Sklyarov Arrest Follow-up 386
Randy Rathbun submitted a Reuters article about the arrest of Dmitri Sklyarov. Cryptome has collected the press release and criminal complaint filed against Sklyarov by the United States, at the urging of Adobe Corporation. The complaint specifically mentions the ROT-13 "encryption" used by at least one "protected ebook" company, so the jokes made about the DMCA before are now true: crack ROT-13, go to jail. Sklyarov is currently imprisoned without bail. We've received a note that another Russian developer who was at the conference with Sklyarov has posted more information about the arrest - can someone provide a translation in the comments?
Update: 07/18 10:57 PM by S : This Las Vegas Sun Article provides more interesting details (Thanks to possible for the link).
What sickens me even more... (Score:2)
And the average sentence for rape is what, 2 years?
Crimes against property are becoming more punishable than crimes against people. Sort of indicative of a society that values property more than people. Now we're starting to see that attitude reflected in laws. It's just more apparent when you are prosecuting against property that doesn't 'exist'.
Don't buy it! (Score:4)
Contact your local paper and give them this additional information, they may have a story getting ready for print on it.
~ Signal 11
Native Speaker Translation (Score:5)
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
He broke the law.
Except that it wasn't passed in Russia, where he wrote the code and published it.
...phil
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Quit splitting hairs. You know what I mean. You can, of course, break into your own house. Though using dynamite might get you some questions from the ATF...
Re:eeek. (Score:5)
In many locations in the US, having lockpicks is not a crime (source: MIT lockpick guide). HOWEVER, using lockpicks in association with a crime is an additional offense in itself. The same should be true for software.
Re:Brick != Theft-o-matic 5000 (Score:2)
What's wrong with that?
Oh Goody (Score:2)
I'm officially ashamed to be a citizen of the United States. We've just managed to create what will end up being an international incident to protect the "intellectual property" of a corporation.
This really sucks for him, but maybe this will be the straw that breaks the DMCA's back. (Please, oh Please....) If this ever makes it to the Supreme Court I don't see how the law would survive scrutiny...
Welcome to the 21st century version of feudalism. Anyone who thinks they're living in a "free market" is sorely mistaken, and this should be an eye-opener. The power in this country has effectively been taken from the voters and common citizenry and placed in the hands of the corporations and major political parties. I wonder if it's too late to undo the damage that we've allowed to happen.
Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
So... the DMCA is a good thing, but doesn't go far enough. It should require *strong* encryption.
The DMCA isn't about protecting your personal right to privacy in emails or documents. It's about the formation of a new corporate definition of copyright that never expires. It's about blocking fair use. It's about giving the copyright holder absolute control over how the copyrighted material is used (eg. only played on approved DVD players).
It disallows decryption when the user intends to pirate, for sure. But it also disallows decryption when the user simply wants to make use of the content.
Perhaps I've misunderstood your post. Correct me if I'm wrong. Perhaps you merely intended to (justifiably) slam Adobe for selling flawed encryption.
Effective protection? (Score:2)
Surely the "protection" has been proven ineffective, and therefore this law doesn't apply?
Re:unbelievable (Score:2)
Well, it's called a "Caesar Cipher" for a reason...
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Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Re:ASCII Illegal (Score:2)
1. Very easy to implement (small, fast)
2. Very easy to decrypt ciphertext
3. Trivial to brute-force, has other known weaknesses and attacks (vulnerable to freq. analysis etc).
There are many applications where ROT-13 is a suitable cipher mechanism (profane usenet messages being just one).
I can't be bothered to reply to every lame slashbot remark about ROT-13 here, but I've yet to see anyone indicate precisely where ROT-13 was used and if it was actually used inappropriately or not.
For instance, an eBook might want to use ROT-13 as a child lock so that adult eBooks, even when purchased, could be weakly encrypted by the owner to prevent children reading them.
The REAL reason Strong AI does not yet exist... (Score:2)
Seriously, this is scary stuff. Not because Adobe chose to exploit the law in their favour - heck*, companies need publicity to survive. What is scary is that the media and the majority of Americans see absolutely nothing wrong in Adobe's actions.
