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MPAA v. 2600 NY Trial Has Ended 365

jlj writes: "According to this New York Times (reg. required) article, the MPAA v. 2600 trial in New York has ended. Judge Kaplan indicated that he was likely to declare the DeCSS code as a form of expressive content, "a distinction that may help bring it First Amendment protection." No matter who wins, this case is likely to end up in the Supreme Court. Hopefully 2600 will win this round because I can only imagine the very truthful press releases the MPAA will be pouring out if they win. From the article: The judge said he was impressed by David Touretzky, a computer science professor at Carnegie Mellon University in Pittsburgh, who testified that the case raises ``very serious concerns about the future of computer science and my ability to function as a computer scientist.''." No ruling has been issued yet, as you can tell from the article - we'll keep you updated.
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MPAA v. 2600 NY Trial Has Ended

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  • by Anonymous Coward
    I'm surprised that the case has gone this far. First, what reason is there for the government to protect outmoded business models. At a former international (brown truck) delivery company, we were always told about how the railroads had managed to fade to near irrelevance because they couldn't adapt to change. The railroads were the only way to transport goods until trucks, planes and other methods sideswiped them.
    This is a fact of business. Adapt or die. Imagine if the government had decreed that railroads were the only way to transport product? Or what if copy machines were banned because they infringed book publishers' rights.
    Secondly, if the MPAA wins this case it could also make vulnerable such products as Wine (windows emulator), VMWare, or the PlayStation Emulator.
    Third, an MPAA win would severely limit the freedom for informative articles about technology. For example, it could then become illegal to explain the pitfalls of the CSS encryption procedure because doing so would aid in its circumvention.
  • I'd say an elegantly-written program can be the artistic equivalant of an elegantly-written musical score.

    In either case, you must be able to understand the language in which they are written to appreciate their beauty. To someone who can't read music, a Bach score is as indecipherable as a C program is to someone who doesn't know C.

    - Robin
  • Survival in the entertainment industry is and has always been about ATTENTION. Somebody with gigs and gigs of mp3s is not abusing the system, they basically don't count. They are sitting on a lot of music that they're essentially ignoring- they are doing the equivalent of playing about 6 radios at once all tuned to different stations. It's drowning in choice, being so swamped by the amount of mp3s they have that few wind up worthy of particular attention. There is effectively no difference between three mp3s you don't listen to and three million mp3s you don't listen to- and the psychology of this type of uber-hoarder is to have the three million mp3s and sit around with the speakers off. It's about collecting, not listening- so it entirely fails to connect to the industry using the only relevant currency, the currency of attention.
  • Note that, while the judge is likely to rule that the DeCSS source code is expressive speech, not all expressive speech gets 1st Amendment protection. For example, shouting "Fire!" in a crowded movie theatre (or burning your draft card, another case cited by the judge), have been ruled by the Supremes to not have 1st Amendment protection.

    All that aside, it is going to be quite hard for the judge to rule that something published in a magazine is not covered by the 1st Amendment. The MPAA made a *MAJOR* mistake in going after 2600 Magazine as their first "big-name" villain here... if they'd first tried to shut down private citizens, and left 2600 alone, they could have gotten their precedent. Instead, they have run ashore on the shoals of the 1st Amendment here, because you don't censor magazines here in the United States unless there is a darn good reason to do so.

    Of course, the trial transcripts of the MPAA execs on the stand showed that the MPAA was seriously clueless anyhow. Apparently they had no idea that 2600.com was the webzine version of a magazine until after they'd already filed the suit.

    -E

  • I'm pretty sure it's somewhere on www.digital-digest.com - There's a HUGE amount of DVD information there. If it's not linked to from there, I don't remember where I saw it...
  • #!/usr/bin/perl

    use Slashdot;

    $sd = Slashdot->new('00/07/26/1317255');

    @expression = ("expression", "of", "form", "a", "is", "code", "My");

    $agree = 0;

    if (! $agree) {

    foreach $word (reverse @expression) {
    print "$word ";
    }

    if ($sd->usertype($sd->post(27)->getuser()) eq 'dumbass') {
    print "dumbass";
    }

    print "!\n";
    }
  • Email me a link to a ripped copy of The Matrix so I can verify that DeCSS is being used for piracy. I promise I won't watch it much. It's really just for educational purposes anyway.

  • by mattdm ( 1931 )
    If the DVD is being distributed over the network, it's going to be further compressed in a lossy way -- just as MP3s are. This will likely remain true even as networks get faster -- the return from making it a perfect copy just isn't worth it, when a slightly less perfect copy is a tenth the size.

    How is this relevant? Well, to make a pirated copy of a movie like this, DeCSS isn't even necessary. Just ripping it from the output of a DVD player will be fine.

    --

  • I'd love to see a link to such a guide -- I'm interested in doing exactly this, and I haven't been able to find much information.

    --

  • All WWII movies acknowledge the existance of other countries. I mean, without Germany and Japan, who would we be winning against?
  • Well...smashing or breaking a lock would be destruction of property, as the lock does have a physical value. However, picking the lock is not illegal (nor is owning lockpicks illegal), unless you're using the picks or picking a lock to commit a crime.

    Smashing or breaking a lock is legal if you own the lock, or the owner of the lock says you can. Under the DMCA it is illegal to smash locks you own (assuming "locks" are digital access control devices).

    Think about it. You bought it, and until the DMCA there were very few limits on what you could do with (digital) things you had bought. The software industry has been thriving for well over two decades without the DMCA, it clearly didn't need it to keep going. (I think software history prior to two decades ago isn't all that relivant, because they tended to be packages with an actual negioatated contract once you get much before the 80s, and today's software is mostly shrink wrap licences)

  • the horrendously idiotic region controls that the MPAA has built into it

    I wouldn't object to the region coding so much, so long as it was only used to control the release schedule for a limited time - for instance, encode a region lock expiry date on the disc, and STOP USING REGION CODING ON DVDs OF 30 YEAR OLD FILMS! It's the region-coding of EVERY DVD that hollywood makes that pisses me off. The only region-free DVDs that I own are BBC discs (Black Adder, and the Flumps), I think.

  • It's too bad that such a great scientist suffers from such a terrible mental disorderzky.
  • that it was'nt funny?
  • Billy

    You make some great points, but a few things to be looked at.



    First, I think that the Constitutional provissions of Freedom of the Press and Freedom of speech can not be superceded by any act of Congress, including the DMCA. This is why I beleive Kaplan is looking at the Freedom of Speech issue and wondering if the Horse is out of the Barn.



    If Corly (Pronounced Goldstien :) ) initially was the source of the DeCSS, Kaplan might be inclined to Judge that the Press is not acting like a reporting agency, but simply trafficing in the DeCSS Software. But since it was alreay released...They're just reporting the News.


    Ultimately, while the DMCA tries to define Reverse Engineering, and Fair Use, it's not really the last word on these issues since they are Constitutional Doctrin. But even still, the DMCA [nyfairuse.org], which can be seen in it entirety in the link provided, gives us the following contradictory passages!!!


    ------------------------------
    (f ) REVERSE ENGINEERING.-(1) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a)(1)(A), a person who has lawfully obtained
    the right to use a copy of a computer program may circumvent
    a technological measure that effectively controls access to a particu-
    lar portion of that program for the sole purpose of identifying
    and analyzing those elements of the program that are necessary
    to achieve interoperability of an independently created computer
    program with other programs, and that have not previously been



    H. R. 2281-8


    readily available to the person engaging in the circumvention, to
    the extent any such acts of identification and analysis do not
    constitute infringement under this title.
    ``(2) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsections (a)(2) and
    (b), a person may develop and employ technological means to cir-
    cumvent a technological measure, or to circumvent protection
    afforded by a technological measure, in order to enable the identi-
    fication and analysis under paragraph (1), or for the purpose of
    enabling interoperability of an independently created computer pro-
    gram with other programs, if such means are necessary to achieve
    such interoperability, to the extent that doing so does not constitute
    infringement under this title.

    ``(3) The information acquired through the acts permitted under
    paragraph (1), and the means permitted under paragraph (2), may
    be made available to others if the person referred to in paragraph
    (1) or (2), as the case may be, provides such information or means
    solely for the purpose of enabling interoperability of an independ-
    ently created computer program with other programs, and to the
    extent that doing so does not constitute infringement under this
    title or violate applicable law other than this section.

    ``(4) For purposes of this subsection, the term `interoperability'
    means the ability of computer programs to exchange information,
    and of such programs mutually to use the information which has
    been exchanged.

    _______________________________

    Congress added this because it would not withstand a Court Case otherwise. Likely the issue of Fair Use. Without Fair Use provissions, the DMCA would be struck down as Consonstitutional in the Cradle. Part of what these Law Suites are about is the MPAA trying to redefine Fair Use in the eye of the public. Where Fair use was the right to make archival Copies, they are say - no - it isn't.

