Barcode Maker Responds After Forcing Drivers Offline 743
The following was sent in by Doug Davis from Digital Convergance. Plain text is his. Bold text is mine.
Digital:Convergence understands this Linux issue and the concerns expressed by the community. Had Digital:Convergence been approached by developers we would have been (and still will be) happy to work with them in a constructive direction. Instead, our products were reversed engineered and what has occurred is a public display of what is clearly our intellectual property. It is unfortunate the supporters of the open source community have taken steps to publicize intellectually property in-order to further their own goals and desires. Unfortunately, for us all, some of the people conducting these efforts would not voluntarily remove our IP, even after being contacted.
Thank god. These folks worked hard to write code to use this piece of hardware, and it would be unfortunate if they were forced to take it down. Imagine if Linus had been forced by Intel to take down kernel versions that used their intellectual property in the early part of the last decade. A lot of companies have bullied a lot of people in the last couple of years, and it's only getting worse. Your CueCat, like DeCSS, is going to redefine what IP is. Personally, I hope that when I get a barcode reader, or a DVD-ROM drive (or a car, or phone, or any other physical thing), that I'm allowed to rip it apart and tinker with it at my discretion. I think that's my right as a consumer.
In the strictest legal terms we had no choice but to proceed protect our interests. By posting our IP to the Net the Linux Community has forced us into a position of having to legally defend our technology . Under IP law if we don't PROTECT our IP, we loose any remedies under law to PROTECT our IP. This IS NOT ABOUT stopping hackers, but trying to get the "hackers" and such to WORK WITH US AND NOT EXPOSE US and destroy over 5 years of hard work by a group of "geeks, hackers and techno-whizzes" like each of you!
IP is a weird beast. If you don't defend it, you don't have it. I imagine if Adaptec or Matrox defended the IP created by the work of their "geeks, hackers and techno-wizzes" by forcing Linux driver writers to take down code utilizing their SCSI controllers, hard drives and video cards, their IP would also be unusable under Linux. Which is too bad because I use hardware that they created every day. Oh, and 5 years of development for "base64+XOR"?
Any professional and serious developer will understand the following: .........Unfortunately the Linux Community could of inadvertently created the WINDOW for the BIG companies to come in and control and profit from this process we have created. So if M$ or some other company decides to do what you are doing *for profit" and DigitalConvergence allows the open source group to continue with out proper licenses, DigitalConvergence could loose its ability to effectively stop them. The Linux Community would of actually had a DIRECT HAND in creating what it stands most vehemently against!
You start it off by saying "Any serious Professional will understand" which is a none-too-subtle way of saying, "If you're smart, you'll understand." Fortunately you don't say that any serious developer will agree. What you're saying is that the Linux community should happily take down the code out of fear of some big company (mentioning Microsoft is poor form: it screams like a bad political commercial where they mention a bunch of scary things just to make their ideas seem more true). If big scary Microsoft came along and released their own distribution, there is nothing we could do about it (provided that they played by the common rules of the GPL). That reality constantly exists, but that doesn't slow anyone down. It's not the point. If Microsoft wants to play by the rules of the GPL, I say let 'em. But by your logic, nobody should ever write and distribute source code, for fear that Microsoft would take it. That strikes me as a bit backwards.
It is our hope the Linux community will help us in our efforts by
- working with us to create a product to support your needs, and;
- stop and remove illegal posting efforts, and;
- encourage others in the Linux community to work with us
hand-in-hand to develop a various solutions and useful applications.
You too, can be part of this valuable tool and project!"
The weird thing about open source development is that code gets written where programmers itch. I bet you'll find support for #1, but less so for #2. See, your itches might not be the same as their itches. We all define valuable tools and projects differently, and our needs might be a bit different then yours. I don't think that folks posting this code constitutes "an illegal posting effort" any more then I think posting a driver for a scanner does.
Digital:Convergence supports the Linux/Unix community and plans to make a version of its software available for Linux available in the near future. Also, licenses are available for any developers wishing to work with any aspect of our technology. We welcome the individuals of the community to contact us and use a more professional, orderly and productive manner in adjusting our products to better serve, in tact and based fully upon our various Patents and Intellectual Property, your community, . Professional Licenses and Development contracts are available to the Linux/Unix community and we welcome your direct and professional contact.
If I own a Ford, do I need a Ford wrench to fiddle with my engine? If I buy a frame, do I need a nail & hammer from the same company in order to hang a picture on my wall? If your tools are the best tools, and at the right price, then by all means, I'd happily use your nail & hammer, but we live in a marketplace where competition drives everything, and you have competition. You have the advantage: you have the technical specifications and the most developed tools, wheras the open source guys are groping blindly in the dark looking for answers. Oddly enough this groping is a large part of the fun. It's a challenge.
And, by the way, the AT HOME - PERSONAL USE DEVELOPER LICENSE is $20 USD! So please, HELP US PROTECT, what a group of talented developers, have worked so very hard on for over the last 5 years!
J. Jovan Philyaw - Chairman & C.E.O. ceo@digitalconvergence.com
Doug Davis - President Technology Group ddavis@digitalconvergence.comI seriously wish you guys the best of luck, and hope you figure out a way to work with the developers who are writing this cool code. If you haven't alienated the developers, I bet they would be happy to work with you. My fear is that your business model is shaky: you've given away zillions of barcode readers, (no doubt at great expense) but failed to realize that they, like iOpeners and TiVos and Furbys and AIBOs and DVD-ROM drives and everything else physical, can (and will!) be ripped apart and played with by people. You're trying to use lawyers to take away people's rights to screw around with their own hardware, and that's a problem... your service strikes me as being about a lot more then a silly little barcode scanner and what people do with it. If your software serves a need, people will use it. If some hacker finds some cool other use for the hardware, maybe people will use their code too. This is very real, but this is a free country where we can tear apart our toys and rebuild them if we want.
On a practical note, you have a website and a net service. Thats different. Thats not a physical piece of hardware that someone can hold in their hands. You should focus on that, and not waste your energy going after hackers who are just poking around with a cool piece of hardware. I'm not a business guy, so I don't know what the answers are, but I do know a dead end when I see it. And don't forget that the percentage of people who are actually gonna mess with this stuff is very tiny. You should concentrate on making your services better for the huge majority of your users who don't run Linux, and wouldn't run software other then yours even if it did exist. It's the blinking 12:00 syndrome. Most users just don't change the defaults.
I'd also like to say something to the readers: don't get angry and attack these guys. They're just a group of guys trying to feed their dogs by coming up with ideas to make a buck. Yelling and screaming doesn't help anyone. It's easy to forget that every company is just a group of people trying to accomplish something; they aren't evil, even when they make mistakes or do things that we disagree with. But don't stop writing the code. I can think of many uses for this barcode scanner (like maybe software to index my DVDs?). It's still legal to reverse engineer, and that sure better never change.
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:2)
Napster's winning card is the fact that Congress legalized all non-commercial copying of music by consumers using any digital or analog recording device [cornell.edu] in 1992, in exchange for mandatory "royalty" payments to the music industry whenever you purchase any blank digital audio recorder or media. [cornell.edu] Napster's defense is not based on fair use -- it's based on a statutory exception that defines all non-commercial copying as non-infringing. Hence, if Napster's users are not infringing copyrights, then Napster cannot be contributing to said non-existant infringement.
Re:A giant pack of lies (Score:2)
Would be nice if they'd admit that they didn't write it rather than implicitly claim it as their own work.
"$20 Developer Fee My Shiny Metal Ass" (Score:2)
---- ----
Re:Original document (Score:2)
And when presented in this fashion, it positively begs for a line-by-line debunking. In fact, after reading it again, I found myself taking issue with almost every line of the thing. This letter is a load of BS from a company that obviously doesn't respect our rights as consumers. I'm offended by it and I don't blame Taco for being offended by it and responding to it either.