*According to the Oxford English Dictionary, a heck is a bridge with fish under it. What this has to do with the above paragraph is best left to the imagination of the reader.
Re:The REAL reason Strong AI does not yet exist... (Score:2)
Hmmmm..... Interesting..... (Score:3)
In short, this arrest would seem to not be about the software, but rather the speech. This implies that the DMCA's coverage of "devices to circumvent copy-protection" includes verbal instructions, not merely physical or virtual "devices".
In the same way as the judge ruled that links to the DeCSS code were essentially the same as publishing the DeCSS code itself, the filing implies that verbal descriptions of the devices covered by the DMCA are the same as those devices.
Ok, so this would seem to explain the action, and provide precident through the courts. It would also imply that, should he be found guilty, he's not going anywhere soon.
On the flip-side, it would also mean that if the arguments fail in court, due to a competent judge, the DeCSS appeals will certainly be helped, as there will then be a precident which contradicts the DeCSS judge's interpretation.
This could utterly destroy America, or it could totally pulverize those laws which exist to create and maintain a corporate Empire.
Re:eeek. (Score:4)
Wrong. I can break into my own home as much or as little as I want to. I can smash through my windows, I can break my doors down, I can pick my own locks [although the legality of possessing lockpicking tools varies from jurisdiction to jurisdiction], etc. I can even dig a tunnel from my front yard into my basement, using dynamite to blast through the wall!
In many locations in the US, having lockpicks is not a crime (source: MIT lockpick guide). HOWEVER, using lockpicks in association with a crime is an additional offense in itself. The same should be true for software.
I'm with you 100% here... well, 50%, anyway. Committing a crime is committing a crime, and that's that. I'm not so sure that particular methodologies deserve the specific additional punshments associated with them. E.g. if my wife is murdered because of her race, she's still murdered, and locking the murderer up for 20 years or 200 years won't bring her back. But that's another issue entirely: the point is that the tools themselves should not be illegal if they have legal uses.
Re:Call me a felon, but I just cracked Rot 13! (Score:2)
Pity this wasn't a speeding ticket.. (Score:2)
Adobe learned that Dmitry Sklyarov is slated to speak on July 15, 1001
And we trust those wacky knuckleheads at Adobe with encryption of literature, when they can't even get verb tense right.
Looks like it's time to boycott Adobe products, citing a "chilling effect" on the marketplace.
.sig a .sog, .sig out loud, .sig out .strog"
".sig,
Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
one-liner (tr A-Za-z N-ZA-Mn-za-m).
It wasn't an effective deterent.
Not only the tourist industry (Score:2)
Because the tool he made was perfectly legal in his country.
Because, you look at the judicial events of the last 12 months in US, US judges will almost always line up with the big corporation WITHOUT EVEN considering the small guy side fairly.
Because, if this case holds water, DMCA can then be construed to arrest any developer of any project that may harm a corporation IP. Doesn't DeCSS runs under Linux? Isn't then Linux a tool propiciating a IP theft? Shouldn't we then arrest this Linus guy and this other Alan guy?
So, let us keep our distance from our american fellows. After all, we have the Internet to exchange ideas while our phisical bodies are safely away from the hands of the FBI.
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
Sound impossible?
That is what has happened here.
And don't even get me started on Adobe and "corporate morality!"
ROT13 Indeed.
Unbelievable.
D
Does "Rot13 security handler" == "ROT-13"? (Score:3)
It's the last two bullets that I'm curious about. "Fixed encryption key" implies something more than simply "rotate by 13", and "key found as text string" sort of enforces that thought. Does anyone have experience with the Acrobat plugin sample that the 1st bullet refers to?
This may be just an example of some company naming their proprietary system after a cool geek-friendly phrase...
...or, it may actually be ROT-13. Does anyone know for sure? What'd they say at the presentation?