    But the DMCA is clear even in it's text that is can not over rule FAIR USE......

    ______________________________________________
    (c) OTHER RIGHTS, ETC., NOT AFFECTED.-(1) Nothing in this
    section shall affect rights, remedies, limitations, or defenses to
    copyright infringement, including fair use, under this title.
    ______________________________________________

    The mechanism of Copyright Office review is some quack idea to try to save this insane act from Court Review death. If the DMCA is an impedence to Fair Use, it should become a dead letter. Therefor the REAL battle is over the definition of Fair Use. That is the issue this case, if decided upon Freedom of Speech/the Press, threatens to circumvent, at least for another day.

  • Like take this one "group of peopl eneed hero(s) find and actor playing a hero and mistake him for a real hero. They contract him to help through misunderstanding (he thinks they know hes an actor and want him to act for them). Truth is discovered, he initially tries to run, ends up rising to the occasion and saving the day".

    Very common story. In the past few years 2 movies that I know of used it. Galaxey Quest, A Bugs life, and I know I have seen it before even that.

    It's a comedic variant of the type of story seen in The Music Man.

  • <i>Don't be silly...everyone whos seen the film U-571 knows that it was the Americans who captured the Enigma machine, cracked the code single handedly, and won the whole war without any help from the rest of the world!</i>
    <p>
    Are you saying there is actually an American movie which acknowledges the existence of the rest of the world? Wow.


  • Again, read the license: when you "purchase" a DVD, sure, you bought a physical disk you can play, microwave, etc but the CONTENT you are NOT buying! The movie or content remains the property of the owners, who reserve all right - you may only view it on an official player, between the hours of 7-10PM, except on Sundays, on a set with a minimum size of 21", and only with Orvill brand buttered popcorn - consumption of any OTHER snack brand constitutes a violation of the license agreement whereupon you must destroy the disk. If more than one person wishes to view the content, contact the publisher for a "license pak" upgrade available in multiples of '5'.
  • DeCSS is NOT used primarily for law breaking.

    Well then, what is it used for?


    DeCSS is the only DVD descrambling technology that is suitable for manufacturing a DVD player without the user restrictions mandated by the DVD-CCA licensing contract, such as a ban on unencrypted digital outputs, and the Macrovision requirement.

    In fact there are several Windows programs to decrypt DVDs, why are they not in court?

    Good question. Why aren't they?


    Other technologies, such as DVD rip are not suitable for development of an unrestricted DVD player because they are simply modifications of an existing, licensed player. You could not legally use these programs to manufacture an unlicensed player. Tellingly, the MPAA has made no moves against people who distribute DVD decryption programs based on hacks to licensed CSS implementations, even though they perform the same function.

    The only difference between these programs and DeCSS is not that DeCSS enables copying and the other programs don't. The difference is that by using DeCSS one is legally free and clear of the industry tying arrangement between the MPAA, the DVD-CCA, and the player manufacturers that controls and restricts what consumer features are allowed and disallowed on DVD player products.

    As usual in the entertainment industry, the real issue is over control and power. Copying in this case is a red herring designed to draw attention away from the MPAA's real interests.

  • From your comments, its obvious that you haven't worked on programming for any large or medium-sized project.

    Just as you can paint a picture a million ways, and tell a story a million ways, you can design a system in a million ways. A coder is an artist in the purest sense because he (or she!) is not limited by the medium. Code can be made simple, elegant, robust, and/or portable. Code can be ugly, orderly, confused, structured... A single program can be written in hundreds of ways using many different languages.

    Certainly my code is governed by mathematical laws, no different than the laws which hold paint to a canvas, or the laws that allow two notes to harmonize. Just because something is governed by laws does not make it less expressive.

    Coding is not a process. It doesn't follow a procedure. It has commonly used methods and practices, but common in the way that most painters use their hands instead of their feet to create.
  • If you agree to a clickwrap license in the process of installing it, yeah, you're bound.

    I wouldn't concede that without a hell of a fight. Not if I paid for the software before to getting to the installer. Once the deal is closed, it is closed.


    ---
  • Assault rifles and lockpicks and DeCSS are use primarily for lawbreaking.

    That is flat-out untrue.

    DeCSS is not primarily used for lawbreaking. That is only one of many uses for it, and I would even go as far as to say that so far, that is the least popular use for it. The plaintiffs in the case admitted that they had never even heard of anyone using DeCSS to pirate movies.

    And in all that time since DeCSS has been out, while it hasn't been used for breaking the law, it has been used for:

    • A first step in an awkward complex process for watching DVDs
    • A starting point to write other DVD players (e.g. Livid) that hopefull aren't so complex
    • Education and amusement
    I bet that so far, piracy isn't even up to the 10% point.

    How could piracy be considered the primary use for the software when this goes against the facts of how people are really using it? That's like have an alleged lockpick tool that 99% of it's owners only use for brushing their teeth, and claiming that lock picking is its primary use.

    When people criticize Napster, which isn't technically a violator, they have a damn good point that the overwhelmingly most popular use of Napster (despite its more neutral purpose) is to pirate. But in the case of DeCSS, even that isn't true.


    ---
  • In that same article, the phrase (actually paraphrased here) '[the legality of DeCSS] would allow anyone to copy DVDs'...

    If these f***ing journalists bothered READING anything before spouting off, they'd realize that there are plenty of programs out there that copy DVDs, and the central purpose of DeCSS is to 'De'crypt the 'CSS' protecting access to the DVD.

    Idiots. Oh yeah, it's not just the NYT, the Associated Press actually released the article, so it's their hacks who screwed up this particular article.

    Eric
  • You could look at this declaration [harvard.edu] by Touretsky. Personally I think this is the most powerful argument in the entire case.

    To paraphrase, the question he asks is "Where do you draw the line?"

    Is some English text describing an algorithm protected under the 1st amendment?
    What about the same text, but annotated in some well defined programming language for which there is no compiler?
    What if it was annotated with C code?
    The C code all by itself (ready to be compiled)?
    Object code?
    Binary executables?
    At what point is it no longer 'speech'?

    Griff
  • But the poster of such information could be held liable as aiding and abetting to a crime. If DVD's start being pirated, couldn't MPAA start suing all the distributors of DeCSS? (Even if thay can't prove a specific site led to it - sue them all and hope one sticks)

    Lots of books have been made that describe the creation of bombs. Does that make them liable?

    Firearms instructors aren't held liable for aiding and abetting if one of their students uses a gun to murder someobdy, either.

    How about these security sites on the Web? They post known exploits and other security loopholes in popular operating systems. If someone uses that information to crack a Linux box, for instance, should that site be held liable for aiding and abetting?

    No, I don't think so.

  • You're right, DeCSS (or something like it) does seem to be being used as part of the process of making unauthorized (and downgraded) copies of DVD movies.

    However, if you look at the time taken to rip a DVD and downconvert it to, say, something that'll fit on a CD (upwards of 15 hours, I've seen), you realize that folks are probably doing to more so they can say they've done it than anything else. If I wanted to make a CD of a DVD movie, I'd just play the thing into a video capture card and grab it in real time. No DeCSS involved at all.

    Heck, where do you think the bootleg V-CDs of 'The Phantom Menace' came from? Certainly not from someone ripping a DVD, there aren't any of TPM. (The one I've seen came from a vidcap of a tape somebody made by sneaking a camcorder into a theatre. There are probably better ones now that the movie has been officially released on VHS.)
  • >> I don't know why the Times article repeats so often that DeCSS is about copying DVDs.

    > Well, most of it is, isn't it? I'll let this slide for now.

    How do you figure? On the very first day of the trial the MPAA's shill had to admit that he could not name a single instance of deCSS being used for bootlegging.

    --
  • So. Writing an essay describing the mathematical methods of breaking a certain type of encryption *IS* protected speech, and is most certainly expressive, however, computer source is not?
  • Actually, this simply refines the LSA from the Hawaiian woodrose seeds. Morning glory would work as well, in larger quantities.

    LSA has similar effects to LSD, though it (I believe) has a shorter half-life and more toxicity.

    Simply eating the seeds works just as well as refining, though you must make sure the seeds you have obtained have not been adulterated (toxins added to make you sick if you eat them, to prevent kiddies from tripping on K-mart seeds).

    If they have, you must refine first.
  • The fact that DVD's can be copied without decrypting them is mentioned in Golstein's deposition. It was the only thing I read completely, and it's in there.
  • Mu_Cow's point was that the AC posted *before* him, so in browsing you should see that before his post. The only reason you wouldn't would be if you were sorting by score or were only reading +1 and higher posts... If you are, you shouldn't be moderating.
  • And by reading this message, I claim that you agree to my licensing agreement which forces you to (blah blah blah).

