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Sony DRM Installed Even When EULA Declined

Posted by Zonk on Thu Dec 22, 2005 12:56 PM
from the damned-if-you-don't dept.
HikingStick writes "News.com is reporting that the Texas attorney general is expanding the allegations against Sony. It seems the software would install even if users declined the EULA. From the article: 'The Texas attorney general said on Wednesday that he added a new claim to a lawsuit charging Sony BMG Music Entertainment with violating the state's laws on deceptive trade practices by hiding 'spyware' on its compact discs ... The new charges brought by Abbott contend that MediaMax software used by Sony BMG to thwart illegal copying of music on CDs violated state laws because it was downloaded even if users rejected a license agreement.'"
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  • Criminal Tresspass (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Renraku (518261) on Thursday December 22 2005, @12:58PM (#14318636) Homepage
    "Can I come into your house?"

    "Nope."

    "Ok."

    Man turns around to find the stranger at the door has already moved his shit into his house. Does this not constitute tresspassing?
    • by Concern (819622) * on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:21PM (#14318894) Journal
      Imagine if you order a box of catfood to be delivered that's worth about $10. And then the next day a crowd of 15 attorneys in suits arrive at your door with a 20 page contract, and the box. They won't give you the catfood until you agree to their "license." You can either call your own attorneys, if you have any, and spend several weeks evaluating their contract at the cost of several thousand dollars of your own money, or, they say, you can simply agree to the contract by blinking your eyes.

      It turns out that there were worms in the catfood and now your cat is incredibly sick. Amazingly, the attorneys did this on purpose. If you take her to the vet, it will cost you hundreds of dollars to cure her. You don't remember blinking, but they swear you did.

      The government has sent an angry letter to the catfood guys, but no one looks like they have any intention of paying your vet bill - or even sending your cat a get well card.

      In response to the government, the catfood people announce they've "solved" the problem, because they've agreed to temporarily stop shipping worms in catfood. However, they're still shipping spiders, ants, and leeches - and they have "big plans" to expand the practice.

      You don't know exactly how long your cat has left to live, but after watching all this, you get the feeling its days are numbered one way or another.
      • by Qzukk (229616) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:34PM (#14319034) Journal
        Huh?

        When I put the CD in the drive, I wanted to play some music, not install some software. It's YOUR analogy that's flawed.

        How about this:

        I run a bar and decide to get some live music, so I call up a group of musicians. A popular and very well known band, of course, I don't want to drive my patrons out. They tell me "sure, we'll come and play, just give us some money." So I send them a payment, and the day of the performance, they show up with a 50 page contract. "Just sign this and we'll be set". I look over it, and I see among it's provisions that they're going to firebomb the stage at the end of the show. I give them the contract back and tell them no.

        Then they firebomb the stage.
        • by SeanDuggan (732224) on Thursday December 22 2005, @02:08PM (#14319442) Homepage Journal
          First of all, very amusing use of bold text.

          Remember this is almost a bait and switch, the people bought a Celine Deon album and got the DRM disaster along with it.
          Right. They were looking for a musical disaster, not a computer based one...

  • Heh. (Score:5, Funny)

    by jacobcaz (91509) on Thursday December 22 2005, @12:58PM (#14318640) Homepage
    By clicking "Agree" below, you agree to the terms of this EULA. By clicking "Decline" below, you agree to the terms of this EULA.

    [ AGREE ] [ DECLINE ]
  • by cez (539085) <cezsolutions&gmail,com> on Thursday December 22 2005, @12:59PM (#14318646) Homepage
    Shouldn't these charges also be mirrored by the feds seeing how Sony is an international company who's crossed state lines with malicious code?
    • by Concern (819622) * on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:11PM (#14318789) Journal
      If it were me who tried to install spyware on people's PC's using music CDs, the answer would be yes.

      On the other hand, if it were a wealthy multinational corporation who did so, the answer would be... perhaps we can find a discrete settlement to avoid any discomfort to our most valued citizens.
  • by Concern (819622) * on Thursday December 22 2005, @12:59PM (#14318652) Journal
    ...this is a bit ridiculous on its face. Sure the spyware is illegal in about a dozen different ways (depending on your state) but... this all hinges on whether or not we accept or decline a EULA? How does that make sense?

    That kind of reasoning by implication gives EULAs legitimacy which THEY DO NOT HAVE.