Re:Rot-13 was not really used as encryption on USE (Score:2)
Rot-13 was not really used as encryption on USENET (Score:5)
Rot-13 was used to prevent the accidental reading of a USENET posting which might be offensive to the reader. Things like explicitly sexual or graphic stories would typically be rot-13ed, with a plaintext note prepended saying, in effect, "the following may be very offensive to you so I've encoded it with rot-13, use the 'r' key in your newsreader to decode and view the text if you're sure you want to read what follows."
For a company to adopt such a scheme, with such a history, as a fundamental part of its so-called content protection product is to defraud its customers, in particular the content providors who have been misled to believe their content is, in fact, protected. To then seek to hide their incompetence behind an ill-considered law such as the DMCA and arrest the whistle blower on criminal charges is, itself, profoundly criminal.
Imagine if safety issues were involved, such as incompetently written medical software, and the whistle blower we being treated like this. There would be a justifiable public outcry and demand that the perpetrators of the fraud should be punished, perhaps even imprisoned. This is no different -- public fraud has been committed and those guilty are misusing our corrupt legal system to incarcerate the person who has publicly exposed them. Unconscionable, as are the despicable
Re:he's *not* being arrested for cracking rot13 (Score:4)
But the simple fact that ROT13 can even be listed as an "encryption technology" should be setting off huge warning alarms. "Ecryption" should be a bit more extensive than "can be decoded in a few minutes by a five-year-old with a Cocoa Puffs Secret Agent Decoder Ring."
-jdm
PS. Apologies to whatever company made the ROT13 encryption; I didn't mean to imply a five year-old could decrypt the eBook on their own. They may need their seven-year-old sister's help with some of the bigger words.
Re:unbelievable (Score:2)
I mean, how old is that cifer ?
ROT-13 is a specific case of a Caesar-cipher, which it is called since Julius Caesar used them in ancient Rome, I believe.
So, 2000 years old give or take a few hundred...
Of course this bad hacker must be imprisoned for cracking something that's been secret for so long!
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Re:crack rot-13, go to jail (Score:2)
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The presentation (Score:4)
www.download.ru/defcon.ppt
It doesn't seem that incriminating. Oh, wait, this is the DMCA we're talking about...
ROT-13 (Score:5)
I guess my old
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Under concerns of security and information privacy, the above message has been encrypted in an advanced version of a standard adopted over ten years ago for transmission of secure ASCII-based information over insecure, public newsgroups.
Please be advised that only text-based readers that can handle at least TWO CONSECUTIVE rounds of ROT-13 encryption will be able to correctly parse the information contained herein.
Any attempt to undermine the encryption methods employed will be prosecuted to the fullest extent of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act, Chapter 12.
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:4)
Nah, we have found the natural evolution of American activism: outsource our patriotism to Russians. Let Russians stand up for our rights. Yeah, that's the ticket!
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he's *not* being arrested for cracking rot13 (Score:5)
If the only complaint against Skylarov was from the rot13 system's vendor, that would be another matter entirely.
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Re:ASCII Illegal (Score:4)
To "decrypt" the message, ROT-13 again, as "n" becomes "a", and so on.
Some people can read ROT-13ed ascii as is.
To describe ROT-13 as encryption is laughable.
Cheers,
Tim
Re:eeek. (Score:4)
But that's not what we're talking about.
This Russian guy has not been accused of stealing an electronic book. He's been accused of trafficking in software which could theoretially be used to steal a book.
It would be like arresting me for saying, "Hey, if you throw a brick through a window, you can break into TomV's house!" or for releasing a report saying, "Yale brand locks are ineffective -- you can break them with a screwdriver!"
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Re:ROT-13 (Score:2)
I know this is sort of a Barney Frank "Do I desecrate my tie" question, but isn't there a line to be drawn somewhere?
The clear place to draw the line is shown in the relevant piece of mind-drunk legislation, emphasis mine:
2. Title 17, United States Code, Section 1201(b) states in relevant part:
(1) No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that -
(A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing protection afforded by a technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title in a work or a portion thereof;
It can be argued safely that ROT13 is not an effective encryption technique. A competent lawyer can get this Russian gentlemen off easily.
Contribute your child's ROT-13 decoding blocks as a defense exhibit. Demonstrate how these blocks can decrypt a passage in the book. Then watch the judge try to keep a straight face....