    Of course, this isn't a valid license, neither is the license with a DVD movie.

    1) You bought the disk, the license tries to offer you the right to play it which you already own, thus the license doesn't offer you any consideration - invalid license.

    2) The license isn't brought to your attention before the purchase - invalid license.

    You are bound by copyright laws because those are applied in blanket fashion to *all* copyrightable works. The only way for copyright protection to not apply is for the author to give away the right.

    DVD Licenses might be valid if the disk performed properly without the license, but if you agreed to it, they'd ship you a movie poster, or something. This way you'd have a valid contract.

    Anyways, they lie, as do software companies, when they claim they have tons and tons of rights and that you *must* agree, etc. It's nothing but lies, you can click 'I Agree' all day and it's not binding.

    (The only exception is in places where the legislators have been bribed to pass the UCITA, but those places suck anyways.)
  • The reason GPL/BSDL/etc licenses are valid and EULAs aren't is that the GPL/BSDL/etc licenses give you something in exchange for your agreement to be bound by more restrictions.

    With the GPL, you have no right to distribute a GPLed file under copyright law. The only way to get that right is to agree to the license which grants you all the distribution rights you want, as long as you do it their way.

    The EULAs try to restrict your actions, but they don't offer you anything in return so you have no reason to accept (and even if you do, it's not a binding contract.)

    A contract needs to have consideration (something for you) for both parties and consent.

    EULAs don't have consent because you don't know about the license when you buy it. Even if you know there will be one, it's not presented as part of the sale, so it's void. They also force you to 'agree' to use the product you legally paid for, this extortion means you didn't actually consent to the contract, you just said so to be able to use the product. They don't have any consideration for the end user because that user already paid for the right (or it was paid on their behalf) to use the software. They are legally entitled to it. To offer them the right to use it is like offering someone the legal right to drink a Coke(tm) that they legally purchased ... irrelevant, because they already have that right. To offer a contract giving them this right is pointless and as such, the contract is void.

    EULAs *could* be valid, *if* you told the sales person you wanted to buy a package, they bring out the contract, explain it, and then in trade for cash, let you use the software in certain ways only.

    As it stands however, EULAs aren't valid. You can click 'I Agree' all you wish, you aren't agreeing to anything, just clicking 'Next'...

    In fact, something ammusing is that licenses that 'allow' your software to do something, like buying windows NT and finding out it'll only server a 5-user network, aren't required. You can legally crack that software and do whatever you want with it, as long as you don't copy copyrighted material.

    (ie, if it's a registry hack to make NT server more machines, it's legal. If you have to copy binaries from a 25-user license, it's not legal.)

    This means that cracking software to remove restrictions like only serving a certain number of users, or requiring the CD, is perfectly legal.

  • Not true. The EULAs Microsoft uses have no power. The RIAA and MPAA could claim the same things, but they wouldn't have any more legal weight than when Microsoft does it.

    The only exception to this is the UCITA which isn't a law in any place worth living and is a documented case of bribery. (There was an NYTimes article back when the UCITA was first passed in one state that documented the payoffs to a few elected officials, both as campaign donations and as other barely legit things.)

    You can ignore the UCITA, it wouldn't stand up in small claims court, let alone the Supreme court...
  • Right, the GPL/BSDL/etc are binding, if you enter into the agreemnt, because they give you something above and beyond normal legal rights if you agree. Regular EULAs try to take away right without offering anything (and without offering you a way to say 'No, install the software without any additional licenses') so they're invalid and completely ignorable.

    And yes, you can do *everything* (legally, not physically) with software that you can with a book. You don't need to look at the license unless you want to do something normally prohibited by law (such as make copies, etc.)

    You're allowed to take a magic marker and modify your book, you're similarly allowed to take a crack and modify your software. To tell someone how to modify a book you say "Ok, on page 83 where it says "Fourscore and seven ..." start to cross out those words. To tell someone how to modify software you say "0C42A3 bytes in, where it says 0x23 0xAC 0xA5, change those three bytes to 0xEA..." That's fair use, using a small ammount of copyrighted material to describe it.

    The DMCA steps on some of these right, not only is it an unfair law, but like with the UCITA they stepped over the bounds into bribery to get it passed and (it appears) in trying to defend it.
  • Not even then, you already own the program so the click-through can't offer you anything, thus it's not a valid contract.

    It's also invalid because of extortion, they're trying to get you to 'agree' despite your wishes. If you click 'No', you don't get to use the software you bought and paid for. If there was 'Agree' 'Disagree' and 'Cancel Install' where the first two installed just the same, then it *might* be binding, if the EULA as offered granted you any benefits you didn't already have the right to.
  • I'll answer two questions at once:

    "Well then, what is it (DeCSS) used for?"
    "Good question. Why aren't they?" (windows DVD decryptors being sued).

    Simple. What if you wanted to make your own DVD player so you could add custome functionaility, and perhaps do things like pipe firewire video through the house, eliminate menu lockouts, and add persistant bookmarks into movies?

    Well, the anser is without a legal DeCSS you can't do any of those things. You can't make your own player unless you pay the MPAA money fo access to the decrpyiton info, and alnog with THAT comes all sorts of things you can't do in a player (like firewire output).

    It's all about who can make players, and not really about being able to copy movies. If just anyone could make a DVD player without paying the MPAA, they would loose a large source of revenue.
  • Yes, today it would be a lot easier to do a video capture. But video capture is kind of a pain- you need to have a separate DVD player, a video capture board, cable them together and hit "start" and "stop" at the right times. My point is that, if the restrictions on DeCSS were completely released, you'd see tools released that would make ripping and recompressing a DVD a lot easier than doing an analog capture, similar to what tools like Music Match and kin have done for MP3 (assuming you've got a DVD drive). Moore's law will take care of the lengthy recompress time soon. The movie industry does have a lot to fear from DeCSS.

    Also, remember that the quality of the images stored on a DVD are a bit higher than standard NTSC. For one thing, it's not interlaced, and secondly, the analog recapture would introduce artifacts that (from what I've seen) significantly degrade the quality of the recompress. And while you do sacrifice some quality for smaller size, what I've seen using Divx / mp4 is quite acceptable, especially compared to the old VCD format.

    I travel a lot, and I'm considering using these tools to rip movies I own so I can easily watch them on the plane without having to carry a DVD drive or burn the batteries on my laptop spinning it. I could easily fit 5-6 movies in the spare space on my HD...
  • Maybe my filter's too high to see comments already posted on this, but did anyone notice that the online NYTIMES article [nytimes.com] did NOT contain an active hyperlink at the bottom of the article (as is their normal practice)?

    While the URL of the site [2600.com] is printed at the bottom of the article, it is not linked. This seems too coincidental...
    -=-=-=-=-=-=-=-=-

  • So before the DMCA it was legal to use a descrambler to get free cable?

    No, but it has always been legal to BUILD a descrambler... just not legal to use it to steal cable. If you are paying for cable but using your own homemade cable box, I don't think you are breaking any laws. We are talking the same thing here. DeCSS is legal to build and use for viewing your own DVDs, but using it (or anything else) to pirate movies is illegal. At least that is how I interpret the law. Lets hope Kaplan sees it the same way.

    Thad

  • It seems true. A symphony is only beautiful when it is performed. A program is beautiful when it runs. Depending on the hardware or orchestra, the composer's score or programmer's code could be played beautifully or crappily.

    Beauty is in the eye of the beholder. Scores can be beautiful to those who know how to read them, so too can code be beautiful to those who can comprehend. Those who can not understand staff notation or awk might only be able to appreciate the beauty of the output, but that does not diminish the beauty in the original.

    Imagine an illerate child and a fabulous tale such as 'The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe.' To the child, the book is just ugly pages until the kind parent reads the story aloud and then the child is captivated by the beauty of the story. The parent is able to perceive the beauty of the story without 'performing' the work because he or she can comprehend the written word.

    Scores and code are no different.

  • Well DUH! this is a NY Times you think they would print anything that wasn't slanted towards the corporate interests.
  • Software and Mathematics both should be protected under the first amendment. Just because I express myself in a language that uses "real" and systematic rules instead of grammer is no reason to exclude me. I am still describing a process (just in precise, accurate detail) and my description deserves freedom of speech protection.
    Else how long until I can't legal even *think* about crypto? What if someone copyrighted "plus" and "minus"? Use to be that one had to join a guild to use screws...make your own screws (for your own use) and the king's soldiers would have your ass.
    We've come along way, lets not slip back!
  • The problem is, the DMCA makes circumventing access control devices illegal, even if no other crime is committed. In your example using a gun alone is not illegal, at least in the US (it may be self-defense, or gasp shooting at a target during a sporting event); it is only illegal when used in the commission of another crime (armed robbery, sexual assault, etc.)
  • Possibly. You could bring one suit and name numerous defendants. With enough evidence you might be able to nail someone. You may be right that the cost of even that one trial would scare away the MPAA, espescially with each defendant having their own legal team.



