Sonicblue Wins Stay of Spying Order 195
ebonkyre writes "According to this article, federal Judge Florence-Marie Cooper has stayed the order which would require SONICBlue to begin recording users viewing habits and reporting them to the MPAA, et al. It has been stayed until June 3rd, at which time the court is to review SB's motion to throw out the order entirely." EPIC has filed a brief supporting Sonicblue's position. EPIC's argument (starting on page 5 of the PDF) neatly summarizes why this order should never have been given.
spying? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:spying? (Score:1)
Discovery (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:spying? (Score:1)
I'm ALL for fair use, of course.
Re:spying? (Score:2)
OR
2) The Federal Magistrate is terminally stupid.
Re:spying? (Score:2)
There is no way (Score:3, Funny)
Liquor companies should start tracking what happens w/their product.
Automotive manufacturers the same, and well anybody who pretty much makes anything. Yes, very smart.
.
Re:There is no way (Score:1, Funny)
ahem. anywhey.
whoever said that legal systems, much less the american legal system was smart?
Re:There is no way (Score:1)
Well, there kind of is a way on some things... Wasn't there something here just the other day about how that publishing companies were going to track books throughout their lifetimes? And they do sort of track automobiles... through the VIN numbers. Admittedly the manufacturers don't always know where the cars are, but in states like IL, where insurance is mandatory, the insurers know where the cars are...
Thank goodness they don't track alcohol sales though... although I used to be paranoid they did back when I was too young to drink. I wouldn't use a credit card to purchase the stuff for fear that someone was tracking it. I really wonder if it would have mattered.
Re:There is no way (Score:2, Funny)
The MPAA and its excesses (Score:3, Interesting)
Now, the way I see it, its a direct violation of my privacy rights to have someone poking through my viewing habits. Its like someone going through my mail. It just shouldn't happen. Theoretical course of events: They begin tracking viewing habits. The "Uncaring Public" goes along. The rest of us either disable the tracking mechanism, or we dump the device entirely. Sonic Blue loses buisness, and the MPAA still can't tell what we, the 'worst offenders' are doing. Lose lose situation for MPAA and Sonic Blue.
Re:The MPAA and its excesses (Score:1)
Good Analogies (Score:5, Informative)
In a personal injury lawsuit, it is relevant to kknow whether a plaintiff who claimed to be wheelchair-bound in fact left his chair; yet, one would be hardpressed to find a discovery ruling in which a judge ordered a plaintiff to place an electronic sensor in his chair seat. In a defamation lawsuit, it would be helpful to know if in fact the defamatory comment had a wide circulation among plaintiff's neighbors; yet, it is unfathomable to think that a court would order a microphone to be place in the local pub.
The point I think they are trying to make is that the only reason this seems even slightly reasonable (and the above examples do not) is because it affects so many people that it becomes a statistic, and the way in which those people's privacy is violated is complicated enough that it is easy to gloss over the fact that it is a severe intrusion into the living rooms of SONICBlue's customers!
This ruling is sickening, and I think it seriously hints at some money changing hands between the plaintiff's and the powers that be. This ruling unquestionably violates the rights of SONICBlue and its customers, and it is without legal precedent.
Websurfing done right! StumbleUpon [stumbleupon.com]
Re:Good Analogies (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course, SonicBlue's problem being that they explicitly put the clause in the service agreement allowing them to collect such information from the consumer. Which is what TiVo did also. Now, I do not believe it has come up whether this clause in itself would be legal and enforceable; but I do not see why not. Usage info is being tracked from variety devices and software legally.
Listening to an EFF representative on CNet radio, and reading this brief, I wouldn't think this was a great argument to reverse the original ruling. This brief goes way too much into how privacy would be violated and presents not so good analogies. Of course MPAA is going to respond by arguing SonicBlue has perfectly legal right to collect such info (based on the clause in their agreement).
IMHO, what they should have argued more than anything else, is that in the discovery process plaintiffs have no right to demand extra, non-existent information from the defendants or ask them to create such data, and presented more and more rulings backing this argument. But then again, IANAL.
Re:Good Analogies (Score:1)
Re:Good Analogies (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Good Analogies (Score:1)
Re:Good Analogies (Score:2, Interesting)
Further, SonicBlue may state in their documentation that they "reserve the right to collect" such information, but I cannot be coerced to cede my right to privacy through contract. They can't reserve the right to my information, because that right is not theirs in the first place, and _I_ have already reserved it.
It's a provision of their "clickthrough" that they are more than welcome to attempt to get enforced in court. I'd be happy to add to the (already existant) legal prescident that click through "contracts" are not enforcable where they are unreasonable and contradictory to Constitutional rights.
