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Amicus Brief in DeCSS case 161

e271828 writes "Brian Kernighan, Marvin Minsky, Ron Rivest, and Richard Stallman are among the CS stalwarts that have jointly filed an amici curiae brief supporting the EFF and 2600. The brief, hosted on Cryptome makes for excellent reading." This is to accompany the appeal that we mentioned a few days ago.
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Amicus Brief in DeCSS case

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    He pointed out that, when all is said and done, only two parties (the plaintiff and the defendant) are impacted by a court decision.

    Your dad meant to say directly impacted. Court cases can affect the definition and interpretation of law and that is where can have an effect on you and me.

  • by Anonymous Coward
    That's not how a court works. A case establishes what is called a precident. When there is a significant precident, a court will hardly think about what the right decision could be; it will go with the precident. If four CSS decryption programs lose in court hen the fifth CSS decryption program will lose almost immediately, possibly through summary judgement. Lawyers arguing related cases will also use the decisions made on this issue, just as this amicus brief is using a number of other cases to make their point.

    Wake up. This case will affect you, one way or another.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    I want to know what "111 F.Supp.2d 294, 326 (S.D.N.Y. 2000)." refers to. Lots of coolness/irony points if it's related to this case or 1st amendment rights.
  • by Anonymous Coward
    If you want people to care, tell them something that will matter to them.

    For example, pretend I am an average consumer who owns a Windows PC. Why should I care about DeCSS? Give me a nice, simple sound bite that doesn't require me to convert to the free software religion first.

    Note, specifically, that as an average consumer with a Windows PC I don't give a shit about what Linux (or Mac, or Amiga, or Playstation) users can or can't do. Why bother writing software to play DVDs? My computer already plays DVDs just fine. Anyway, you can pay money to license it if you want.

    More importantly, I don't give a shit about abstract concepts of freedom of speech or code. I will never write or compile software, I will almost certainly never make a movie or write music, and as long as the new Harrison Ford movie costs $14.95 or less at Circuit City, I don't care if there's restrictions on copying it. (If it breaks, I buy a new one.)

    So, tell me: as a Windows-using information consumer, why do I give a shit about DeCSS?

  • by Anonymous Coward
    If I'm reading the brief correctly they're saying that plain-English words on a page are given standard First Ammendment protection, and they feel source should be treated the same. Why not then do what the MD5 author did and write up a generic, plain-English description of how the DeCSS algorithm works? Once that happens it's no longer computer code (in the court's eyes anyway) and the whole functionality argument goes right out the window.

    You know what would happen next? The paper would fly around the net and within a few days you would have a dozen different implementations. I'd like to see the MPAA and DVDCCA try and tackle that one! :)
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:52PM (#483733)
    A friend of mine couldn't find a free player for Windows, either. There are several software DVD players for Linux now, albeit not with the most efficient software decoders.

    If you really don't want to pay for a shareware player, it looks like your only option is to download a DVD ripper (I think FlaskMPEG+DeCSS is the only choice if you don't already have a DVD player software) and make DivX copies of those movies. You can then get the codec installed in Windows (and Linux, thanks to the avifile Wine loader hackery) for free.

    But with all the noise about this case I would think they were fighting something "REAL", not just some source code sippets.

    Get on an OpenNAP server, search for "divx". There are hundreds of ripped movies out there, although bandwidth is still precious enough that people will only let you trade, not freeload. (Or is fear of authority the problem? Hell, I'm nervous enough to post anonymously and I don't even have any pirated movies)

    The MPAA is scared as hell. Thanks to Blockbuster's "DVD per night" rental card and CD-Rs it costs about a dollar to rip a DVD movie. Thanks to cable modems it costs about a dollar more (or zero marginal cost, for people who would get a cable modem anyway and only trade a couple movies per day) to send a copy of that rip across the country. That's a fraction of what the movie would cost otherwise, and only a fraction of that goes to the producers through Blockbuster.

    Don't get me wrong, it's still not enough reason to stomp on the First Amendment, but if they weren't trying to destroy fair use rights I'd actually be sympathetic.
  • DeCSS can't be suppressed.

    You are probably right. There will always be some copies around, and hackers, or even script kiddies, will be able to compile it and to use it to decrypt movies.

    But for DeCSS to be really useful to the Linux community or even to the average consumer, it needs to be included in a decent player, and shipped with e.g. Red Hat, Debian, and SuSE. This will not happen with a product thac cannot be legally distributed.

    However, the underlying theme is still more important. If code is not protected as speech, you may not be able to talk effectively about cryptography, about bugs in commercial products, about viruses, or about filter programs. You may not be able to publish programs such as Freenet, Napster or Gnuzilla.

    In fact, Napster is something that might hurt even your average Windows user...

  • This would be correct, except for one minor little problem- precedent. This case, and others like it, *will* matter when it's our turn be sued for being programmers.
  • No.

    The way to bring this issue to "normal" people (Joe 6Pack), is to tell it like it really is. What is this issue about? It's about undue influence of government by well-funded special interest groups.

    There is only one cure for this.

    Campaign Finance Reform.

    Again, I blame all the morons who did not vote for Bill McCain in the primaries. Until we get real Campaign Finance Reform that has teeth, nothing will change. The moneyed interests will do what they have to to ensure that the legal environment favors them.

    End of story.
  • Don't be silly, you can't make the MPAA change their tune. Not with market forces, when the market consists of many billions of sheep willing to spend their money on products despite your lunatic ranting. The only way to fix this problem is to remove the undue influence moneyed parties have on the lawmaking process. In other words, we need real Campaign Finance Reform NOW.
  • by algae ( 2196 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:39PM (#483739)
    I love it! They referenced various poems written in perl as an example of creative speech using computer code, and the Internation Obfuscated C Code Contest as an example of satire. Never thought I'd see *that* in a legal brief.
  • Contrary to popular belief, i guess Verio didn't destroy digitalNation. It's spirit lives on.

    But then again, I'm biased as a customer and former employee...
  • Someone should write a program that translates computer code into english, and another that translates it back. Simply distribute the english version!

    "Allocate a storage location named i.
    Place the number 3.1416 into i.
    For each integer between 1 and three do the following:..."

    Sort of like COBOL.

  • Reading this is a real eye-opener. This brief is so well-written, even I (who hate legalese) could read it. Moreover, it elegantly illustrates just *why* code is speech, why any other view is a slippery slope towards eroding protections, and why it is in the best interests of the court to overturn the previous ruling and just give up on any attempt to litigate this matter.

    Not to mention the list of people on this -- it's like a "who's who" of CS/IS. The only person they missed was CmdrTaco :-).
  • by Squid ( 3420 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @01:04PM (#483743) Homepage
    I seem to recall a case in the 1800s involving counterfeit music rolls for player pianos. Judgement was something to the effect that, machine-read documents could be protected under copyright law the same as human-read ones.

    That judgement, I also seem to remember, WAS the standard by which computer software was allowed to be copyrighted up until the next major reform in copyright law sometime in the 1980s.