    Being with you, it's just one epiphany after another
  • I guess the various Gun manufactures must be in a lot of trouble then.

    Actually they are. The difference is that the primary use of cars is to drive (legally of course). The vast majority of people using cars do not do so illegally (unless you count speeding). The primary purpose of piracy software however is to pirate which is illegal. IANAL but I think it has to deal with primary intention and/or likelyhood of a committing a crime.



    Being with you, it's just one epiphany after another
  • "The RIAA is a private, not-for-profit trade association whose members produce, manufacture and distribute approximately 90 percent of all legitimate
    recorded music in the United States."
    Hrm. Wonder what percent the MPAA owns.. Probably like 99.9%. Thanks for standing up to these creeps 2600!
  • Yeah, I noticed this too. But that seems to be their regular policy and not due to some fear of an injunction against linking to site that in turn links to DeCSS.

    See this article [nytimes.com] on Microsoft's latest appeal in their antitrust case for an example. The URL for MS' actual press release hasn't been made a link either, however, there are links provided to more information on the NYTimes site itself. I think it is more an IP issue in that they don't want to link to sites without first obtaining permission from the site's owners.

  • English law has something about goods being fit for the purpose they
    were designed for, and I suppose the same is true of US law. I'm
    guessing the MPAA isn't trying to argue that the purpose of a DVD disk
    is to be a pretty, shiny round thing.
  • That was right before the Africans came out of the jungle and started tribal dancing, I believe. Nelson Mandela would be proud.
  • A piece of code is no more expressive than an accountant's books or a differential equation.

    Not so. A DifEq or the bank books are just a way of cenceptualizing an existing phenomenon. The equation describes and predicts behavior of something- a moving object or a wave, the books describe the state and history of a bank account. They describe and nothing more. Code on the other hand, both describes and creates. If I code a beautiful GUI, is that any less of a creative expression than any other picture, be it in a marketing campaign or the Louvre? I decide how the problem is to be solved. Looking at the problem, you could not predict the precise way in which I as opposed to someone else will solve it. Maybe I think C is appropriate, and someone else would rather use pure assembly, or C++. The solution is unique to me, not the the problem

    Computing is not an art, it is a science governed by mathematical laws and logical premises. There is no creativity involved, merely a process of logical deduction and algorithmic optimization

    It seems that if that were true, most source would be written by computers by now. Coding is more than a logical batch process. It involves conceptualizing potentially new solutions to existing problems. A novel method of solving a problem has as much to do with the person solving as it does the problem. It is the creation of a model and a method, and those are both creative acts.

    Expression does not have to be poetry; we aren't talking about "what is art" here. Source code can constitue expression, because it describes the way in which you (the coder) uniquely feel a set of problems ought to be solved. Consider this: I need to solve a complex problem, so I come up with a solution. I write a paper expressing my method of solving the problem, and why I think it is most appropriate (talking here about engineering-style problems, where solutions have to take into account existing conditions and other factors, not a pure-mathematics problem where solutions can be proved). Then I make some psuedocode describing the procedure, with comments explaining certain orderings or optimizations. Finally, I sit down and pound it out in C, or Java, or Perl, or (insert favored language here), creating a source file that includes the methods that I described for solving the problem expressed in code, with comments that explain why a particular statement is in a certain order, or why certain optimizations or algorythms are appropriate at a certain juncture. I think most people would say that the first of these three examples is expression. Now, why, I ask, can the last two be considered any differently, simply because they do not use regular English (or other) grammer? I am yet to see a reason why an idea expressed in one form (a paper) is expression, but the same idea expressed in another way (code) is nothing.

    "Sweet creeping zombie Jesus!"

  • None of the things that you mention are illegal. According to the terms of the DMCA that bans means of avoiding copy-control products, DeCSS might be. Gun manufacturers cannot really be held liable as long as they sell their actual product in accordance with the law, and there is no question that selling specs or blueprints for guns is legal. The sourcecode for DeCSS can be used to create something potentially illegal, which is where the trouble comes. Providing a legal tool is not a crime- be it a gun, a knife, or a potato peeler, as long as it is sold in accordance with the law (which is where the gun manufacturers could be exposed to liablity- if it is illegal for so many felons to own guns, how are they getting them? It's more likely that the individual reseller will get dinged, though). Providing an illegal tool- LSD, high-yield explosives, is obsiously illegal. Providing a description of an illegal tool- bomb recipes, LSD recipes, is legal, as long as they are not used in commiting a crime. If I can prove you gave Timmy McVeigh the recipe for a high-yield fertilizer bomb, you can be held liable in the crime. So, if a tool created from the DeCSS source is illegal, than the source is legal to publish, but you incur liability if the illegal tool derived from it is used in a crime.

    "Sweet creeping zombie Jesus!"
  • I can't find resources for pro-Napster resources on the web. Can you?

    If you mean pro-Napster legal arguments and such, try going here [napster.com].

    Of particular interest is the Opposition to RIAA's Motion for Preliminary Injunction [napster.com] (182 kb PDF).
  • As the parent points out (mod him up).

    If this is true, then the MPAA is acting just like the RIAA with their phase1 and phase2 players. Phase one is to get the public to accept it. The phase1 players play unencrypted, unsigned media. But then they flip a switch and you can only play encrypted, signed media. And from that point forward, you HAVE TO GO THROUGH them to get anything published.

    And, if it's true, then the switch has been flipped in the case of DVD players. You can no longer play unencrypted discs. You can no longer avoid paying a license fee to the DVD/CA to make a disc.

    (I did some research and cannot confirm that that is true. But I can confirm that the phase1/phase2 switch DOES disable changing your region code. In Phase 1, you can switch regions, in Phase 2, the DVD drive itself holds the region code and it cannot be changed or reset.)

    Quick question: Anyone know how to tell if you have a phase1/phase2 player?
  • Am I the only one missing it?

    The code was published by a Norwegian in Norway, where disassembling code isn't a crime.

    When the movie industry in US reacted, the police in Norway asked the kid some qustions (_not_ arresting him in any way).

    He was even given awards from his school for his coding.

    So from a coders perspective he was given a pat on his head within his country.

    2600 reported abot this, what logic is it in the first case to atack 2600 for reporting about something that a Norwegian did in Norway?

    US Law as far as I know, doesn't aply here in Scandinavia, so it seems to me abit strange that you guys (as a country) are sueing one-another about a thing done over here???

    This is not intended as a flamer, just my inability to understand, what the trial is realy about, but since it's already over, maybe it's a little late to ask this ;)
  • If you can take time off work today, you may want to visit the hearing today in SF, where RIAA might get an injunction against Napster.

    Napster CEO Optimistic for Hearing on Wednesday
    Updated 1:31 AM ET July 26, 2000

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Napster Chief Executive Hank Barry said Tuesday he was optimistic the company will prevail at a hearing in federal court Wednesday to decide if Napster's popular song-swap service should be shut down amid claims it is promoting digital piracy. 'We're very optimistic about our legal positions and our legal team,' Barry told Reuters in an interview Tuesday.

    I can't find resources for pro-Napster resources on the web. Can you?

  • If you're glad we've won this one, you should be ready for the Napster fight. The hearing is today to allow the RIAA an injunction against Napster (sorry if my terminology is wrong).

    Napster CEO Optimistic for Hearing on Wednesday
    Updated 1:31 AM ET July 26, 2000

    LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Napster Chief Executive Hank Barry said Tuesday he was optimistic the company will prevail at a hearing in federal court Wednesday to decide if Napster's popular song-swap service should be shut down amid claims it is promoting digital piracy. 'We're very optimistic about our legal positions and our legal team,' Barry told Reuters in an interview Tuesday.

    I can't find resources for pro-Napster resources on the web. Are you interested? Help us out by posting 'em if you find 'em, most notably the time and place of this thing? I would love to go - maybe you CAN!

  • Dave has also suffered the wrath of the Scientologists by exposing their space aliens [cmu.edu] and e-meter [cmu.edu] really a tricked out multimeter.

    While doing so he's done it in the guise of academic scholarly study - pointing out why the 1st amendment is important and why 'fair use' is needed for a free and open society

  • But surely you want it to be made illegal to circumvent an access control device, be it some form of encryption or a defense system on your computer. CSS is a marketing control device and not access control, but access control circumvention must be a crime.

    No, sir, I most certainly do NOT want circumvention of access control to be a crime! The issue of cracking someone's computer or infiltrating their firewall is NOT the same as that of blocking or exercising fair use of copyrighted material that I have purchased and now OWN.