Basically, the MPAA et al can kiss my ass. They want information about how I use MY property, they can damn well get a court order that names me specifically as a defendant (for which they'd need some proof to support the request), otherwise they can fuck off.
Re:Poor argument. (Score:2, Informative)
Here is a clue [siliconvalley.com]. Actually, the plantiffs wanted to collect the information with unique identifcation for every user. So, don't listen to the media companies, as they lie like a cheap linoleum floor.
A question (Score:2, Interesting)
I mean, can't you see it? Kelsey Grammar doing a 30-second spot, explaining how skipping commercials is really a crime, and explaining how ads pay for TV programming, et cetera? After all, it would be pretty cheap and easy to launch for them to launch such a campaign.
I believe I know why they wouldn't dare do such a thing. Because the very concept that somehow manipulating content that comes into your home is a form of theft flies in the face of common sense. That's why these bastards are taking their fight to the courts, where common sense is almost a liability. But I'm glad to see some sense has come back into the courts with the latest ruling.
Re:A question (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:A question (Score:1)
This is where i think Metallica shot themselves in the foot.
Nobody I knew (except for geeks) even heard about downloading music (except for 3 second
Re:A question (Score:4, Insightful)
Which is what bugs me about this.
The court shouldn't even be fucking involved in this. It's legal to piss while you watch TV. It's legal to tape a show to an analog VCR and fast-forward through the commercials. There's no law that says that VCR's can only fast-forward at a certain rate - just an engineering problem with spinning a shaft and winding a spool of magnetic tape. A VCR with extremely powerful motors (and really strong tape :-) could do this and nobody would bat an eye.
The difference between the VCR and PVR is that a VCR engineered to do that would cost thousands, and the tape, hundreds. The PVR makers have merely built a better ad-skipping mousetrap, by swapping analog stretchy tape for bits on a disk and a CPU to decode them.
So how the fuck are the Content Cartel able to browbeat judges into thinking that 30-second skip is somehow worthy of a lawsuit? (Yes, I know that's not the thrust of this suit, but with that fucknozzle from AOL/TW calling PVR users "thieves", we know it's coming). Why the hell aren't such suits immediately recognized as SLAPPs (Strategic Lawsuits Against Public Participations) and thrown out?
All the PVR industry needs to do to achieve total world domination(tm) is run one 30-second spot, something like this:
Presto! Instant consumer adoption - it gives the consumer what he wants - the ability to watch a 2-hour broadcast of a movie in 90 minutes. (The ability to watch a whole baseball game in 20 minutes
The consumer wants this, but they can't imagine that it's possible. Your job is to show them that it's not only possible, but it's here, and available for the low, low price of $10/month.
Will you get sued? Probably. But you're getting sued by these bastards anyways. Why not get the public on your side now, before the Content Cartel gets Congress to pass a law banning 30-second-skip or other ad-skipipng features in PVRs? (Or a judge bans your product, which is what the Cartel is trying to have done now?)
The Cartel can get away with it because Joe Sixpack doesn't know he can skip commercials.
I know this is horribly old-fashioned, but lots of people have made assloads of money by simply making the consumer aware of a need they didn't know they had ("I hate the 3-4 minute ad breaks") and that you have a product that meets that need ("You mean I don't have to watch commericals if I buy your box?").
When Joe Sixpack realizes he can skip commercials, it'll be too late. Just like Sony vs. Betamax - once Joe Sixpack found out how valuable time-shifting was, no court, (and just as importanly, no Congresscritters), will dare take it away from him.
Why work with the broadcasters? You guys sell hardware and subscription-based software. I can't see any legal reason why 30-second skip is any more "illegal" than fast-forwarding on a VCR, or channel-surfing during the commercials. FUCK the broadcasters. You don't need them.
Re:A question (Score:2)
Granted. It's the getting up and going to the bathroom that MPAA resents.
Re:A question (Score:2, Insightful)
Why? Because every viewer that hasn't heard about ReplayTV will think "You mean I can get a box that lets me skip commercials? Where do I sign up?"
Re:A question (Score:1)
Re:A question (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, the best ad wouldn't be the "Find an annoying guy to talk about the product" one I mentioned a few minutes ago.
The best ad would cost $20 to produce:
30 seconds of a 1000-hz tone at loud volume, and in big block letters:
"If you owned a PVR, you could press 'skip ad' and never have to sit through another annoying ad again."
Re:A question (Score:2)
I don't remember if it was Tivo or Replay that ran the ad parodies, but they were a little counterproductive. Ads for an ad-skipping device that were actually worth watching.
Re:A question (Score:1)
Maybe he already did, but we just missed it because we skipped the commercials!
