ACLU Files New DMCA Challenge 249
joeblowme writes "Finally, someone is stepping up to the plate to challenge the DMCA. The ACLU is filing a lawsuit on behalf of a 22-year-old programmer claiming that the law hinders the ability to effectively test internet filtering software. The story can be found here at CNet. Hopefully this will lead to one victory in reducing the scope of the DMCA." The ACLU's press release is available, as is their complaint.
I'd like to see this succeed (Score:5, Informative)
Re:I'd like to see this succeed (Score:1)
Enough is enough! (Score:2)
I just gave the ACLU $250 this morning. Vote with your voice or your pocketbook! The multinational corporations already do..
god bless (Score:2, Informative)
I did, once (Score:2)
Re:I did, once (Score:3, Funny)
You know what I do with all that crap? I recycle it.
Side note: sometimes the appeals for money get interesting, and I can only assume that the people who send me such solicitations haven't done their homework. Once I got a solicitation from Handgun Control Inc. I was tempted to send them a photograph of my NRA member card and an extended middle finger, but my maturity got the better of me.
Re:I did, once (Score:2)
This seems to be the MO for all charitable organizations these days. I've given money to many in the past, including Greenpeace, Amnesty International, Doctors w/o Borders, (Men Without Hats?), hell, even the fucking Planetary Society! (to be fair, the L5 society was kind and low-key when I was a member back in the 1980's.) National Wildlife Federation, They ALL started sending me a crapload of unwanted junk mail. I'm almost afraid to start giving to the EFF.
Re:I did, once (Score:2)
The ACLU has taken a number cases that I find very offensive such as defending NAMBLA. If you REALLY want to help protect technology related freedoms, donate to the EFF. Then you can make sure your money is going to a good cause rather than NAMBLA like cases.
Re:I did, once (Score:2)
What, exactly, do you find offensive? That the 1st Amendment applies to NAMBLA, NAMBLA itslef, or that the ACLU defended NAMBLA's 1st Amendment rights?
I don't see how you can pick and choose who gets free speech and who doesn't. It tkes no balls or brains to support free speech for *popular* groups.
I'm no fan of NAMBLA, I think they're a sick lot, but I want to be sure they can express their sick ideas, least one day somebody decides my *ideas* are sick, and I should be silenced.
Re:I did, once (Score:2)
Nambla can pay for their own defense. The ACLU is using members money to defend nambla. I would hazzard a guess that a majority of aclu members would not approve of their money being used in this manor. Like me I certainly don't, and they will never get a penny from me.
Remember, not all speech is protected. There are cases where the first ammendment does not apply ("fire" in a crowded theater.) One can assert that educating "pedophiles" on exactly how to entrap, kidnap, and rape children is similar and therefore not protected.
As I said, there are other cases that are a MUCH more worthwhile use of limited resources.
Re:god bless (Score:3, Informative)
And if that isn't enough, how 'bout another word:
Spammer [cpsr.org].
The ACLU has a a long track record of defending spam as somehow Frea Speach that's worthy of First Amendment protection.
1997 [cpsr.org]: "commercial speech restrictions on telemarketing calls and unsolicited fax advertisements have passed First Amendment challenges but direct mail and door-to-door solicitations enjoy much greater protection. Given the Supreme Court decision in ACLU v. Reno, on-line messages should receive the same First Amendment protection given traditional print media, which includes commercial mailings."
2000: [pcworld.com] "...and groups like the American Civil Liberties Union that oppose any restrictions on commercial e-mail"
2001: [tnr.com]The argument raised by the ACLU and other memters of the First Amendment lobby is that spam, like junk mail in our offline mailboxes, is a nuisance that still must be protected."
In fact, ACLU has always supported spammers, going back to 1995.
Source: CuD (Computer underground Digest) 7.50 [niu.edu]
This issue of CuD quotes from Canter and Siegel's (the original "Green Card Lawyers" spammers) as follows:
To which I can only add:
ACLU on spam (Score:2, Informative)
Looking at the ACLU's website, the only things I can find about spam are: several suggestions that they are looking closely at the problem and the proposed legislation, which is unarguably sound; and the assertion that the disputed e-mail in the Hamidi/Intel case is not spam, which does not seem to be supportive of spam in itself. Can you provide a current link to ACLU policy on spam?
The article linked to (from 1997) says that the many bills that seek to control commercial e-mail on the basis of content face First Amendment issues, and that state-specific legislation also has jurisdictional problems. Personally, I'd rather see spam fail for social and technical reasons, rather than legislative. Certainly if I had to choose between Free Speech and eliminating spam, I know what my choice would be.