Re:I don't understand something. (Score:2)
But, because barcode aren't encrypted, the DMCA doesn't apply at all. The UCITA does, if you're in a location that has it, but that's it. And that only applies if you install the software.
No laws were broken by writing this software.
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
True. And as imp states, the phone-home is at the next level (actually, several levels up :-) in the stack. Application layer versus hardware layer.
Frankly, I don't see how this hack can threaten their business model.
A Linux guy writes a device driver that allows it to scan barcodes and not phone home. BFD.
Something that might bave been a threat to their business model would have been a Linux device driver that did phone home -- to somewhere other than Digital Convergence -- and tried to build a database of customer information for future resale to some other privacy invader.
While it's still possible that someone might code such a thing, who the hell would run it?
(For that matter, how many of us geeks would have run their Windoze software that phoned home to DCNV? ;)
Interesting thought - Windoze users are used to getting closed-source binary-only distributions of software, which makes this type of product (the :CueCat that phones home) feasible.
I wonder if DCNV will release source code to the Linux version of their client.
I wonder - if they do - who among us will compile and run it?
Maybe we don't want our computers phoning home.
Broader question: In a world in which there exist open sourced apps which don't phone home and which can be inspected at the source code level to verify that they can't phone home, why would anyone choose to run an app that couldn't be trusted?
The "Give away the razor, sell the blades" model isn't in jeopardy. Despite their management team's abysmal English skills, DCNV has an interesting product and viable strategy for compiling large databases of consumer preferences.
What might be in jeopardy, two or three years down the road, is the whole "hide functionality from the user and collect data surreptitiously" business model espoused by everyone from MSFT (think .NET) and Doublefsck on down to DCNV.
Trying to sue every species of penguin into extinction is gonna be a much bigger different kettle of herring than a cat-shaped barcode reader and some flying butt monkeys...
Re:A giant pack of lies (Score:2)
None of the stuff you mention even applies to this case though. Even if they were claiming IP rights to the actual printed codes, nobody is copying their bar codes. The protocol was reverse engineered, something that is apparently (remains to be decided in court) upheld even by the DMCA. Even if they claim it as a trade secret, reverse engineering can make it legally public.
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:2)
You can patent a business model and keep others from using the same model. They've mentioned no such patent, and it wouldn't apply in this case anyway since nobody is trying to duplicate their business model (probably with good reason).
Re:Dogs? Attack dogs? (Score:2)
US6098106: Method for controlling a computer with an audio signal [ibm.com]
Though I don't get the audio signal part. The text of the patent seems pretty similar though. And the patent seems really trivial.
Also, the patent covers the whole application, not the specific encoding scheme that the CueCat uses to talk to the computer with. So if the linux driver only allows reading of barcodes, it should be okay and not get tangled in this patent...?
--
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
You could choose to use the serial number from your scanner or one made up, and to scan a list of barcodes from your favorite products, or to download a list of such from the net...
Imagine if you and all of your friends started scanning the barcodes for your favorite small bands, thus tweaking the demographics "Hey look bob, thousands of our customers are fans of Band X, they've got as big a following as the Spice Girls (or whatever)."
Then they sell these demographics and companies like the RIAA buy them, and then start promoting bands like Band X more because of their already large following.
Use their own invasive techniques against them. Like a Neilson family taking bribes to watch certain shows.
Even better, you wouldn't have to sign any contract, and you'd be performing this intended use of the site, to look up products by their barcodes, so they'd have no legitimate problem with this.
Then, if they get too uppity, we simply reveal than a huge percentage of their demographics are completely false, driving them out of business when people refuse to pay for incorrect statistics.
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
--
Re:DC is on solid legal ground. . .unless. . . (Score:2)
Secondly, the "protect it or lose it" defense does not apply to patents. This only applies to trademarks. Since there are most likely no trademarks being infringed upon in the reverse engineered drivers, this does not apply either.
I would say the fact that they are attempting insuate both of these in their letters, without providing proof of either (probably because they don't have either) is a fairly bogus thing to do. The best it will do is upset people, the worst it will do is bring legal action back against them.
** Martin
Re:Misunderstanding of what IP is at stake (Score:2)
Your are correct about barcodes being read from every direction, its part of the spec.
Re:Destroying the Loss Leader business model. (Score:2)
Sure, and they can do that by having you sign an agreement up front restricting how you are allowed to use it. Unfortunately for DC, they didn't do that. Too bad.
...phil
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
Actually, according to their EULA, they claim that they're only loaning the CueCat to you, therefore, it's their property and they can control how you use it.
The problem they have there, is that the scanner is a GIFT untill you agree to the EULA and allow that it is a loan. OTOH, if you just throw the CD away unopened, it remains a nice gift. Even if you dod click agree on the EULA, it might still be a gift since the legality of click-wrap licenses is questionable. UCITA is not in force in most states and may never be.
It seems that by trying to maximise the hype by making what was intended as a loan look like a gift, they unintentionally made it an actual gift. Serves them right IMHO.
Re:A giant pack of lies (Score:2)
In his position, I would be pretty pissed off with all the self-righteousness and posturing in these messages, just 'cos some guy decided to reverse engineer his protocol and put his livelihood at risk, not even for serious reasons, but as an amusing hobby.
Two things. First, I'd be a lot more pissed at myself for not forseeing this inevitable outcome, and for relying on such a weak business model as this one could end up being. Second, it remains to be seen whether his business model will succeed or fail. I think the number of people who use these readers in unintended ways will be completely insignificant next to the number of people who take one home, throw it in a drawer and never touch it again.
Clear Example of Customer Having it All Wrong (Score:2)
Vote [dragonswest.com] Naked 2000
Re:WRONG (was: Re:The really sad part...) (Score:2)
Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:4)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
--
Nope...try again... (Score:2)
w00t! (Score:2)
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
Copyright NEVER protects against reverse engineering. Only patenting does. And patenting also protects against clean room implementations. You cannot use the invention specified in the patent to accomplish the patent's claims, and ignorance is no excuse. You can make a clean room implementation and hope that it doesn't use the same methods to accomplish the same goal. If it
does use the same methods to accomplish the same claims, you are in violation.
I think in this case the intellectual property is probably copyrighted, and they are screwed.
Re:Misunderstanding of what IP is at stake (Score:2)
---- ----
Re:Waitaminute... (Score:2)
Just how much of that work is really stolen in this? If DC does make and release a Linux driver, then what? I can assure you that if it is not satisfactory to the Linux community, they will still tear it apart. If you make the driver in object code binary only, they will reverse engineer it to source code anyway. An army of lawyers can't stop it because it all happens and millions of copies made before a lawyer even wakes up.
It sounds to me like MOST of what DC did was investment, and wants to even count Net Talk Live in it just to up the apparent ante.
It also sounds to me like technology poorly done. I don't know what technology you actually used because I haven't looked at it. But I know that I could have picked technology that could not have been cracked and thus made the
Interesting Parallel: X10 (Score:3)
Geeks come up with some cool implementations of this hardware. They write some software, that works with Linux (X10 hasn't released any that I know of). X10 sells a bunch more gear.
The difference is that X10 is giving away the razors and selling the blades. The Digital Convergence guys are giving away the razors and trying to sell blades that can easily be made of of normal everyday household items.
Which, isn't neccessarily a flawed business model--someone brought up the blinking 12:00 analogy.
Also, convenience is an issue: Kool-aid sells two main types--with sugar and without. They make a much better margin on the 'with sugar' ones--but they aren't quite as popular as the 20 for $1 kind. I guess I mean that people will pay a lot for value added convenience--and Digital Convergence needs to work hard to provide it.