Re:A question (Score:1)
I'm disappointed... (Score:1)
Finally... (Score:2)
Finally, a judge who cannot be bought. I wonder how we can get more of these RIAA financed decisions sent over to her for review??
Re:Finally... (Score:1, Funny)
Court mandated invasion of privacy? (Score:1)
Kellner (Score:2, Interesting)
favroite Kellner quote (Score:4, Funny)
CW: What if you have to go to the bathroom or get up to get a Coke?
JK: I guess there's a certain amount of tolerance for going to the bathroom
jeez how reasonable of him, there is a "certain" tolerance for allowing natural bodily functions by TV viewers, but im guessing that us beer drinkers and people with weak bladders should probably stop watching, because such willy-nilly use of the bathroom is probably thievery
full interview here [inside.com] btw
Re:favroite Kellner quote (Score:2)
around and around (Score:3, Insightful)
You may think this is a no-brainer, but if the viable source of income for TV producers is to "promise" a certain number of eyes watch your commercials, thats how they are priced. Otherwise, you'd be paying-per-channel of cable TV, which again is possibly a good idea...
With the corporations soon to be expecting a discount based on the market share/demogrpahic of owners of SB or Tivo-like devices, we'll see the budgets of TV constrained from their traditional sources. Of course, other sources will be built (look out for a tax bill).
So, the bottom line is the dollars are expeced out of the consumer's pockets somehow. If the ad rates drop and TV quality follow suit, will we watch less TV? I doubt it, although I hope so. If a tax-proposal fails for devices that manipulated recorded video, then perhaps we'll see everything sold through cable at higher rates. So, the cable bill goes up.
This will undoubtedly push the distribution faster into free methods: PTP video. But then again, this may positively impact broadband sales. Perhaps cable companies again here will reap the rewards (Telecomm cannot compete since there is too much infighting about open markets and DSL just cannot cut it long term).
So the eyes have it. Shows can be compressed to a cheap size (still huge by today's file sizes) and passed around. When the bandwidth is sold with an odometer-like billing model, we'll be here again, discussing the neighborhood radio networks and other private options.
Oh the drama.
signal
Re:around and around (Score:1)
Yeah, that's not a long drop (t.v. quality). I know watching the most eligible bachelors in Alaska compete for a bride is riveting t.v. but I admit I am not too enamoured by what is offered up by the networks.
I wish they would go to a pay format because then I would stop watching altogether and have more productive time in my day. The spirit is willing but the flesh is weak. Please help me by making television too expensive.
Re:around and around (Score:1)
A message from the other side: Life is fun and you won't miss it. Although I am the only one in the bar still giggling about the silly commercials that everyone else is bored of.
Killing The TV is just a slogan anymore. 12 years and going strong.
No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:5, Insightful)
Are we supposed to weep for vaudeville tap dancers and plate jugglers because radio and TV ran their business model into the ground?
How about street sweepers -- should we guarantee them a job even though the automobile reduced the amount of horseshit on the roads?
Re:No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:1)
And just what business model do you think will replace it?
Here's a hint: Big Hollywood will like it more than you.
Re:No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:1)
Ok Time's Up!
The business model to expect is The Show Is The Commercial...The Commercial Is The Show.
Imagine if advertisers simply paid for the Friends cast to drink Coke, eat Wheaties and wear Gap jeans. Logos everywhere...storylines about brands by name.
It's already been done. Shift it to moralizing and you have the anti-drug scandal that broke last year about plot line written just this way.
If you don't want to watch a commercial, turn your TV off.
Re:No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:2)
Problem with product placement is that it can be highly limiting. Viewers certainly will notice if a New York cab company suddenly appears in Sunnydale. Or question how so many 21st century US brandnames could survive a major war in order to get on the starship Enterprise. Usually such product placement is a little more subtle.
Consider also what would happen if every Star Trek ship was plastered in Pan Am and Enron logos...
Re:No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:4, Insightful)
Much like the Music industry, they want to use technology as a club to prevent the market from forcing change.
Instead of suing Replay, they should be paying them to collect real performance statistics on commercials. Broadcasters should be more interested in figuring out how to get people to voluntarily watch more commercials. Broadcasters should be trying to avoid showing commercials that send people running to the bathroom.
Re:No one promised the studios a rose garden (Score:2)
While I agree with your points about commercials sucking, networks make money by either having commercials, or having people pay for content (HBO, etc). Therefore, their providing to you, for free, television shows is in return for your eyeballs come commercialtime. Getting up and going elsewhere, that's fine. Fastforwarding, I'm ok with. Reading a book or magazine, sure, but intentionally, deliberately, blatantly skipping over commercials removes the only source of income the networks have to fund these commercials. If advertisers say 'we're not going to pay as much because people aren't watching', then less shows get produced, and the quality goes down.
