPAA just trying to take away my ability to view DVD's I've already paid for? Don't my personal rights outweigh the coporate profits? I mean, I could use my computer to crack the pentagon, but they haven't taken it from me yet.

  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @01:38PM (#1047792) Homepage Journal

    Just wondering if any of you folks have considered ways which hackers/users could benifit from the draconian copywrite laws like DMCA.

    I came up with an idea a few months ago (even posted it here on Slashdot) but no one took it seriously. I'll summarize it...

    Premise: the CSS scrambling scheme is not patented. Nobody owns it. A case can be made, using DMCA, to prevent people from using its inverse (descrambling), but not scrambling.

    Action: Create a CSS-scrambled DVD. Do not sign any agreements with MPAA or DVD-CCA in order to get the info. Specifically, do not grant them any authorization to circumvent your protection.

    Conclusion: Every single DVD player on the market becomes a DMCA violator, since it circumvents the protection. DVD-CCA is also a DMCA violator, since by licensing CSS, it "traffics in tools to circumvent."

    Nobody has taken my idea seriously, though. As far as I can tell, the only weak link is using CSS to scramble, since some might say CSS is protected by trade secret. When DeCSS loses its trade secret status, though (and I think this is inevitable), then CSS could be inferred/REd from DeCSS. This it's curtains. All you need then is a single DVD without a pre-burned key track, and you can start suing everyone left and right, or negotiate authorization fees (assuming DMCA is still standing by then).


    ---
  • What makes this unenforcable isn't the law, or even the illegality of DeCSS (after all, maybe it is the decoy DeCSS program, which is undisputably legal and merely bears a superfical resemblence to DeCSS, in the similarity of their names). [ . . . ]

    Even if such a license were enforcable, the RIAA and the MPAA would simply purchase a new law from congress post haste (a relatively inexpensive proposition), which would then make the license unenforcable, probably retroactively.

    As to your first point, I don't think your strategy would succeed. If you put up just a link, or a decoy, then either (1) you've disclosed that fact, and no one would click through, or (2) you've concealed that fact, and the contract is unenforceable on the ground of fraud.

    As to your second point, there are Fifth Amendment limitations on Congress' power to abridge a person's rights under existing contracts, though I wouldn't dismiss the possibility entirely.

  • How about a text terminal screen which detects links?

    Today, if you have a Gnome Terminal screen you can "cat" a file with a link in it. The text then is just being displayed on the screen, so no program other than Gnome Terminal is involved.

    Move your pointer over a URL (http://wilcoxon.org/) and notice the pointer changes from an arrow to a pointing hand, and the URL is underlined. Hold down the CTRL key and push the right mouse button -- and you'll see that menu has an option to open the URL in a browser.

    So already you can chase a URL which is not in HTML, merely in a text file.

  • by adric ( 91323 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:05AM (#1047795)
    would be to here [feedmag.com]. :-)
    --
  • Unfortunately, they have a point -- you can't read all of a DVD without unlocking the drive. DeCSS does that, but according to the the defense breif [slashdot.org], so do DVD players.

    So anyone who can play a DVD doesn't need DeCSS to copy it :-). It's like trying to ban footballs because they can be kicked through windows.

  • by johnny_amp ( 170790 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:08AM (#1047801)
    Here's the relevant links:

    feed story [feedmag.com]
    the memorandum order (from 2600) [2600.com]

    <//-------------//>
    "I like /. but you can tell it was designed by programmers..."

  • What if the MPAA had simply ignored DeCSS and done nothing at all about it? Mr. Garbus makes a good point in that DeCSS probably wouldn't have spread nearly as quickly if not for the publicity caused by the lawsuit. It's entirely likely that it would have faded into the background until the day a linux DVD player based on the code emerged. It strikes me as trying to kill dandelions by cutting off the seed heads, not only do you not kill the weed, you spread the seeds farther than they would have propagated by themselves.

    jim
  • by Anonymous Coward
  • Ok, since you acknowledge that currently, copies are more expensive than originals, I'll let that go for now, although I think it is a very good reason for lifting the injunction against 2600 since any damage that could currently be done will be extremely insignificant.

    I was pointing out that currently the only remotely viable method of copying dvds produces an inferior product, since you have to re-encode them with divx or some other codec in order to end up with something of a reasonable size. But you are correct, it will be easier to copy them when we have 2TB hard drives and 100GB removeable disks, for prices that are comparable to todays hard drives and zip disks. And yes, we should focus on our rights to access content that we have purchased in any manner we like, just as we have done with books, videotapes, cassettes, cds, and any other media you care to name. Only now are they trying to take those rights away, even though, as you point out, the DMCA explicitly states that it does not remove those rights.

    In short, you're right. I was taking the short-term view of the matter in my post. Probably because I just finished reading the amicus brief and was focused on the 2600 injunction which was put in place ostensibly to stop rampant "piracy".

  • These companies have the right to make a profit off of their products.
    I keep seeing remarks to this effect, and I have to point that your statement is just patently false.

    Nowhere is a corporation (or individual) assured the Right to a profit.

    If you favor Right to Work, you could argue that a Corp or individual has the right to do business (attempt to make a profit), but to assert that the corp has a right to make a profit implies that if the company loses money, then their rights have somehow been violated. That is incorrect.

    Furthermore, if a right of a corporation to do business is based on the right of an individual to work, then it can be shown that the coroporations do no have any inherent right to do business by their own lights, since the corporate stance seems to be generally against the right of the individual to work.

    At best, the "right to do business" is a priviledge, sanctioned by the govt (which was supposed to represent people); it stops well short of ensuring that a company will make a profit simply by virtue of having won the priviledge of doing business.

    Sorry if this seems like splitting hairs, but I've seen that type of remark so often, I'm afraid some younglings might actually believe it...

    It is Right of Ownership which is at the crux of the problems facing the internet. What constitutes ownership, and what benefits and responsibilities are attached to it?