    Now I want to go a step further. Machine language and people language are equivalent for copyright purposes - otherwise software, and for that matter, the MPEG streams contained on a DVD, can't be protected by copyright! But the MPAA, which THRIVES on the fact that machine and human languages are equivalent under copyright law, wants to separate the two under the First Amendment - and it's gonna be damn hard for them to demonstrate LEGALLY (not financially) why they should be allowed to have it both ways.
  • Since Slashdot can easily get 14 "first posts" in the time it takes to write one, it is nearly impossible for post 14 [slashdot.org] to be "Redundant".
  • The (textual strict subset of English) program or the (having nothing to do with DeCSS) strict English interpreter?

    I disagree with your point, since as others have pointed out a program is still a program even if it's interpreted. But even more important is that your point is irrelevant to the above question; I think you're losing sight of the forest for the trees here...
  • How 'bout:

    30 and a grad student : 8 to serve on the lumenecense committee which finds, based on the research done by another dozen and cited by another ten in a peer-review of tenured faculty that the grad student should do it.

    The wheel is turning but the hamster is dead.

  • In October 2000, the Librarian of Congress completed the first rulemaking mandated by 1201(a)(1). One exemption was for "[c]ompilations consisting of lists of websites blocked by filtering software applications." 37 CFR Part 201. If the LOC rulemaking now legitimizes the use of a program such as the X-stop decoder to compile such lists, it makes no sense under any theory of copyright law that 1201(a)(2) proscribes the distribution of such a program,
    I'm not sure that this is accurate. As I understand it, the exemptions are purely to the clause that prevents the act of circumventing the technological measure; creation of a device that curcumvents is still illegal. So, only cryptologists with a pad of paper and lots of time can decrypt filter lists; librarians aren't allowed to because they don't have the skill, and tools to do it can't be created.

    1. Am I correct

    2. Who do I contact

  • Suddenly I'm very pleased to be a Verio SDSL customer. I would never have dreamed a telecomm provider like Verio would have the testicular fortitute to tell the MPAA to smeg off.

    Schwab

  • You make an excellent and important point, but miss an equally excellent one. Motion video display, cature, and editing on Linux is immature and could use some work. The work put into mpeg2dec and the XVideo extension directly impacts people who want to use free software to make and watch movies.

    Look at the recent Apple product announcements. New Macs are shipping with the ability to capture video to MPEG-2 streams and burn it to DVDs, watchable on regular DVD players. The MPAA is already out of the loop. Free DVD software is just a way for free software users and developers to participate. You don't want the Mac people having all the fun, do you? :)

    Anyway, my point is that free DVD software makes independent (non-MPAA) movie making even cheaper than it ever was before. Soone you won't even need an expensive video tape deck: you can do everything in the digital domain with free software, everyday computers, and cheap DVD-R media.

  • by Jeffrey Baker ( 6191 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:08PM (#483750)
    The last paragraph really trashes Judge Dickhole's original opinion in this case. The authors leave no doubt that they consider the judge to be a puppet for the entertainment industry, instead of a sworn defender of the Constitution:
    We leave this Court with these disturbing ideas, because we suggest that the lower court's note evinces an attitude that Appellees' economic interests must be protected at all costs. The "functionality" of code was, we think, a means to an end, not a legal basis for decision. If code is to be proscribed at all, it must be only after the attempt has withstood strict judicial scrutiny.
  • by Jeffrey Baker ( 6191 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:27PM (#483751)
    If you are willing to ditch W2K, Xine [sourceforge.net] with the Captain CSS [nbci.com] plug-in makes watching DVDs in linux a joy.
  • by Jeffrey Baker ( 6191 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @03:58PM (#483752)
    CSS is not "core" to DVD. You can make perfectly good DVDs without CSS. In fact, many major movies, even those from large American studios, are sold on DVD without CSS. These movies can be played in any player without any illegal-according-to-the-mpaa software. And certainly any movies you make on your own will not be encumbered by CSS unless you choose to inflict it upon yourself.

    The core technologies of DVD are the disc and player itself, MPEG-2 video compression, various audio encodings including AC3, and a file system with chapters, menus, and branching.

  • Further, for those who can read code fluently, the code itself is a precise description of what is intended, more than any amount of English.

    They are handing an argument on a platter here, in my view. Pages spent saying code is speech, there is no line between code and expression, etc. is subverted right here. At least in debater-ish terms; no idea what a lawyer would make of that.

    The statement in question is saying that no amount of English can provide as precise a description of what is intended. And you're right in questioning this item. I suspect that what they meant is that no amount of English can describe what is intended as succinctly as the source code.

    Oops.



    --
  • Ah, I see. Do you refuse to go to the movies as well?

    I mention this because I refuse, and I've found that I don't really miss them. As for DVDs and players, I've found a solution I'm happy with & it's the same I use for major-label CDs: buy used. That way, not only is the MPAA not getting your tithe, but you've help keep one less drive from getting wasted & thrown away.

  • Further, for those who can read code fluently, the code itself is a precise description of what is intended, more than any amount of English.

    They are handing an argument on a platter here, in my view. Pages spent saying code is speech, there is no line between code and expression, etc. is subverted right here. At least in debater-ish terms; no idea what a lawyer would make of that.

    On a different note, I found it funny that they couldn't get by without a reference to Star Trek:

    What SLS has developed is not as advanced as the computer interface on the starship Enterprise, of course, but it is a working example of human speech as the "source code" for a computer

    -j

  • There should be no need for ISPs to "have decent mac support". An ISP is providing a TCP/IP connection to the "rest of the world". Therefore any ISP should be usable with any client platform. It should be just as silly for an ISP to only "support" WinTel PCs as it would be for a cable TV company to only support (for example) Sony TVs.
  • Similar to other documents I've read, this interview [linuxworld.com] with Jon Johansen states "encryption code wasn't in fact written by me, but written by the German member" and that he was keeping the names of his collaborators anonymous. (At the time of this interview he only knew these people by IRC nicks.) I would contend that the core of DeCSS is this encryption code. The account [eff.org] of DeCSS's creation given by the EFF in their brief is in my opinion intentionally misleading. Fortunately for the EFF and 2600 it does not appear that the MPAA has decided to use this distinction, for now. It is important because the DMCA from what I read authorizes "reverse engineering" only if the copyrighted materials were being used legally. If the ones who did the encryption code are anonymous, how can it be proven that the information used was obtained legally? Yes there is an account after the fact about how one could have obtained this information, but if the source is anonymous, how can this be proven? My objection to characterizing DeCSS as being written by a "boy" (EFF's word not mine) is that this is simply a misrepresentation of the events for emotional reasons. If we believe what Johansen has said, we have no idea what the ages of the other coders were. They could have been well into their thirties and beyond. And more troubling, there is nothing to rule out that they were industry insiders leaking trade secrets. This is not "reverse engineering" in any sense of what Compaq did when it legitimately reverse engineered the IBM BIOS with people it could prove did not have access to IBM IP.