    Cracking a computer or a firewall is a form of burglary or trespass, and, IMHO, should be recognized as such in law; the cracker has no legitimate business being there. It's an infringement of a property right; I have an essentially absolute right to be free from trespass by private citizens.

    Restricting access to copyrighted material one has bought and paid for is an infringement of "Fair Use" under the copyright laws (the DMCA excepted; it WILL go down.). I DO have a legitimate right to view the work, 'cause I bought it! Traditionally, a copyright holder relinquishes ALL control over the manner in which a buyer will view or experience the work, (or even make copies not for distribution); all the copyright holder gets is the legal assurance that he/she will have exclusive rights of first sale for a limited time.

    DMCA and its demonic brethren attempt to extend this control over first sale to a total control over all access; THAT is an intellectual property land grab of breathtaking proportions.

    Tonight's homework: What about circumvention of access control AFTER the copyright expires and the work enters the public domain?
  • Please explain how hitting the space bar is being "creative"

    . Please explain how smearing a brush on canvas is being "creative"

  • Not to take away anything from the EFF's legal effectiveness in this case, because I do think putting Touretzky on the stand was a brillinat move, but I think this case (if the defense wins) will have been won as much by the MPAA's utter failure to present a decent argument as it was by the EFF's defense. I mean really, when your star "anti-piracy investigator" can't even provide evidence of a single DeCSS-pirated DVD, and 99% of whose testimony consists of "I don't recall," you could have had OOG THE OPEN SOURCE CAVEMAN serve as your defense lawyer and still win.

    -Vercingetorix
  • When considering the issue of whether source and object code are distinct things, or simply different expressions of the same thing, don't you think that the opinion of a computer science professor holds far more weight than the opinion of a journalist with no formal training in computer science? The relative value of someone's opinion has nothing to do with how much stake they have in the question.

    I'm sure someone convicted of murder has a very strong opinion on what his or her sentence should be, and they certainly have a greater stake in that decision than anyone else, but ultimately their opinion is pretty much irrelevant.

    I would say Touretsky's testimony was probably the most valuable offered during the whole trial, since he was able to make it starkly clear that this really is about free speech, and not about copying DVDs. The DMCA simply has no power to override your 1st amendment rights, and the judge's decision in this case could set the precedent to either nullify, or at least take a significant bite out of the DMCA. If the judge makes a ruling that states, in effect, that the DeCSS code constitutes protected speech, then the MPAA will have no recourse but to go after the actual pirates, instead of software developers and journalists.

    -Vercingetorix

  • And what was writing a DVD that would work in a DVD player if not authorization? If I encrypt a message with your public key and send it to you, can I then sue you for circumventing an access control method?
  • But surely you want it to be made illegal to circumvent an access control device, be it some form of encryption or a defense system on your computer

    So before the DMCA it was legal to use a descrambler to get free cable?
    Access control circumvention does not need to be illegal. A ruling in favor of DeCSS wouldn't mean that copyright infringement is ok.

  • by phil reed ( 626 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:37AM (#904624) Homepage
    If the ruling goes this way, that means the judge will not be ruling on linking, which is what everybody was worried about.


    ...phil
  • by Outlyer ( 1767 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:35AM (#904625) Homepage
    Don't expect any amazing insights here, but let me say this. This ruling could be a great thing. This lawsuit is ridiculous for a number of reasons. First, most companies either have patents or trade secrets. Each affords different protections. You can only bring a trade secret violation to court if it is leaked, which isn't the case here. Patents need to have algorithms published, of course, this isn't the case either. So what the MPAA is trying to do is make a buffet out of these regulations and pick and choose what they'd like to use.

    Which brings up the second point, which is that the DCMA provides for this type of unfair practice.

    So, the MPAA losing here would be a great blow to this ridiculous law.

    I also agree that this is freedom of speech. Some people would disagree here, but this type of hack is not only a technical breakthrough, but it also indirectly protests an unfair law. You must admit that the thousands of people mirroring the code, are doing it out of principle. The fact is, they should be able to mirror it, because it is both a message that the DCMA and MPAA are wrong in denying us fair use. In that way, it is freedom of speech, and it ought to be protected. I doubt those who are mirroring it are doing it for the technical validity of the code.

    On a more personal level, I have a laptop with a DVD player, and I'm stuck running Windows on it. The potential legality of DeCSS could lead to a good Linux DVD player, which means I can eliminate the last bastion of Microsoft in my home. Which will be a victory for me, anyway.

  • by SimonK ( 7722 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @06:52AM (#904626)
    Copyright grants to the creator of a work the right to control the distribution of his work for profit (or otherwise, as he chooses). Its relevant that this is (in most people's opinion) not a "natural" right, because that makes its scope and form questionable, and up to society (through the state) to control.

    Your copyright allows you to make demands of the licensee in exchange for your work. So far, so good. This allows you to impose certain conditions - in the case of the Microsoft EULA, payment, in the case of the GPL/BSDL certain conditions relating to copying and modification.

    However, there are limits to what you can do with such a license. In short, you can't deprive the licensee or any other individual of their other rights through it. You can't (to pick an absurd example) require that someone go out and commit a murder in order to use you software.

    To get back to the original issue: The question is not whether copyright is good or bad, but what the legitimate scope of a copyright license is. Can you require that only approved devices be used to access the work ? can you require that no copies be made ? Can you override somebody's right to free expression on the grounds that the knowledge they've expressed might be used to undermine your monopoly on players, or copy your work ?

    According the doctrine of fair use, which is fundamental to the law in this matter, the answer to the first question is "no", you can't create a monopoly on players in this way, as it has nothing to do with your profiting from your work. To the second "sometimes", you can only control the making of copies where you can reasonably argue that you're being deprived of a sale you'd otherwise have made.

    The answer to the third question is clearly the critical matter in this case. To us, the answer is pretty clearly no. The MPAA has no right to maintain its monopoly on players, and no right to restrict information about copying (thats like outlawing the instructions for making a photocopier).

    Frankly, I find it disturbing that so many people have such a naive idea of copyright as a form of "ownership" that allows the owners copyright to override everything else.
  • .
    Well...smashing or breaking a lock would be destruction of property,

    But that's the whole point the RIAA says that if we buy the lock, we can't break it. Last time I checked, we were able to buy an object, then do anything we wanted to it. Otherwise, the Who and Jimi Hendrix would be jailed for smashing or burning their insturments.

    In fact, they say that if we bought an Epiphone guitar, we would have to buy Epiphone strings, and only play it on a Epiphone amplifier through Epiphone cords. If someone built their own amp (a fairly simple task that requires some technical skill, similar to writing DeCSS) to play the guitar that they bought, they would be seized out of their home and taken to the police (like a certain scandinavian fellow).

    What pisses me off is that some fairly intelligent people can't get past the "well, are you saying it should be legal to copy movies and give them to your friends?" This is not about copying - it's about using the objects that you bought fairly and making them do what you want for your own private use.

    --
    Evan

  • by Billy Donahue ( 29642 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @07:58AM (#904628)
    Mr Brooklyn writes:

    > One of the problems that those of us watching this case have had in our
    > analysis and understanding is that we are so
    > passionate about the issue of being able to create free software
    > to play DVD's, and the threat of the DMCA to the continued development
    > of free software, that we are overlooking the specifics of this
    > particular case.
    >
    > In the case against Corey, we have a situation where the prosecution
    > is saying that Corey is trafficking in an illegal software program
    > that violates the DMCA. The defense, on the other hand, has been
    > arguing that Corey is a JOURNALIST!!! and that the links to the
    > DeCSS program is a protection of the 1st Amendment, protected
    > Free Speech and an issue of Freedom of the Press.
    >
    > In this light, actually, the issue of the DMCA is actually a side
    > show altogether. The real issue is can the court suppress the
    > Press from reporting the location and contents of DeCSS,
    > regardless of any violation of the DMCA.

    First of all, it's Corley. (pronounced Gold-stein)

    Let me enlighten you on some fine points of the DMCA:

    Sec.1201(a)(1)(A) of the DMCA hasn't even taken effect yet.
    [DMCA]
    1201. Circumvention of copyright protection systems
    (a) VIOLATIONS REGARDING CIRCUMVENTION OF TECHNOLOGICAL MEASURES.
    (1)
    (A)
    No person shall circumvent a technological
    measure that effectively controls access to a work protected
    under this title. The prohibition contained in the preceding sentence
    shall take effect at the end of the 2-year period beginning on the
    date of the enactment of this chapter.
    [/DMCA]

    That 2-year period hasn't yet expired.. In the interim, the Library of
    congress was charged with holding hearings about exempted works.
    The interesting part of this case, isn't that Emmanuel is charged with
    copyright infringement under 1201(a)(1)(A), but that he's charged
    with copyright infringement under 1201(a)(2)(A,B,C)
    [DMCA]
    1201. Circumvention of copyright protection systems
    (a) VIOLATIONS REGARDING CIRCUMVENTION OF TECHNOLOGICAL MEASURES.
    (2)
    No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public,
    provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device,
    component, or part thereof, that--
    (A)
    is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of
    circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls
    access to a work protected under this title;
    (B)
    has only limited commercially significant purpose or
    use other than to circumvent a technological measure that effectively
    controls access to a work protected under this title; or
    (C)
    is marketed by that person or another acting in concert
    with that person with that person's knowledge for use in circumventing
    a technological measure that effectively controls access
    to a work protected under this title.
    [/DMCA]

    There is no 2-year waiting period on 1201(a)(2).
    It is in effect right now, and has been in effect since 1998.
    So it's not accurate to say that the real issue is regardless
    of violations of the DMCA.. The DMCA itself puts these restrictions
    on the press and on every other American.