    The right of ownership is also at the very basis of capitalism. I'll leave that proof for somebody else, since I want to harp on another topic you touched on (sort of)....

    [about the press and the internet]

    One is a more proffesional invironment that I see as being too tainted by big buisiness and the other an unrully mass or rioters.
    Just as it is important that the press strive to be percieved as impartial (mostly a joke, these days), I think it is becoming important that netizens fight against the characterization of lawlessness that is being foisted upon them by, among others, the press.

    A Reuters article [zdnet.com] of this morning refers to the internet as a "culture of theft".

    I believe the long term goal of many elements within the govt and industry is to criminalize the types of knowledge and behavior associated with net culture, hacking, and so on. This is a tactic used throughout history by entrenched power structures to protect their position.

    When the PTBs feel that there is a possiblity of any measure of control of the populace slipping from their grasp, expect them to demonstrate complete disregard for established legal conventions, compacts, treaties, and agreements of any kind. They will deny the need for a mandate to perform any henious action to damp what they will label first "disruptive", and then "criminal" behavior or attitudes.

    What we are seeing now is only the pre-implementation spin: "*bad* hackers, *bad* internet gurus; they do criminal things." => UCITA, DMCA, etc, ad infinitum.

    The financial rewards which will acrue to industry if it becomes illegal, say, for an individual to host a website on a non-company-owned server, are manifest.

    This type of control is also a direct goal of the govt, who, as we all know, is all in favor of preventing any form of terrorism not perpetrated by those 3-letter agency charged with identifying, evaluating, and neutralizing any real or potential disidents within the population.

    Keep Cracking, just keep it a little more quiet!
    The quieter you are, the fewer people notice when you disapear, the easier it is to paint you a criminal in the eyes of the world, the fewer people care when BATF splatters your brains to take you offline.

    MPAA is all about control of entertainment, which is known to be a powerful and pervasive influence, which cannot be entrusted to just anyone. If you don't believe it, ask a film-maker from the former USSR.

    MPAA controlling the long arm of the law is just a gun to your head making sure you listen to what you're supposed to.

    Take back the law.

  • by Groundskeepr ( 188287 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @02:03PM (#1047819)
    Am I the only one who thinks that the real reason the MPAA is fighting DeCSS is precisely to control the how, when, and where of viewing copyrighted content? Am I the only one who envisions a brave new world in which you can no longer *buy* books, but must license the content for a limited time and for specific purposes?

    We talk about how we live in the Information Age, but noone seems to understand how that fact will change our society and its laws. When our societies were land-based and agricultural, the owners of the land organized society in such a way as to protect their own interests at the cost of the poor saps who worked the land. It stands to reason that in the Information Age, the owners of the information (i.e., copyright holders) will do the same.

    Picture yourself as an Information-Age serf and you will have a clear idea of what the MPAA has in mind. We are presented with two choices: lie back and enjoy it, or become authors ourselves and use our copyright/copyleft authority set up an alternative to their vision of the future.
  • by barleyguy ( 64202 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:52AM (#1047825)
    The fact that code presents danger is somewhat irrelevant to the free speech defense.

    The landmark case on this was a case about 60 years ago involving a book about nuclear bomb technology. The publishers of the book were sued based on the "danger" of the information. The court held that the book was protected by the First Amendment, even though the information contained in it was undisputedly dangerous.

    You can send the source code of a virus to anyone you like, as long as you never compile it or attach it in an active form. The fact that Outlook will run scripts attached to a message as source complicates this issue. But just because Outlook is broken doesn't mean you should arrest people for distributing source code.

    The other issue is that our government is prosecuting people who violate our overdependence on technology. What they are essentially doing is enforcing the status quo - requiring that things are allowed to stay the way they are. You're not supposed to rock the boat, and you can get in big trouble for it. However, the boat will eventually tip over, and things will go the direction they are naturally inclined to go. All that resistance does is delay things a little.
  • You gotta think that one step further.

    Is it linking if you write the link in plain text ?
    Is it linking if you post a .wav file where you speak the url ?
    Is it linking when you post a phone number where people can listen to an answering machine telling you the link ?
    Is linking just defined as the A HREF tag ?

    You can't draw the line between linking and not linking. There is no difference, it's just the 'clickability'.

    But does it really matter if I can click onto some text or if i gotta copy/paste it ?

    I leave that up to you.

  • .. it would be nice if www.feedmag.com would quit timing out.

    Also, it seems feedmag.com shares the same point of view of the defendants. This is sort of like saying "Rush Limbaugh reported on a facinating story today which called Bill Clinton a liar..".

    This sort of stuff preaches to the converted in the choir loft. Get the "other side" on ABC, NBC, CBS, etc. Then when mainstream American sees it they can decide for themselves rather than listen to Jack Valenti's propoganda over and over again.

    Certain people hold the reins in this country. The rest of us are left out like cattle in the rain. Quit believing in terms like treason, censorship, freedom and liberty. They just don't exist any in the US any longer.

  • by lpopman ( 180801 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:57AM (#1047830)
    "If you now went to the Disney Infoseek site, you would find references to DeCSS -- you would get through that site the exact thing that Disney's trying to stop in this suit. You would find that the search engines that are owned by these very plaintiffs do exactly the same thing that they're trying to stop. They link. What the MPAA is doing is trying to stop certain people from linking."

    What this means, effectively, is that the search engines will be the only legal source of links to the DeCSS source. It is then only a trivial matter to track down the posters, and throw them to the lawyers.

    Ultimately, DeCSS will be sent underground, and that could possibly strengthen the MPAA's argument that DeCSS is a tool of piracy (Oh look, they're hiding behind handles on secret undernet channels. They must be 31337 pir8ez.)

    Just my tuppence worth. (Yep, I'm a tea drinker!)

    ==========
    This message brought to you by the numbers Thirty One, Thirty Three, and Seven.
  • And the key to all this is I have never conclusively been shown that you need anything special to duplicate a DVD byte by byte.