    I believe that on First Amendment grounds the Supreme Court will eventually rule to lift the injunction against 2600 for linking, but that the DeCSS code will be ruled to infringe the Constitutional DMCA. After all I believe in the Betamax case the Supreme Court ruled that Congress had to specify explicitly what were the limits of fair use. Congress has done so. So we'll get 2600 scoring a media victory while a Supreme Court case will set a long term precedent against fair use, one whose significence will be equal to Betamax. This I feel is madness for the EFF to pursue if it had the best interests of the community at heart. Find a better case.

  • Ask a dumb question, get a great answer.

    W
    -------------------
  • Why does this sound so much like:

    "First they came for the Jews
    and I did not speak out
    because I was not a Jew.
    Then they came for the Communists
    and I did not speak out
    because I was not a Communist.
    Then they came for the trade unionists
    and I did not speak out
    because I was not a trade unionist.
    Then they came for me
    and there was no one left
    to speak out for me."

    - Pastor Martin Niemöller, 1938

    Has it occured to you or your father that once a precedence is set, then they can move on to other lawsuits with more ease of prosecution?

    Vip
  • Mainly I was trying to illustrate (a bit colorfully I admit) how irrelevant the judicial branch is compared to the other two branches...

    This may be true in terms of ENFORCEMENT... but the FINAL WORD is the supreme court. Think about it.. the FINAL WORD. Without the final word, enforcement is bologna.

    Legislators can throw all the crappy laws out they want.. yet the court COULD reverse every damn one of them. STRIKE THAT.

    Pan
  • That's not the point. I too would pay if I needed to. The point is that blanket Digital copyright protection schemes (ala CSS) have no provisions for Fair Use.

    Pan
  • If you tape movies or news shows now using your VCR, imagine when VCR's don't work anymore. Ten years from now, nobody will own a VCR... you won't be able to archive anything digital, because it will be illegal to do it.

    You won't be able to clip obituaries from the digital newspaper. You won't be able to print it, because it would be illegal.

    The DMCA will apply to everything you see at bookstores, video stores, on TV, on the Radio, on the Internet... anything copyrighted and protected.

    The right you enjoyed as a teenager to record your favorite band interview from a radio show will soon be gone...

    Pan
  • After all, a DVD is a program. The code that performs the operation of the menus and such is a program. Clearly, and with no doubt. The MPEG stream itself could also be considered a program: it's the object code for the virtual decoder machine. Actually, in the case of a DVD player, it is being fed to a hardware MPEG decoder which is nothing but a special purpose processor.

    So, by the MPAA's own logic, it appears that DVD's do not in fact qualify for First Amendment protection. They are programs for DVD players. The fact that they may (or may not) have artistic content or communicate ideas is secondary to their functional aspect as a set of commands to run a DVD player.
  • What if someone were to make a compiler that would compile simple computer instructions written in English into C source code or an executable?

    It's been done. Omri Schwartz wrote C to English to C perl scripts [mit.edu] a/k/a DECSS (Descriptive English for C Statements and Subroutines).

    An English version of css-auth.c [cmu.edu] produced with this program can be downloaded from Dr. David Touretzky's Gallery of CSS Descramblers [cmu.edu].

  • Okay, I think I see what you are saying here, and I agree. You are not affected until the MPAA personally comes over and sues your ass. But... I think what everone else is trying to say is that IF the MPAA DOES sue your ass, the precedent of this case is going to make their case against you practically open-and-shut, no? And with every victory, their next victory is easier. That is why no one wants them to win even once. It makes it that much harder to beat them next time.

    Now definitely this is not as bad as all of this becoming law, as you say. If that happens we are all fucked because the cops can come and bust our heads. So is eveyone on the same page here now? :)

  • I'm very satisified with them. I had some periodic connectivity issues for the first couple of days after I signed up, but they cleared it up before it even became enough of a problem for me to contact them.

  • IANAL, but I think you misunderstand what the brief means when it refers to "First Amendment protection". See for example (my emphasis):

    We acknowledge that no court has held expressly that a copyrightable original work of authorship must, necessarily, be entitled to full First Amendment protection,
    including strict judicial scrutiny, but the conclusion is ineluctable.(10) Code is a literary work, and there is no basis for distinguishing between the levels of Constitutional review given to differing types of literary works.(11)

    The argument is, I think, "Code is copyrightable, which suggests that it is speech in the same way that, say, a novel is. Therefore it deserves the same First Amendment scrutiny as a novel". Now a novel can certainly be suppressed in the US. But it can only be suppressed if First Amendment law permits it, for example on the grounds of obscenity. All novels come under the First Amendment, not in the sense that no novel can be suppressed, but in the sense that no novel can be suppressed unless the First Amendment permits it; this is the "First Amendment protection" that the apellants are claiming for source and object code, and which Kaplan denied it on the grounds that it didn't come under the full remit of the First Amendment at all. (In the context of that argument, quoting Harper & Row makes perfect sense, since a jugdement which implies that "it's copyrightable, because it's speech" is rather handy if you're trying to asssert that "it's speech, because it's copyrightable".)

    DeCSS is of course home and dry under "strict scrutiny" - trying to prove it obscene, defamatory or what have you would be an interesting exercise. Not all code would; a computer game could well be ruled obscene, while, trivially,

    printf("[obscene novel]");

    surely wouldn't be any more protected than

    [obscene novel]
    .
  • This was with regard to Crytome's publishing of public court documents in the 2600 case where the source code for DeCSS was entered in as evidence. If 2600 wasn't a free speech case, this most certianly is.

    I would be curious to see how the MPAA would sue the courts for publishing DeCSS.
  • (The laws of irony require that I made at least one spelling error in this, but I haven't found it yet)

    Well, you did forget a . after the word ``yet''. Not a spelling mistake, but an error nonetheless.

    (Not a flame, just reassuring you that you didn't break the laws of irony. :)
    --

  • by LennyDotCom ( 26658 ) <Lenny@lenny.com> on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:35AM (#483770) Homepage Journal
    about a ISP that is not backing down to the MPAA threats
    news.com [cnet.com]
    good timing

  • Probably why we had a 500-comment story [slashdot.org] about it the other day.
  • Thanks - since I'm the lawyer who wrote the brief. ;-)

    Very good work, and understandable to laymen also.

    The EFF brief [eff.org] is excellent reading also.

    When can we expect a ruling on the appeal, btw?
  • If a machine takes speech (or even textual English for instance) as input then processes that data, the machine isn't running object code derived from human language... it's data processing, based on some other code the machine happens to be running.

    This 'data processing' is also done when you run code written in other interpreted languages. Are you saying that the perl script I just wrote isn't a program?

    Also, there is nothing that prevents you from writing a compiler that takes structured english as input and produce object code.

  • This argument is *very* important because of the precedent that has been created. If limitations can be placed on source code because it doesn't meet some judge's idea of "Speech", then many other types of programs could be affected besides DeCSS. That being said, I hope that there will be other briefs filed that go to problems in the DCMA as well.
  • if I wanted to post other people's creditcard numbers or root passwords online, would that be allowed? After all, it's just an expression of my thoughts.

    See what you wrote there?

    If the CC#'s or passwords belong to other people, how can you claim ownership?