Anyway, I don't understand why it is that they don't sell a SOHO multi-purpose barcode? Seems like a cool peripheral. Hopefully someone will see the demand for such a product and release one--perhaps even X10.
-k
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
Should be a correction. There are instances in which it can be illegal to use a product in a manner inconistent with it's stated purpose. Generally because using the product improperly could harm others. This is why we have laws about what you can do with your car, guns, etc. I can't think of a single such law that would be applicable in this situation though.
Not quite right... corrections and additions... (Score:2)
Intellectual Property law takes on three main forms: Trade Secrecy Law, Patent Law, and Copyright Law.
Actually there are four since trademark law should be included as a form of IP (and a particularly insidious form at that).
It doesn't fall under Patent law unless they have a patent that hasn't yet been mentioned (this would have to be a patent on the software, because that's what's being recreated)
It's not even the software that's being reverse-engineered. It's just the protocol that the reader uses to send data to the computer.
It is a company's sad obligation to go after everyone who is violating one of these IP laws, lest they lose protection under the law
This simply isn't true. At least not in the sense that they are claiming. Companies are obligated to enforce their trademarks or risk having them become diluted and therefore public domain (note that the bar for a tm being considered "diluted" is still set pretty darn high). Since trademarks don't seem to be the issue here (though it could be, they were extremely vague regarding their "IP"), this doesn't apply.
Trade secrets must also be enforced, but in a different way. Companies must actively prosecute anyone violating an NDA or commiting espionage against the company. If the company can show that the secret was obtained illegally, they can prevent it from being used. However, if the secret is reverse-engineered, then it can be legally published. That's the trade-off of a trade secret versus a patent.
Something that I just learned is that there is a certain requirement placed on patent holders as well. According to this [iwaynet.net], patent holders may lose their recourse if they knew or should have known about an infringement, but take no action for 6 years or more. It should be pointed out that this does not require them to take action in all cases or risk losing control of their patent, which is what they seem to be claiming in their letter regarding their "IP." It simply means that they can't knowingly allow the infringement to occur for an unreasonable amount of time without taking action in that particular instance. Failing that, they only lose their recourse against that particular company or individual, not the rights to pursue other infringers. This seems to be designed to thwart "submarine patents." Not sure how effective it is at that, but since they don't mention any patents in their letter, it doesn't seem to apply in this situation.
Companies can selectively prosecute copyright violations to their heart's content. There is no requirement for enforcement, so this doesn't apply either.
Now, given that none of the forms of IP have been violated, what exactly are they claiming that these developers have done wrong? That's the real question, and one that they conveniently glossed over in their letter, instead preferring to try to intimidate, scare, and finally appeal to some imagined form of kinship. I found the letter to be quit offensive and demeaning. I'm going to write an email to them and tell them that myself.
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
Wrong. Removing a firing pin from a semi-automatic weapon, thereby converting it into a fully automatic weapon is illegal, even though you haven't harmed anyone. Same with sawing off the barrel of a shotgun if you make it too short.
Patents & 6 year time limit. (Score:2)
Read the law:
http://www4.law.cornell.edu/uscode/ 35/ch29.html [cornell.edu]
-E
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:2)
--
Kept 100 other people from saying the same thing (Score:2)
---
Re:Their IP? (Score:2)
And I got +2 because after a certain amount of karma gained you automatically get + 2. You should try it instead of hiding behind A/C with your comments
Full of Holes (Score:3)
Actually, since reverse engineering is legal, and since all D:C did was send a nice, threatening letter...nobody on either side has broken any laws. But this is the least of the problems with your argument...
They sure will. But will they bust you for taking apart your radio? No. You have every right to take apart your radio, and even to build a transmitter with the parts. They'll just bust you for transmitting over regulated frequencies without a licence.
You're wrong again. I can take any part of my car off that I want to, including the bumpers. And as long as I'm driving my bumperless car on my own property, the police have no right to stop me. On the other hand, if I go onto public roads like that -- if I go onto property that isn't mine, and break the rules set by the property owners -- then yes, they certainly can stop me.
--
Re:Using "Intellectual Property" as a shield (Score:2)
Wrong, this is only true if there is an infringement of a trade secret or a trademark. Copyrights and Patents do not lose their clout if undefended, they can be successfully selectively enforced.
-- iCEBaLM
Re:A complaint. (Score:2)
If we use DeCSS as a rough example, we see that, once accused of doing something 'illegal', the DeCSS crowd responds with 'but we had a moral cause; we wanted a linux DVD player'. This is nothing but 'making an excuse'. The *REAL* answer should be 'we don't NEED an excuse to do what we did. It is our right'.
I very much understand the history of software in use today.
If you make excuses for the reverse-engineering you do, based on some high moral cause, or whatever, you simply give your opponents (the industry) ammunition to fight back with. If you flat out come out and say 'I've always had the right to do this.' what can they say? They cannot fight you other than to try to show how you do not have that right.
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
But there's no law that says "if a manufacturer says that you can only do X with their product, then you must listen to them" for every X that a manufacturer could dream up.
--
Re:Sec. 1201. Circumvention of copyright protectio (Score:2)
What I meant was that I was making an assumption about what the previous poster meant because I didn't understand them. Not an assumption about what the :C:C actually does.
This is what IS protected, and the DMCA states if you try to go around this scrambling you are "circumvent[ing] a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title [DMCA]."
What copyrighted work are you claiming to be protected by the :C:C? Some copyrighted barcodes? The DMCA [arl.org] states, in the introduction:
In other words, if there are thousands of other barcode readers, then the :C:C doesn't effectively prevent copying the barcode data.
Or are you claiming that the DMCA covers the :C:C in some other bizarre way? No other data is being copied with the Linux driver, so I don't see how it could be anything else.
--
Re:Destroying the Loss Leader business model. (Score:2)
Well, that's not really true. Intel has a broad cross licesense with National Semiconductor and IBM. Both or those companies can clone and market any intel chip. So, Cryix, AMD etc. had IBM and National make their chips. This is also how VIA gets away with making some of thier chipsets for US consumption.
Re:Here here, this was poor form. Fascism, in fact (Score:2)
And populated by Chicken Littles, if you're any evidence. Do you realize that under real fascism, you would have been censored, or worse, for what you just posted?
Do you realize how much your statement dilutes the definition of fascism?
Re:Overstates damage (Score:2)
--
Not exactly... (Score:2)
This is not the same as trademark law. A company can still selectively enforce its patents without risking the loss of control that a trademark holder can suffer due to dilution. The link you give just explains that a company cannot take an unreasonably long amount of time to bring suit against someone allegedly infringing on their patent because it could result in material predjudice to the defendant. This bit of law could be designed to undermine "submarine patents." It does not require that the patent holder prosecute every known infringement as trademark law does, therefore their "defend it or lose it" claim is still false.
Re:Yes, but... (Score:2)
Actually, according to their EULA [digitalconvergence.com], they claim that they're only loaning the CueCat to you, therefore, it's their property and they can control how you use it.
Counter-examples abound... renters can't completely control how you use their apartment... bankers can't completely control how you use their money they loan to you.
--
Was this really from a lawyer? (Score:3)
I agree that CmdrTaco should have kept his opinions as a sidebar or bookends to the letter in full. As I read, I skipped over the baldfac- er, boldface material and read the letter itself.
Aside from the interspersed comments, are we sure this is actually from a lawyer or official of this company?
There's several grammatical errors that make the letter sound like it's coming from, well, from a twenty-something hothead. "Would of"s and ranting allcap phrases are what I expect to see in the less decorous 'leet crowd, not from someone at the helm or hire of a respectable company.