    Consumer DVD-RW drives cannot write to the "key sector" of the DVD disc, and the key sectors of blank dvds are pre-burned with zeros. Without the key that would normally exist there, the DVD player cannot decode the movie, nor can it read an already decoded movie burned onto a dvd disc.

    Now in respect to you already paying a tax on that media. That is not true. Computer CD-R media is quite a bit cheaper than Audio CD-R media. Why? Because your not paying a tax on the Computer CD-R media. Nor did I pay a tax on my hard drive to store movies on. So the MPAA/RIAA isn't getting their percentage of it, and their pissed off.

    You're right about this. I remembered after I had posted. Either way, it should be illegal for them to tax the discs in the first place. Seems like a form of prior restraint.

    Seems like we agree on everything else though. I was just pointing out that the MPAAs claims that people will be pirating DVDs left and right is just false. That's why there's no reason for the injunction against 2600.

  • This is the 'Napster generates sales' defence. I've often seen it used, but never seen it verified. Anecdotal evidence aside, is there any hard evidence that 'piracy' leads to increased sales and/or readers?

    This argument implies that there is hard evidence to prove that 'piracy' leads to decreased sales. The argument works both ways. It's not as obvious as you would think.

  • You are 100% correct. The professional DVD pirates in Hong Kong/Taiwan/etc. have been making bit-for-bit copies of DVD movies since more than a year before DeCSS existed. And the MPAA's only made 1 half-hearted attempt to stop them so far as far as I know.
  • by Mignon ( 34109 ) <satan@programmer.net> on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:58AM (#1047846)
    Posting content like this is undeniably useful when a server gets Slashdotted, but I can see it now: FeedMag joins Microsoft in suing Slashdot for hosting posts that they claim are copyrighted material...

    On a related note, how about if we modify the Samba code to include an HTTP transaction with Microsoft's server that simulates the process of downloading the "MSKerberos" spec and clicking the "I Agree" button? After a few weeks of getting hammered by Samba servers, Microsoft would surely back down on their licensing requirements...

  • Someone read aloud (and recorded) the DeCSS code.

    Then it was transcribed.

    Judge Kaplan said code didn't fall under free speech protection.

    Now does it?

    Think.
  • by Golias ( 176380 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:05AM (#1047850)
    Speaking as one libertarian to another, your argument has a few gaps.

    The authors of viruses can be prosecuted because that code may present a real danger.

    Writing a virus, or even publishing one, is not and should not be illegal. In fact, such restrictions would interfere with the creation of anti-virus software. What is outlawed is the act of unleashing a destructive self-replicating program out into the world... for that matter, even putting destructive software one single, stand-alone box that does not belong to you is a crime, because you are damaging somebody's property.

    Just as the courts have decided to impose limits on verbal expression ... they will place restrictions on the distribution of code.

    One concept that could perhaps be re-examined here is the nature of software: is code invented (like a coffee maker) or authored (like a novel)? One is protected by patents, the other by copyright.

    Programs are mathematical constructs. They are important for their functions, not their forms. "Good design" is only valued because it improves the functionality (runs faster, debugs with less trouble, etc.)

    In this sense, software is more like an invention to be pantented than a document to be copyrighted. If you invent a formula that tastes just like coke, or write a program that decodes DVD's, and do so using honest reverse-engineering methods, then you should be free and clear to do what you like.

    IANAL, but it seems to me that this might turn into a case that brings up a lot of questions that the courts need to ask.

  • Years ago, they made the motion-picture studios give up their control over theaters because they found it was a violation of antitrust. There are similar issues here.

    As I understand it, the principal members of the MPAA are the major motion picture studios. And the MPAA controls the licensing to produce DVDs and controls the licensing to produce DVD players. IANAL, but that does sound like a potential antitrust violation.

    OTOH, who has the motivation and money to initiate a lawsuit?
  • Another neat trick would be to go into a crowded theater with little slips of paper with my phone number... andwhen people called it, the answering machine said, "FIRE!!!"

    That's pretty damn insightful.

    W

    The weird thing is, there really is a crowdedtheater.com... sigh.
    -------------------

  • by bwt ( 68845 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:46AM (#1047855)
    Quoting Garbus: Right now the MPAA has got an order from the court which makes it possible to stop the posting of the DeCSS. The MPAA has now made a motion to expand the injunction to include linking. What I'd like to know is, if links themselves are prohibited, can simply posting the text of the URL itself be prohibited as well? If we get to this extreme, I think we've gone way over the first amendment line.


    The Openlaw DVD Forum [harvard.edu] is going to submit an amicus brief making exactly this point. We're currently at the 4th draft and are trying to finish up by this weekend.

    Garbus and his associate Edward Hernstadt have been very supportive of our attempts to apply open source methods to crafting legal arguments. Both have even posted to our mailing list. Anyone who wishes to get involved should check it out. There is also a very good resources page there.
  • Then isn't a simple matter to change your links to become a link to a search engine's results on a search for +decss +source or something?

    Then what are they going to do? Stop all the search engines?


    -AS
  • Well, the owner of the (chunkymunky) domain is currently seeing a lawyer. Also, the lawyer for the sueing site is in New Jersey, while the chunkymunky domain's owner (and lawyer) are in England.

    Everyone behind ChunkyMunky.Com wants to fight this - that's for sure. As I said, the owner is currently seeing a lawyer, so we'll see where it goes from here.
  • Actually, they (Chunky Monkey) *licenses* the name to Ben and Jerry's for use as their ice cream flavor.

    So, they win on that point :P
  • Well, that news is kinda old by the mailing list standard :P

    If you actually see the woman's e-mail, it says "allowed" (as you hinted in your post). The problem with this is, if chunkymunky accepts this, then it's like saying "Okay, you *do* own the rights to 'chunkymunky' and we accept your grant to use the domain." The thing is, the domain was never hers to grant the rights to - it's the domain name owner's and *NO ONE ELSE'S*.
  • Actually, the opinons of most of the OpenLaw people is just the opposite. Garbus is clearly very knowledgable, and very capable. Despite his inexperience with the technology, he has learned very quickly. If I were on trial, I would want him as my lawyer.