    If you wanted to post your credit card number or root password, then you'd be perfectly entitled (and stupid) to do so.

    And this is what the entire case is about - people want to post their own code, not someone else's. Just like you could post an explanation of a how credit card CRC checks are done, or the crypt(2) algorithm used to encrypt a password.

    Short answer: there are specific legal definitions of what constitutes free speech. Posting someone else's personal information isn't one of them. Go look them up before posting again.
  • Yes, I was going to point this out, too. Very nicely done - almost sounds like a thinly veiled threat that there may be other actions taken...

    Are there any other legal actions to be taken besides the appeal?
  • This is such a non issue.

    Au contraire, mon ami.

    I don't for a minute believe that any of them think they are going to win, and even assuming some crack smoking Judge did put some sort of ban od DeCSS, that will not make it go away.

    But that's not the point, even tho I will agree with your conclusion. The point is to blow a gaping hole in DCMA. Ideally, to kill it, but rendering it ineffective should be adequate.

    I am BOFH. Resistance is futile. Your network will be assimilated.

  • by coyote-san ( 38515 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @01:09PM (#483780)
    You obviously don't know much about how the US judicial system works.

    Civil suits are between two parties. Everyone else is an observer, even if it's clear to everyone involved that the plantiff carefully searched for a defendant who 1) didn't have many resources to fight the case and 2) seemed to have the best case for establishing broad precedents.

    Once the judgement comes down against the plantiff the details don't matter - the precedence has been established and every subsequent court case in this jurisdiction must consider it. (I won't get into binding vs. non-binding precedents, etc.) This is a powerful tool for suppressing dissent, since every future defendant must prove why the precedence doesn't apply in their case.

    Needless to say, this create a HUGE potential for mischief. To balance it, courts allow others affected by any precedence established, but not involved in the specific case, to file briefs that may be considered by the court. These briefs usually illuminate points that one party doesn't want brought up - and the other party *can't* bring up because of the rules of the courtroom. This might result in a reversed judgement, or at least the restriction of the judgement to be non-precedent setting.

    The MPAA may be fuming about the content of this brief, but there's not a whole lot they can do about it. Any attempt to suppress it would merely serve to highly just how carefully constrained their case is -- and why it must not be used to establish precedence for suppressing such publications.

    Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer, but I paid attention in civics class. If you think I have no right to discuss this (and potentially learn from others) then you believe that either 1) voters are best when ignorant and apathetic or 2) that only practicing lawyers should have the right to vote. Either way, you are no friend of democracy.
  • by werdna ( 39029 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @05:20PM (#483781) Journal
    Perhaps the most important quote:

    2. Among academics and programmers, communicating in computer code (in addition to or in lieu of a natural language) is essential "[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts ...", the core purpose of copyright. U.S. CONST., art. I, 8 (Copyright Clause). Minimizing First Amendment protections given to code would deter, not promote, the progress of science.


    While I agree with the conclusion, I don't think the argument is the most important one, either legally or morally in the present case. Legally, the DMCA could stand even if it were not authorized under the Copyright Clause -- because Congress could still be empowered to enact the statute under the Commerce Clause.

    Morally, the importance of promoting the arts is salutory, but not at the core of the First Amendment. Even if there were no redeeming social value whatsoever to software content, the First Amendment does not permit government to regulate it (with exceptions not relevant here). The point is that it doesn't matter whether the Court believes the content is good, bad or ugly -- what matters is that it is expressive.

    At the end of the day, it is for the marketplace of ideas, and not the government, to decide the worth and worthiness of expressive content.

    This, to me, is the most important issue.
  • by rjh ( 40933 ) <rjh@sixdemonbag.org> on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @10:31PM (#483785)
    I think we all agree that Kaplan was nothing but a paid lackey for the MPAA.

    Kaplan doesn't give a damn about the MPAA. I have yet to meet a Federal judge (and I know well over two dozen of them) who doesn't possess a remarkable degree of intransigence and stubbornness. These are not necessarily bad traits in a judge, by the by; you want a judge who is stubborn enough to stand his ground and decide things according to legal principle and the demands of justice, regardless of public opinion.

    Brown v Board of Education was a tremendously unpopular decision in much of America, but the Supreme Court simply didn't care. Ditto with Roe v Wade, which to this day causes Supreme Court justices to get mailbags full of hate mail.

    By and large, Federal judges cannot be "paid lackeys". A lackey is the inferior of, and subservient to, the person he serves. Federal judges possess such intransigence (and, some would argue, arrogance) that the only thing they consider themselves inferior of and subservient to are abstract notions like law, social justice, individual liberties and so on.

    what happens to him then?

    We send him lots of mail at his courthouse accusing him of being an intellectual coward who ought to step down from the bench to spare the Judiciary further humiliation. But guess what? That's our only recourse.

    Was his decision wrong? Yes. Poorly reasoned? Yes. Was his decision so horrifically negligient as to rise to the level of an impeachable offense? Nope.

    We want judges to possess near-ultimate judicial independence. Look at Judge John Sirica, who (some would argue) used sweeping and unprecedented powers of the judiciary to assist a grand jury in its investigation of the Watergate break-in. Nixon hated Sirica and probably spent every waking moment wishing Maximum John would get hit by a city bus.

    Nixon challenged Sirica's legal authority both in Congress and in court. The Judiciary Committee refused to even consider impeaching Maximum John; while what Sirica had done was sweeping, it was far from impeachable. The Supreme Court refused to overrule Maximum John; while the Court agreed that Sirica was going like gangbusters, the Court said that Sirica was acting in accordance with the best traditions of the Federal Judiciary.

    Now, if the President of the United States can't get rid of one single Federal judge, a judge who possesses lifetime tenure specifically so he can check abuses in other branches of government, do you really think you have any chance of getting Kaplan off the bench because he made a decision you don't like?
  • Do you mean: <a href = "http://www.verkkotieto.com/~lm/c2txt2c/">This& lt;/a>?
    <BR><BR>
    This was originally created for the Bernstein case mentioned in the Amicus brief.
  • *grin* Anyone who has the balls to use examples from Star Trek or Perl code in a document to The Court is pretty cool in my book.
    --
  • >Does English communication itself need actually make sense in order to be protected under the US Constitution?

    Nope, it doesn't.

    >If I were to string words together without 'meaning' in its conventional sense because, say, I liked the way in which they sounded, would that be protected?

    Yes. What you describe exists, Dadaism makes a lot of use of this. It's filled with nonsensical 'words', chosen for their sound(or even the way they look). I found this one quite a good example: Gedicht by Kurt SChwitters. (don't bother with the bable fish. The title means simply 'poem').

    >If I were to write a long rant that was meaningless to the casual listener, would that be?

    Yes. but why write rants in Welsh? ;)
  • Another interesting point is the claim that there is no distinct line between natural language (e.g., English) source code and object code. The example they use is a natural language processing system through which a computer takes actions based on spoken, conversational English. It is argued that that can be described as a form of source code. If the court decides to draw such a distinction, the lines are bound to become more fuzzy in the future.

    If one form of language recieves protection, and another does not, this can get very sticky as technology improves.