  • by jyuter ( 48936 ) <jyuter&gmail,com> on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:45AM (#904629) Homepage Journal
    This is only good news until people start pirating DVD's. Observe:

    He noted that free speech rights allow the publishing of a formula for LSD even though it is illegal to possess LSD -- and the publishing of a schematic for a timing device for a bomb.

    But the poster of such information could be held liable as aiding and abetting to a crime. If DVD's start being pirated, couldn't MPAA start suing all the distributors of DeCSS? (Even if thay can't prove a specific site led to it - sue them all and hope one sticks)



    Being with you, it's just one epiphany after another
  • by Spasemunki ( 63473 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:08AM (#904630) Homepage
    The design of a typical 500 year old cathedral is actually mainly based on functionality

    Partially true- if it were wholly true, all cathedrals would be identical. And even given the similarities in cathedrals, it is still clear that their design is influenced a great deal by personal (or communal) expression as much as functionality. Why are cathedrals in the shape of a cross, with the main alter at the meeting of the two beams? Why are there so many upward-pointing structures (spires, steeples, the pointed-topped arches)? Why were they built to that size at all, with huge vaulted ceilings and massive internal fixtures? Functionality controlled how these features were achieved (ie- flying buttresses et al.), but why set out to create those features at all? If the people who had conceived of and built the cathedrals had not been religious people, there design(not to mention existance) would have been wholly different. Features were chosen, based on what the designers and patrons wanted the building to express, and then the means to achieve that vision were used where necesary.

    "Sweet creeping zombie Jesus!"

  • by barleyguy ( 64202 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @09:41AM (#904631)
    Oh. Really. Well, I guess it's understandable that you overlook Sun and Oracle and IBM and Adobe and Corel and all those other minor little companies that exercise those exact same rights.

    No matter who pretends to exercise them, that still doesn't make them rights. They are exercising a unilateral extension of contract law, which is generally not legitimately enforceable. They do this to try and prevent fair use. However, fair use still stands, because it is the condition under which copyright law exists.

    License agreements operate under the smokescreen of copyright law, when really they are more closely related to contract law. By getting someone to agree to a contract, you can give yourself any "rights" you want to. The problem with license agreements is that they try to take away the fair rights of the consumer without that consumer's actual agreement. This generally makes the contract invalid. In all reality, the only basis for license agreements is fear. (Of course, if you get right down to it, that's the basis of law itself.)
  • > all the copyright holder gets is the legal
    > assurance that he/she will have exclusive
    > rights of first sale for a limited time.

    And even then, its not total. In fact, hows this for a kicker in the whole "information as property" copyright argument:

    There is a section of copyright law, which applies explicitly to music. It states that you do NOT need to obtain permission to distribute copyrighted musical works AT ALL. There is a simple, outlined procedure whereby you notify the copyright holder, distribute, and then send them royalties.

    It is called a compulsory licence. You notify them, not ask for permission. Why? Because they can't refuse. Its law, its compulsory. All you need to do is be sure to notify them and send in the royalties in the manner that is specified.

    I think that is a pretty clear statment that posessing a copyright is NOT the same as owning property.

    > Tonight's homework: What about circumvention of
    > access control AFTER the copyright expires and
    > the work enters the public domain?

    It doesn't matter, no software will be going into the public domain for the next 80 years or so (ok more like 60). Certainly no current day, well used software. By that time the interests of Big Buisness will have done away with the concepts of public domain and "fair use".

  • by edibleplastic ( 98111 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:16AM (#904633)
    I have to admit that I am really pleasantly surprised (if this article is true) that the judge has realized that you have to seperate the algorithm from the crime. Just as someone mentioned in another post, listing the contents of LSD is very different from making it.

    It seems to me that the biggest problem has been divorcing the legality of posting the DeCSS from the legality of copying and pirating DVDs.

    The next part, and this will be the trickiest step, is how to deal with the legal and illegal uses of DeCSS. I agree with all the posts here talking about how one of its major uses will be to circumvent the horrendously idiotic region controls that the MPAA has built into it. This goes back to the heart of intellectual property issue, that I buy it and I should be able to get every part of it. Hopefully this issue will get resolved in another fasion (probably a court case) so that people don't have to DeCSS their DVD's just to get all the content.

    The other side is how to deal with the piracy. It seems to me that this will eventually mirror the mp3 issue... the algorithm is of course legal, but piracy isn't, and I suppose we'll see the MPAA looking more and more like the RIAA, hunting down Napster sites. I hope that the Congressional hearings on Online Music will have implications on fair use and licensing that will extend to the MPAA. As they currently stand, the intellectual property laws cannot continue to exist, and they most certainly will have to be changed. And this is why the DeCSS case has been so complicated.. it has been impossible to divorce it from issues of intellectual property rights, the rights of the consumer, and the potential for piracy.

  • by Vanders ( 110092 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:54AM (#904634) Homepage
    But the poster of such information could be held liable as aiding and abetting to a crime. If DVD's start being pirated, couldn't MPAA start suing all the distributors of DeCSS?

    I guess the various Gun manufactures must be in a lot of trouble then. And car manufactures. Hey, brick and bottle makers best watch out, people use them to smash things. Oh, and knife makers, tool makers (Hammers, crowbars). I could go on and on...

    The point is, providing a tool to a person is not a crime. If that person then uses the tool to commit a crime, then thats their problem. I shouldn't be liable if i tell someone how to light a match, and they burn down a hospital.
  • by Rand Race ( 110288 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:13AM (#904635) Homepage
    So by your logic, posting an article explaining how to fire a gun would make one liable for every murder or assault commited with a firearm. An article on 'toe-heel' driving could make you liable for every speeding ticket in the nation. The CDC would be responsible for every BackOrrifice hack, and don't write a book on programming since that would allow someone to write a virus for which you would be responsible.

    I am not responsible for what people do with the information I give them unless it can be proved that I actively conspired with them to commit a crime.

  • by tjwhaynes ( 114792 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:29AM (#904636)

    Firstly, this sounds like an extremely positive step. It's about time that source code was given the legal protection of being self-expression - almost everything else creative is given this distinction so this sounds like it will finally give source code the recognition it deserves.

    But while it sounds like the courts may be getting it sorted, it looks like we still have a long way to go in educating the Media at large about technical issues. First, this NYT article constantly babbles about how DeCSS allows people to copy DVDs. AAARGGGGHH. How do we get the Media to realize that you can copy DVDs anyway, without the DeCSS code? And more importantly, how do we get the Media to spot the distinction between Access control (i.e. CSS) and Copy control (such as special disks, watermarking, etc.). This seems to be an issue that just isn't getting explained in the general press.

    Cheers,

    Toby Haynes

  • by Kagato ( 116051 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:42AM (#904637)
    It's a yes and no question. The original release of DeCSS was on Windows, not linux. The reason for this was at the time UDF support in linux was not up to par. So what did DeCSS do? It unlocked the DVD, descripted the contents and copied a VOB onto the hard drive.

    Everyone, even Emmanuel Goldstein and Jon Johansen have stated DeCSS copies the VOB to the harddrive in windows. So the Times is correct, the version of DeCSS that Johansen released, a windows Binary, was designed to COPY files from the DVD drive to the hard drive. It is however, a qualified yes because the end intention was to copy the files to Linux and allow them to be played there.
  • by lordmage ( 124376 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @09:02AM (#904638) Homepage
    Great analogy.

    Very simple, I would get arrested if I went and broke into someone elses locker, but if I broke into mine. I have the right to destroy my own property.

    I can blow up my car, I can kick dents in it. But YOU CANNOT. There is the truth. If reconized that we own the property, then we can do whatever we want.

    So, is the DVD ours? or a loner?
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:32AM (#904639)
    I wonder if it's too late for Nazi Germany to sue the British for breaking their code in WWII?

    Don't be silly...everyone whos seen the film U-571 knows that it was the Americans who captured the Enigma machine, cracked the code single handedly, and won the whole war without any help from the rest of the world!

