Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
United States It's funny.  Laugh. Your Rights Online

DMCA Vs. The Sewing Underground 545

Roundeye writes "So the folks at monsterpatterns.com dumpster-dive to get envelopes containing discontinued sewing patterns and sell the envelopes via their website. The sewing pattern company McCall invoked the DMCA to get the site shut down. Monsterpatterns is now suing to protect their 'fair use rights' to advertise and sell the discarded patterns. You might recall that this isn't the first time the sewing industry has cracked down on bootlegging grandmas and their suppliers."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

DMCA Vs. The Sewing Underground

Comments Filter:
  • by BrynM ( 217883 ) * on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:50PM (#6117311) Homepage Journal
    How can this be considered piracy? He isn't reproducing the patterns, he is selling hard merchandise. I understand that "He did not pay for these patterns" as Mr. Herman from McCall stated, but doesn't that make it theft? Where I live, dumpster diving is considered tresspass which could lead to theft charges, but Mr. Gendron claims "they are abandoned property" and he may be right if that is what Detroit law says. This was an underhanded misuse of an already bad law to get the site taken down. Gotta love that whole consequences before proven guilt thing the DMCA has going for it.
    • by eyeball ( 17206 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:56PM (#6117400) Journal
      Furthermore, isn't the DMCA supposed to punish and prevent people from circumventing copyright protection? Are they arguing that the dumpster constitutes a copyright protection mechanism?

      • To apply the DMCA the patterns:

        1) Would have to be digital.

        2) Have a copy protection mechanism in place. My favorite dumpster copy protection mechanism consists of broken glass, rusty razor blades and animal dung. This will protect the contents of your dumpster from copying by all except the most dedicated of dumpster divers. It also really cuts down on the repeat offenders.

        IANAL yadda yadda.

      • by Wavicle ( 181176 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @04:44PM (#6118549)
        Yes, you are correct.

        Let's all write a letter to congress thanking them for passing a law which threatens ISPs with financial ruin if they do not comply with what a business says, but essentially holds those businesses unaccountable for abuse of that law.

        Any takedown notice issued by a company whose revenue exceeds $1 million should be accompanied by a bond for $100,000. If the target of the takedown contests the takedown, the issuing company should have thirty days to commence litigation or forfeit the bond in its entirety to the defendant. This bond amount should not limit in any way the ability of the defendant to sue for damages. The bond simply exists as a token to ensure that corporations will perform substantial legwork before issuing a DMCA based takedown notice.
    • by Zathrus ( 232140 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:58PM (#6117423) Homepage
      I suspect that what's occurred here is the hobby store (Jo-Ann's in this case it seems) wants to send the merchandise back to the manufacturer for a refund. The manufacturer issues the refund but tells the store to discard the excess material -- they don't want to store it either afterall.

      It's kinda similar to books with the covers ripped off, which are not supposed to be sold since they were written off by the publisher. But it still happens. And McCall is out on a weak limb here -- if they wanted to sue someone, they should go after the store for not properly discarding the material. Or maybe they should've had it shipped back to them (at their expense) so they could discard it properly (at their expense). Once it's in the trash, it's usually considered fair game.

      It really is another horrible example of the DMCA though. Yeah, I couldn't care less about the patterns, but as you said it's a law that assumes guilt (and while, admittedly, this would be a civil case where the burdon of proof is not as strong as in a criminal case, it's still a very wrong methodology).
      • by David Price ( 1200 ) * on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:47PM (#6117912)
        Even in paperback books with the covers ripped off, the language warning against stripped books doesn't mention copyright liability. Here's the language used by one publisher:
        The sale of this book without its cover is unauthorized. If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that it was reported to the publisher as "unsold and destroyed." Neither the author nor the publisher has received payment for the sale of this "stripped book."
        Note the language here: "unauthorized." That literally means that the publisher does not authorize the sale. But so what? The publisher's authorization means nothing, unless I copy, perform, or create a derivative work of the book in question. When the bookstore cannot sell these legally made copies of the book in question, it tears off the covers and sends them back to the publisher. There is no doubt a contract involved in which the bookstore commits not to sell the stripped books, but if the bookstore violates that contract, or discards the books, then whoever bought the books or claims them from the refuse heap has not done anything wrong: they have acquired a legally produced copy, not stolen property. Unlike dollar bills in a bank's vault, copyrighted works do not magically lose their abstracted value by virtue of legal wand-waving.