That being said, I don't think the quality can go down any further. Most TV I watch is CBS (Survivor, Amazing Race, CSI), HBO (Sopranos and Sex in the City, which I would watch if I had a PVR), Canadian (This Hour, Lexx, and the news), or has already been paid for (M*A*S*H). There are a few exceptions, but nothing I watch regularly. Maybe if the networks didn't throw money away on crap like they do (VIP? Come on...) it wouldn't be an issue, but people don't want quality TV, they want to rot their brains, and if you want to rot your brain too, you have to pay the toll.
--Dan
Product placement (Score:2)
The down side is that the shows then become less attractive in syndication, where the placed products could be in conflict with new ads introduced, and the new ads could be skipped. But then with digital technology, this stuff could be morphed, the brand of beer or whatever could easily change.
So that's what will happen.
___
Re:around and around (Score:1)
Obviously it would depend on price per channel, but I know that I have always wished I could select my channels a la carte... I only watch about 5 channels but to get them all I have to pay for 30 or so. If I could just have Discovery without having to pay for "Faith and Vision", or whatever that f'd up channel with all the evangelists is, I'd be a much happier person... although sometimes those evangalist types are good for a laugh.
Bah! (Score:5, Insightful)
Among features the studios and networks object to are the ability to skip commercials and a broadband connection that allows users to exchange recorded programs with others.
PBS has been airing quality television programs for many years commercial-free by asking viewers to contribute their financial support. This and the ability to hit the mute/channel change button on my remote allow me to watch TV stations commercial-free.So what's next, suing TV manufacturers to force them to start making TV remotes without mute buttons and channel changing capabilities? God forbid I excercise my own free will and look for an alternative.
Further, what's to prevent me from recording a show to VHS, taking it to a friend's house, and then watching it again? This is a method of sharing. It's just not as convenient for me to do so. Add to this the term "digital" or "broadband" and suddenly all the lawyers in the room come alive as programmed and start using acronyms like DMCA.
I think the truth is that companies like Disney realize that someone else beat them to the technology, they realized what an opportunity they missed (to make more money), and they're now trying to catch up by miring the industry in legal battles.
Regardless of what Disney and their ilk think, I decide whether or not they are successful... Unfortunately, I (and most /. readers) am in the minority of people who actually give a rat's ass and vote with their wallet.
Yeah yeah, I know. Flamebait.
--
A point about PBS (Score:3, Interesting)
As usual, "free" is only free in small scale due to support of commercial interests. A suitable balance must be struck.
Re:A point about PBS (Score:1)
Exactly. Thanks for the follow up.
And it's companies like these that I support. Unfortunately it's killing me having to buy the entire line of Delta, Porter-Cable, and Stanley hand and power tools.
Re:A point about PBS (Score:5, Insightful)
And the majority of that traditional advertising is a simple "this program was made possible by a grant from the XYZ Corporation." It isn't in your face, it doesn't annoy anyone and doesn't turn an hour show into 35-40 minutes worth of crap. It does, however, fund programming and create a brand association. ABC Corp. interrupts my shows with shitty ads. XYZ Corp. funded that Nova episode.
The few things I do watch aren't on PBS, though. I'll buy a PVR when it all gets sorted out and that'll be fun.
Re:A point about PBS (Score:2)
Most of the shows I watch have horrible commercials. Some of them, they're so bad and so uncared for that the color even drops out of them - FX I'm talking about you - and they're so repetative. How many times do I have to watch an ad about painted silver dollars or penis "enhancement" products before I should be able to decide I'm not interested? Apparently the anti-PVR crowd thinks that I'll eventually buy in. As if that would stop the problem.
Re:A point about PBS (Score:2)
Because want one that'll get info from my guide channel, not one that's crippleware to force you into subscriptionware that the fscking illiterate courts will turn into spyware. I also want to tape off of it so I can archive things on an old fashioned shelf.
I haven't done any research as such, but everything I've heard of has to phone home. I don't want a lifetime subscription- I want an appliance. Any suggestions? Seriously- please.
Re:A point about PBS (Score:2)
The BBC is currently showing a US-made television drama called '24', shown in 24 episodes each of which supposedly encapsulates an hour of the day. This is screamingly announced as 'real time television', but each episode, as screened by the BBC, lasts only 45 minutes... so presumably you guys watched one minute of advertising for every three minutes of content. No wonder you have attention deficits!
Re:A point about PBS (Score:2)
In US television terms "one hour" equates to around 43 minutes. (With one notable exception.) AFAIK this hasn't changed much in a long time.