    On the other hand, Kaplan seems to be very heavily biased against the defense. If you read over the transcripts again, he dismisses defense arguments without consideration, and accepts arguments by the plaintiffs with similar cause. He has managed to earn the ire of several people (including John Young, of Cryptome).
    Sam TH
  • What if you don't explicitly state that the "DeCSS" link is linked to the DVD decoding code? What if you simply put up a "DeCSS Code" link, that links to code that removes cascading style sheets code or something? Would the clickthrough then be enforceable?

    Is it actually fraud if you're not selling anything? Hell, if Microsoft can disclaim everything with their licenses, including fitness for use for any purpose at all, you should be able to use some similar disclaimer.

  • What search engine do you use?!?!? I get more than ten billion hits for "sex" on my hard drive alone!
  • by Danse ( 1026 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @12:23PM (#1047871)

    And what does one do with these ripped DVDs? You end up with an inferior product, just like a cassette tape copied from a CD. You still have to purchase blank media to store the copies you make, and the industry has already imposed a tax on that media, ostensibly to compensate them for piracy losses, so what's the problem? This is not the huge problem that they make it out to be. It's just the VCR or cassette tape issue all over again. When will they learn?


  • WTF is with the 'offtopic' moderation on this!!! People aren't allowed to respond appropriately to other posts without losing karma! It's not like we were using our +1 bonuses or had been mis-moderated up. The original poster might have been off topic, but I don't expect people replying to get dragged down.

    That's it, fuck this place.

    Sucks too much time out of my day anyways.

    My password is 'ncLxReVL'. The time is 9:30 EST, I currently have karma of 30. Go wild ACs.

    EOF

  • This argument implies that there is hard evidence to prove that 'piracy' leads to decreased sales.

    It wasn't meant to imply anything. It was simply a question based on the argument used in the post I was replying to. I don't know the effect unauthorized copying has, positive or negative.

    The argument works both ways. It's not as obvious as you would think.

    Agreed, I don't think it is obvious at all. I phrased it the way I did because my experience and anecdotal evidence is such that it does increase sales.

    But anecdotal evidence is all I have.

    Steve M

  • Quoting you: "He's mostly come off as evasive and ill-prepared."

    Vehement disagreement, at least in the documents which I have read. The article listed at the top of this thread is by far the most incisive summary about why the DeCSS court case in front of Judge Kaplan is so damned important, and in the "interesting item", although he got a bit long winded and apparently loud some times, he was exactly on point -- wanting the injunction reversed because of First Amendment issues, and failing that, to argue for speedy depositions (which the movie companies are trying to evade), in order to get the case in front of the Supreme Court by fall.

    This is a man on a mission, focused, angry, and ready to do battle on behalf of the constitutional issues raised by the DCMA and DeCSS.

  • by wendy ( 42400 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:06AM (#1047875) Homepage
    Garbus: The other thing this case is about, which is very interesting to me, is that it's kind of going to be an Internet legal trial in the sense that some of the people on the Internet and some people who deal with the Internet are very interested in this particular trial -- and every document, witness's word, judge's ruling, and lawyer's call will be on the Internet within a day.
    He's serious about getting all the documents online. Cryptome [cryptome.org] has been posting them nearly as soon as they are filed. In addition, we're using the Openlaw/DVD [harvard.edu] forum to develop arguments online.

    In the next few days, we'll be filing an amicus brief [harvard.edu] arguing against the MPAA's proposed injunction on hyperlinking.

    Join the fight! [harvard.edu]

  • Posting content like this is undeniably useful when a server gets Slashdotted, but I can see it now: FeedMag joins Microsoft in suing Slashdot for hosting posts that they claim are copyrighted material...

    Sure, but they'd be fools if they did. They're enjoying a lot more eyeballs than they would have otherwise, even with the mirrored text. They can't even serve up the text to the potential readers anyways because they've been slashdotted.

    They may also get new readers. I'd never even heard of them before this.

  • Two immediate problems:

    (1) Legal unenforceability: In the example you give, assuming for sake of argument that DeCSS is illegal,(*) you're offering to sell an illegal product, not in exchange for money but for a release. It follows that the contract you propose is unenforceable because it is supported by an illegal consideration.

    (* If it's legal, why would they care?)

    (2) Practical unenforceability: In the example you give, how do you prove that any given person-who-clicks-through is a person with authority to grant a release on behalf of a studio?

    That's not to say this isn't worth pursuing, however.

  • by the_other_one ( 178565 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:21AM (#1047881) Homepage

    Sing the DeCSS code to a Metalica tune then put it on Napster

  • by Chiasmus_ ( 171285 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:21AM (#1047884) Journal
    Is it linking when you post a phone number where people can listen to an answering machine telling you the link ?

    I think my grandmother would be really confused if she got my answering machine, and it said, "Hi, http colon slash slash www dot plankensteiner dot com... BEEP"

    Another neat trick would be to go into a crowded theater with little slips of paper with my phone number... and when people called it, the answering machine said, "FIRE!!!"
  • Source code should be free speech. It's just text, after all.

    Compiled code is property.

    Running code is a person under the law.

    Treat these accordingly. ie if a virus causes widespread damage, arrest it and jail/execute it (no pun intended!).
    If MS-Outlook helps the virus along, indict it as an accomplice to terrorism.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:10AM (#1047892)
    downloading a three megabyte file was ridiculously slow over a 14k modem. But now it takes thirty seconds.
    I had no idea that 14K modem technology had progressed so much in the last few years! =)
  • by Janthkin ( 32289 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:11AM (#1047894)
    The intro to the interview (here [feedmag.com], if you need it), compares Garbus to a modern day Daniel Webster. I'm not convinced; it seems to me that he has more of a Clarence Darrow case on his hands. (From the Scope Monkey Trial [dimensional.com], if you don't remember him.) Both were dealing with a case of the PTBs trying to squelch what is (was) a novel idea, and should have been protected as Free speech. Of course, Darrow lost....
  • by Mimosa ( 137747 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @05:19PM (#1047897)
    I wish a little less fawning would occur when describing this gentleman, as lately, repeatedly in various publications he's described as brilliant. That may well be, but, lets be a little less sycophantic, you're coming across as starry-eyed/teeny-bopper-love struck.