  • by michael_cain ( 66650 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:45PM (#483793) Journal
    It is sad that there is even any question about whether code is language. Can you imagine calculus without notation? Code is good for expressing certain kinds of ideas; English is good for expressing a different set of ideas; and French is better than English for expressing some ideas. Different cultures have different ideas about what is important and the language will reflect this.
  • by XLawyer ( 68496 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:58AM (#483794) Homepage
    This link [cryptome.org] should work better than the one at the top of the page.

    It's a good brief, and it's especially worth reading if you think no lawyer can write anything except impenetrable jargon.

    One of its great strengths is the way in which it tries to connect the subject of the case, First Amendment protection for source code, with things judges know about. Judges (and lawyers) for that matter tend to resist learning about technology. Even if they're willing, they have little opportunity. So you have to talk about it in the way they understand.

    Early in the brief, we get a couple of lines of Visual Basic. They wouldn't do much in real life, but they illustrate the point. My favorite part of the brief is footnote 4, which compares source code to legal citation: each is impenetrable to outsiders, but each is a clean, compact, and efficient representation, which is transparent to people who speak the language.

    The only thing that makes me sad is that I doubt the court will recognize the weight attached to the names on the brief. We all recognize names like Kernighan, Minsky, and Stallman but there's really no way to communicate that weight to an outsider. It's like those newspaper ads demanding that Mumia be released from jail and appointed dictator-for-life--there's lots of names signed at the bottom, and some of them are connected to impressive institutions, but I suspect that they're adjuncts, or junior assistant professors, or leaders of impressively-named organizations that don't do anything because these people invented them.
  • Motion video display, cature, and editing on Linux is immature and could use some work.

    How can Linux video editing software advance, when the core of manipulating DVD, the Content Scrambling System, cannot legally be a part of it?

    Yes, I fully support developing MPEG video codecs, non-linear editing software, etc.

    I just don't support DVD!
  • by wowbagger ( 69688 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:55PM (#483796) Homepage Journal
    I keep seeing people on /. saying "use package foo and bar to watch DVDs under Linux".

    People, I feel this is the wrong approach. Until I can use software that has NO legal cloud over its head, I refuse to buy DVDs, DVD players or DVD drives.

    One of my machines at home threw a CDROM drive night before last. I went to buy another. I had a simple choice: buy a 50x CDROM drive for $X, or buy a 16x DVD drive for 2*$X. The cost delta meant next to nothing to me - either was an incidental, "do you want fries with that" type of purchase. I waffled briefly over buying the DVD drive, then said to myself, "HELL NO! I am NOT going to give the MPAA any satisfaction on this. I WILL stick to my guns, and wait until the DeCSS is held to be completely legal before I buy a DVD. And if that day never comes, then I will never buy a DVD."

    I don't want to come off as an extremist, but this is the BEST way we can make the MPAA change their tune: hit them in the ass pocket. Don't buy their crap. Don't give them money. Encourage your friends to do the same.

    Just say NO!
  • I seem to recall a case in the 1800s involving counterfeit music rolls for player pianos. Judgement was something to the effect that, machine-read documents could be protected under copyright law the same as human-read ones.

    You're probably thinking of White-Smith vs. Apollo [findlaw.com], and if you are, your memory is wrong. The supreme court held that piano rolls were not covered by copyright. Obviously things are a little different today.
    --

  • While I agree whole-heartedly with the "code in any form is free speech deserving protection" argument, it's not the right approach to take on appeal. There are two more fundamental problems with the MPAA vs 2600 case that aren't even being addressed by this appeal.

    Problem #1: You shouldn't be able to shut down or file suit against a web site simply because you don't like the material to which it links. Links are just a form of reference, and there is nothing illegal about making a reference to anything you want.

    Problem #2: DeCSS was the result of legitimate reverse-engineering. The DMCA is inherently evil and unlawful because it removes what was a previously protected ethical right to reverse-engineer any product just by observing it or taking it apart.

    This case is only about free speech as far as links are concerned. It is actually more concerned with the legality of reverse-engineering and the illegality of the DMCA.

  • Wow. They sure have a lot of academic weight behind this. I havn't seen so many doctors listed in one place since the time-share sales pitch in Orlando!

    -Vercingetorix
  • by nezroy ( 84641 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:52AM (#483804) Homepage
    We cannot know what the court would have done had it been asked to enjoin a purely English narrative of the DeCSS source, but the note strongly suggests the court's willingness to do so. It is unfathomable that English prose could be a circumvention measure under the terms of DMCA, yet the court intimated that it might have so found. And if DMCA could be read to proscribe English as a circumvention measure, the Constitutional ramifications come into even sharper focus.

    The brief in general culminates to this point, which is essentially that the Court enjoined speech to protect the interests of corporate money. Now even the most Republican judge will stop and pause before letting THAT slide. Despite the Republicans and the corporate leaders being age old bedfellows, they still have to face a certain degree of public review. And even the most average Joe Schmoe who couldn't understand the cake recipe, let alone a Perl program, will be able to understand that point. No American, no matter how Republican or right-wing (or Liberal or left-wing) is going to accept a courts decision to enjoin anything on the grounds of protecting corporate money. Ever. It's probably the one thing you can count on Americans to get angry about, actually. As long as the case continues to be presented in this light, the public support will ultimately fall on "our" side.
  • by Arker ( 91948 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:41AM (#483807) Homepage

    Very well reasoned and argued, as one would expect given the source.

    Perhaps the most important quote:

    2. Among academics and programmers, communicating in computer code (in addition to or in lieu of a natural language) is essential "[t]o promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts ...", the core purpose of copyright. U.S. CONST., art. I, 8 (Copyright Clause). Minimizing First Amendment protections given to code would deter, not promote, the progress of science.

    That point cannot be made often enough. What the MPAA wants to do is use copyright in a way completely antithetical to the reason copyrights were granted to begin with.

  • The references cited in this brief include:

    Bravo to the amici curiae[? [everything2.com]] for giving the court (or at least its clerks) such fine reading material!

  • by Jim Tyre ( 100017 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @01:22PM (#483811) Homepage
    It's a good brief, and it's especially worth reading if you think no lawyer can write anything except impenetrable jargon.

    Thanks - since I'm the lawyer who wrote the brief. ;-)

    My favorite part of the brief is footnote 4, which compares source code to legal citation: each is impenetrable to outsiders, but each is a clean, compact, and efficient representation, which is transparent to people who speak the language.

    I started law school in 1975, but I still remember my reaction when I saw my first case citation, something like "What the HELL is that?"

    To whatever extent peole like the brief, though, I take only some of the credit. The amici helped me a lot, of course, and at the top of my help list was Seth Finkelstein, a friend and excellent programmer.

    There will be more amicus briefs in support of 2600, due Friday. I just needed to get mine in early because of my own schedule.

  • This closing statement encapsulates the consequences of Kaplan's reasoning in his decision. The amici are not accusing him of being a tool, or they suggest that they hope he is not, but ascribe to him a form of intellectual cowardice. He was unwilling to face the consequences of a correct judgement on the facts.
  • by bludstone ( 103539 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:49AM (#483813)
    wow. this is a great example. blew me away.