        It's just the same in this case: the hobby store probably had an agreement to destroy unsold patterns, and violated that agreement by simply discarding the patterns. As a result of that violation, anyone who wanted to could legally take ownership of the discarded patterns - and this company did.

        That's the copyright case. The paracopyright (DMCA) case has no leg to stand on, because there was no actual copyright infringement. The right answer, before running off to court, is to send a DMCA counter-notice [cmu.edu] stating that McCall's does not own the copyright to the web pages in question. These pages are copyrighted, not by McCall's, but by Monsterpatterns; they do not themselves contain the copyrighted patterns. (If Monsterpatterns were disseminating the patterns themselves on their website, then this would constitute copyright infringement, since digitial distribution implies that a copy is made. The same is not true of distribution of envelopes that are not copied.)

        • Let me try this again:
          Even in paperback books with the covers ripped off, the language warning against stripped books doesn't mention copyright liability. Here's the language used by one publisher:
          The sale of this book without its cover is unauthorized. If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that it was reported to the publisher as "unsold and destroyed." Neither the author nor the publisher has received payment for the sale of this "stripped book."

          Many publishers amplify on th

    • I think this might be covered in the same way as "book destruction". When a bookstore "returns" its books to the distributor because it no longer wants to sell them, what it really does is rip the cover off and return that and throw the rest of the book away because the cost of returning the whole book is more than the cost to make a whole new book. Thats why (I think) buying a book with no cover is illegal.

      I don't know if there are laws for destruction of other works that are similar to the book thing but

    • State laws vary, some make garbage private property, but most make it where garbage on the curb is fair game
    • If it is like it is where I live dumpster diving is considered trespassing, unless the dumpster is on the curb (or near it for that matter). If it is on the curb it is lawful to take whatever you want because the previous owner has given up all previous rights they had to it by placing it on the curb. Thus making them this so called "abandoned property."
    • I guess they're using the DMCA because it's a website they're trying to shutdown.

      I don't see that resale of merchanside is hacking or infringing copyright.
  • I knew it! (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:51PM (#6117329)
    Damn midwestern grandmothers with their sewing circles. Up to no good! Oughta lock the whole lot of them up. Whole generation's going to hell in a handbasket.
  • this... (Score:3, Funny)

    by deadsaijinx* ( 637410 ) <animemeken@hotmail.com> on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:52PM (#6117345) Homepage
    bodes ill for those of us who dumpster dive for fun. Screw the piracy and patent issues, I'm concerned about the negative image us dumpster diver enthusiasts will receive
    • RIGHT!

      just because we cover ourselves with all kinds of waste (even rotten food!!!) in the process of trying to recover 5 year old laser printers (so we can casemod them and put linux on them) doesn't mean we're not worried about our image.

  • by gpinzone ( 531794 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:53PM (#6117354) Homepage Journal
    Wow, those Taiwanese can bootleg anything!
  • Sew, it's come to this, has it?
  • DMCA confusion? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Ron Harwood ( 136613 ) <harwoodr@nOspaM.linux.ca> on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:54PM (#6117369) Homepage Journal
    I thought the DMCA was about copyright control circumvention?

    What, are they claiming that a dumpster is copyright control?
  • by johnthorensen ( 539527 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:54PM (#6117373)
    That if you put "DMCA" in it, you automatically have something that will get posted by the editors of Slashdot.

    -JT
  • by gerf ( 532474 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:54PM (#6117374) Journal

    The old article stated that the Internet is responsible for declining sales of patterns for doilies and other sewing patters. Here's two reasons i think this is BS.

    1.) Given the median age of the people who still knit and sew, i'd say that few of them use a computer, much less the internet.

    1.) The people who do sew, are so old they're probably just dying off anyway, thus leading to the declining sales.

    • 1.) They can't count past one, and therefore are confused by the instructions...
    • by Torgo's Pizza ( 547926 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:01PM (#6117455) Homepage Journal
      You'd be surprised. I walked in my mother's house the other day and she wanted to show me her new sewing machine. Gee, how exciting. So I humored her and walked upstairs. Imagine my surpise when it had a LCD display and a USB cable to hooked up to her computer. All her friends at the local Sewing Guild (wow, a guild outside of Everquest!) all had similar models and she "needed to keep up".