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Terra? (Score:2)
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Could be very funny to do this. (Score:3)
For a really good press conference, get hold of several sets of these ROT-13 children's blocks, an eBook, and a video projector.
The script would run as follows:
"For those who are not informed as to the issues, here is a demonstration of the techniques used in the alleged circumvention software."
A set of the children's blocks are laid out so the letters are in alphabetical order and are clearly visible. They are encased in a simple harness so they can all be flipped at the same time.
"Here we have a set of children's blocks, which are readily available from many toy stores all around the nation. The blocks have letters on both sides. Watch what happens when we flip all the blocks over."
The blocks are flipped, revealing the letters on the other side.
"Notice how the letters on the blocks now run from N to Z, then from A to M. In the computer industry, this technique is called 'ROTATE 13' or 'R-O-T-13'."
The video projector displays a portion of the encrypted eBook.
"Here is a section of an eBook. Tou will notice that it appears to be encrypted."
Another set of children's blocks are laid out in another harness with the first encrypted line of the eBook.
"We have used another set of blocks to duplicate the first line in the eBook. What what happens when we flip these blocks."
The blocks are flipped, and a line about Big Brother from the novel '1984' is revealed.
Here is the sound bite:
"This case is about the alleged circumvention of an alleged technological measure designed to protect copyrighted works. But a protection technique that can be cracked by a two-year-old with toy blocks cannot be considered by any sane person to be effective."
Ouch. This will hit below the waterline.
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effective (Score:2)
It could be a single 'copy-me' bit, and if someone develops software to get around it, they are violating the DMCA.
Re:This is just unbelievable (Score:4)
On that thought, maybe that's a good way to explain the "decryption" to the judge. Take an actual excerpt of an eBook encrypted file, then give it to your mother to do just like those cryptagram puzzles. Get her to write up an explanation of how she worked it out, and mail it to a friend. Show the judge the puzzle and her solution, then demand that they also throw your mom in jail for circumventing the encryption on the eBook (and distributing the crack)!
Re:without bail? (Score:2)
Re:Complements of our friend fish. (Score:2)
Nothing like human translation:
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Some of my neighbors won a hard-fought victory to allow them to change their mailbox to a different color (green, very attractive). I think they did it just to see what it would take. Being retired and very thick-headed and taking amusement at the utter stupidity of the bureaucratic mentality was reason enough I guess. Anyhow, now almost all of us on the cul-de-sac now sport nice green mailboxes.
Score: -1 Off-topic
Translation (Score:4)
Details of arrest of Dmitry Skljarova from July, 11 till July, 16 I was in Las Vegas on conference Defcon 9 together with the employee of our corporation Dmitry Skljarovym who addressed to on conference on the report. In the morning, July, 16, we together with Dmitry have quitted from hotel and were going to go in the airport. Before flight remained about one and a half hours. Directly at an output(exit) from a door to us two young men, with shouts " hands on a wall, FBI came! ". Having decided(solved), that is whose unsuccessful joke (and of conference rather frequently joked concerning ôåäåðàëîâ), Dmitry has burst out laughing and even something has tried to tell in the answer. However to it(him) in some more rough form it was told " hands on a wall! " . For me have asked a key from a hotel room and have invited for conversation. Hardly later into number have entered Dmitry. It(he) was already in handcuffs. Two more employees of FBI who probably, inspected street came. Dmitry has asked to move handcuffs forwards as with the hands connected behind it is very inconvenient to sit. To it(him) it refused. The employee of FBI was presented and has told, that to me claims are not present, and they came to arrest Dmitry. In the polite form it was offered to have a talk. On my question " for what have arrested Dmitry? " The answer was given, that to it(him) accusation of violation DMCA is showed(presented) (Digital Millennium Copyright Act) is the American law on copyrights. The initiator of litigation and consequence(investigation) is Adobe company. More employees of FBI have not informed any details, referring that they only fulfil the order. To me formal questions on which they certainly already knew answers were given some. Have asked to take with itself things Äèìû, motivating it is that, that " as though they were not lost in America ". A question on further destiny Äèìû have answered, that right now it(him) will take in local office of FBI where will clarify still any questions, and then to the judge who will make final solution. All above described has taken place in Alexis Park Hotel, Las-Vegas, staff(state) Nevada. On road to Los Angeles me watched(kept up), and rather roughly. As soon as I at the airport have answered the phone the officer of police has on the spot run up and has pretent, that wants to call from the adjacent phone. Anywhere it(he) and has not called. The details concerning conflict ElcomSoft with Adobe, you can read on a site of ElcomSoft company. The official official report of the officer of FBI which delayed Dmitry, it is possible to look here. Andrey Malyshev, ÝëêîìÑîôò company, July, 18, 2001.