    4. If "$plain_text = $file_key ^ $xor_block" seems unapproachable, consider what those not trained in the language of legal citation would make of "111 F.Supp.2d 294, 326 (S.D.N.Y. 2000)." Each is meaningless to those unfamiliar with the language; but each is more precise and compact for those who do understand than would be an English narrative equivalent.

  • by DESADE ( 104626 ) <slashdot@nOsPAm.bobwardrop.com> on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:43AM (#483815)
    on this site is at:

    http://cryptome.org/jg-wwwcp.htm [cryptome.org]

    Great info on how the industry is working to stop digital reproduction rights.
  • If you're going to call someone a moron, check your spelling. Courts establish precedents, not precidents.
    Although a court did establish our president, so if you were making a pun and not a misspelling, I applaud you.

    (The laws of irony require that I made at least one spelling error in this, but I haven't found it yet)
  • Everything you've said could have been applied to CDs in 1984.

    "Why do I want to listen to music on my computer? That's why I have a stereo."

    "It's no big deal to store one little CD in my rack for when I want to listen to it."

    Fair use is what enables you to make use of content for non-commercial purposes. It underlies everything from a college student's right to compile excerpts and bibilographies, to the recent judgement affirming your right to space-shift your music onto your Rio. The idea behind fair-use provisions is to limit unreasonable legal controls on your access to copyrighted material. Some of us think that the use of unreasonable mechanical controls should be limited as well, if the intent of the law is taken into consideration.

    Your arguments amount to "I don't care about what rights you strip away, as long as I'm not using them at the time. Sounds like somebody else's problem." Wrong.

    You're right, though, in that it's a real challenge to get the idea across to Joe Six-Pack.
  • by John Miles ( 108215 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @03:05PM (#483818) Homepage Journal
    Do you have an MP3 collection? A directory full of your favorite music in a single easily-accessible place that lets you determine how, when, and where you listen to it?

    Would you like to be able to do the same with movies someday, when the necessary storage space is cheap enough?

    I'd like to keep that ability (and the right to exercise it without becoming a criminal). And that's why I oppose access-control schemes of all types. They simply don't do a thing for me as a consumer.

    I don't like to see the Federal legislative process brought to bear against my fair-use rights. Unless action is taken on consumers' behalf, the lawmaking-by-payola charade that brought us the DMCA will only get worse.
  • SUMMARY OF ARGUMENT
    It cannot seriously be argued that any form of computer code may be regulated without reference to First Amendment doctrine.
    Universal City Studios v. Reimerdes, 111 F.Supp.2d 294, 326 (S.D.N.Y. 2000).

    And from the amici:

    Based on all of the foregoing, the functionality of code should not, and does not, limit the First Amendment protection to which it is entitled.
  • Absolutely. Facts differ. When you read what Judge Kaplan wrote, you can see that the domain names that seem to advertise dvd copying figured prominently in the early going. THIS IS NOT AN ACCIDENT. He surely, deep down, believed that this was about piracy.

    At that point, the case is virtually impossible to win. Why? Doesn't matter. The first child to kill his parents and then put his hand out for the inheritance certainly argued "Hey, I'm an orphan!" Despite whatever law was on the books, the trial judge probably said "too bad, you lose in my court, see if you can get your inheritance out of the court of appeals, but you won't get it out of me!"

    It is virtually impossible to get a jury or a trial court to give you a win on bad facts. This guy did not take the job to promote injustice. Really. The bad-boy, geek-counter-culture thing did not help in conjunction with articles on the site about "hacking" and "copying dvds."

    When he was an NAACP attorney, Thurgood Marshall turned away hundreds of cases of race discrimination because the facts were not perfect. He knew that the system was stacked against him, so he only took "perfect" cases. Why? Despite the justice he sought, he knew he had no margin of error in trying to move the precedent his way. Case 1, perfect. Case 2, next to perfect, case 3, a little less perfect maybe. Try to move the law by microns each case.

    Despite what a later response says, I see no reason to believe that Judge Kaplan was really biased. Grandpa saw a would-be thief, and hammered him. It's that simple. If you were out of your technology curve, you might do the same thing if that was the story you understood.

    Lemme tell you, you'd much rather have had an MIT researcher hauled in for publishing the results of his research on CSS in an academic journal than this case. MPAA would NEVER bring that case. Let's keep in mind here that the MPAA is not stupid, it chose this particular battlefield for a reason -- its a reasonably good one for them.

    That said, there is still a chance that the Second Circuit will find the DCMA overreaching. The Second Circuit has tended to favor copyright in traditional (atoms) media, and disfavor it in new (bits) media. Cross you fingers.

  • by Artagel ( 114272 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @02:10PM (#483822) Homepage

    Wait a minute let's get clear that there are two different kind of impacts.

    Your father is dead right that in terms of the effect of the JUDGMENT, that only the parties are bound. That is, whether or not 2600 can put DeCSS on its web site is determined by the outcome of THIS CASE.

    On the effect of PRECEDENT, that's part right. The trial judge's opinion has little precedential value. Some other trial judges might give it weight, or might not. Again, your father is right that it is not that big a deal for anyone else.

    The place where this veers into the land of incorrectness is the impact that the APPEAL will have. This is to the Second Circuit Court of Appeals. When the Second Circuit decides this case, that makes the law for all of the federal trial courts in the Second Circuit that includes NY. A federal trial judge in NY will look at the opinion and see one that he is bound to follow.

    In addition, the Second Circuit is one of the most influential federal courts of appeal in the nation. Other federal trial judges and appellate judges, even those not bound to follow the Second Circuit, will be substantially influenced by the opinion.

    In sum, now is when the rubber really hits the road. Walking away before this step was not a big deal to uninvolved people. Whatever happens with this appeal will have lasting effect on what others can expect when they walk into court.

  • And for a good reason. This ruling touches greatly on academic freedoms, and as such they will band together to make sure that their position is heard and defended.
    This will end up in the Supreme Court, and which way it will goes I don't want to hazard a guess. (Bush's appointments would follow the Consitution more closely than those that Gore would have appointed - thus more likely to rule agaist the MPAA (knock-on-wood)).
  • You are in fact right that all this fuzz is about a silly, practically unreadable piece of pseudocode.

    That makes a strong case for treating this as Free Speach (instead of treating this as a real Circumvention Device).

    And secondly, it makes me wonder exactly how far the DMCA goes. I mean, the crypto community claims that the CSS system contains a lot of weaknesses for a crypto system. But the DMCA says it is a copy protection system and thus it may not be circumvented.

    What if there was no real copy protection system at all? Would it be illegal to go out on the street say (or rather, post on your website) "hey, folks, you can just copy a DVD, takes no pain". Would that be considered harming a trade secret?

    I'm sure judges would laugh their head off when the MPAA tries to sue someone for saying just that. But it's not substantially different. What I'm trying to say is that this DMCA stuff is bound to move the line that divides simple everyday knowledge and computer crime.