    BTW, what a brief piece, from the buildup in the description I was expecting a meaty sized dialog.

    * Be that as it may, I did notice that perhaps the most salient point in the DeCSS discussion is missing: The movie industry has shifted the real discussion away from the fact that DeCSS is not presently needed for copying DVDs! Bit-for-bit copying is doable now. *

    Perhaps this point was mentioned as a story here in /., however, I came across it in LWN.net; it is a 4 month old piece. ESR makes the relevant point succinctly, incisively. Here's a quote from that LWN piece [lwn.net]:
    The real story here, though, is that the DVDCA's
    central complaint is fraudulent. DVD encryption does nothing to prevent content piracy. A pirate doesn't have to know how to decode DVDs to make bit-for-bit copies of them by the thousands. And no DVD player can distinguish between a legally distributed original and a pirated bit-for-bit copy. The amount of protection content producers get from DVD is exactly zero.
    Note: There are counterpoints [lwn.net] to the above,
    We have gotten some mail contesting Eric's claim that it is not necessary to decrypt DVDs to be able to make illegal copies. In fact, as documented in this IEEE Spectrum article, a number of steps have been taken to make bit-for-bit copying of DVDs hard - including prerecording sections of blank disks so that the encryption key can not be copied onto them.
    and counters to that [lwn.net] as well,
    None of that changes the fundamental point, though: pirates determined to make illegal DVD copies will be able to do so without any need for the DeCSS software. Subverting a (hardware or software) player to get a clear bit stream, or finding a source of non-prerecorded disks are both entirely viable approaches. Trying to protect bits that are in the hands of users is a losing battle.
    As the 2nd quote mentions, that rebuttal quotes IEEE docs [ieee.org].

    Thanks
  • That's because Go.com has adult content ("sex" etc.) filtered by default.
  • Is this a limitation of consumer level equipment (much like the fact that consumer level audio cd-recorders require that special audio cd-r media)? Or is it that you just can't buy (without paying some huge fee to the DVD group that controls the keys) a player that can record the key sectors of the dvd disc?

    Umm.. well, both. Consumer equipment is not designed to allow it to write to the key sector. If you want a recorder that does, you have to meet certain qualifications, sign contracts, and pay a crapload of money for it.

    So is the encryption on the disc truly there for copy protection, or are there commercial outfits somewhere duplicating DVD's just as easily as CD's in mass quantity.

    Oh, they're definitely being copied in mass quantities, mostly overseas. This scheme won't even put a dent in those operations.

    You're right that it's really content protection, which should not be allowed, or at least we shouldn't be prevented from bypassing it, which is why the DMCA is so onerous.

  • by Devil Ducky ( 48672 ) <slashdot@devilducky.org> on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:13AM (#1047901) Homepage
    > How would you distinguish the DeCSS case from the Napster disputes of late?
    Nice tie-in with recent events but the two are far from related.

    >What happens if you link into the Coca-Cola code?
    Why'd they put it on the web , where it could get linked to?

    >A different legal system is going to have to be constructed to deal with these issues on the Web.
    That's something most people can't grasp, they are still trying to fold the old laws over the new world.

    It is however a very good point about more bandwidth leading to larger case of piracy (see end of interview). I would never have been able to trade MP3s on my original internet connection, not that I had a sound card or anything.

    Devil Ducky
  • If you look at the actual sales, have they gone down over the last years? No, they've increased (despite the record industry's hard attempts at scaring people away with crap like Britney Spears).

    I know that they have increased. But is there a direct link between unauthorized copying and CD sales?

    As pointed out with respect to the Napster Hurts Album Sales? [slashdot.org] thread, correlation is not causation. The fact that CD sales have gone up may be a side effect of a booming economy. Or it may be because of try before you buy. I don't know.

    Steve M

  • Serve your pages through a script that checks the "referer" field. You can reject:

    • everything from *.slashdot.org (so you don't have to pay by the MB for traffic you never expected)
    • everything from domains other than yours (if you really want to stop deep linking)
  • Piracy has little to do with DeCSS. Even the MPAA cannot cite an example of it being used for this. This is a case about communicating ideas learned by examining copyrighted material. This does not present a "danger" - in fact, just the opposite, suppressing it is the far more dangerous path.

    This is what kills me. With the whole VCD and DivX thing going on right now, and the fact that you can download a full length movie in MS's .ASF format from a website, FTP site, News Server or (theoretically) via DCC on IRC, this DeCSS thing would seem quaint if it weren't for its possible ramifications on our future.

    Kinda like suing Napster... Really, what's the point? What about Scour [scour.net] or Gnutella, or Freenet, or the countless other FILE SHARING utilities that are popping up...

    It's ludicrous to go after the people making the tools and utilities necessary to commit illegal acts of piracy. Noone sues gun companies for making guns that are used to kill, or for posting schematics that could be used to build them.

    Code is free speech. Utilities can be shared. Just don't get caught using them.
  • Every DeCSS story on slashdot has someone posting, "DeCSS overcomes playback protection, and not copy protection," or something along those lines. An analogy is usually drawn to a photocopier, which can easily copy, but not decode, material like cryptograms. This is in contrast to DeCSS, which does the opposite. The job of the photocopier can be performed for copying DVDs without DeCSS.

    In all my reading on the subject, not only have I found this to be true, but I haven't even found any argument to the contrary beyond, "No, you're wrong."

    So is it bad when the lawyer hired to protect DeCSS doesn't seem to grasp this point in an interview? Was he just simplifying the matter for the interviewer, does he really not understand the nature of the software he's defending, or is there something I'm missing?