Besides, if there was intellectual property litigation involved, the company would probably best be served by holding its temper and its collective tongue.
"Major asshole." --Dubya Bush "Big time." --Dick Cheney
Re:Destroying the Loss Leader business model. (Score:4)
What I object to are laws that say people have a right to make money on this sort of stuff.
You mention Sony and the PS2... They sell a PS2 at a loss hoping the license fees for games make up for it. A valid business model imho.
But, what about someone who decides they don't like the PS2? Sony is out a bit of money if the person buys the system and gets the default game, plays it once and tosses it in a box, never to buy more PS2 games. Should the law mandate purchase of at least twelve games?
What if I buy a PS2 and play games on it, thus satisfying Sony's business model, but would also like to run Linux on it. Do they have a right to say I can't?
If they're concerned, they should sell the system *and* twelve games, or whatever they need to break even, as a unit, or with a clearly written contract requiring the purchase of these games by a certain date. Unfortunately, few people would be willing to spend the $800 or so that this would cost on a system they may not like, so Sony would sell few units.
Instead, they gamble. If the PS2 is good, the games will rock and people will buy them. If the PS2 sucks, nobody will buy them and they'll lose money.
I would have been willing, had DC asked politely, without threats and lies (yes, provable lies) to makre sure any CueCat software I wrote would *by default* communicate with their servers, if used in a network mode. That is, if the user scanned something and wanted to look it up, the default server would be theirs, changeable to Amazon(etc) only if the user wished. Instead they lie and threaten, telling us any unquthorized use is against the contract (this is fraud on their part) and demand we don't use the product in any way they disagree with. This is where I stop supporting them in any way.
Instead of them having a reasonable business which I would support, and hobby usage as well, they try for 100% of the pie instead of 99.9% and lose my support and the support of almost everyone else.
It's not their business model, it's them. They're lying, threatening, assholes commiting fraud and I'll take any and all actions I can to see them bankrupt in a short a time as I can manage.
Step 1: Flood their service with repetitive and automated scans and created serial numbers.
Step 2: Reveal this to their potential customers, dropping the value of their data to zero.
Maybe the next group of people to try this business model will realize that fraud and lies aren't going to help them, those people I will support.
this EULA smells like "bait and switch" to me... (Score:3)
--
I Liked Taco's Editorial! (Score:4)
Taco deserves the freedom to Editorialize as he wishes on his web page. I am happy he did it. I enjoyed reading it. I think it was well written and complete.
Enough of this Politically Corect, lets not ruffle any feathers crap.
When we have no rights left (they were sold to corporations by our duly elected reps in congress and executive offices) we will be dreaming of opportunities such as this where we can defend our rights.
BTW: The business model of this product (I picked up one from Radio Shack on Thursday) implies that they are recording the data and selling it without the users permission (or was it hidden in the shrink wrap). I think their model is flawed. Just like I think the Grocery chains model of holding us ransome for 'preferred savings cards' panel id card is flawed.
Re:Yes, but... (Score:5)
What they did instead was to give the BIOS to engineers who has not seen the assembler code on the chip and instruct them to duplicate it based on its behavior. So they sent various signals to the chip, and watched what it did as it booted up, and basically systematically looked at precisely what it was doing. They were then, with some trial and error, able to write code that duplicated all the observable behavior of the IBM BIOS. That is a cleanroom implementation, as evidenced by the fact that Compaq came out with a fine clone of the BIOS and was legally allowed to sell it. Mere use of the hardware is not enough to make it not a clean implementation
The CueCat reverse engineering is remarkably similar to this, except much more simple. The hackers merely had to figure out what the output meant, which apparently was pretty easy. They treated the CueCat as a black box, recording the output from the scanner and figuring out what it meant. No harm, no foul.
Walt
Overstates damage (Score:5)
Even if Microsoft programmers are as incompotent as people at slashdot paint them from time to time (and I know they aren't), I doubt that it would take more than a day for them to reverse engineer the protocol.
Current US laws allow for reverse engineering to effect interoperability. Nothing more than that was engaged in here.
Finally, I think they are just a bunch of crybabies out to give opensource a bad name. Look how much whining they did. Look how unspecific they were about what IP was allegedly stolen. My guess is that they lost sales of some development kit or another, or fear such loss, and are using the IP argument to scare people into not blabbing.
Using "Intellectual Property" as a shield (Score:5)
Anyone taking apart their barcode reader and creating software from what they see isn't violating Trade Secrecy law, because reverse-engineering is permitted under Trade Secrecy law. It doesn't fall under Patent law unless they have a patent that hasn't yet been mentioned (this would have to be a patent on the software, because that's what's being recreated), and it doesn't fall under Copyright law unless folks are actually using code from the barcode reader's software or ROM, or producing a work heavily derived from them.
It is a company's sad obligation to go after everyone who is violating one of these IP laws, lest they lose protection under the law, but it's a sadder 'obligation' for a company to use FUD (even when they're apologizing at the same time), under the guise of protecting legal rights, to try to dissuade people who have every right to do what they're doing.
The question here is whether D:C knows it has no legal footing, but is ding everything it can to get people to stop anyhow, or if they read too much slashdot and think 'that's our intellectual property! We must defend it!' without knowing the ramifications of IP law.
Kevin Fox
Re: Reverse Engineering in general... (Score:3)
What most people have to realise is that this idea against reverse engineering in general is again an invention of the software developement industry.. In all the other industries, reverse engineering is common, and used by all.
For example, if you visit a car manufacturer you will see they have groups dedicated to tear down and study in detail their competitors' cars. I know also a few persons in the microelectronics field, who had as a project to design machines for helping reverse engineering. (for a big big player in the market) (those were physical machines to permit the manufacturer in question to open the chips and study each layer of them)
Re:Concerns warrented.. (Score:3)
All that has happened here is that someone has taken their scanner, plugged it into a computer, scanned some barcodes, seen what they got, figured out how it was converting the barcode into the data it supplied and finally wrote a bit of code to turn the data from the device into something useful. They didn't go near the distributors software (it wasn't even close to being complicated enough to need that) so all they did was use the hardware the manufacturer gave away for free as it was intended with different software.
Now ask yourself this, if Ford gave away car fresheners for their Fiesta and then asked people to remove from websites the instructions for how to fit the freshener to other models of cars would you say "the right channels have to be used when dealing with other peoples work is concerned"?
I think this is a simple case of a company who are trying to implement a business plan with a potential flaw ("the WINDOW for the BIG companies to come in and control and profit from this process we have created"). Guess they should have made sure that door was closed BEFORE they handed the things out. Besides, do you really think that MS would need the Open Source community to help them crack this OR that MS would be deterred from rolling drivers for this into their software by claims of infringment of IP rights.
Bottom line I think they are stupid....not mallicious just stupid.....ah well so much for another dot.com dream!
Product misuse: American as apple pie (Score:5)
The best part was that the store was having a sale -- buy a microwave, get a free home microwave inspection (where a guy would come out and test your oven for RF leaks). Of course Josh had the guy come out and test the microwave AFTER he had taken it apart and used it to make his standing-wave-generator. The guy was scared shitless but tested the apparatus anyhow.
My point is that your example is a particularly cogent one about using a product in a manner for which it's not intened.
Ever use a car as a nutcracker? You jack up a drive wheel, put it in fourth and put a brick on the gas. Then you throw nuts into the gap between the wheel and the ground. Works VERY WELL with fresh walnuts.
Ever use a stereo as a degausser? You short a speaker line through a long spool of wire, ram a bunch of iron things into the center of the spool, and use the volume knob to degauss.
Ever use a Craftsman screwdriver in a way for which it wasn't intended? Did you break it?