ACLU is up to no good? (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:3)
ACLU could be worse (Score:2)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:1, Insightful)
Sadly, it's hard to trust any organization these days, not just the government and businesses. Any org/gov/bus only has one purpose: to live on, to expand, to survive.
Traditionally, we've knocked the big boys, M$, US gov, ect., but only because they've succeeded and have more clout, making us vulnerable. the reality is, almost any business would run the same way as M$, given the chance and the resources.
but, the ACLU has a 'purpose'. to defend our rights. sure, they may not have ideas that correspond to our own, but they don't need to. all they need to do to survive is to be able to use their self proscribed purpose to get donations and support from those who can keep the organization working. Really, they'd do just as much as Worldcom did, if they were pushed to it.
So, while i wouldn't trust the ACLU with everything political, economical, social, ect, i think that they can do a very good deed here in fighting the DMCA. Perhaps, they most likely surmise, they can get some computer geeks to contribute to their causes, and can thus extend their membership and capital.
it's all business when you look at it. that's why i'm in engineering. i hate business ethics
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
There's no mechanistic law that says businesses have to be unethical or immoral, just a collective decision by the shareholders to do so whether it's explicit or just shutting their eyes to the consequences of their decisions.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
There's no reason that big is necessarily better. In fact, with B2B and buying collectives, there's a good business case for small.
I'll stick to my position that it doesn't *have* to be this way but it's the way it is by choice of the owners.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:5, Insightful)
Second of all, I'm wondering why the ACLU gets such a bad rap here on ./, a place that seems to stand by some of the same basic principles that the organization swears by.
It's interesting how people tend to not like an organiztion which is interested primarily in defending some of the basic tenets of the US constitution.
The ACLU gets involved in many many issues which you do not hear about. Many of these are not "sexy" issues, which make news. For instance, they were recently involved with protecting the rights of Haitian refugess, basically preventing people from being deported into deplorable situations. Sure, many of you don't like the idea of immigrants, even though 99.9% of you (in the US) are descended from immigrants, but it is the basic principles of protection from tyranny of the majority that the ACLU defends.
This particular issue is of direct relevance to /. as they are going after legislation which most here (rightly) hate. However, they exist largely to protect the public from the "mob mentality" that often ignores the rights of many groups whose opinions are in the minority.
Witness their actions regarding the USA PATRIOT act; a ridiculous bill which basically removes many basic freedoms guaranteed in the constitution under the rubrick of protecting us from enemies. Sure there may be a point to trying to be better protected, but I'm of the view that if you remove freedom, there's very little left to protect.
Sure the ACLU ends up getting involved with issues that may end up pissing off some their own constituencies (e.g. Skokie) but it's the principles of freedom that they stand for, not just the rhetoric.
If you're going to bash the ACLU, then provide an alternative.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:2)
Slashdot does not have a consensus on the value of the ACLU, "basic principles", the quality of various operating systems or programming languages, the best drugs to take while coding, or just about anything else.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:2)
Isn't there a statistic that says that 50% of all software projects fail? One wonders...
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:2)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:2)
So basically, are you saying you don't mind if people are deported into a deporable living environment if they are "foreigners"?
Re:ACLU is up to no good? - what? (Score:2)
So what you're saying is that if any one from a nasty country with sub-standard living conditions can make it to the USA that they should be allowed to stay? Wow that is bright! We have to protect the USA.
What are we protecting the USA from? From foreigners? That seems like a pretty racist view. There are some people (foreign and US-citizen) who are enemies of the USA, but certainly not everyone. I don't know you but I suspect the USA didn't feel the need to protect itself from your ancestors, regardless of how they were admitted into the country.
I support anyone's ability to come here without "paperwork". There is plenty of room in the USA for anyone who wants to enjoy the freedoms we have here.
What a bunch of bigotry (Score:2)
While there isn't much call for a lot of 3rd amendment work, there certainly is a lot of call for 2nd amendment litigation. Even 1st amendment issues like the grossly bigoted Blaine amendments haven't attracted a lot of ACLU condemnation over the years and these anti-catholic efforts are enshrined in dozens of state constitutions.
When the ACLU is evenhanded in its defense of the Constitution, I'll take it all back. Until then, no money for them and they can talk to the hand.
Re:What a bunch of bigotry (Score:2)
Remember if it wasnt for the aclu we would have copa still.