    --Colbey

  • by Shaheen ( 313 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:57AM (#1047911) Homepage
    Beyond the 2600.Com Cease and Desist controversey, another one (though less popular) has risen on the internet...

    ChunkyMonkey.Com [chunkymonkey.com], a children's site owned and operated by a nice old woman who owns the trademark to the name "Chunky Monkey" (a lovable little monkey cartoon character) sent a cease and desist letter to ChunkyMunky.Com [chunkymunky.com], a site devoted to desktop customization.

    This is eToys vs. eToy all over again! E-mails sent back and forth between myself and ChunkyMonkey's lawyer are posted at my website here [pimpin.net]. I don't own the chunkymunky.com domain or anything, but I'm part of its community, so I took a stand :P
  • by the_other_one ( 178565 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @10:40AM (#1047914) Homepage

    2,081,730 matches for decss

    The same search engine only shows 1,065,121 matches for sex

    Therefore decss is more popular than sex

  • Posting this late nobody will notice this but I'll ask anyway.

    Will the post office in the U.S. actually deliver this, also, what are their limits? I'm in Canada so if I were to send a less than fresh trout it probably wouldn't make it through customs. However, if the post office will actualy send stuff attached to a postage paid envelope then this could be an effective and very entertaining protest method.

  • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:17AM (#1047920)

    FEED: What's the evaluation process when you decide to take on a case like this?

    GARBUS: I think you decide based on the significance of the case: What are the values that get involved? What are the social values? Why is it worth spending the time and energy? And it seems to me what this case basically deals with is balancing First Amendment values -- the right to an open Internet, the right to free speech, the right to the preservation of fair use with software materials -- against the claims of the people like the MPAA that permitting fair use just allows for piracy and the bringing down of their industry. I think it's the question of how you achieve that balance, protecting the artist/publishers who are entitled to be paid for the work that they do, while on the other hand making sure that other people can use what is appropriate for them. It's a balancing act.

    I also think what the case will probably deal with or will affect is how the entertainment business or how the media business will change because of this new technology. Generally what happens is the law sets up a cage under which the technologies operate. Here the technology is outstripping the law, and the law is going to have to adjust somewhat to the technology. Law is based on two hundred years of precedence, and I think the precedent is the structure, and I'm not so sure that that structure can handle these demands. So the question is how do you build new structures, and what are those new structures going to be. And this is going to be the first case to define those.

    FEED: How would you distinguish the DeCSS case from the Napster disputes of late?

    GARBUS: The most important difference is that there's been no piracy that they've found through the use of the DeCSS. There are a lot of reasons why that's so: because it takes so long to download, etc., etc. Now, if there's no piracy, there's absolutely no reason why this DeCSS shouldn't be discussed, explained, posted. If, in fact, there was substantial piracy coming from it -- or the potential for enormous piracy -- then one might come to a different conclusion. But clearly here, based on all the testimony to date, there has to be a better balance. There was a case here -- the Betamax case -- where the movie companies came in, and they said you shouldn't have VCRs. You shouldn't be able to copy movies that come off TV because that's an infringement. And the court said, "Yes, it may be an infringement. The question is, is it a substantial infringement, and what are the other values that it serves by permitting that infringement?"

    The other thing this case is about, which is very interesting to me, is that it's kind of going to be an Internet legal trial in the sense that some of the people on the Internet and some people who deal with the Internet are very interested in this particular trial -- and every document, witness's word, judge's ruling, and lawyer's call will be on the Internet within a day. Now, a federal court -- such as this court with Judge Kaplan -- is closed to cameras, but can't be closed to the Internet. There's going to be this extraordinary high-stakes battle for the control of the Internet on the Internet. In the sense that O. J. Simpson was the first TV trial, this becomes in a peculiar way the first documented Internet trial.

    FEED: Now, tell me if I'm getting this correctly. It seems to me that there are three layers to free speech elements of this case. There is the fair use element, which is that the technology itself enables people to take small samples from DVDs and "quote" them effectively in their work. There's the right of the cryptography community to discuss techniques of getting through encryption schemes in some kind of public way. And then there's also a question, if I understand it correctly, of people linking to pages where these things are discussed.

    GARBUS: Exactly. Right now the MPAA has got an order from the court which makes it possible to stop the posting of the DeCSS. The MPAA has now made a motion to expand the injunction to include linking. Now, the New York Times has talked about this case on its Web site. The New York Times has linked when it talks about the right to carry the DeCSS. Under the logic of this case, if you ban linking, you can stop places like the New York Times from doing that. The Associated Press, both in its pieces of paper and its Web site, has also referred to linking sites. Now, the New York Times is allowed to say that crack is being bought on 120th Street -- a different kind of linking -- without being told that it can't say that because it's going to be a participant in the crime that ultimately occurs. So I think the linking and posting, while separate issues, are related. If you now went to the Disney Infoseek site, you would find references to DeCSS -- you would get through that site the exact thing that Disney's trying to stop in this suit. You would find that the search engines that are owned by these very plaintiffs do exactly the same thing that they're trying to stop. They link. What the MPAA is doing is trying to stop certain people from linking.

    FEED: It seems to me like this has been an issue from the early days of the Web: Linking itself as a technology has challenged a lot of our assumptions about the legal status of copyright and free speech, and so on. And we've still not figured out how to handle it.

    GARBUS: Right. I think nobody has quite figured it out. What happens if you link into the Coca-Cola code, and you know that everybody can get that secret formula? Is Coca-Cola entitled to protection? We do have trade-secret laws. My estimate is that there probably have been three hundred thousand downloads of the DeCSS now in the United States. Now, once that's out there -- putting aside the question of whether it should be out there -- how do you put it back? How do you enforce trade secret laws? A different legal system is going to have to be constructed to deal with these issues on the Web. And this case is going to play a large part in that construction.

    FEED: Is there a case from your past that this most resembles, or does it seem very different because of all the technological issues?