      The latest model sewing and quilt machines can download patterns and sew just about anything. Why a guy can use one of these things and feel pretty good about himself! Ahem... not like I've done that or... anything.

      • by Gorm the DBA ( 581373 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:09PM (#6117547) Journal
        So now this brings up several obvious challenges:
        • Who'll be the first to get Mom's Singer to boot Linux?
        • Who'll write the first sewing machine virus, which copies the contents of the pattern directory and sends it to a IRC bot in #SeW1NGH@CkOrZ
        • WHo'll be the first overclocker to break the 200Msz barrier (200 Million Stiches)? And will the machine be water cooled?
        • And, of course, the mandatory case mods so the lady next door's sewing machine is also her fishtank
        Hmm...this could almost be cooler than I thought at first...
        • Who'll write the first sewing machine virus, which copies the contents of the pattern directory and sends it to a IRC bot in #SeW1NGH@CkOrZ

          ... or that takes over the machine and sews "ur sw34t3r 1s 0wnz0r3d" into whatever you're sewing.

          • I'm not "picking stitches" anymore, I'm "reverse engineering." I'm not "tailoring" anymore, I'm "setting my preferences," and I'm not "customizing a pattern" anymore, I'm "kernel hacking." Ah. Hmm, now that I can talk about it in 1337 code, I feel a lot better about admitting that I (can) sew!

            Let's just say I won't be buying any McCall's patterns for quite awhile. I think I'll stick to Burda. (Burda 0wNz0rZ j00!)
      • It's a pity that she bought into that. Sure, it's interesting to have those gadgets, but modern machines are just the crappiest, weakest construction ever. Sneeze on them, and they fall apart.

        My wife and I have a 1947 Singer. STEEL, baby, 100%. Doesn't reverse, doesn't buttonhole, uses a legbar for control instead of a foot pedal.

        That sucker stitches through leather WITHOUT a leather needle. My wife made a 32 foot long x 17 foot high x 13 foot wide "French Bell" pavillion on it, and it just needed an
    • Ya know, I was going to email this off to my mom (a quilter by hobby) as one more demonstration of the evils of the DMCA. So, you tell me. Shall I risk insulting my own mother by letting her read this comment, or let her stay blissfully ignorant about this story? Hmmm?
    • by Zathrus ( 232140 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:05PM (#6117500) Homepage
      Shrug... my wife's step-mother sews. She also teaches computer classes. She has her own computer (separate from my father-in-law's) and it used to be located next to her sewing machines (they're currently moving, so who knows after they've settled in).

      And no, she's not that old... in her 50s I believe.

      I agree that the number of people who sew are on the decline, but I've known several people (all female, unsurprisingly) my age who sew, knit, or do other such things as hobbies. And they're all from large cities (2M+), not country bumpkins.
    • I live in a Florida trailer park half-full of retirees, and a *lot* of them have computers and Internet connections. And they have a sewing club...

      - Robin
    • by gwernol ( 167574 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:05PM (#6117508)
      The old article stated that the Internet is responsible for declining sales of patterns for doilies and other sewing patters. Here's two reasons i think this is BS.

      1.) Given the median age of the people who still knit and sew, i'd say that few of them use a computer, much less the internet.


      Okay, bring on the data. What is the median age of people who knit and sew? What percentage of them use computers? What percentage use the Internet? Actual figures from a reliable source would be useful. I just don't buy this argument without seeing some evidence. After all if none of McCall's target audience used the Internet, they'd hardly be worried about a company that sold old sewing patterns on the Internet...

      1.) The people who do sew, are so old they're probably just dying off anyway, thus leading to the declining sales.

      That assumes that no-one new is taking up the pasttime. Again, do you have any evidence to substantiate this?
    • by angeles13 ( 443205 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:14PM (#6117604)
      I am definately not so old that I am going to die off, and have been sewing for more than 20 years (along with knitting and crocheting - something that alleves the carpel tunnel pain that is in my wrists from working on the computer!!)

      It is much easier to search the internet for patterns than going to the fabric store. (http://www.simplicity.com or http://www.voguepatterns.com) I can search several different sites that can create custom patterns that are the printed on plotters via AutoCad - http://www.cochenille.com is one of the best. For the patterns that have been discontinued - that has been one of the sour points of the industry. I find something that I like - and McCalls has allready discontinued it, or it's used as an example of restyling a design, can't be done.