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
IANAL
But...
The circumvention of security measures for educational and research reasons is explicitly protected. That is what this is.
Even if developing software and selling it commercially is illegal (okay, it probably is) the software was developed and only sold outside of the US (specifically, Russia).
Now, even though the US is a pretty damned big and important country (and let all those silly French people be damned. It's true. Don't fight it. Admit it;) its sovereignty does not extend over the borders of Russia.
Re:This is just unbelievable (Score:2)
Now we know where all the people on
(The crack. As in "Gimme some of what you're smoking.")
/. their phone (Score:4)
All press inquiries to the U.S. Attorney's Office should be directed to Assistant U.S. Attorney Matthew J. Jacobs at (415) 436-7181
Or maybe we should just get jonkatz to call them? He's a member of the press, right?
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Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
... I think this calls for an ORGANIZED* protest at the US Mission... perhaps the one outside the U.N. would be apropriate.
*Organized means providing a few weeks notice to the community, obtaining the proper permits, and notifying the press... all things that could be very helpful in insuring a LARGE and VISABLE turnout.
Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
Re:hmmm (Score:4)
Norwegian copyright law says that it is legal to make a backup copy of a computer program if needed. However, it does not say that software makers are _required_ to provide a way for creating backups.
So no, Adobe software is not illegal in Norway.
/.'ers capable of reading norwegian can find the relevant paragraph here:
http://www.lovdata.no/all/tl-19610512-002-029.h
Counterattack, anyone? (Score:2)
Amusingly, any ROT-13 encryptor is an effective ROT-13 decryptor. And Adobe obviously has a ROT-13 encryptor hanging around.
This means that somebody at Adobe is guilty of exactly the same crime...
Re:Does "Rot13 security handler" == "ROT-13"? (Score:2)
The code was a cut and paste from the ROT-13 code, with a few lines changed, so that it used a different fixed position cypher.
In otherwords, it didn't do ROT-13. That comment is about how much time they actually spent writing the plugin (virtually nil)
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Re:he's *not* being arrested for cracking rot13 (Score:2)
Would it? The DMCA doesn't require that the technological measures be effective. It merely requires that they be present, and that the software is commercially available and designed to break the encryption. So yes, as far as I can tell, if I took your money and gave you a script which breaks rot-13 (hint: #!/bin/sh\ntr a-zA-Z n-za-mN-ZA-M, but you got that for free, so I'm not a criminal. Yet.), you could throw me in jail.
NOW do you realize how bad the DMCA is?
-russ
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
Re:ROT-13 (Score:2)
It worries me a lot. It you get arrested returning from Thailand, how easy would it be for you to get the evidence to prove you're innocent? The proof you might require could be half a planet away.
Is he represented? (Score:2)
JMR
(speaking ONLY for myself, again)
Form letter (Score:2)
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Re:Form letter (Score:2)
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Re:NY Times Article (Score:2)
The problem is that the CEOs of major corporations have are immoral slimeballs.
Re:Secret Decoder Ring (Score:2)
Re:ROT-13 (Score:2)
Quite a few countries (UK for instance) have laws that allow 'child sex tourists' to be convicted in their home country for paedophile acts comitted in countries with less-strong child protection, as if the crime was comitted domestically. This worries me a bit [but I tend to fall in with the mob in saying they deserve whatever they get, I'd just prefer it if the 'peds got time (and a bloody good buggering) in the Bancock Hilton, rather then Spacklerweg Hilton (a very comfortable prison here in Amsterdam)].