    GARBUS: I think the technology makes it really different. Take the matter of operating systems -- there's another and very separate issue that you have with the Linux operating system. One of the reasons that there's so much interest in the DeCSS is that DVDs are not yet licensed to play on the Linux operating system. Now, to bring us back to the Betamax case, is Linux like a VCR? Can the motion-picture industry control distribution from the very beginning to the very end? Maybe the only platforms that can play DVD are those that pay the licensing fees. Or can you have other systems? Is that a violation of antitrust? Years ago, they made the motion-picture studios give up their control over theaters because they found it was a violation of antitrust. There are similar issues here.

    FEED: Obviously the objection in terms of the piracy question is that the technology and the bandwidth is expanding so fast that in a few years software like DeCSS will enable widespread piracy. I mean, you look at the case of Napster -- three years ago, what goes on now with Napster and audio files was impossible because downloading a three megabyte file was ridiculously slow over a 14k modem. But now it takes thirty seconds.

    GARBUS: I think that this process of copying data will always be longer and more expensive than traditional pirating methods. But one really can't project out until the end of time. Let's assume that at the end of the year, one percent of the total piracy is caused by the DeCSS, and let's presume that the discussion is there are First Amendment values with respect to the discussion of the DeCSS. How do you balance that? Now, in the Betamax case, the court did balance it. They said there will be infringements, but we don't look upon that as substantial infringement. We don't look upon that as infringement sufficient to override, let's say, a fair-use defense. So I don't rule out the possibility of piracy. I know enough now about the way things are copied to believe that, no matter how good the machinery ever got, there would be faster and more inexpensive ways. But as of today, nobody that I have spoken to can claim that any particular movie that was ever shown on the Internet ever came off a DVD, and nobody is even claiming that.

    But in the end, I think Napster was too difficult a case for the court to accept at this time. Our case may be too difficult for the court to accept at this time. Piracy has a very large and powerful meaning. In the Rio case, a witness testified about the negative and positive effect of piracy. I don't think anybody believed it. No one wants to hear it. In the Napster case, there was -- if you want to use that word -- piracy. People were downloading files; you had ten million criminals. I think the problem is with the DeCSS if you have ten million criminals, what do you do then? And the other issue is how quickly the copyright holders have to move. Look at what happens in something like this MPAA case: A small group of people find out about these potential violations, and they bring a lawsuit. And then there's an extraordinary proliferation. Probably if the MPAA had left it alone, fewer people would have heard about it. If the MPAA weren't claiming that you could make these wonderful copies, that people were making copies, then I think most people would have left it alone. So I think that what this case may teach the MPAA and other copyright holders is that you can exacerbate a situation by trying to stop something that really is not affecting you.

    Share your thoughts on DVD piracy, copyright protection, and the ramifications of the DeCSS case in the Loop. [feedmag.com]

    Photo of Martin Garbus by Bruce Davidson

    © FEED Inc. [feedmag.com] 2000

    http://www.feedmag.com/re/re340.2.html [feedmag.com]
    introduction: http://www.feedmag.com/re/re340.html [feedmag.com]

  • by John Jorsett ( 171560 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @09:23AM (#1047923)
    Quoting Garbus: Right now the MPAA has got an order from the court which makes it possible to stop the posting of the DeCSS. The MPAA has now made a motion to expand the injunction to include linking. What I'd like to know is, if links themselves are prohibited, can simply posting the text of the URL itself be prohibited as well? If we get to this extreme, I think we've gone way over the first amendment line.
  • When DeCSS loses its trade secret status, though (and I think this is inevitable), then CSS could be inferred/REd from DeCSS.

    In my opinion it already has lost trade secret status, but the judge in DVD CCA v. McLaughlin, Bunner et al [eff.org]. disagreed in this order [eff.org]. Frankly I find the idea a little weird.

    "The Court is not persuaded that trade secret status should be deemed destroyed at this stage merely by the posting of the trade secret to the Internet. Religious Technology Center v. Netcom on-Line.com supra. To hold otherwise would do nothing less than encourage misappropriaters of trade secrets to post the fruits of their wrongdoing on the Internet as quickly as possible and as widely as possible thereby destroying a trade secret forever. Such a holding would not be prudent in this age of the Internet. Plaintiffs moved expeditiously, reasonably and responsibly to protect their proprietary information as soon as they discovered it had been disclosed by investigating, sending cease and desist letters all over the world and then filing suit against those who refused within two months of the disclosure. The Court is satisfied that trade secret status has not been destroyed."

    Now the whole point of trade secrets is that you have to keep them secret. The judge here is apparently saying that he doesn't care that the material has already been downloaded by everyone and their grandmother. He is basically pulling the judicial equivalent of putting his fingers in his ears and going "Neener neener I can't hear you."

    Even more weirdly, he cites RTC v. Netcom [superlink.net], where the judge came to an entirely different conclusion, though stating that he was "troubled" by it.

    "While the Internet has not reached the status where a temporary posting on a newsgroup is akin to publication in a major newspaper or on a television network, those with an interest in using the Church's trade secrets to compete with the Church are likely to look to the newsgroup. Thus, posting works to the Internet makes them "generally known" to the relevant people -- the potential "competitors" of the Church. The court is troubled by the notion that any Internet user, including those using "anonymous remainers" [sic] [29] to protect their identity, can destroy valuable intellectual property rights by posting them over the Internet, especially given the fact that there is little opportunity to screen postings before they are made."

    The "Church" referenced is, of course, Scientology [xenu.net].

  • While many of the libertarians on /. (including myself) may see the merit of the "code is free speech" defense, the fact is that it has little legal merit. The authors of viruses can be prosecuted because that code may present a real danger. Just as the courts have decided to impose limits on verbal expression (i.e. the overused fire in a theater example) that can present a public danger, they will place restrictions on the distribution of code. One of the questions that is raised is: is the *threat* of piracy a public hazard that justifies the restriction on expression.