Re:Bah! (Score:5, Informative)
The following quote best exemplifies Disney's stance. The Future of Ideas, by Lawrence Lessig:
If that doesn't make you shudder, I don't know what will.
Re:Bah! (Score:5, Insightful)
The simple solution to keeping people from skipping commercials is to make them worth watching. I would gladly sit through a few minutes of commercials if they were entertaining or informative.
Unfortunately, most commercials are stupid and insulting.
Re:Bah! (Score:2)
And I never saw any of those commercials on TV!!!
Re:Bah! (Score:2)
Also avoid repeating them too often. Other possibilities would be commercials which solicit viewer input (but these are obviously not much use if not watched "live".)
Re:Bah! (Score:2)
ReplayTV users are even further away. They never even see the commercials, not even at 60x. They'll never know if commercial quality improves.
Re:Bah! (Score:1)
The main point I want to make is that there really isn't that much difference between DVR's and VCR's as far as what you can do with them. The implementation may be different, but I can still record shows for later viewing, skip through commercials (though not as fast), take a tape over to a friend's, or make copies. And there's nothing wrong with that (as long as it's for personal use). In fact, allowing viewers to record TV shows can actually increase a station's audience, because otherwise we'd have to choose between two or more shows that share the same time slot, or choose whether to watch TV at all if we have something more important to do at that time. So why raise such a fuss over a new technology to do the same thing viewers have already been doing for years?
Let this be a lesson... (Score:2)
I'm glad this ridiculous ruling was objected to and stayed (for now), but it touches on a bigger problem: PVR companies could shield their customers from this type of abuse by simply not implementing a way to track viewing habits. Just make a PVR that doesn't track anything but software diagnostics. Then advertise it as a feature: "we won't spy on your viewing habits like other PVR companies!"
Of course, an unscrupulous PVR company could make that claim, get someone like TrustE to back it up, then put a bunch of fine print in that basically exempts them from it.
Re:Let this be a lesson... (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact that they didn't implement those data gathering methodologies is what allows them to stop the discovery proceedings like this. One of the main points of the brief is that Civil discovery rules do not allow surveilence as a means of obtaining prospective evidence. If SonicBLUE already had the data it would be a cinch for the plaintiffs to get their hands on it. That's what discovery is. But since they don't actually have the data they are arguing (correctly, IMHO) that they can not be compelled to gather the data.
You've got to tell them! (Score:3, Funny)
legal brief (Score:1)
I do hope that this ruling is overturned. The way courts have been ruling lately on copyright law terrifies me. Are these judges not citizens? Do they not see how this is going to effect them? Are they all bought? sigh......
Pointer to SonicBlue references (Score:3, Informative)
There's a good index of various references at
http://cs-www.bu.edu/~dm/pubs/replaytv.html [bu.edu]
Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org) [sethf.com]
Re:Pointer to SonicBlue references (Score:1, Informative)
Oh god no!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Fun solution (Score:1)
On Slashdot... (Score:1)
If I was a sponsor, I would request Slashdot to turn over the user browsing data on the grounds that the above activity clearly constitutes as stealing the content. Also, scroll bars should be disabled until the banner ad goes through at least 3 iterations of its images.
Tacking Viewing (Score:5, Insightful)
The fact of the matter is that the viewing habits that can be tracked and utilized by a PVR that is networked are extremely valuable and useful to a whole host of interested parties. It dwarfs the value of similar data about web users' habits and demographics.
I tend not to be as militant about privacy as most of the rest of you. Even so, I agree that this type of information should be anonymous if it is collected. Perhaps also an explicit opt-in. But even with those requirements, the data collected is still very useful and valuable. That data is worth a great deal of money to the PVR manufacturers. The broadcast industry had every reason to expect that SonicBlue was collecting this information; and, if not, that they will in the future. It's disingenuous of SonicBlue to act as if collecting that information is something that they don't do and would never consider doing. Frankly, that would be a stupid business decision.
In this way, this information and its collection is substantially different from the "sensor in the wheelchair" or "microphone in the bar" analogies that Amici uses. In those cases, that information would never be collected for any reason outside the context of a court order. In the SonicBlue case, this information is closer to, for example, Best Buy's information on what kinds of people buy what kinds of products from which Best Buy stores. Best Buy probably collects this information, and there are hypothetical court cases where this would be relevant and completely acceptable for the plaintiff to order its discovery (or how ever that should be worded).
SonicBlue is in a tricky situation here. The broadcast industry is asking for information that SonicBlue might reasonably be collecting and that they very well may want to be collecting if they're not. The broadcast industry wants information on how the ReplayTV devices are being used, and that information is relevant to the case. SonicBlue certainly has an interest in how their PVRs are being used, and that information is at their fingertips.