      If it's been thrown away in the trash -- it's public. That's been proven in several U.S. courts (which is why the police do not need a search warrent to go through someone's trash).

      McCalls' -- get over it. Your patterns have not been the greatest for the past ten years. To blame your main customers for the decline is like the RIAA blaming their customers for producing insipid music and loss of sales!!!
    • by Red Warrior ( 637634 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:15PM (#6117609) Homepage Journal
      You may need to widen your circle of friends (or awareness of different subcultures). That isn't meant as a troll or swipe at you personally.
      I personally know 8 people who sew as a hobby. Only one is over 60. Two others are over 40. The other 5 are in thier 20s to mid 30s. Of the 8, 7 use a computer on a regular basis, 5 of them at home as well as work. 3 of them (that I know of) are part of online sewing/knitting groups. One of them is a software contractor. there is a (fairly large) niche market for pattern-making/designing software. There is also a fair-sized market in machines that you can program with said patterns. The 60+ YO's machine can do just about everything except go to the store and buy the fabric.

      I don't pretend to follow it all that closely, but the whole sewing/knitting hobby/subculture is alive and kicking. It probably rivals the Ham people in numbers.(Yes, yes, I know "Ham is dying, film at 11")

      That said, if the internet "is responsible" for declining sales, it's because they have failed to adapt to a changing business environment.
      • I don't pretend to follow it all that closely, but the whole sewing/knitting hobby/subculture is alive and kicking. It probably rivals the Ham people in numbers.(Yes, yes, I know "Ham is dying, film at 11")

        My wife, for example, is a professional seamstress and in her late 20's. Her job is in the costume/theatre industry. At least half of all the costumes at every show across the country has been at least altered for the actor in that show, unless the show is set in the current day and the costume designe

    • My wife is in her early 30's. She uses the Internet every day. She also knits like there's no tomorrow. She can't stand watching TV and not doing something productive at the same time. And she's not alone, either. Most of her knitting friends (and she has a lot of them) are all between teh ages of 15 and 40, and most of them are computer and Internet litterate.

      The idea that knitters and sewers are dottering old ladies is just as much a myth as the idea that all Linux users are thieving communist hippi
  • by MentLTheo ( 607841 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:55PM (#6117379)
    That once your garbage hits the curb, its public domain. I think this should constitute..
    • But, if your trash is on private property and NOT on the curb, its called trespassing at the very least.

      Perhaps even theft..

      But it don't have diddly to do with DMCA.. This is getting way out of hand.. 'guilty until YOU prove innocence'.. and no recourse for lost revenue during the process.

    • by clonebarkins ( 470547 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:07PM (#6117524)
      That once your garbage hits the curb, its public domain. I think this should constitute..

      For my own curiosity, does this include dumpsters? I mean, technically, you could be taken for trespassers if the dumpster is on the property (which it probably is). A friend and I were caught dumpster diving a few years back, and though the cops didn't do anything except get our information (we had no ID on us, and they gave us a hard time about that, but since that's not illegal -- yet -- there was nothing they could do). But they told us that we were trespassing and if we did again they'd arrest us. I'm guessing they were bull-sh***ing us, but I don't really know.

      Anyway, I guess my question is, what's the definition of a "curb"? If you hire a dumpster, does that mean the stuff in the dumpster is PD? Or does it belong to the dumpster owner?

  • The next big thing will be to monitor your trash--if someone wants whats inside, arrest them and place trash back on the market. That's what Microsoft did anyway...
  • I've described the copyright battles over cross-stitching, player piano rolls, Happy Birthday and guitar sheet music as being good analogies for what "kids" are doing today with MP3s, Kazaa and keygen cracks.

    The thing is: will you respect the current legal rights of the publisher, or will you create a new paradigm?

    Who said, "The reasonable man adapts to his environment. The unreasonable man tries to adapt the environment to himself. Thus, all progress has been made by unreasonable men"?

  • sue 'em good (Score:5, Insightful)

    by frovingslosh ( 582462 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:56PM (#6117393)
    If , as reported, they are selling actual patterns and not copies of same, then McCalls or anyone else has no business in using the DMCA in this, it just doesn't apply. Heck, it doesn't apply anyway, maybe copyright law would (for bogus copies, not for factory originals), but there is no digital security to defeat in any sewing pattern I've ever seen. Sounds like a more extreme abuse of DMCA that has ever been reported before, and there have been some good ones. Only thing they might have a leg to stand on is simply theft of property, but apparently they don't think they can support that. I hope McCalls gets sued real good on this one.
    • Only thing they might have a leg to stand on is simply theft of property, but apparently they don't think they can support that.