Using products in ways in which they weren't intended is a big part of the American ideal. If the Wright Brothers hadn't used bicycle parts in a way for which they SERIOUSLY weren't intended, it might take a lot longer to get to that ski vacation today...
Re:Yes, but... (Score:3)
But the FlyingButtMonkeys didn't reverse engineer the software, they reverse engineered the protocol and built their own software to use the protocols. So clearly they didn't copy any of DC's source code.
--
Re:Have a dog and bark yourself (Score:3)
Which means that the Commander wouldn't be able to guarantee that his inspired thoughts would be foremost in our minds if he opened them up to the hazards of moderation. I hope that he (and his compatriots) will do this in the future, and even consider modifying this story to remove his commentary.
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:5)
And this is the flawed reasoning that will kill a lot of "free/cheap hardware, but buy our service" businesses. A lot of people, including some misguided business owners and managers, can't deal with the fact that computers are, in the end, user-programmable devices. If you develop hardware centered around a computer, someone can (and these days will) develop a free implementation of the software end, just because they can. All the legal threats and letters in the world won't stop an interested hacker from indulging his/her curiosity and reverse-engineering something, especially if that something is hardware that currently doesn't work with his/her favoured OS. As long as no secret documents or specs have been stolen directly from the company (as in, broke into their computers/offices and copied/took the docs) or leaked by an employee under an NDA, nothing legally or morally wrong has been done.
Either some business owners need to wake up to that reality now and learn to live with it, or the future will see even more legal stupidity as frightened CEOs loose their attack dogs in futile attempts to stifle curiosity and interoperability outside of their control.
Re:Yes, but... (Score:4)
Thomas claimed that the protocol is IP. I think that's false. Even if it were, the actual embodiment of "the protocol" is not one specific string of bits that it spits out (no more than an image generated by a Adobe Photoshop is the IP of Adobe), but rather the set of rules for generating that string of bits, namely the logic/code stored in the CueCat and in the driver on the computer.
Additionally, if this were the case, I think they'd have to have a patent on the rules for the protocol. Otherwise, the rules for the protocol were independantly figured out, which is a legal way to get the information under trade secrets law.
--
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:5)
People here don't take kindly to blustering, vague, ill-defined complaints about "Intellectual Property", especially when the company doing the complaining can't seem to make their fingers spell out just what intellectual property they are talking about in the first place! Slashdot is chock full of IP war veterans, and many of us do know our rights.
Intellectual property consists of:
o Copyrights
o Patents
o Trade secrets
o Trademarks
Can't be copyright infringement, because the drivers don't use their software. As a matter of fact, the safest approach at the moment appears to be to throw their software away unopened, to avoid being subject to their restrictive license.
If there is patent infringement, what is the patent number?
If an exclusive-or is the trade secret, then sorry, but it was reverse engineered, and is no longer a trade secret. It is now in the public domain. The DMCA doesn't help them because the bar coder doesn't control access to a copyrighted work.
Perhaps they have trademark issues? They assert:
Trademarks are the only type of IP with this requirement. If they are having issues with the open source drivers saying "cuecat", then they should just SAY SO and I'm sure that we could come up with a brand new name for the drivers that imply no public association with the people who developed the Radio Shack software.
To Digital Convergence:
Where's the beef? What's the IP you are complaining about? Why are you so vague, or do you have no case and are just bluffing? Consider your bluff called. What the hell are you talking about? Please provide details if you want to be taken seriously.
Total fsckedcompany.com material (Score:4)
OK, let's see here:
No, you dipsticks, that's trademark law. If I create something called the CueCat (without the dippy colon in front of the "C"), and it's a plastic cat-shaped barcode thingy, and he doesn't sue me, he stands to lose the right to use the word ":CueCat" to describe his plastic cat-shaped barcode thingy.
Netpliance (with the I-Opener and the resulting arms race of BIOS upgrades and anti-hack measures they wasted time with) missed the clue train [cluetrain.org], but at least can claim they faced a genuine threat. And even they didn't try to sue anyone.
But these guys, good Lord, they haven't just missed the Cluetrain, they aren't even at the friggin' station!
In closing, I'm pretty sure think there's more than one reason the "threatening letter" was merely a vaguely-threatening letter and not a real cease-and-desist.
1) As flamed ad infinitum on /. last week, any case against the developers of :CueCat(tm)-related hacks is likely to be extremely weak.
2) If Digital Convergence doesn't even have proofreaders, what the fuck are they using for corporate counsel?
3) And on that corporate counsel, if they do have corporate counsel, could one of them kindly bitchslap their management team and explain the difference between trademark law and "whatever the ring-tailed rambling fuck" (that's waht I'm calling it, because they've utterly failed to explain it - again) they're trying to use as grounds to sue an open-source developer with a funny domain name?
Re:I Liked Taco's Editorial! (Score:3)
I agree, Taco has a right to critique. However, I think it should be done in the same fashion as the rest of us - as a comment to the posting.
That stuff doesn't belong in the initial story. The story should report the NEWS, unless it's specifically an editorial piece. This was both, which is unnecessary. The COMMENTS are for opinions.
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:5)
Tough Titty!
A razorblade company decides to give away millions of free razors, as a loss-leader. They intend to make their money selling blades. Unfortunately, the world discovers that these razors make idealsauce-ap handles. So millions of free razors end up being used as saucepan handles and generate no razorblade-sale revenue at all. Whose fault is this?
The razorblade company will have to either
The company wants to make money (big surprise). They have a loopy plan, which partially backfires in their face (boo hoo!). Exactly why should I voluntarily give up my rights to help them make money despite a flawed business plan?
Re:The reason they don't like it... (Score:3)
Ah, but you see yours is free of that kind of crap. According to federal law (which would supercede the "you're just borrowing our hardware, and you're forbidden from reverse engineering our hardware" provision of their license.) any unsolicited item mailed to you may be considered a GIFT. As a gift, it is 100% yours, and you don't have to worry about the provisions that claim the hardware is really theirs.
This however wouldn't apply to the ones picked up from Radio Crack.
Patent protection (Score:3)
Indeed. Witness the huge flap when Unisys suddenly decided to enforce their patent on the GIF algorithm [fsf.org]. Unisys' official story on the subject was that although in theory, the GIF format should have been free, it contained a patent-protected algorithm (LZW compression), and their failing to charge license fees over it was "an oversight." It wouldn't surprise me if this was actually true (as opposed to a convenient fabrication), but it still sucked.
On the other hand, the Unisys GIF thing at least had the effect of forcing some people towards PNG [idgnet.com], which is a good thing. With apologies to Princess Leia, "The harder you grip your intellectual property, the more clients will slip through your fingers."
Here here, this was poor form. Fascism, in fact. (Score:3)
In as much as Cmdr's comments are so tightly woven with the core of this story, this post represents a form of fascism, imho.
It's such a radical departure from the way this view would have been discussed in the past, and leaves a bad taste.
The Bazaar is being run by Fascists.
Yes, but... (Score:5)
They should feel free to ask us not to use their hardware, but when they try to force us not to, I refuse to cooperate with their impolite request.
-russ
Have a dog and bark yourself (Score:4)
Commander,
Whilst I can appreciate your desire to rip to shreds some of the specious arguments presented in this letter, I would humbly suggest in future that you refrain from doing so. The first law of public posting is that someone else always has a smarter angle on the whole thing than you do, so if you act in a restrained manner and don't rip into the offender, someone else will.
Or, to put it simply, next time just post the original letter and invite comments. This way, the Slashdot hordes (ranging from rabid to rapier-witted) can do the barking for you, whilst you can maintain a modicum of disinterested independence.
Please consider.
Regards,
TFBW
Re:defense of whose rights ? (Score:5)
To those who published the code: Thanks!