And yes, I live in the Netherlands too, US customs can already get really 'funny' about that. I have heard that some countries (Singapore?) have laws where they can, and do, test returning citizens (not forigners) for THC (cannabis/mary J) use and convict them after they return from the Netherlands.
Remember, you'll never hear a politician saying 'We need fewer laws' (Unless they have been bribed by a big corporation who do not like a law that puts power back to consumers).
EZ
Re:ROT-13 (Score:2)
EZ
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Except that it still costs a significant amount of money to "re-arrange" that sand in such a way as to become an Athlon. You know, even though processors become much cheaper once the research (IP) is amortized, they do not become completely free either. It takes quite a little bit more effort to make an Athlon than to write your name (or even your price essay...) in the sand.
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
This is called civil disobedience, and it's a common way to raise the awareness of unjust laws. I agree and applaud this.
BUT... remember, just because you proclaim a law unjust, and violate it in an effort to publicize it's unjustice, does NOT relieve you of the consequences of violating the law.
So, go ahead and stage your civil disobedience, but be prepared to be arrested, charged, prosecuted, and convicted of a crime.
All of that being said, I applaud anyone who is actually willing to do this for this clearly unjust law. As the sole bread winner for my family, I can not afford the risk. The most that I can afford is to contribute to the EFF, and ask my elected representatives for an accounting of how this law can remain on the books.
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Re:Yes, and they are right, IMHO (Score:2)
So i always considered ROT13 'encryption' as a low hurdle to show you made an attempt at preventing a casual reader from reading something he might find offensive. If you must use an analogy then a fence with stairs over it to keep the cattle in, but let people pass would be more like it, than a house with a weak lock. Or like putting a book on a high shelf, to prevent the young one from stumbling over it. The letter analogy is flawed anyway because anyone who wants to look at the letter must get it from your mailbox first. Again a better analogy would be to put an opened letter face down on your table to prevent someone else in the room from scanning over it. Basically you trust in that persons good judgement not to flip the letter over when you go for the loo.
If the law doesn't protect your file from unwanted readers in the first place, then ROT13-encyption sure won't do either.
Re:effective (Score:2)
Re:effective (Score:2)
To me, its not even logically sensible.
"... requires
As another poster stated, ROT-13 (and most other cryptosystems) can be decoded without any attention given to the Copyright holder.
Note that I used "decoded" not "hacked" or "bypassed" since there is no logistic difference beetween my ROT-13'ing an E-book with my own program or with Adobe's.
The difference is that the Copyright holder has at some point supposedly made me agree to only use Adobe's software to read the book.
Re:The presentation (Score:2)
He was literally arrested for his ability to read books!
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:5)
True. So was the First Amendment.
He broke the law.
The DMCA broke the law. He violated an illegal law.
Now, I personally think the law is stupid, and there are a great deal of other laws I think are stupid. However, the law is not unconstitutional (well, it hasn't been ruled unconstitutional yet), and therefore he is a criminal.
As were the Bostonians who threw the tea into the harbor. As were the patriots who fired on the Redcoats at Bunker Hill. As were the blacks who wouldn't sit at the back of the bus. As am I.
Now, jurisdiction issues aside, what's left to do?
Violate the law. Openly. Loudly. Celebrate people who do it and get caught. Maximize the effort required to enforce the law - minimize the impact of getting caught. If you haven't noticed, there are many people doing this.
If the people who most clearly see and understand the injustice (us) are not willing to risk anything to oppose it, then we should just admit that we deserve no rights and that we will bend over and obey unjust laws.
Can you tell me exactly why we should obey a law that is a violation of our rights and a betrayel by Congress and the Courts of their Constitutional duty. Only a sheep would obey such a law. Are you a sheep?
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
Technically, the only thing the US can do is revoke his visa (passport/whatever) and kick him out of the country. In practice, the police (FBI/whatever) don't ask for proof of citizenship before they arrest you -- they don't care.