    While we will answer that question one way, the MPAA is sure to present an alternative answer. The fervor with which they advocated the DMCA and prosecuted the DeCSS case indicates that *they* see the free distribution of Digital Media as a threat to their billions in revenue and their shareholders' interests.

    This is a simple case. Whether code is a form of expression that is protected is *irrelevant*. The fact is that DeCSS can be used for *legitimate* purposes as previous copyright law defines "fair use" and will thus be permitted to be distributed. This is not a "test case" and 10 years from now will be seen as having little significance.
  • they will in the netherlands. send me the letter, and I'll attach it to a dutch brick. by airmail if possible. dutch postoffice would definately send it.

    //rdj
  • Don't fight the copying issue, because:
    1.You're wrong. DeCSS really is useful for making perfect digital copies.

    Yes *useful* but not *neccesary* If you are only interested in copying DVD's, bit for bit copy or frame capture is still there if DeCSS is successfully banned.

  • Just finished reading the letters you linked to. Interesting stuff. I had never heard of Chunkey Monkey before, except the ice cream flavor. I'd like to know what the standard is for a trademark being deemed "famous." That seems to be one of the strongest points that Chunkey Monkey has made, and could be the make-or-break point of the case if this ever goes to trial (which doesn't appear likely since ChunkyMunky.com does not apparently want to fight this, and/or doesn't have the resources to fight it). If the Chunkey Monkey trademark actually is considered famous, then you'd have to figure out if the ChunkyMunky.com name actually constitutes infringement. That could vary depending on the precedents that exist and where the trial is held. Probably have to talk to an attorney on that one, and one that is very knowledgeable about trademark issues.

    If, on the other hand, Chunkey Monkey is not considered famous (and it's hard for me to believe that it is, since it's definitely nowhere near as famous as say, Microsoft, Chrysler, McDonald's, etc.), then I think you make a good and valid argument that since the two sites serve completely different purposes and have completely different audiences, there is no infringement.

    I'll have to check back later and see if you ever get a reply to your last letter.

  • by FreeUser ( 11483 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @11:04AM (#1047935)
    (1) Legal unenforceability: In the example you give, assuming for sake of argument that DeCSS is illegal,(*) you're offering to sell an illegal product, not in exchange for money but for a release. It follows that the contract you propose is unenforceable because it is supported by an illegal consideration.


    You are correct, although not necessarilly for the correct reason.

    One could host one's web page, complete with click-through license, in one of the two American States foolish enough to have passed UCITA legislation (which explicitly makes click-through licenses enforcable).

    Then, have the aforementioned "click-through" license on your web page, followed by a link to download DeCSS.

    What makes this unenforcable isn't the law, or even the illegality of DeCSS (after all, maybe it is the decoy DeCSS program, which is undisputably legal and merely bears a superfical resemblence to DeCSS, in the similarity of their names). It is the fact that you are a powerless, unrepresented individual on the one hand, going up against a large cartel of corporate conglomerates by whom the government is employed on the other.

    Even if such a license were enforcable, the RIAA and the MPAA would simply purchase a new law from congress post haste (a relatively inexpensive proposition), which would then make the license unenforcable, probably retroactively.

    Really, until we seize back our government, all of this discussion will be more or less moot.
  • That's because you have to pay for sex...
  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @01:06PM (#1047938) Homepage Journal

    And what does one do with these ripped DVDs? You end up with an inferior product, just like a cassette tape copied from a CD.

    Whoa, whoa, how's that? It isn't anything like a cassette tape copied from a CD. The "ripped" copy is a perfect digital copy of the content. The only difference between the source and the target is that the target is not scrambled. If anything, the "ripped" version is superior, since it now requires slightly less processing before playback. And the descrambled version can now be stored/played on a DVD that has the key sector pre-burned with zeroes.

    Don't fight the copying issue, because:

    1. You're wrong. DeCSS really is useful for making perfect digital copies. Furthermore, even though it currently costs more to make copies than the cost of the original, that won't always be true as storage technology progresses. (Some day, you'll buy a 100 Gig removable disk for ten bucks.)
    2. There's no need. We're perfectly within our rights, under copyright law, to have Fair Use copies. (DMCA tries to outlaw making such copies, but then it shoots itself in the foot with "Nothing in this section shall affect rights, remedies, limitations, or defenses to copy-right infringement, including fair use, under this title.")

    ---
  • Well, if you want a Coca-Cola formula here [sodafountain.com] it is.
  • Interesting idea, I think I'll write a program that contains a list of grocery items and buys them from webvan.com...

    Put it in cron.weekly, and hot damn, I'll never have to go to the store again!
  • by bwt ( 68845 ) on Thursday May 25, 2000 @11:08AM (#1047943)
    While many of the libertarians on /. (including myself) may see the merit of the "code is free speech" defense, the fact is that it has little legal merit. The authors of viruses can be prosecuted because that code may present a real danger. Just as the courts have decided to impose limits on verbal expression (i.e. the overused fire in a theater example) that can present a public danger, they will place restrictions on the distribution of code. One of the questions that is raised is: is the *threat* of piracy a public hazard that justifies the restriction on expression.

    Piracy has little to do with DeCSS. Even the MPAA cannot cite an example of it being used for this. This is a case about communicating ideas learned by examining copyrighted material. This does not present a "danger" - in fact, just the opposite, suppressing it is the far more dangerous path.

    The burden on the government, before it upholds a content based ban on speech is called the "strict scrutiny" standard. To meet this the governement must show that it regulates to protect a compelling state interest (whose maginitude is at least as great as the right to free speech) and that it does so by the least restrictive means.

    This "Least restrictive means" requirement is a razor sharper than Occum's. The US Supreme Court reaffirmed it as a hard-line requirement this week in US v. Playboy [cornell.edu].
  • I can tell that YANALE (You are not a lawyer either).

    Odds are, the computer you are using right now contains hardware that was reverse-engineered... and there's not a thing that IBM can do about it, because Compaq (and later other companies) did it legally.

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