    Oh, wait...
  • by Roblimo ( 357 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:38AM (#904640) Homepage Journal
    Both fair use and the ease of copying DVDs without decryption certainly were mentioned. I have read all the trial transcripts as they have become available. Boring as hell, but part of my job.

    An interesting note is that Slashdot was mentioned over and over again as a primary source of information by both the plaintiffs and the defendants. Even Judge Kaplan seemed to have read many of the /. comments about the case.

    His decision is going to be interesting. I look forward to reading it.

    - Robin
  • by Outlyer ( 1767 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:38AM (#904641) Homepage
    I would totally disagree. The code itself protests a law. To put it another way, the Buddhist monk who set himself on fire to protest the war was not claiming that the fire was free speech, however, you cannot deny that the combination of fire, and the monk was a powerful free speech image. Perhaps that's a slightly intense image, but in this case, this 'code' alone is not free speech, but in combination with what it means and what it does, it is.
  • by mattdm ( 1931 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:15AM (#904642) Homepage
    Copyright (and other intellectual property) isn't some sort of magical natural right. It's something we've set up as a society because in general it's a good idea that promotes creative expression. However, it's not an infinite right -- there are limits to its extent, including the fair use doctrine. These limits exist for exactly the same reason as the IP laws themselves: the benefit of the public as a whole.

    Since it's so easy to replicate digital media, it's fair to make some laws which govern doing so, and to have the government enforce those laws. But why should we radically increase the rights given? Large copyright interests are taking the opportunity presented by digital media to attempt an overcompensation -- they're asking for rights they've never had before.

    --

  • by MrBrklyn ( 4775 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @07:06AM (#904643) Homepage Journal
    One of the problems that those of us watching this case have had in our
    analysis and understanding is that we are so
    passionate about the issue of being able to create free software
    to play DVD's, and the threat of the DMCA to the continued development
    of free software, that we are overlooking the specifics of this
    particular case.


    In the case against Corey, we have a situation where the prosecution
    is saying that Corey is trafficking in an illegal software program
    that violates the DMCA. The defense, on the other hand, has been
    arguing that Corey is a JOURNALIST!!! and that the links to the
    DeCSS program is a protection of the 1st Amendment, protected
    Free Speech and an issue of Freedom of the Press.


    In this light, actually, the issue of the DMCA is actually a side
    show altogether. The real issue is can the court suppress the
    Press from reporting the location and contents of DeCSS,
    regardless of any violation of the DMCA.


    In consideration of THIS question, Kaplan is asking if the Horse is
    out of the Barn, Is DeCSS publicly available knowledge which is
    newsworthy and therefor afforded protection. This is indeed a
    fair point of view in regards to this specific case. Does it
    really matter if 2600.com publishes the link, as opposed to
    the NY Times?

    Probably not.



    However, such a ruling does not answer the fundamental question
    of the legality of the DMCA or it's use as a legal means to
    repress reverse engineering or forms of freedom of speech more
    specific the "Fair Use" doctrine.



    On the other hand, if Kaplan rules that DeCSS is a form of
    speech protected under the 1st amendment, regardless of it
    being an instruction kit to descramble the CSS algorthim or
    not, then the issue of the Horse being out of the Barn is
    irrelevant. Free Speech is assumed to be permitted, horse, barn
    or entire farm notwithstanding!



    In any event, a ruling in favor of Corey under this logic may not
    be what's in the best interest of Free Software, or for that matter,
    the public's welfare. Ideally, Kaplan would examine the facts and rule
    that the property rights of the writers of the DeCSS permits them to
    reverse engineer the CSS encryption scheme, and their rights to
    freedom of speech permits them to distribute the code
    as they see fit. He would rule this is permissible under the DMCA
    and in line with previous Constitutional Ruling of the Supreme Court,
    or he would rule that the DMCA is unconstitutional because it's
    enforcement would violate the civil rights guaranteed every citizen
    to their property and their freedom of speech. Then he would
    rule that because the software was legally developed for a legal
    purpose, that the MPAA's arguments for a permanent injunction
    has no basis in the law, DMCA notwithstanding.


    Baring a ruling similar to this, the MPAA might loose this battle, and
    not appeal, thereby sidestepping the major issues which argue that the
    DMCA is either unenforcible as the MPAA wishes it to be,
    or unconstitutional. And in the long run, that would be very bad
    for the public and Free Software.


    Bet the Farm on it!!


    New Yorkers for Fair Use [nyfairuse.org]

  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:57AM (#904644) Homepage Journal

    Movies are a form of creative expression. Code (and, by extension, compiled software) is a form of creative expression. You can put a EULA on code. Or a GPL. Or a BSD license. Or whatever. So why can't you put these on some other form of creative expression?

    You can, of course. You just can't count on the end user agreeing to the EULA. The terms of the license is entirely optional to the end user! (Yes, even when the license is the GPL.)

    When I buy some software, there's a tiny little implicit contract between me and the vendor (who is likely not the copyright holder) which is basically: money in exchange for a copyrighted work. And when I download some GPLed software off the 'Net, there's probably no contract at all.

    At this point, I may not have even seen the license or know whether or not it exists. I certainly haven't agreed to it yet. After I own the box that contains the software, or after I have exploded the archive, I might see the license and then decide whether or not to agree to it. If there's a seal that says, "by breaking this seal, you agree to..." I don't worry about it because I know that the words on the seal are incorrect, even misleading. I already own it without the need for an additional contract.

    If I don't agree to the license, then the usual copyright laws apply. I can't redistribute the software, but I can do anything within fair use. This even applies to software that is distributed under GPL! If I do decide to agree to it, well, then whatever is in the license applies. Some licenses (e.g. GPL, BSD) grant me additional rights, above and beyond the rights given to me by copyright law, to entice me to agree to them. Think of those additional rights as my "consideration" in the new contract that I'm entering into with the copyright holder.

    In the case of DVDs, the MPAA offers a license that nobody wants. It doesn't grant any additional rights, so there's no reason for me to agree to it. (In fact, if it doesn't have any "consideration" for me, it may not even be a legal contract at all.) Therefore I reject the license, plain and simple, and just accept the rights given to me by copyright law. The only restrictions on what I can or can't do with the DVD, are the ones specified by copyright law. The license is irrelevant if I don't agree to it.

    (Of course, the restrictions "specified by copyright law" were severely changed when DMCA passed. A lot of people think that it is an unfair law. All unfair laws should be ignored, since the Purpose of Law is to serve us by making the world a more fair place, rather than to make us slaves. Laws that do not serve the public interest are a form of tyranny. I wish legislators would stop and think about that for a moment before they vote on things.)


    ---
  • You can no longer avoid paying a license fee to the DVD/CA to make a disc.

    Ah, but the CSS algorithm has been reverse-engineered and is no longer a secret. Why pay a license fee when you can get the specs for free? Just download DeCSS and invert its function.

    That's the trial I really want to see: DVDCCA suing a publisher for making an encrypted DVD without a license, in order to play in Phase 2 players.

    Because if the publisher were to win that case (and I think they would) and 2600 loses the DeCSS case, then every single DVD player manufacturer -- even the ones who already have licenses from DVDCCA -- would be in violation of DMCA unless they reached a settlement with that publisher for "authorization" to circumvent.

    Read DMCA some time. It uses words like "authorization" but is pretty vague on who does the authorizing. I'm pretty sure it refers to the owner of the copyrighted work, though it doesn't explicitly say that. I'm damn sure that it doesn't refer to the inventor of the algorithm.

    I wish there were some say to make Judge Kaplan aware of this. It sheds a lot of light on the bizarre consequences of DMCA's language.


    ---
  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:28AM (#904646)
    Touretzky is an interesting guy. I first heard of him while studying simulated neural networks. Definitely not a CS lightweight.

    However, it may be appropriate to label him as an "activist" as well. On his Web page [cmu.edu] you'll find links to such things as his "Ethics and Etiquette in Scientific Research", deCSS, Cyber Patrol's filter list, and the latest poop on Scientology and Amway.

    --
  • by Black Parrot ( 19622 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:42AM (#904647)
    > Even Judge Kaplan seemed to have read many of the /. comments about the case.

    Yes, but did he moderate them up, or down?

    --
  • by SuperKendall ( 25149 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:57AM (#904648)
    The case looked like trouble to start with, but now it looks like they may have a good ruling - this just goes to show that the EFF CAN wage an effective legal war in this case and others like it.

    Show your support, and send money [eff.org] to them RIGHT NOW. There simply is no more effective way to tell the MPAA and RIAA that they can not get away with what they are trying to do.

    Boycotts will not work. Protests will not work. Support the only fight that can actually achive a lasting victory!
  • by RebornData ( 25811 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @06:47AM (#904649)
    I'm sure I'll get moderated down for this one, but I have to say it:

    DeCSS is being used for piracy today. Anyone who believes otherwise is deluding themselves.