      If you've thrown it into the trash, I don't think you can later claim the garbage men came by and stole it.

    • by Cyno ( 85911 )
      I think what they are saying is that the trashcan was being used as something to protect their copyright. And by removing the item from their trashcan they broke their copy protection and thus the DMCA.

      Same thing as copying the DVD you purchased. You're removing the movie from some invisible trashcan stored on the DVD.

      Laws were meant to be broken.
  • I was onto something here. [slashdot.org]
  • Supreme Court? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Captain Rotundo ( 165816 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:57PM (#6117409) Homepage
    Maybe since sewing grandmas don't have the same image as Eric Corley, this would be a good case to take the DMCA to the Supreme Court over?
  • by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @02:57PM (#6117415)
    Maybe finally we have something ridiculous enough to finally overturn or rewrite the DMCA.

    That's usually what it takes -- an application of the law so abusrd that even Joe Average realizes it's a bad law. Remember the Life Begins at Conception laws where people started claiming their unborn children on tax returns for the year where they were in the womb, and female prisoners claiming that their unborn children were unlawfully imprisoned because the mother was?

    Call it the Law of Unintended Consequences Applied to Law Law.

  • I cannot stop laughing, I can imagine my grandma sitting in front of her Mac, "New Angel Pattern, SCORE, 3l33t" LMAO
  • "asking a judge to declare his dumpster diving, and the selling of his treasures, legal."

    I think for international open-sea salvage laws to apply, they'd need to demonstrate dumpster diving was in fact some form of underwater diving.

    Any reference to treasures and pirates as in "Pirated sewing patterns" can only help Mosterpatterns demonstrate the applicability of sea-faring rules. Was there a captain in the dumpster at the time of the escapade?

  • by MoxCamel ( 20484 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:05PM (#6117504)
    ...because it just goes to show how ridiculous the DMCA is. Eventually, it's going to be obvious even to lawmakers that it should be repealed. Not that we're even close to that point yet, but it's nice to see that we're headed that way.
  • by Angus McNitt ( 542101 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:06PM (#6117517)
    All this time I have pictured my Grandmom sitting home and sewing stuff for her grandkids, a fine upstanind citizen.

    Now, sitting here wearing a shirt she made me, I wonder: is this covered under fair use or are they going to take the shirt off my back? How does one check if a garment was reproduced from a licensed patern? You have to wonder how many copywritable permutations of the shirt there really are.

    Maybe this is why Granny wanted Kazaa loaded and that 120GB hard drive for Mother's Day?

  • by mblase ( 200735 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:07PM (#6117520)
    For the same time period, both major pattern makers referred scores of customers to Monsterpatterns as a great source for discontinued patterns. These referrals came by way of email and telephone from Simplicity and McCall employees.

    While this doesn't qualify as official company policy (employees referring customers to the site on their own, rather than the company telling the employees to refer them), I think it badly undermines the pattern companies' case. Obviously they knew about the site for a long time, they knew what it did and what it offered, and they turned a blind eye towards it.

    Suddenly, some lawyer realizes it might be grounds for a quick courtroom profit and announces they're suing under (of all things) the DCMA. As if throwing boxes in the trash could possibly constitute encryption....
  • by Newer Guy ( 520108 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:07PM (#6117521)

    1. I find a bunch of old magazines in someone's trash.


    2. I take the magazines and list them on my web site hoping to sell them.


    3. I'm guilty of a DMCA violation?? This doesn't make sense! People are using the DMCA as a 'catch all' law to make EVERYTHING online illegal. This law must go away!

  • by rulethirty ( 673757 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:09PM (#6117545)
    If she can find it cheaper on MonsterPatterns.com then maybe she can afford to give me two shiney quarters for cleaning out her gutters!
  • This is good... (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Bull999999 ( 652264 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:09PM (#6117556) Journal
    We need lawsuits like this to show the world how silly DMCA is. I thought that they crossed the line with toners and ink cartridges but this one tops them all.