    Since when under common law do we have such outrageously elaborate and suprising binding legal agreements by parties without equal representation?

    Since when can agreement be given by pressing a mouse button or removing shrinkwrap?

    The EULA itself is an ugly audacious legal fiction... this is why they needed UCITA to attempt to legitimize them after the fact.
    • by LexNaturalis (895838) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:10PM (#14318783)
      I think it's just another straw in the pile. This just adds another charge against the company that they will have to defend themselves against. The other charges don't hinge on the EULA issue at all; the rootkit is still illegal. This is simply ANOTHER thing they are adding. So even if the rootkit is found to be legal, they can still be nailed with this charge.

      From my law classes, my lawyer professors told me that a favorite trick of lawyers is to allege as many possible crimes/violations as possible so as to make the other side more likely to either plea bargain or settle as well as to raise the chances of successfully arguing at least ONE of the charges/torts.

      (Disclaimer: IANAL, just had some law classes)
  • It's only fair (Score:5, Insightful)

    by goombah99 (560566) on Thursday December 22 2005, @12:59PM (#14318656)
    I click through EULAs because I dont think they have any legal weight. Sony in turn ignores my requests not to install since they don't think EULA's have any legal weight. In sshort the 'A' in EULA is not an agreement, meeting of minds, or a legal contract. I'm fine with that I guess. Those privacy rights were unenforcable anyhow so I lose nothing.
  • Indie Music (Score:5, Interesting)

    by jhouserizer (616566) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:01PM (#14318667) Homepage
    Sure am glad I've only purchased indie cd's in the last few years! Apparently not only do the big companies cram crappy music down your ears, but they also cram crappy software into your computer.
  • by EvilMonkeySlayer (826044) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:02PM (#14318682) Journal
    For example, I was planning on buying a new widescreen tv and a psp, but because of the rootkit etc I decided against a Sony tv and i'm probably going to buy either a Nintendo DS or the GPX2.

    I wonder, if Sony has lost any sales because of this. Just how much in cash it has cost them?
  • by kawika (87069) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:03PM (#14318696)
    This is the original blog [freedom-to-tinker.com] that revealed the SunnComm DRM installed despite the user declining the EULA. Whereas the XCP DRM could hide behind the EULA excuse, I don't see how SunnComm has any legal fig leaf here (though IANAL).

    Supposedly there is about ten times [com.com] more SunnComm DRM in the wild than XCP DRM, so maybe Sony felt they couldn't sacrifice holiday sales despite the legal exposure.
  • Lawsuit (Score:5, Funny)

    by Council (514577) <rmunroe@g[ ]l.com ['mai' in gap]> on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:03PM (#14318703) Homepage
    Sony is complaining that although they declined the offer to be sued, the Texas AG is still pursuing the case.
  • Not a Virus? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by DeanFox (729620) * <fox.dean@nOSPam.gmail.com> on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:07PM (#14318746)

    FTA: "The creator of the copy-protection software, a British company called First 4 Internet, said the cloaking mechanism was not a risk. The company's team has worked regularly with big antivirus companies to ensure the safety of its software, and to make sure it is not picked up as a virus, he said."

    First of all, I would like to know who these "big antivirus" companies are so I can stop using their product (assuming I might be). That or to make sure I never use or recommend them to others'.

    We are in trouble when antivirus companies are in backroom negotiations with virus makers, I assume for profit, not to detect one virus in favor of another.

    How can I trust they haven't negotiated other backroom deals with virus/spyware writers that let other viruses and spyware on my machine?

    I want to know who these "anti" virus companies are!
  • by FreeBSD evangelist (873412) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:17PM (#14318851)
    I have an RCA Victor (one of Sony/BMG's brands) with MediaMax. It absolutely installs software on your computer, even =before= the EULA response box pops up.
  • Corporate Anarchy (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Beerden (874601) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:18PM (#14318856)
    We live in the age of Corporate Anarchy. A Corporation has had, in the past, essentially the same rights as an individual human. Now, however, individual rights have been taken away, yet the Corporation is free to do what it pleases. Corporations like SONY feel they are above the law, and are now testing to see how far they can go. After Corporate Anarchy comes Corporate Rule. I would not shed a tear if the Individuals were to blow up Corporate buildings, clean out Corporate bank accounts, and fight in a [very bloody] Revolution against Government and Corporation (war against Facism, in other words). Civil war, if you could call it that, but more like the French Revolution. I think there is no other way around it, because History shows us that it will happen.
    • by mlong (160620) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:02PM (#14318686)
      The way I see it, Sony breached a contract. This is easily resolved in court, and anyone who had their contract breached by Sony should go ahead and file an independent lawsuit (not a class action lawsuit). You can hire a local attorney and move forward.