To DigitalConvergence: What your beef? How does this ruin you business model? It seems to me that your little toy just became orders of magnitude more useful. Not only can I use it with your software (when I'm in Windows), but I can use it for whatever else my little geek brain dreams up. Back off and let the popularity of your device soar.
That is all.
-Derek
@#!! vendors using punctuation in products (Score:3)
Makes reading about
ouch ouch ouch.
Re:Destroying the Loss Leader business model. (Score:5)
No business has the right to anyone's money. If some company chooses to give away some widget because they think that you can't use it without paying for their service, that's a gamble.
As we all know, not every gamble pays off. There should be no additional legal protection for those who choose a risky business model. Intel wasn't able to stop AMD and Cyrix from using MMX, even though intel claimed that it was something that was necessary to protect their business.
It's like their renting you the device, not giving it to you - the price of the rental is that you pay them for it's use.
No, they're giving it away. If they wanted to rent it, then fine let them rent it. The way things stand they are giving it away. It becomes YOUR scanner, if you wanted to, you could drop it off a cliff or run it over with your car, it is YOURS.
I don't think it's your right to destroy their business.
They don't have any RIGHT to have their business model succeed. They bet on the wrong horse, tough luck for them.
Sure, the device isn't their business, but it's a vital (and vulnerable) part.
A chain is only as strong as it's weakest link, so too is a business plan. If they made a bad assumption about how the devices could be used, then that is their fault and their problem. As long as nobody stole and code from them, there is nothing questionable here.
LK
Re:What would make this argument valid? (Score:3)
The DMCA only covers systems that control access to a copyrighted work, not all encryption systems.
Not really a matter of opinion (Score:5)
Anyway, the opinion is that no illegal activity has taken place. According to posted descriptions, the re-engineering activity which occured took place within permitted boundaries of US law. Furthermore, posting of the re-engineered driver to the Internet and use of the driver by persons who have NOT clicked agreement with their contract, is perfectly legal. In addition, if someone mailed you the device unsolicited or if Radio Shack gave you the device without telling you that it was on loan AND if you did not click to agree with their contract, the widget is yours for permissable use within US copyright and patent law. You can't rip it apart to find out how it works and then start cranking out clones, but that's just about the only thing you can't do with it. Specifically, using a different software driver which avoids reference to their site and/or usage tracking technology, is perfectly legal. If they wanted to bind users to a contract dictating terms of usage, they didn't do it properly and unless you click on the "Agree" button on their contract, no usage contract exists.
Have fun!
PS: The commenting interspersed with their reply letter disturbs me. It looks like heckling, for which I have no respect. Please, next time just present the response and comment on it afterward. Please don't abuse the forum. mjs
Ok. I'm Pissed (Score:5)
To: ceo@digitalconvergence.com
CC: ddavis@digitalconvergence.com
CC: ontheweb@usatoday.com
CC: malda@slashdot.org
Subject: Cuecat Reverse Engineering Effort
Date: Tue, 5 Sep 2000 10:02:33 -0600 (MDT)
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE-----
Hash: SHA1
Gentlemen,
Reading the letter to the community
(http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=00/09/05/05
regarding the reverse engineering of the Cuecat barcode reader, I
have a few comments which I would like to convey at this point.
First, the right to reverse engineer a product for interoperability
purposes has legal precedent which has been upheld by the courts on
several occasions (Sony vs. Connectix being the latest one that I am
aware of.) Had I had anything to do with the development of the
drivers in question, I would currently be initiating my own legal
proceedings requesting a summary judgment stating that I am in no way
infringing on the Digital Convergence IP. After receiving that (And I
WOULD win, given previous legal precedents.) I would then follow up
with a harassment lawsuit requesting damages sufficient to give any
other company attempting this tactic pause. In this case, I had
nothing to do with the development of the drivers in question but I
hope my suggestion has made its way back to the original developers
and that they take it under consideration.
Second, the IP laws as originally designed were intended to stimulate
innovation and protect small inventors. They are currently being used
by large corporations to prevent innovation and intimidate small
inventors. Had the legal landscape been similar to this a decade ago,
Linux would never have been created because each computer would have
shipped with a license stating that you could only use it in the way
the hardware company intended, with the copy of Windows that came with
it being your only choice. Undoubtedly were you to desire to upgrade
your software, you would have had to have bought a new computer. This
is clearly not what our founding fathers intended when they created
the IP laws.
Third, if we, the community, do not stand up to large corporations
when they attempt to use these tactics to intimidate us into silence,
we will lose what rights we have to use the hardware we bought and
paid for in the manner of our choosing. Computing as a hobby will
cease to be, and the best and the brightest programmers in the field
will go elsewhere, leaving only mediocre writers of mediocre software
in a mediocre field with none of the growth that you may have noticed
over the past decade. That's not good for the community and it's not
good for the companies which serve the community of which Digital
Convergence is one.
Fourth, given the above, I must question both the ethics and the
intelligence of a company which does not realize the above. Truly,
alienating a potential customer base is not a good way to do
business. I take the same stand with any company using these tactics
to spread fear and intimidation in the community: I will never buy
your products. I will never recommend your products in any project I
work on. I will never work for your company. In a managerial position,
I will never hire as an employee anyone who worked in your company
after these tactics came to light. I will encourage all of my friends
to take a similar stance. You have plenty of competitors. I shall
patronize them.
Thank you for your time.
- --
Bruce Ide bruce.ide@echostar.com
http://www.paratheoanametamystikhood.net
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE-----
Version: GnuPG v1.0.2 (GNU/Linux)
Comment: Processed by Mailcrypt 3.5.5 and Gnu Privacy Guard
iD8DBQE5tRiYYrife6UJ+gURArLmAJsHFnBCfPUfxEWTmtb
jpKB+EgJubzFMuPmyxmjRM0=
=6Vu2
-----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Re:Still a bit vague on one thing.... (Score:3)
--
Protection of IP (Score:4)
-russ
The really sad part... (Score:3)
Yes, that would have increased the price somewhat, but I would guess that thing thing costs atleast $20 anyways, waiting a couple of months before they released it, and using RSA would have saved them from having to worry about other systems using their expensive hardware.
I don't understand something. (Score:5)
In order to publish such a manual, one has to "reverse engineer" the car in question. Haynes even brags that every manual is "based on a complete teardown and rebuild" of the car that it's for.
LK
Dogs? Attack dogs? (Score:5)
Their dogs are attack dogs, better known in certain circles as lawyers.
Their explanation is pure bullshit, starting with the fact that it is only for trademarks that the principle "defend it or lose it" is valid. Besides, what exactly intellectual property they are trying to defend from hackers? They are wonderfully vague on this point and the reason is that what they'd like to defend is not legally defensible. And spare me these sob-sister stories about five years of sleepless nights. There is nothing technologically interesting in their toy. They came up with a business plan which, as usual, didn't survive contact with reality. Film at 11.
I don't like guys whose knee-jerk reaction is to send threatening but legally meaningless letters.
Kaa
"Just a couple of guys"? (Score:3)
All this whining about "intellectual property" convinces me that the folks behind CueCat have a only the foggiest notion of what intellectual property is, and I think that the "crime" that the folks that made a kernel driver for the CueCat really comitted--what really freaked out the CueCat suits out-- was that they pried loose control of the valuable marketing information that CueCat is capturing and sending back to the CueCat servers. I think we should be watching very carefully to see what kind of things start showing up in that data stream...especially since I bet the "official" client software is quite capable of silently updating itself to do whatever the suits want it to.