I don't think that Amici is going to convince the court of their position. The personal privacy issues can be easily addressed while still collecting the information that is relevant to the case. And that information is not merely relevant -- it's crucial. Is the ReplayTV a device that exists to break copyright law? Or is it a perfectly acceptable example of fair use in the VCR tradition? SonicBlue can supply strong evidence one way or another simply by checking to see how their product is being used. As I said, it's at their fingertips, and there's good reason to believe that they are or will be collecting it anyway.
Having said all that, I'm as rabidly angry about the entertainment industry's methods and goals in the wider debate as anyone here on Slashdot.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
Bear in mind that the same arguments were made against the VCR as are being made against the PVR. The courts ruled that it didn't matter how large or small a percentage the legitimate uses were, because the VCR manufacturers didn't have control over that. All that mattered was that a) there were legitimate, non-copyright-infringing uses for VCRs, and b) the VCR makers were targeting their sales at those legitimate uses and not to the illegal ones. If one replaced PVR with VCR in the case, the court would have to ignore Federal appeals court precedent to rule in favor of plaintiffs here. So what precisely is different between a VCR and a PVR, other than that one records on iron oxide on a plastic substrate and the other records on silicon, that would demand that the two not be treated the same?
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
(I haven't kept up with hard disc materials lately, but it's still magnetic recording.)
-Z
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
This ruling probably protects broadcasters. Otherwise any TV station which made cuts, for either content or time, could find themselves in court PDQ.
Yes, the judge will almost certainly try to treat the PVR differently, but IMHO SonicBlue and the others should continue harping on the similarities. Movies didn't cease to be movies just because they were recorded on iron oxide instead of celluloid. VCRs don't cease to be VCRs just because they store video on silicon instead of iron oxide and can send what they've recorded from the living-room set to the bedroom set without you needing to take the tape out and put it back in the other machine.
It isn't so much the judge as the plaintiff trying to persuade the judge that the fiddling details of the technology make a difference. Also it would be perfectly possible to do things like a 30 second skip function with video tape. Anyway the major storage media for these devices is ferromagnetic material. Only real difference is the details of the substrate which carries it. Metal platters vs plastic tape.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
This ruling probably protects broadcasters.
No, the ruling in that case was specifically that the video store had the right to make edited copies for customers who'd bought or were in the process of buying the tape. No broadcast involved.
It isn't so much the judge as the plaintiff trying to persuade the judge that the fiddling details of the technology make a difference.
All the more reason to keep harping on the similarities. Just as you said, all the features of the PVR are available on a standard VCR or could be implemented, even sharing. Go Video fought that case around their double-well VCR and won. Rule #1: never ever fight a battle on your opponent's terms. The judge rules based on what's presented, and if the plaintiff's the only one bringing up options for how the judge treats things the plaintiff's likely to win. So why the hell aren't the defendants bringing up the string of cases starting with the Betamax case that say consistently that plaintiffs here haven't a legal leg to stand on?
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
First of all, SonicBlue is not making a "stupid business decision." They're making a very smart one. Their competition got *fried* on privacy issues for making the decision you advocate. So they made the opposite decision, and then advertised it as a feature. Tivo has since anonymized their data significantly, but there's still a black eye. (And the DTivo box is anything but anonymous...DirecTV is absolutely spying.)
Yes, this information is worth a great deal of money to the PVR manufacturers, but only because they can sell it to the content cartel. I fail to see, however, how the value of the information correlates to whether it's OK to collect it.
But this ruling goes far beyond that. It required that a device be used to collect ostensibly private information, simply because it was within the capability of the device to do so.
Think about this for a moment. Let's change the names a bit. Let's say that the RIAA gets tired of Apple and goes after them. So they sue Apple, and get a court order demanding that they install keystroke loggers in the OS to see where Apple's customers are getting their music. Certainly this is data that Apple might want (hey, good marketroids want all the data they can get!), but it's not data that Apple is going to collect, because to do so would be a massive invasion of privacy.
%s/Apple/SonicBlue/
%s/RIAA/MPAA/
%s/music/mo
%s/OS/Replay 4000/
Get the point?
This isn't really about Copyright law anymore. It's about privacy, which is allegedly protected by the Constitution.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
(And make no mistake, that's PRECISELY what Tivo logs. Keystrokes. They knew that we were rewinding to watch Britney jiggle, and fast-forwarding through the rest of the Super Bowl.)
Apple being forced to log keystrokes was a close parallel. What about...
<REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM>
Is a datalogging condom an invasion of privacy? Even if the results were "made anonymous"? Think of all the "free money" Schmid could get by eliminating excess latex. With all that data on number of strokes, surface temperature, tension, and coefficients of friction, they could reduce the raw material requirements dramatically, a cost savings that would go straight to the bottom line.