    One of the results might be that hardcoded passwords and other idiotic "security measures" will be introduced into everyday systems because the companies developing it know that they can silence everyone that discovers their stupid code. That would mean to me that the world gets what it deservers, so I don't really fear this situation -- it would be heaven for those amongst us being a little bit less than avarage skilled in computers, right? So in fact it means, power to us -- and we never abuse our powers, do we? :-)

    But another result might be the trendy fear of "power to the industries". Which means they decide whether you can see your favourite movies or you have to watch those stupid commercials again. This isn't cool, but hey, it can get worse:

    The worst result of all is, however, control of your knowledge. You will not be allowed to discover things that are meant to be "secret". One day they'll declare it to be a "secret" that you can also run Linux on Apple's latest hardware platform. They might even get so far that you'd have to pay $1 for an on-line service to change your desktop background in Windows, and that you'd have to pay Disney $1 extra if you used an image of Winnie the Pooh (whereas the original author of WtP doesn't get a nickel because they can't buy the law as Disney can), and you'd go into jail if you discovered how to put your own image there for free.

    You may think I'm being ridiculous here, but again, it is not substantially different from the DVD case.

    And slowly but gently we'd become a race of apathic zombies that gladly stick our heads in our asses if the brothers Warner ask us to do so.

    No. Knowledge should always be freely spreadable. If you can do something yourself (playing DVD's, movies, music) and don't really need any external services for that (a "licenced DVDplayer", a bioscope, CD's), then you should never be forced to rely on the external services in any way. "We know what's good for you" has never been any good to me. Let the users decide. That's what they call "free market" and "democracy".

    It's... It's...
  • I know exactly what you mean, but when I got my computer, I definately DID get a DVD rom with it. I did NOT, however, get an MPAA-sanctioned dvd DECODER card with it. Nor did I buy dvd decrypting software.

    You see, the MPAA has nothing to do with a dvd rom. Suse linux comes on a DVD. Lots of data is stored on a data DVD. Now, if you buy a dvd decoder card, some money goes to the MPAA. But just a dvdrom is definately a useful adition to a computer.
  • I was just listening to an MP3 of 'Off the Hook' from July- the 2600 radio show hosted by Corley. If you want more insight into this case (in a listenable format) download the MP3's [2600.com] from 2600.com [2600.com] - Interesting perspectives from before, during and after the case.

  • It doesn't matter. Basically you're saying that taking away decss impacts me indirectly. But only in that now decss is gone. I can still write my own decss (or hire someone to write it for me). The mpaa has to file suit to stop me. So while I may be delayed, there has been no relief granted against me, there is no reason I cannot have and use a decss until the mpaa comes after me.

    A law has no impact on me unless it has executive backing (in this case the willingness of the mpaa to file suit against individuals) which isn't done by the judicial branch (and so this court case cannot grant relief against me). I stand by my first statement, let the court interpret the constitution any rotten way they want. They only take away decss, not my ability to generate my own decryption.
  • by brsett ( 169637 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:57AM (#483844)
    The most important piece of insight about court cases came from my dad (a lawyer) a few weeks back.

    He pointed out that, when all is said and done, only two parties (the plaintiff and the defendant) are impacted by a court decision. It is in fact meaningless to everyone else. They can interpret the Constitution any rotten way they want, but only two parties are impacted. I bring this up, because at first I thought this kind of crap (banning DeCSS) was going to make being a programmer (my beloved profession) insufferable in 15 years. But it won't, cause the court is only one arm of the government, and is no more or less corrupt than any other. Witness, the election, sure we were impacted because we may care who the president is, but only Bush and Gore were able to receive relief. In this case only MPAA receives relief (though they don't deserve it). Every other piece of code that breaks the DMCA has to have an injunction brought against it as well. This does not stop you from hacking other copy encryptions (even CSS), it just stop DeCSS. Let them ban it, maybe I'll start my own CSS decryption project and they'll have to come after me. Then you write your own, and they come after you. It still doesn't matter. Trials only affect two parties.

    And thank goodness I might add, otherwise I might of sat up nights worrying (and I used to think about this kind of stuff alot) about something as insignificant as the judicial branch. :-)
  • The link you are looking for would be cryptome.org [cryptome.org]

  • by fjordboy ( 169716 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:32AM (#483846) Homepage
    I think the real problem is that not very many people are informed about what the MPAA is doing and what we can do about it....That is why I got the anti dvdcca shirt and the got decss shirt from copyleft. [copyleft.net] I get extremely strange looks in the halls, and when people question me about the shirt, I am able to tell them about the oppression from the MPAA and about decss and why source code is free speech and such things..I think if anything is going to be done, we need to get the word out.

    want to see the shirt in action? go here [iceball.net]

  • .... indeed, Kaplan's original judgement said so, at length. The point at issue is how much the 1st amendment actually protects.
  • I don't want to come off as an extremist, but this is the BEST way we can make the MPAA change their tune: hit them in the ass pocket. Don't buy their crap. Don't give them money. Encourage your friends to do the same.

    On some aspects I agree with your post, but I prefer a more subversive approach. I looked for and purchased a DVD player that has hidden options to subvert region coding, macrovision (i.e., analog copy protection), etc. There is nothing wrong with DVD technology, and in fact many movies are available as unencrypted DVD (no CSS encryption used). But purposely looking for and purchasing "empowering" equipment is my way to regain my rights - to use the media I purchase the way I want, and not for piracy.

    Another poster in this thread said this too -- existing copy protections are failing in their goal. Real-world software pirates do not care about encryption because they make bitwise copies of whatever it is they are pirating. Copy protection has always been an inconvenience for the honest consumer, and a nonsolution for the real pirates.

    I'm in the process of converting my old cassette tapes and LPs (the big black analog CDs :-) to MP3. This is fair use, and our rights have not changed for video!

    -3dr

  • Advocating overthrowing the government by violent means. This one's banned.

    What about the US Constitution? Doesn't it allow just that?

  • by Alien54 ( 180860 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @11:37AM (#483851) Journal
    One of the arguements that made the most sense to me was the idea the "Source Code And Object Code Are Copyrightable And Thus Entitled To Full First Amendment Protection."

    As noted further:

    9. No legislation can diminish First Amendment rights, but the DMCA expressly provides for such rights. 17 U.S.C. 1201 (c)(4) states that "[n]othing in this section shall enlarge or diminish any rights of free speech or the press for activities using consumer electronics, telecommunications, or computing products."
    This point is not only important, but has a broader relevance on other technology issues, such as the the push to leave out technology options for recording, time-shifting, etc.

    The case continues to have a wider importance then we first imagined.

  • This is not different from how such trailers are presented on analog media. Is there a fast-forward feature that at least cuts the sound and reduces viewing time by at least half?

    This is in no way meant to be argumentative. I will not buy a DVD player as long as they have things like "Region Coding" and don't do useful stuff like record TV shows, so I have no experience with the devices.
  • In the brief there is a discussion of the differences (or lack thereof) between source code and natural language. What if someone were to make a compiler that would compile simple computer instructions written in English into C source code or an executable? Then you could write whatever software you want and since it is English it would be easier to defend as free speech. Just make the rules for the English that the compiler would accept very rigid so there is no ambiguity.
  • by JWhitlock ( 201845 ) <John-Whitlock&ieee,org> on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @01:05PM (#483859)
    I usually have a hard time making my way through legal documents (anyone else try to read the text of Valenti's testimony?), but this one was clear, to the point, and very convincing.