      However, since one clicked Disagree/Decline, then they did not enter into any contract. Yet Sony went and installed software anyway. That is trespass and thus the state should be involved since it was illegal activity.

      • by twiddlingbits (707452) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:08PM (#14318759)
        Correct, contracts have to be entered into bilaterally not unilaterally. It is a matter for the State as it is then Fraud to execute a contract not agreed to by both parties. Criminal prosecution IS the domain of the State. If the GP poster can think of a civil tort that was committed by Sony the sue them. Find a good lawyer who will get 40% of what you win and go for it. Or you could go to small claims court. If you win, just how do you think you will enforce the penalty?
      • by dr_dank (472072) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:27PM (#14318956) Homepage Journal
        That is trespass and thus the state should be involved since it was illegal activity.

        Might makes right. A cracker who sends trojans or rootkits may actually see fines or jailtime. A corporation who does the same thing is just protecting its IP or, if suitably backed into a corner, admit they made a mistake and continue doing the same crap with a different name. You'll never see a single indictment for wrongdoing at a large company for this.
    • The way I see it, Sony breached a contract.

      A contract is, by definition, a bilateral agreement. The EULA is a contract offer, and if it is declined, there is NO contract between Sony and the user. What that means is that Sony is forcing a unilateral agreement onto a user who does not have a contract with Sony. That's a criminal case, not a civil case.

      Of course, I'm not a lawyer, so take my comment with a grain of salt. But that's my interpretation of it in a nutshell.
        • It's not a contract because clicking a button is not intent to contract. It's not a signature, it's not a handshake

          It's a contract in the same way that ordering food in a restaurant is a verbal contract to exchange money for food.

          Reasons why EULAs may be unenforcable contracts, however, include:

          - They tend to be unilateral in nature.
          - They attempt to impose restrictions AFTER the point of sale contract. (This is a legal no-no.)
          - They are forced upon the customer, as the he has already paid for the software.
          - There's no way to prove that the user actually accepted the license. (That's why the GPL has a fall-through clause that uses regular copyright law for protection.)
          - It cannot be shown that customers actually understand the license before accepting it, meaning that the terms may be unenforcable.

          Basically, there are a lot of problems with EULAs. The idea that they're not contracts, however, is not one of them.
    • by jebell (567579) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:06PM (#14318737) Journal

      While I generally agree with your sentiments regarding pre-existing civil remedies, state Attorneys General routinely file "consumer-protection" type of law suits against big companies in order to spare the consumers from having to litigate matters that would otherwise be too costly.

      While some have criticized over-active Attorneys General, like New York's Eliot Spitzer, for being too litigious, I think this type of action has its place. It's definitely better than the standard class-action suit where the lawyers are made rich and the class members get a coupon for $5 off their next purchase of the product they complained about in the first place. I don't think the "state lawyers" get rich in this type of case, although there are instances (like the tobacco litigation) where the states hired outside lawyers to litigate this stuff.

      Law has always been complicated, believe it or not. Else, why have we had lawyers for so long? At least for the last couple of hundred years, we've actually had laws that are written down in codes and case books.

    • by 10101001 10101001 (732688) on Thursday December 22 2005, @01:22PM (#14318907) Journal
      Yes and no. You see, there's state and federal laws against computer trespassing. This means that if there's any legitimate use for an EULA, it's to basically indemnify the company by making it clear that the user intentionally installed software. This means that if software is installed regardless, there's a valid basis for computer trespassing--note, this is true if one manages to bypass the EULA, as well. Computer trespassing laws are generally very vague and badly written, so only something like an EULA really will protect an entity from prosecution under them. At least in this case, were someone was specifically presented the EULA and did not agree to it while software is installed anyways, there's no way to somehow misinterpret the letter or the spirit of the law to not take it as computer trespassing, unlike with intentionally bypassing or hacking an EULA to install software without agreeing to it.