</REDUCTIO AD ABSURDUM>
Sorry. That was, perhaps, in poor taste. But you see the problem.
As to the Constitutional issues regarding privacy, you are correct that it is not explicitly guaranteed by the Constitution. I submit, however, that it is only a contentious issue for the court because it was the basis of Roe v. Wade. Had that been based on, say, property rights (Interesting suggestion, courtesy another
But even setting aside all of those issues, which have far more to do with emotional charge than actual law, this was still a completely brain-dead ruling. Federal Law regarding discovery does not allow surveillance for prospective evidence.
And that should have settled it.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
... of some country other than the US. Unfortunately, the people who wrote the constitution forgot to add in mention of a right to privacy.
Hence the word "allegedly."
And don't give me any shit about the 9th and 10th Amendments -- you might as well say they protect a right to murder.
Thank you for underlining my argument regarding the right to privacy being contentious only because it was the basis of Roe v. Wade.
What is collected (Score:2)
What is presumably difficult to provide is a history of what was watched. Even more difficult would be to record a history of fast forwarding, automatic commercial advance, and manual 30-second skip usage.
Making things worse is that older units (like my 2020) are short on RAM, so any new code added to comply with court orders would have to be added at the expense of removing other features.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
The data may be worth a great deal, but as the Amici point out collecting it would be a federal criminal offence in the United States, and incidentally it would also be a criminal offence in every state in the European Community. Don't know the state of the law on privacy in Japan, but my guess is the only place you could do this legally would be a few obscure third world countries. So it was not reasonable for the broadcasters to assume SonicBLUE was collecting this information. They may have had the means to collect it, but they had no right to do so.
Re:Tacking Viewing (Score:2)
That this information has a dollar value to the PVR business
That this information can be given without breaking traditionaly privacy grounds
BUT, let's look at the facts
This information is useful, but does the court have a right to give that information based on the belief that something might have been done illegally. As the Amici discusses this is like saying "We're not sure if they broke the law, we believe they may have. You should have somebody monitor them at all times to see if they will". As much as SonicBLUE has the capabilities and possibly future plans for this technology doesn't matter. It is beyond the powers of the court to set a precedent like this
Also, once again it doesn't matter if there is a possible dollar value to this. The court shouldn't have the power to force SonicBLUE to give this info. even if it is of value to them. What if SonicBLUE did want to sell this. This would be like the court saying "Give it to them for free". The fact that this information has a value is not the point. The point is the scope of the case involved and the data requested is beyond the scope of what may or might be, it's what IS and what should be allowed.
Also, this information can be given without breaking privacy concerns. But that's not what the industry is asking for. First, they don't just want information about ad skipping ( which is obscure since most people don't sign contracts about watching them anyway... but I digress ) and sending files. They want EVERYTHING. That's beyond what they would need IF they were to have it. Also, the information wouldn't be aggregate it would be personally identifiable by a unique number ( why is this necessary? this is beyond the info they need )
Entering into a contract to watch ads?? (Score:2, Insightful)
THIS IS REDICULOUS!! Is there any "viewer" out there that actually considers themselves as having agreed to watch ad spots in order to receive the programming?? Certainly I don't and never will.
My "Contract" with the advertisers/Networks is at most this: "I pay the cable company to bring me programming. I expect to receive 100 or so channels of programming that may or may not be interesting to me or consist of quality content. Except for premium channels, I expect to be annoyed during the airing of a program by interruptions from advertisers attempting to gain my attention."
But I never "agreed" to actually watch these annoying interruptions. In fact if I am ever forced into such a contract in order to receive a television program I'll just refuse to watch the program and the included advertisements entirely.
If the advertisers actually want to compete for attention in the new age of PVRs then I think they should take a history lesson. In the early days of television Advertisers sponsored a particular show and their product placement and other advertisements where made during the airing of the show. Famous examples would be shows like Howdy Doody or the Milton Berle Show, etc... It was in the best interest of both the viewer and the advertiser to produce high quality shows. It was almost impossible to be aware of the program without being aware of the sponsor and vice verse.
These days we have hundreds of times more content produced yearly but as we all know, 99% of it is pure crap. And the advertisements are, by far, the worst of the crap. Consisting of inane or irrelevant premises and pandering to the overall stupidity of the masses. 99% of all advertisements are no better than e-mail spam. Relying on contacing millions of recipients who don't need the product, can't afford the product or would be harmed by the product in an attempt to reach the overwhelming minority of recipients who do need the product or are stupid enough to waste their money on the product.