    At least there's one Senator that wants to limit DRM and DMCA.

    http://zdnet.com.com/2100-1105_2-1013037.html?ta g=fdfeed
  • by MyNameIsFred ( 543994 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:11PM (#6117574)
    It is not uncommon for companies to have merchants dispose of surplus merchandise. For example, paperbacks have their covers ripped-off. The bookseller returns the cover for a refund. The rest of the book is not suppose to be sold or given away. This process is designed to keep costs low (they don't have to pay shipping for the heavy books).

    Apparently, McCall has a similar process for excess patterns. The understanding with the merchants is that the excess patterns are NOT to be sold. Monsterpatterns is disrupting this process. While other means could be used (e.g., shredding the patterns) this would increase costs for the merchants. And is not a good thing.

    So while DMCA may be hated on Slashdot, I believe McCalls has a right to protect their copyrighted materials, which they want to have removed from the marketplace.

    • I disagree. To use your book example, who would buy (at full price, or even half off) a new book without the cover? Nobody would, that's why the practice works to a large part.

      If the pattern industry were going to do something similar, they'd require that the patterns be ripped in half.

      Regardless, if I have the physical material, I can sell it for whatever I can get. That's why it's called "owning" something.

      Also, once you stick it in the dumpster, it's fair game. You might be able to do the "tres

    • by dwdyer ( 5238 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:18PM (#6117644) Journal
      So while DMCA may be hated on Slashdot, I believe McCalls has a right to protect their copyrighted materials, which they want to have removed from the marketplace.
      That's fine, but it's the invoking of the DMCA that makes this goofy. How does that affect grabbing something out of someone's trash and selling it? Granted, it might not be legal, but it doesn't appear to involve the DMCA except to get some press time.
    • by poot_rootbeer ( 188613 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:41PM (#6117848)
      The understanding with the merchants is that the excess patterns are NOT to be sold. Monsterpatterns is disrupting this process.

      But Monsterpatterns is not a party to the contractual agreement between the pattern manufacturer and the pattern retailer. If the retailer fails to execute their part of the agreement, no third party is bound to abide by the agreement in their stead.

      "They're doing something that's not illegal but it's messing up our business model" is not a justification to sue. It's a sign that the business model needs to be altered.

      ('altered', ha... tailoring humor... thank you, I'll be here all week)
    • McCalls LOST control of the patterns the instant they sold them. The copyright holder DOES NOT have any say in the fate of that object beyond the right to sue if it is copied. "Doctrine of first sale" rules.

      Remember the hassle over used records an dthe stores that sold them? That's what McCall's is trying to do - prevent resale in order to keep profits up.

  • by teamhasnoi ( 554944 ) <teamhasnoi AT yahoo DOT com> on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:16PM (#6117621) Journal
    I do IT and such for a small crafting company.

    First - dumpster diving has nothing to do with the DMCA. Nothing. What monsterpackets is doing is no different from me grabbing a turntable that someone tossed and selling it on eBay.

    Second - if this is such a *huge* problem, why not FIX it?

    Sell the packets in bulk to monsterpackets or someone else.
    buy a shredder and destroy them.

    Shit, this DMCA crap is tired already - it took me two minutes to think of these things, and I haven't even started drinking yet.

  • Sewing cost (Score:4, Interesting)

    by phorm ( 591458 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:18PM (#6117651) Journal
    Not my first choice of purchase, but has anyone looked at the cost of sewing nowadays?

    I mean, supplies are expensive, the cost of sewing machines can be incredible (cheap ones in the hundreds, up to thousands for higher-end though), and patterns are definately a rip.

    Maybe we need an "open pattern site" - anyone got a link?
  • by mykepredko ( 40154 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:24PM (#6117703) Homepage
    I just can't wait for McCall to take their lead from Madonna and put on the Internet some of their own "designs" to help thwart pirating of their intellectual property.

    The whole pattern pirating industry would be shut down in an instant as soon as some grandmother that downloaded a pattern called "Playful Kittens" and spent hours stitching it out, ended up with a pillow that says "WHAT THE FUCK ARE YOU DOING?"

    myke
  • by OrangeGoo ( 678478 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:27PM (#6117741)
    Can I sue everybody everywhere who has ever made a profit just by claiming that I made the product originally, but threw it away? I've never really thought about it; I just kinda assumed that I was giving up rights to my trash. I'm generally more than happy to turn it over to the nice men who come twice a week to take it away. Are those sons-of-bitches getting rich at my expense?!

