MPAA Is Sending Out Letters Again 16
rbb writes "The MPAA is sending out new cease-and-desist letters to people who apparently did not remove DeCSS from their site. The (obviously script-powered) letter they sent out is hilarious!" Wording appears to be stronger than previous letters.
Re:E-mailed cease & desist letters mean squat. (Score:1)
It's been said before, but... (Score:1)
Therefore, most if not all search engines are violating the DMCA, as are any sites that link to search engines, etc. So did the MPAA send these letters to half the internet?
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E-mailed cease & desist letters mean squat. (Score:1)
Before people make a big deal out of this, realize that an e-mail is not a legal document. If you receive one, by all means get legal counsel, but do not reply to the letter as you can plausibly claim that you never received it.
The only way a cease and desist letter can be legally acknowledged as delivered to you is if the MPAA sends it by certified mail and you sign for it.
I think I'm missing something . . . (Score:1)
Re:E-mailed cease & desist letters mean squat. (Score:1)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but... (Score:1)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't the injunction against 2600 only? They seem to be saying in this letter that the injunction was against all sites everywhere. Wouldn't they have to go through the same legal proceedings for every site?
Re:Really amazing (Score:1)
Re:E-mailed cease & desist letters mean squat. (Score:1)
I'd be careful about that. If you receive an e-mail, and someone asks you directly if you have received it (and asks you under oath), the best you can do is say something like "I don't recall." If you say "No", you have just perjured yourself. And that is both illegal AND unethical.
Re:We need more media people like you! (Score:1)
We need more media people like you! (Score:2)
Really amazing (Score:2)
I am still at a loss as to how a decypher routine, that does not play or copy anything by itself, can be a "pirating device", or whatever that Amish judge said.
Somehow, the rights of the individual make no difference to anybody any more (except for that individual of course). How on earth can it be *wrong* for me to give my own instructions to my own equipment to play files that I purchased? If I am doing something like copying DVDs, then by all means, prosecute me.
In this case, the MPAA obviously does not care about piracy, because they are harassing everybody that they can find *except* the pirates.
Let's see, if Chrysler decided to provide a *licensed* map with every vehicle that they sell, and by their own decree that map was some sort of "safety equipment", then some person went into a gas station and was handed a "free" map for a fillup, then was *caught* by Chrysler in posession of that map, would any court bother to hear a criminal case against the gas station for giving away "circumvention devices"? Also, add that the gas station was aiding "counterfiters" of automobile products, with the map being a key component in the counterfiting.
Sadly, in this day and age, I believe that the answer would be yes and the above example is identical to what happened to 2600 magazine.
Visit DC2600 [dc2600.com]
Not just in the US, either (Score:2)
It appears Demon Internet (a largish ISP here in the UK) received the letter [cryptome.org] too, and was sufficiently paniced by it to sent out a "prove you are innocent or else" letter to it's customer.
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Re:Not just in the US, either (Score:2)
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Re:Really amazing (Score:2)
As far as I can tell, the MPAA managed to convince the judge that an encrpyted file can't be copied at all whereas a decrypted file can be. (The docs have various comments along the lines of "decrypted...and copied just like any other file"
Meanwhile, 2600 didn't seem to realise that anyone could be so stupid as to assume this, and 2600's legal experts didn't have the technical knowledge to understand that an encrypted file could still be copied.
Re:Correct me if I'm wrong, but... (Score:2)
Re:It's been said before, but... (Score:3)