If PVRs result in the decrease attendance of advertisements then advertisers will be lessing willing to pay for advertisement time. Decrease revenues from advertsiements would result in the decreased ability for channels to remain operative resulting in fewer available channels. Fewer channels means less air time and thus an increase in competition for air time. Increase competition means a greater likelyhood of quality shows on the fewer available channels.
So PVRs result in fewer channels with an increased signal to noise ratio? I'm all for that. I don't need to watch crap like VIP or Greg the Bunny and I especially do not need to see another vacuous automobile commercial.
Maybe They will be cool... (Score:1)
If they really don't believe in this, that is what I think they will do.
Nomel
My PVR Will Be a ReplayTV (Score:2)
Wow, having read that brief by EPIC, finding out that Tivo collects info on what I watch, I'm getting a ReplayTV when I get a PVR.
Monitoring what people read/watch/listen to is the stuff of police states, and is no better if it's a company instead of the government, I don't care why they do it.
Re:My PVR Will Be a ReplayTV (Score:2)
rm -rf
It is a Linux machine, after all.
-Z
Re:My PVR Will Be a ReplayTV (Score:2)
Re:My PVR Will Be a ReplayTV (Score:2)
I already have several other SonicBlue products, most significantly a couple of empeg^H^H^H^H^HRio Cars.
Companies are now greater than the Government (Score:1, Informative)
Suppose I were presented with a choice, where upon completion would result in the preservation of my family. If the two options were to have a plane fly into a building, killing thousands of people, or to watch a movie without commercials I would be inclined choose the former. I would be much more likely to get away with it.
SEC Attack... (Score:1)
This of course have repercutions in the stock exchange if the companies involved are quoted in the stock exchanges they are mingling and abusivly tampering in the market values.
Why shouldn't the courts be investigated by the SEC?
Class protection?
Cheers...
P.S.- it is amazing how can a judge rule over something that he doesn't have an ounce of wit about...
Shouldn't the special cases be judged by judges with credentials in the area? (i'm assuming too much here mayhappen... i'm assuming that judges are people with curiosity and thrus have more skills then the law)
Ad campaign against PVRs (Score:2)
Hmm, or they could just have the president/head of the writers and actors guild go into a a 5 minute rant about it at the next Oscars.
Hell, maybe even hire some college kids to record as many TV shows as possible in three days...
Obligatory Heinlein Quote (Score:2)
-- The Judge in Life-line
Re:Who cares. (Score:1, Offtopic)
One word: Subliminal
Re:Wow... (Score:1)
Those of us with some foresight can tell that some fundamental laws need to change, but the government needs proof. So all these lawsuits will help build that proof.
Gov'ts and corps are doing what they've always done throughout history -- acquire money and power. The only way to decisively "stop this way of thinking" is war. I hope we don't come to that.
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
I'd be willing to bet this kind of thinking is a quirky, unfortunate aspect of human nature and is not entirely removable.
By your comments, I take it you are not American. That's fine. We are ALL going through a time of extraordinary technological change right now. Some people get scared by the change -- their reactions are not as cogent or reasonable as we all would like. This is not limited to the United States. (I'm sure I don't even need to mention Australia's warped approach to internet regulation.)
It's all caused by fear -- fear of change, fear of the unknown. Oh yeah, and fear of losing money. The best way to combat this is education, and tons of it. Get those kids -- get everyone -- educated. Get computers in the schools. Let people make up their own minds, when their minds are full of information. The right decisions will be made.
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
Are you sure about that? [efa.org.au]
Re:Wow... (Score:2)
A right to privacy is a necessary prerequisite to the 1st Amendment. Unlike Copyright, courts seem to care when "technological circumvention" measures are put in place to discourage or prevent free expression.
Re:Don't act like SonicBlue is the good guy in thi (Score:1)
ReplayTV's are basically computers with software, modems, hard drives and graphics chips. The capability to send usage information through the modem is inherent in such a system.
Re:Don't act like SonicBlue is the good guy in thi (Score:1)
ReplayTV's are basically computers with software, modems, hard drives and graphics chips. The capability to send usage information through the modem is inherent in such a system.
So leave out the modem! Market a cut-down Tivoid that (a) acts as a VCR and (b) has an option to filter out the ads. None of this phoning home nonsense. It can take its TV guide direct from Teletext.
Problems: how do you update the software when the TV companies work out how to beat your ad-recognition system? And just how much is the hardware of a Tivoid subsidised by the money from subscriptions? Would a standalone box with no strings attached be prohibitively expensive?
Alternatively, could we set up some sort of embedded system (cheap processor, small memory, TV tuner) that just plain kills both audio and video when it identifies ads? Something you'd plug your aerial through? Again, software update trouble, but it could at least be made very cheaply.