Re:Yes, but... (Score:3)
That's correct. You could also have a copyright. Or a trademark. Apart from that, you don't have a whole lot in the way of IP rights. However, the only thing that could possibly be applicable in this situation is a patent. So where's the reference to patent numbers or patents pending? lacking those, they are missing any sort of a case against the driver developers - am I right?
Stereotyping (Score:3)
I'll bet most of us said "no." Now, while we might very well support the writers of that code, The suits at digital convergence shouldn't feel free to lump us all together as offenders. That lends itself to more anti-Linux FUD by the mainstream press who get ahold of this letter. I mean, imagine an article quoting this letter that said "Digital Convergence is upset by the actions of the Linux community..." instead of "Digital convergence is upset by the actions of several programmers..."
It's not that I think we should leave these guys high and dry; I think they deserve our support. But at the same time we must force Digital Convergence to say what they mean and not toss stereotypes around.
Destroying the Loss Leader business model. (Score:3)
It's like their renting you the device, not giving it to you - the price of the rental is that you pay them for it's use.
I think it would be cool if my Mom got a "free" device that would let her read Email and do basic Web stuff, even if it had a great big ad across the bottom (FreePC style). I for one don't want to see the business model that would permit that to happen, be destroyed.
IMHO if their license says don't reverse engineer the device, then pretend it didn't exist. I don't think it's your right to destroy their business.
Oh, and trying to say that this device isn't their business (that their business is the website and their services) is drawing attention away from the fact that, say, if someone were to write a handy Open Source app that let you take the ISBNs off your books and create a cool catalog of your home library or CD collection, suddenly they could have a million people wanting their "free" device. Oops.. now they can't give it away. Sure, the device isn't their business, but it's a vital (and vulnerable) part.
As for the Adaptec's and DVD-ROM drives of the world, well, that's a wholly different argument because they CHARGE for the hardware. They made their money up-front.
- Steve
They could have had legal protection (Score:5)
It already has legal protection; they simply chose not to use it.
The legal protection is contract law. Make the customer sign a contract that explicitly states what is required by the customer, states what uses are permitted, and states that using their product in conjunction with competitor's products is prohibited.
Digital Convergance, the companies that sell DVD movies, the makers of the iOpener, and countless other businesses won't do this, of course, because they don't want the customer to be aware of the terms prior to the sale. They know that people will refuse if they know what they are getting into. Well, that's dishonest and deceptive, and I won't fucking tolerate it.
(Another reason they won't put these contracts up front is that there are anti-trust laws against it. But I would favor the repeal of these anti-trust laws if consumers were informed up-front about their (lack of) rights. Buy a DVD, sign an agreement that you will only play it on a DVDCCA-licensed player. Take a free CueCat, sign an agreement that you will send everything that you scan to their server, along with the CueCat's serial number which was also scanned at Radio Shack and linked to your name and address. Buy Microsoft Windows, sign an agreement that you will only run Microsoft apps on it. Make these ridiculous "agreements" explicit and let the market embrace them (*snicker*) or wipe them out. And if there's no contract, then there's no restrictions beyond the "default" restrictions state by, for example, copyright law.)
---
The reason they don't like it... (Score:5)
It seems pretty clear to me that this company is all about collecting personal information about you. Now, we're used to companies like Doubleclick et al. using various schemes to figure out where you browse, and generate models of your on-line behaviors automatically. But the CueCat thing is designed so that they can find out about things in the real world, too. They WANT you to scan things in your house (books, products, magazines, TV shows, etc), and when you do, their software does a quick lookup for you, and gives you the shovelware connected to whatever it is.
But it ALSO remembers who scanned what, and they can generate a much more impressive profile of you as a consumer: what do you watch, what magazines are you reading, what books do you have, etc. And I'll bet that THAT's what their business model is all about---more invasive consumer profiling.
And THAT's why they can't tolerate the Linux drivers which don't do the lookup through their servers---because they don't let them form that profile. They've probably calculated their (hugely expensive) giveaway scheme to give a particular rate of data generation through their servers, and if they don't get that, then their business model is shot to hell. Of COURSE they're going to try to prevent people from getting around their software: every person using the Linux driver is the same as a reader thrown away to them. So I'm sure that if a developer tried to work with them, they'd spend a lot of effort urging them to direct all connections through the Digital Convergance servers.
My father-in-law gave me his reader (which some magazine helpfully mailed him), and I was going to use it under Linux, but I've changed my mind. If I want a barcode reader, I'll go buy one that's free of this kind of crap.
My reply. (Score:4)
A bar code reader with obfuscated output no harder to figure out than a secret decoder ring? THAT's IP these days? Fine, I claim uuencoded rot14 encoded text to be my increadibly earth shatteringly important, gen-U-Ine rocket science type intellectual property.
More seriously, bar code readers are NOT any sort of rocket science these days. There's really nothing worth protecting as far as reading the output goes. Knowing how to read it's output doesn't tell anyone anything about the reader that they couldn't easily guess with 100% accuracy without even looking at the thing. The less information that is available about communicating with hardware, the less valuable it is.
As for the free source helping MS out, the fact that they have programmers capable of making Windows even get through the boot process tells me that they could SURELY have figured the simple obfuscator out with no help from the Open Source/GPL community. It's REALLY that simple. I even said to my wife a few days ago that something like that would be GREAT for a High School or edvanced elementery school math class. It's challenging enough but attainable for students at that level. (I'm not a teacher, It was just an idle morning coffee sort of thought).
By referring to that as valuable IP, Mr. Davis is effectively wandering around at an international grand master's chess competition talking about the mind numbingly complex strategies and logic involved in Tic-Tac-Toe. The funny sound in the background is raucous laughter.
but trying to get the "hackers" and such to WORK WITH US AND NOT EXPOSE US and destroy over 5 years of hard work by a group of "geeks, hackers and techno-whizzes" like each of you!
Small hint: sending a nastygram from a horde of lawyers is NOT a good way to open that dialog. Some people have found that 'Can we sit down and discuss this' is a lot meor effective than 'Listen here palley or we bust your kneecaps'
There IS SOME innovative thinking going on with the CueCat. Having a server that allows the user to scan catalog barcodes and be taken to the product page is possably a good idea. I would suggest working to protect that rather than the simply obfuscated standard hardware. The real objective is to have the consumers out there using the CueCat and Digital Convergance servers to scan catalog items. Make sure that those servers are reliable and their databases are extensive. Perhaps even add additional information that's otherwise hard to find. Make sure that when a retailer wants that feature for their catalog that they sign up with Digital Convergance for that service. So what if a few geeks use the CueCat as a general purpose barcode reader, as long as they use your server when they want to look up an item in a catalog!
A final point, I realise that Radio Shack is not the geek haven it once was, but REALLY! Of all of the retailers to work with SURELY Radio Shack was one of the MOST LIKELY ones to have customers who could and would figure it out and further, consider doing so a moral imperitive as well as a fun way to waste an hour or two on the weekend! If you show off your cool new car at an auto mechanics convention, expect the hood to be raised!
Re:Waitaminute... (Score:5)
It's not just the barcode scanning that went into the development of this product. There is also an audio-cue portion to this technology which was much more difficult to come up with effectively.
There was also the fact that we had whole racks of machines that were configured differently to test various sound cards, barcode readers, Windows versions, audio cables, etc. We did months and months of live testing from satellite feeds and on-air broadcasts using the audio technology.
Not to mention the upper management doing the dog-and-pony in countless conference rooms across the country. It really was a 5 year process. I know I spent several months on the back-end mod_perl that would handle just the proto-type testing. The C code came after I left...
In any company, starting from scratch takes awhile. Especially when you have a TV show to run, etc. It was a long hard road... Still is. (Just not for me anymore, although I still feel intimately acquainted with DigitalConvergence's ideals and plans. I still see the "vision").