    In the U.S., it is actually a point of law that any judge is able to rule on any subject (law students may know the case that affirmed this). This means a judge that has no agricultural background can rule on agricultural cases, those with no science background can rule on scientific cases, etc, and that a judge who can't turn on a computer can rule on computer issues. This is necessary (should a case not be tried due to a lack of "expert" judges in a district?), but annoying, resulting in judges issuing decisions that make us shake our heads in confusion.

    Because judges are often not experts, they require a case be argued in terms of earlier cases, or rely on expert witnesses. Often, the defendant who "looks better" in the eyes of the law will have "better" expert witnesses and present "more convincing" previous cases to base decisions. A corporation's lawyers will often look better than lawyers representing a hacker's magazine.

    For this reason, Amicus Briefs that are as clear as this one are very important. This lets a judge hear what the real experts think, and even confirm the briefs with outside sources.

    Of course, it would also help to create a new degree, comp-sci-law, so that all programmers are also lawyers. That way, we can argue these kinds of cases on equal footing, and we make money whichever way a case goes. Maybe a few of us would make it into Congress as well...

  • by Peter Dyck ( 201979 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:28PM (#483860)
    Among academics and programmers

    We're already there. The lawyers are now telling Prof. Ed Felton of Princeton him that he can't release his promised details on what was wrong with the SDMI watermarking systems, because of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

    Wake up people.

  • by touretzky ( 215593 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @02:11PM (#483862) Homepage
    Omri Schwartz has written some Perl scripts that automatically translate C code to English, and the English back to C. This is similar to the c2txt2c program that was used to encode blowfish, but Omri's code is a more general and robust solution that has successfully encoded css-auth. Omri's code and the output it produces for css-auth can be found in the Gallery of CSS Descramblers [cmu.edu].

    The URL for the Gallery is cited in the amicus brief. I'm proud to point out that among the co-sponsors of this brief there are four Carnegie Mellon faculty, including the dean of the School of Computer Science. MPAA has been keeping a hands-off attitude toward the Gallery, perhaps because they realize how bad it would look if they tried to censor an academic work.

  • Totally agree. Encouragement should be given to Artists and Performers to back this. This Freedom of Speech issue has been fought by them for years. The programming profession is almost totally new to this.

    I for instance run a small art and technology gallery and we're putting out a GPLed CD of experimental music where each artist uses the DeCSS source code as a creative element in each of the tracks.

    Lawyers, Judges, your parents, and neighbors have a much stronger personal, emotional, and intellectual relationship with music (even obscure music), t-shirts, etc. than they do with source code. The tracks can , BTW, be downloaded at circumventiondevice.com [circumventiondevice.com]

  • by RareHeintz ( 244414 ) on Wednesday January 24, 2001 @12:03PM (#483870) Homepage Journal
    Despite the fact that it's a legal document, that has to be one of the most lucid and ironclad expositions of the software-as-free-speech argument that I've ever seen. Add to that the huge body of legal support cited, and the bona-fides of the participants, and this is a mighty big stick.

    Now we just have to hope that the appeals court can connect enough brain cells to comprehend it.

    OK,
    - B
    --

  • Actually, the court is one way, perhaps the ONLY way, to get the horrid parts of the DMCA declared illegal.

    Given that the DMCA passed unanimously by BOTH houses of Congress, I think our chances of getting them to repeal it are hovering just barely above zero...

    However, get a Federal judge to judge the DeCSS case on the Constitutionality of the law (DMCA) that enabled the MPAA claim to begin with, and it's almost certain parts of it will go.

    The dishonorable, worthless "judge" Kaplan completely abandoned his duty to the Constitution (he did swear an oath to uphold it) in the name of previous and likely future MPAA money.

    This case will ultimately end up at the Supreme Court. What we need is to turn things around and put the DMCA on trial, and this amicus brief REALLY does a good job of raising this issue. We NEED a court to rule on this, in that way. Get a strong ruling, then it becomes harder up the line to get it overturned. I doubt the present Supreme Court will look kindly on Kaplan's ruling if handed to them to evaluate.

    The court of appeals is the beginning of the major league. Kaplan was only a lowly district judge, a relative peon compared to who has this case now. District judges get overturned all the time.

  • "In short, how do we get him fired?"

    We can't. He would have to be impeached by Congress. There are federal judges who make wacko decisions all the time (like the female judge in Texas who let a man who molested and raped a 12 year old boy off with probation).

    People in Texas are outraged and are pushing for her removal, BTW, and it looks like it MAY happen.

    The system allows for wacko judges by having an appeals system.

    Usually the only consequence is that they do not get to move up. District "judges" like Kaplan are the lowest rung. To get up to the court of appeals, you either have to show merit, or (more common) be a reliable political hack.

    Sadly, Kaplan probably stands a chance to move up eventually. Why? Because the public doesn't know enough to be outraged (like they got over that Texas case).

    Chances are, he will end up leaving the bench and cash in his ticket for a fat legal consulting job for the MPAA or a MPAA plantiff. Or else he may end up as an attorney general for a future Gore or Hillary Clinton administration (if either happens, the Baldwins can stay, I'm leaving :)
  • Back in the early 80's, when HBO was broadcast through the air, the entertainment industry said it was illegal to make your own antenna, but it wasn't. Then they scrambled the signal and told people it was illegal to unscramble it, but it wasn't. Now they are telling people it is illegal to decode some bytes on a disk. It isn't.
    The only way the industry was able to make TV scrambling stick was with 2-way communication between the home receiver and the transmitter, because circumventing that system requires sending a fraudulent (illegal) signal to the transmitter. To protect DVDs they will have to force develop a similar system whereby the player must get a new decryption key from the movie company every time you play the DVD. For now they are merely using their time-honored tactic of legal intimidation until the necessary technology comes online. The really significant battle will be between entities like the MPAA and the DVD player manufacturers who decide not to go along. Whoever has the best lawyers will win. Ask OJ.
  • Okay, your replies are well advised - but Perl and BASIC have the advantage of being fairly static (ahem wrt Perl) and easy to parse - in the sense that if you give a computer with an interpreter/compiler (yes, another program) a syntactically valid Perl/BASIC program, it should function with very high probability (unless the compiler's broken.)

    Now take a spoken language; (yes, this is going to be a different argument with little bearing on the previous post...) it's not well-defined what writing a compiler/interpreter that will act meaningfully on *any* syntactically valid English statements. Where by meaningful, I mean even a program that would print "accept" for valid sentences and "reject" for invalid ones. Spoken language is (mostly) less static than (currently) machine-readable language.... and... err... more ambiguous...

    On further reflection though, I guess it just won't be long until English is source. Ah well. Then we'll need the "Talking to your Computer for Dummies(TM)" series of books.

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