    I'm not talking about the old-style piracy of copying a disk physically and selling it through some black market channel... this is the modern, Internet-enabled kind. Download Scour Exchange sometime and search for videos- you'll find plenty of movies there that are described as having been converted by a DVD rip.

    With mpeg4 (divx comes to mind) it's very feasible to put a reasonable quality dvd rip into files that can be downloaded without too much trouble by anyone with a DSL connection. It's happening today- people who didn't buy the DVD download these movies and watch them for free. This is piracy, any way you look at.

    It's like guns- they have many potential uses, but it's hard to ignore that they're awfully good at killing people. DeCSS has many potentially benign uses, but it's awfully good at helping to enable piracy. If freely packaged with the right tools, it could enable digital piracy of DVDs on a scale approaching that of mp3s and CDs.

    Just so you don't think I'm some sort of industry flack- I think the movie (and music, for that matter) companies are being terribly hidebound and reactive, and they deserve every last bit of damage that comes from their inabililty to grasp and sanely exploit the potential for electronic distribution of their content. I don't think programs like DeCSS should be illegal. Lawsuits against companies like Napster and Scour are sad attempts to return to an earlier time when complete control of content was possible through restricting physical distribution. My only point: just don't say that DeCSS isn't used for piracy- that's BS.
  • by Stavr0 ( 35032 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:42AM (#904650) Homepage Journal
    OK. I'll bite.
    That's like saying there's no creativity in designing bridges, buildings etc...
    My god man, Cathedrals rely on those laws and rules in order to stand up for centuries, but take away the creativity and I'd rather they fall down than to look at a functional, boring square box they'd turn into.
    (Moderators, don't 'troll'/'flamebait' this just yet. I want to see those hundred of replies how this suit's got it all wrong.
    ---
  • by Mickey ( 90903 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:26AM (#904651) Homepage
    I don't know about its being called "expressive content," but I did always think it ludicrous to tell someone, "No, no, I'm afraid you're not allowed to decode my encryption. Shame on you."

    I wonder if it's too late for Nazi Germany to sue the British for breaking their code in WWII?
  • by nlvp ( 115149 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:46AM (#904652)
    I'm really tired of reading news articles (ie the link) that continue to state that the purpose of deCSS is to copy DVDs. You'd have thought that they'd get over that particular item of technical ignorance by now.

    But of course every time someone makes that mistake and publishes an article containing the implication that the purpose of deCSS is to copy/pirate/steal, it strengthens the MPAA's case. If people are copying DVDs, then go after them, sure, but isn't it time they came clean and declared once and for all that the CSS is a tool for segmenting the market, creating regional focuses that allow them to price discriminate, and potentially create a new source of revenue through the need to licence the CSS code to companies that want to make DVD players?

    Does this also mean that amateur film-makers will be unable to create films for distribution on DVD because they won't be allowed to use the CSS encryption standard and therefore can't create content readable by CSS-hobbled DVD players? Or am I wrong about that last point?

  • by mu_cow ( 168630 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:25AM (#904653)
    Here [nytimes.com].
  • by Andy Dodd ( 701 ) <atd7NO@SPAMcornell.edu> on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:56AM (#904654) Homepage
    CSS-capable DVD players will play one of two types of discs:

    CSS-encrypted discs for the player's region

    Non-encrypted discs which will play in any region.

    It's perfectly feasible to create an unencrypted region-free disc, and playing it will be no problem as long as you use the correct file formats/bitrates/etc. (Which ARE documented AFAIK - In fact, there are guides on how to make your own DVD. Although in most cases they cover using the DVD filesystem/file format on CD-R media, which DVD players will recognize and play just like a normal DVD.)
  • by raygundan ( 16760 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:36AM (#904655) Homepage
    Circumventing access control devices ought to be legal. There is nothing illegal about picking or smashing or melting a lock, unless by doing so you violate some other law. (trespass, theft, etc...) There should NOT be laws against breaking access control mechanisms in the computer world, either-- it would remove a right that we have otherwise. If you break the encryption on a DVD you own for watching in a manner that is consistent with fair use guidelines (in your house, with a couple of friends, no public showings, don't redistribute it, etc...) there is nothing wrong with it.

    The distinction between a marketing control device and an access control device is a good one, but breaking both should be legal, so long as no other laws are violated. If I want to hack the living crap out of my linux box, breaking every access control device I can find along the way, I should be perfectly within my rights to do so. To declare otherwise legally would be silly.
  • by konstant ( 63560 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:34AM (#904656)
    I don't know why the Times article repeats so often that DeCSS is about copying DVDs. It isn't, it's about access control and the movie studios trying to control what you can you with a DVD *after* you have bought and paid for it. We know this all ready, but the general public doesn't and it is a shame to see the Times drop the ball.

    Ah, but that's only what it means to us, to the consumers who purchase and have to make use of these DVD products.

    To the MPAA however, which has far more potent propaganda organs than Slashdot can boast, this really is about copying and piracy.

    When you rip a DVD directly without decryption, the resulting DVD remains playable only on MPAA-controlled hardware. The number of "rogue" copies is limited to your financial potential for output of physical DVDs - in other words, not much. This means the MPAA can largely restrict number and presentation of their movies, ultimately squeezing scarce-product revenue out of zero-scarcity information.

    But with DeCSS, users can extract a clear copy of teh content, and present it via any channel they like, including the Internet. Unlike some geeks on slashdot, who for some reason only envision a future of broadband when piracy isn't on trial, the MPAA fully expects movies to be downloadable in a short period of time by ordinary viewers in just a matter of a few years.

    They are trying to head off the perceived obsolesence of their marketing and distribution channels. It's not piracy now they're fighting but piracy five years from now.

    All together now: YOU CORPORATE A$$HOLES!

    -konstant
    Yes! We are all individuals! I'm not!
  • by Battra ( 65036 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:32AM (#904657)
    I don't know why the Times article repeats so often that DeCSS is about copying DVDs. It isn't, it's about access control and the movie studios trying to control what you can you with a DVD *after* you have bought and paid for it. We know this all ready, but the general public doesn't and it is a shame to see the Times drop the ball.

    They had acutally been an important supporter of 2600 through this case and made a point of linking to the 2600 site to test the MPAA's contention that linking to DeCSS is illegal.

    Well, at least the article wasn't written by John Markoff
  • by molog ( 110171 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @05:52AM (#904658) Homepage Journal
    DeCSS is NOT used primarily for law breaking.

    Well then, what is it used for?

    Well I use it to decode the DVD vob to my hard drive, then run a converter to mpeg format, and then I watch the movie. I am well within my rights as I own the DVD that I'm decoding and watching.

    If the DeCSS people had never published it, these people probably wouldn't have found the decryption algorithm, correct? So they're all essentially DeCSS offshoots.

    For your info, speed ripper was out long before DeCSS was. In fact the code for DeCSS was not originally available but then the css-auth code came out. I do not think that they are all DeCSS offshoots and I would love to see you prove it. If DeCSS and css-auth have no practical purpose, what about its role in LiViD [linuxvideo.org]?
    Molog

    So Linus, what are we doing tonight?

  • by DragonMagic ( 170846 ) on Wednesday July 26, 2000 @04:39AM (#904659) Homepage
    I've been reading the transcripts on 2600 [2600.com] throughout the trial because it's too far to drive to sit in on the court case, and realized many things during the course of the trial.

    First off, that the MPA admitted that their original suit and their original assumptions changed over the course of the trial. They admitted they only targeted DeCSS and knew when the trial was starting that they weren't going to get a piracy issue through. The true nature of the suit filed had been changed so that they had a better chance to win.

    Secondly, that the MPA was really looking to make the DeCSS code and software a tool to help copy DVDs and help take away their licensing powers, but failed to call the proper witnesses. They did do a better job cross-examining the Defense witnesses than examining their own witnesses, from what I could see. As well, calling only one MPA agent for the prosecution seemed to weaken their case more, since she failed to shed much light on anything.

    Truthfully, I think that DeCSS will win, just based on the lackluster case built by the MPA lawyers. I don't think they've actually built any substantial case about anything other than they're going to lose their ability to control licensing of their DVD encryption. If the MPA had better prepared for the case and realized earlier on that they were focusing on the wrong points, we might have seen DeCSS shut down permenantly. Not that such a thing could happen effectively, but it would have been the ruling.

    My only hope is that Congress sees the growing trend of corporations trying to take away rights of their consumers by using the laws, and stop listening to lobbyists for the corporations about "proper" copyright laws. It just leads to cases like these.

    Dragon Magic [dragonmagic.net]

FORTRAN is not a flower but a weed -- it is hardy, occasionally blooms, and grows in every computer. -- A.J. Perlis

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