They'd better sue me then (Score:3)
Dammit they better sue me too. I once used a GM car as a chair at a Drive-In Theater
Re:Have a dog and bark yourself (Score:3)
He isn't saying that CmdrTaco is somehow obliged to editorialize in comments rather than in the story. He's just saying that it would be more effective, and better for slashdot.
I agree w/ the editorial this time, but I still think it would be more effective. Or at least at the end rather than in between.
Re:The reason they don't like it... (Score:3)
Re:Misunderstanding of what IP is at stake (Score:3)
I used to work at a library, our barcode scanners could do the same thing, this was about five years ago, so this technology existed before the CueCat people even began developing the CueCat.
A giant pack of lies (Score:5)
-- nothing done with the Cuecat was illegal
-- there's no IP for the Cuecat people to defend - identify it! I dare you! "By posting our IP to the net" my ass!
-- there's no such thing as "Defend it or lose it" under IP law. If 200 people rip off MS Windows and MS prosecutes 2 of them, there's no such defense as "Well, your honor, MS didn't prosecute the other 198 people..." This is a MASSIVE LIE made up by companies who want to shift responsibility. ANYTIME you see a company say "We had to
-- That whole third paragraph about the linux community helping Microsoft is hogwash.
-- there aren't any illegal posting efforts
-- if it took them five years to develop a BARCODE SCANNER which MUNGES the normal output in a trivial manner before outputting it, I am a Great Horned Antelope. I'm not? Well then I guess they're lying again. I talked to a friend of mine at Symbol [symbol.com], and Digital Convergance approached them to make this device earlier this year. (Symbol didn't end up making it.) Their company has been in existence less than one year. Symbol could make a run of these for you in a few months.
And what I really hate is that the lies are so pervasive that they end up shaping the whole debate. People can only see past a certain limited number of lies at a time. So they'll catch a few, but then they'll accept the bigger lies like "We had to
Random thought to any company executives who happen to be reading this: you know, if you truly wanted [your company] to be a radical, different company, try this on for size. Fire any and all PR people. Just fire them. Don't hire any more. Ever. If there's a story where you have to talk to the press, let one of the principals do it - the guy who programmed that feature, or whatever. No matter how big the company gets, DON'T EMPLOY TRAINED LIARS TO DEFEND IT. Because that's what a PR person is - someone trained in the art of creating believable lies day in and day out. People catch on to this, believe it or not, even though it's a very slippery thing to catch on to, and they end up with (at a minimum) a vague distrust of that company, because they know they're being lied to but can't quite figure out exactly where. It's the reason Microsoft has such a bad reputation. If VA or Red Hat or anyone else truly wanted to break the mold, they would abandon the institutionalized lying. This would prevent that distrust from building, as well as keeping the company on the straight and narrow - without a wall of lying to protect them, the company execs get good feedback whenever they're doing something wrong.
I think the first company to do this has the potential of being a very different, much more
people-friendly company than we've seen in the past.
--
Michael Sims-michael at slashdot.org
Use it or lose it; IP Myth (Score:4)
I challenge any attorney out there to support this with case law. I have consulted with IP attorneys on this very matter and have been told that, except for trademarks, this is totally false. IANAL, so I could be wrong, but I doubt it. If you ARE a lawyer, and I'm wrong, please point to freely-available references justifying your opinion.
Given that the above-quoted statement is false, we have two (and ONLY two) choices.
1. Doug Davis is STUPID.
a. He is NAL, and he either makes statements about legal principles without consulting AL, or he consults STUPID L and believes them.
b. He is AL and should know better.
2. Doug Davis is a LIAR. He knows what he says is wrong, and says it anyway.
Again, if I'm wrong about my premise, please correct me in this forum.
Re:The reason they don't like it... (Score:4)
Their privacy policy [cuecat.com] is quite funny. It says, "Digital:Convergence wants every member of its community to understand what information we collect and how we intend to use that information."
But while the rest of the page is quite explicit about not giving out your phone number, it says nothing about the mother lode of data they (surely) collect about what you actually scan. In fact, they don't even mention the possibility!
Don't yell and scream... (Score:4)
They don't get to trample on our rights to explore technical problems and discuss our solutions, in order to feed their dogs. Their threatening legal tactics are no different than those of the MPAA in the DeCSS case. The fact that they're a small company is no excuse - indeed, it means that every person there holds more responsibility for the actions of the company, not less.
Note the vauge references to "intellectual property". What do they mean? Was copyright violated? Was a patent broken? Was a trademark violated? Taking something apart to see how it works, and describing your findings to others, is not a violation of any legitimate law. (The DMCA is illegitmate and unconstitutional, and its architects and supporters need to be cleansed via the flaying and boiling ritual described above.) Oh, and to my knowledge (IANAL) only trademarks need to be defended with vigor to be recognized; patent and copyright holders can be more lenient and still retain their legal rights.
So: fsck 'em if they can't take a hack.
LIARS (Score:4)
---- ----
Follow the money... (Score:5)
The reason DC is able to make money is not because they can move you to the site easily with the bar code scanner, it's because they can autmatically track the demographics of users who swipe codes.
DC has set up a completely seperate company called Digital Demographics to handle this. This is where the money really is.
Homegrown drivers that don't require the user to sign up and let their demographic pants down would obviously scare DC.
Also, the DC codes system is proprietary. The CueCats can read normal bar codes, but only CueCats can read DC codes. Figure it out for yourself.
Re:@#!! vendors using punctuation in products (Score:3)
Hey! That naming scheme took them five years to come up with!
-
Don't buy stock in these guys... (Score:4)
1. Each device has a unique serial number. You can see this number spit out with the perl decoder available on the net. (I will not post link, for fear of having author harassed) This RISK needs no explanation.
2. Their database depends on customer contributions, just like CDDB does. They clearly state that the submissions become the sole property of them. (In case you were thinking about polluting the database in protest, as I did, it appears that the submissions are queued up and reviewed by humans.)
I'm also annoyed that the damned device has no off switch or a cover for the scanner LED. My computer desk now gives off an eerie red glow at night unless I cover up the ugly cat-shaped device.
Still, I can't see they have any hope of defending this. AFAIK, there are no patents on the absurd encoding scheme they use. They gave away the hardware (I will not be bound by a shrink-wrap click/through license on hardware!). And now now they're bitching that someone can potentially built a better mouse trap.
I'm not angry with this company, really. It's more like pity for dreaming up such a poor business model. I hope the employees are looking for other jobs, as these folks won't be around much longer, IMHO.
Re:I don't understand something. (Score:4)
Sec. 1201(a)(1)(A) of the DMCA states:
"No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title."
The problem is that the authors of the DMCA seem to want to prohibit reverse engineering, but haven't figured out how to do it without being so blatant that it wouldn't get through Congress. So, we end up with this schizophrenic piece of legislation. Sec. 1201(f)(1) states:
"Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a)(1)(A), a person who has lawfully obtained the right to use a copy of a computer program may circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a particular portion of that program for the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program that are necessary to achieve interoperability of an independently created computer program with other programs, and that have not previously been readily available to the person engaging in the circumvention, to the extent any such acts of identification and analysis do not constitute infringement under this title."
It comes down to whether or not your lawyers are good enough to get you off based on this clause or not. Hopefully the DeCSS case will eventually establish a good precedent. They haven't done very well so far, but hopefully things will go better in the appeals courts.
Re:Concerns warrented.. (Score:3)
Your car analogy is doubly valid (Score:3)
Any good idea (that isn't patented or legally protected) will be taken note of, and may find its way into a future project. Any bad idea or poor tradeoff will be laughed at.
There is a very long history of "reverse engineering" in the nuts and bolts world. The software world should expect no less.