I suspect this will end up as an international "incident". Someone from the Russian Consulate will have to go through the proper channels to get their citizen released.
And, unless he was selling or otherwise knowingly distributing the program while at DefCon (or anywhere on US soil), he wasn't breaking any law. Even posessing the program on his laptop is not illegal. However, the act of publication has yet to be tested as everyone has backed away when faced with law suits.
(First amendment or not, the DMCA will not be thrown out. Personally, I find the DMCA utterly stupid -- it's a law that makes it illegal to break numerous pre-existing laws.)
Re:No Consequences... (Score:2)
The US tourist industry would suffer considerably if every visitor were subjected to summary arrest by the FBI on trumped up charges under a law that completely favours corporations. I would hardly call arresting a foreign visitor like this, no consequences. Think of where the guy is from, he might be frightened for his life right now, fearing the sorts of things that used to happen to prisoners in Lubyanka prison. Even today, Russian police are not the most gentle of folks.
I would say this has at least the potential to do some serious mental harm - I hope that if they do drop the charges he turns around and sues them for wrongful arrest.
I am so thankful I live up here in Canada, where so far we have avoided laws such as the DCMA - but then we are starting to emulate the worst aspects of the US (while ignoring the better ones completely of course) more and more each day, so I had better enjoy it while it lasts...
Re:Secret Decoder Ring (Score:5)
Describe ROT-13 in terms of "Secret Decoder Rings". These plastic toys have been around for ages, lending a familiarity to the average US citizen who is technically uninformed.
Re:hmmm (Score:2)
Can someone translate that into english, please?
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Re:eeek. (Score:5)
It is also higly debateble if the utility is a violation of the DMCA because it only is usable by persons who own the Ebooks it operates on, and you need to provide the pasword to use the utility. So it is a utility with a lot f
non infringing uses (fair use anyone). I higly informative collum about the issue is to be found here:
http://www.ebookweb.org/opinion/roger.sperberg.
http://www.ebookweb.org/opinion/roger.sperberg.
A quote:
"In Russia, apparently, it's illegal to sell software without the ability to make "at least one backup copy of the data it works with." So? That's Russia. I'm in the U.S., land of the free and so on. What does it matter if a
Russian company makes software that enables the purchaser but no one else to make a backup copy of data sold by foreigners who violate Russian law?
Joost
Re: Owned by coporate america (Score:2)
The article is actually far more informative than the postings to /. It makes it clear that the prosecution is for the sale of the software _not_ the presentation at the conference. Furthermore it makes it clear that US jurisdiction is present because sales were processed by a US company.
I am no fan of the DMCA, but this case is more along the lines of prosecuting someone for selling lock picks to criminals than presenting a paper on the use of lock picks by criminals. The /. sensationalism doesn't make this clear, and undermines meaningful discussion of complicated issues.
Re:Rot-13 was not really used as encryption on USE (Score:2)
That's like finding out my bank left the front door and the safe unlocked and someone came in and stole my money. You bet I'd be suing the bank.
Re:There is one annoying fact... (Score:2)
--
Re:Yes I will arrest you all... (Score:2)
I wasn't aware at the time of my post that something like this was already going on. I'll have to look into that.
It's getting to the point where I just want to leave the field, bury my head in the sand and never touch a computer again.
Re:Yes I will arrest you all... (Score:3)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but your point seems to be that if someone says that they intended to hide something that it should be wrong and not if otherwise. This is the absurdity. To begin with, who determines whether or not something has been "hidden" well enough to imply protection? In this case I'd say rot13 isn't quite enough, though adobe seems to think differently. Contrary to your belief, I believe that if I have some type of media, I can extract any meaning from it I wish, and instruct others on my thought processes that led me to those meanings. The meaning in a painting (especially an abstract one) is hidden (encrypted) often times, but I am certainly allowed to point out to anyone who cares to listen what the meaning is. The artist has no right to try to stop me because he/she did not want me to see that meaning.
If you want to keep something secure, keep it in your head, if you make it public, it is public, I don't care what your implenentation of it is, you've given up your ability and to hide it. And morally, IMHO, you have no business telling me what I can or can not derive from it.