    I'm suing!
  • This is really weird (Score:4, Interesting)

    by M. Silver ( 141590 ) <{ten.xyneohp} {ta} {revlis}> on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:43PM (#6117867) Homepage Journal
    Okay, I may be one of the few slashdotters who sews (for a living, yet... it's slightly more profitable, in the right areas, than writing code from home. Go figure), and it's not really relevant to the issue itself, but...

    Monsterpatterns is selling stuff for "30-40% off retail"?? If that's cover price, that's highway robbery, never mind where the patterns came from. McCall, Butterick and Vogue patterns are *normally* sold for 50% off cover. Most places (JoAnn, Hancock, etc.) have rotating sales where one particular line is a buck a pattern.

    I guess Monsterpatterns (and the sewing stores) are targeting the folks that want a particular pattern RIGHT NOW and are willing to pay the fairly-outrageous cover prices ($9-15) on them.

    (In other Slashdot-relevant news, I'm trying to decide on an appropriate "open-source" license for sewing patterns.)

  • by bob_jenkins ( 144606 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @03:59PM (#6118113) Homepage Journal
    Is there software for generating needlework designs? Both repetitive patterns, and rendering of scanned pictures? The problems of arranging circuits on chips and displaying words & pictures with pixels seem similar. Software can handle those problems quite well, sometimes better than any human can.
  • Ah ha. Doing a little more homework...

    McCall's isn't saying the patterns can't be sold. Wait. Let me say that a little louder.

    MCCALL'S ISN'T SAYING THE PATTERNS CAN'T BE SOLD.

    Their gripe is with Monsterpatterns putting pictures of the patterns on the website. You know: reproducing (as in making a COPY of) the copyrighted art/photographs on the cover of the patterns.

    It's still a bit underhanded, but it makes a certain sort of sense, far more than "you can't resell the physical pattern."

    Here's the forum message [sewingcommons.com] where the rep (owner?) says "Today The Mccall pattern company through their attorneys have told our web host company that we are 'infringing on their copyrights' by displaying pictures of patterns that we own."
  • by BMonger ( 68213 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @04:14PM (#6118264)
    Yesterday I was at my grandma's and she was downloading some patterns off the internet... I asked her, "Grandma, isn't that illegal?" She shrugged stating, "I wouldn't have bought it anyway. Plus I don't like those top 40 patterns of old ladies with pineapples on their heads. When I stitch I like to stitch indie stuff anyhow which I can't find at the local needlpoint store." I thought it made sense but somehow... I dunno... it seems like I've seen that argument elsewhere... hmmmm...

    Anyhow to all you grandma's that read slashdot out there... don't buy McAll's patterns! Buy from your local neighborhood needlepoint store!
  • by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @04:57PM (#6118680) Homepage
    After all, they've circumvented my account name encryption of 'mccalli', purely to trade under my name...

    Cheers,
    Ian (McCall)

  • by mark-t ( 151149 ) <markt AT nerdflat DOT com> on Wednesday June 04, 2003 @05:36PM (#6118981) Journal
    The DMCA is only meant to prevent the decryption of digitally encrypted copyrighted content. Although there may be copyrighted content involved here, there is no digital encryption. The DMCA cannot apply.
  • With few exceptions, once the item has "entered into the stream of commerce", the holder of copyright can not prevent further sale. See: USA Copyright law [cornell.edu] And it's backed up by a Supreme Court decision from 1905 or so.

    The doctrine allows the legitimate owner of a particular lawful copy of a work to "sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy" without the permission of the copyright owner, and produce images of it for purpose of aiding the sale. It does not permit copying the item in its entirety.

    If the city codes allow dumpster diving and if they declare that the contents are "abandoned property", then the divers ARE the legal owners of the patterns and can tell McCall's to take a flying leap.

    This issue comes up frequently on eBay. One $$$ fabric maker was invoking the DMCA to get auctions for items made of their fabric shut down. Their claim was that the photos showed their copyrighted fabric designs. It only took a few sellers ordering eBay to restore the content and to tell the fabric company that it was fair use (citing chapter, verse and Supreme Copurt decision number) and to go ahead and file to convince them they were out of line.

Remember, UNIX spelled backwards is XINU. -- Mt.

Working...