What if I were to write my posts in haxor-speak. Would it be illegal for someone to write some code to change it back to english so that they could understand it? I think not. Otherwise we will have a legal system that prosecutes publishing houses for translating literature to other languages without permission. Encryption is a nebulous word. In fact if it's reversible it's not encryption in the strictest sense of the word, it's obfuscation.
Yes I will arrest you all... (Score:5)
Re:eeek. (Score:2)
No, that's $10 you'll never have in your pocket, and possibly never would have anyway.
Legitimate uses (Score:2)
This software is usefull for reading e-books on any platform that has .pdf support but no support for reading Adobe protected docs (i.e. Linux, *BSD, PalmOS, etc...).
I, for one, like reading e-books on my Handspring visor, but this limits me to things released in (or easily converted to) palmdoc, or pdf format. This software would allow me access to a much greater variety of reading material.
Re: Owned by coporate america (Score:2)
If our government's (nonexistent) actions regarding the detention of Li Shaomin [princeton.edu] and other American citizens for "spying" by China are any indication, I'd predict that the shit wouldn't even make it off the ground.
--Fesh
crack rot-13, go to jail (Score:2)
Trafficking a circumvention device, right?
Not to mention what they could do to C|Net for LINKING to these implements of mass destruction!
Terra Rttf naq Unz (Score:5)
When trying to explain to a non techie (Score:4)
Re:eeek. (Score:5)
I'm sort of in two minds about this..
TomV
anyone know how to write to him (Score:5)
I've never written to anyone in jail or in prison before, so I don't know what's entailed.
--
Re:eeek. (Score:3)
EXACTLY. That's what's so nafarious about the DMCA, it goes WAY beyond criminalizing actions and criminalizes things that *could* be used.
If you don't have anything nice to say, say it often.
Re:eeek. (Score:3)
You cannot copmare tangible goods to IP. They are not the same. If someone takes your stereo, you are deprived of a stereo and must spend money to get a new one. If someone copies your prize essay, you still have your essay. You do not need to rewrite it. The only thing is you have lost a potenital revenue stream. This is what everyone is trying to protect.
Re:effective (Score:3)
A lawyer is unnecessary. Here is the actual wording of the law:
Source is here. [cornell.edu] So Adobe implements ROT-x encryption, sets x = 13 (which must be "applied" to gain access), and has full rights under the DMCA.
eeek. (Score:5)
That's some excellent logic. We should have arrested the families that lost people in the Ford/Firestone wrecks because they managed to find a way to strip their tires of tread.
I love America.
NY Times Article (Score:5)
Welcome to the future as owned by coporate america.
Give a man a fish and he will eat for a day.
Re:eeek. (Score:3)
This is perfectly normal. It is legal for me to have (consensual) sex with a 16 year old in most European countries. If I tried this in the US, I'd be arrested and sent to jail. When in a country, obey the laws of the country, even if they are different from the laws in your home country.
Don't forget that this is about more than just breaking the encryption. This person was giving a presentation on how to do so in the US, where giving such a presentation is (probably) illegal under the DMCA.
when decryption tools become outlawed (Score:3)
Am I the only one who finds this scary?
Sig: Tell all your friends NOT to download the Advanced Ebook Processor:
hmmm (Score:4)
2. Title 17, United States Code, Section 1201(b) states in relevant part:
(1) No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that -
(A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing protection afforded by a technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title in a work or a portion thereof;
Yikes! Am I reading this correctly - you can't even write such software just for testing purposes? Or as proof-of-concept? I thought Adobe was upset about him selling the product, but I guess he can be arrested just for making it.
I also found this interesting from the Reuters article:
U.S. copyright protection law conflicts with laws in Russia, Germany and Scandinavian countries which require software makers to provide a way for users to create a backup copy, Katalov said. ``So, in reality, Adobe software is illegal in Russia,'' he said.
Is that really correct? Anybody know anything about copyright law in those countries? It just sounds kind of strange.
Re:anyone know how to write to him (Score:3)