Re:What a bunch of bigotry (Score:2)
Re:What a bunch of bigotry (Score:2)
Re:What a bunch of bigotry (Score:2)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2, Insightful)
Agreed, I usually get suspicious whenever I hear the ACLU has gotten involved in a case. As most of the cases they tend to get involved in are the highly controversial and highly visable cases. And I rarely find myself agreeing with thier point of view.
However, there is the old axiom, "The enemy of my enemy is my ally". So, in this case, I'm happy to have them onboard.
Maybe there will finally be enough money to throw at this law to get it killed.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
Some other things that are true:
-The only military actions that happen are the ones that you hear about.
-The only ideas that exist are the ones that you've heard about.
The ACLU does a great deal of stuff. The only time they make the news is when something newsworthy happens. It doesn't seem like you've accounted for this.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
mother jones and salon are about all i can think of actually.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
The facts are not on your side here.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2, Insightful)
One of the claims I'm absolutely certain you're going to bring up is how the majority of the commentators describe themselves as liberal. While many may be soft liberals, there are practically no solid left-wingers who ever appear on the national media. The right, however, is more than adequately represented. When was the last time Noam Chomsky was invited on TV to balance George Will? How often does Michael Moore balance Pat Buchanan? Instead, it's an airhead soft liberal like Elanor Clift or an incoherent authoritarian like Jesse Jackson who supposedly represents the left.
The corporate media is not in any way left wing. They range from CNN's neoliberal economic/social soft liberal presentations to Fox News' neoliberal economic/social conservative. But if you want reporting without a neoliberal bias, you have to look beyond ABC, CNN, or Fox.
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
Re:ACLU is up to no good? (Score:2)
Then again, the definition of what is left and right shifts too. 75 years ago to agitate for a color blind government that does not take race into account was considered a radical left-wing position in the US. Today, that opinion generally appears on the right.
This sort of center shift is what marks great politicians like FDR, Reagan, and Thatcher. Agree with them or not, the center shifted in their direction during their political time at the top and stayed their afterwards.
Original statement was correct (Score:2)
In any case, simple polarisation of political views along a left-right divide is a nonsense and an unfortunate artifact of two-party systems.
Re:Original statement was correct (Score:2)
I don't agree that the left-right divide has anything to do with a two party system since it was invented for a French parliament that had multiple parties. OTOH, I do agree that it's nonsense but it's nonsense that just won't die. I'd rather use an imperfect scale and speak to substantive issues than spend a lot of time teaching people the authoritarian, libertarian, conservative, liberal grid.
Re:Where does the ACLU's funding come from? (Score:2)
IIRC, they gave Hillary Rosen (of RIAA fame) an award for protecting free speech rights. Given the ACLU's long history of fighting for free speech rights, I assume they collect quite a bit of money from the media.
This is true, and it's because the media want the ability to say as much as they possibly can. As soon as it comes to other people saying things that threaten the media's business model, the media becomes a bunch of jackboot thugs ripping out people's vocal chords.
During the 2002 Cybercrime Conference I had the opportunity to talk to one of the RIAA's lawyers. We got to talking about free speech.
"You'll probably find that we're on the same side there. We're huge defenders of free speech."
"I'll believe that when you guys file an amicus brief stating that source code is protected speech."
He had a genuinely hard time grasping what I was talking about.
Rosen got an award in 1997 (Score:3, Insightful)
You're right, they did... in 1997 [aclu.org]. Perhaps you aren't deliberately being trollish, but the water shouldn't be muddied to fool people into thinking the ACLU agrees with Rosen's more recent behavior.
Re:Rosen got an award in 1997 (Score:2)
Test internet filtering software? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Test internet filtering software? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Test internet filtering software? (Score:5, Funny)
Hilarious but true... (Score:4, Funny)
I remember she said it was bizarre to walk into an office where everyone was hard at work with hardcore pr0n on their screens.
err, I suppose that was an unforgivable pun.
-A.
Re:Test internet filtering software? (Score:1)
Re:Test internet filtering software? (Score:2)
A co-worker knows some people who used to work for Playboy. Their jobs were to basically search the internet to make sure that other people were not profiting from copyrighted Playboy materials. So, these people really were paid to surf for porn.
That said, they supposedly ran across some very bizzare and disturbing sites while working. Be careful what you wish for. :-)
Re:Test internet filtering software? (Score:2)
for further info... (Score:4, Informative)
Finally! (Score:1)
Not just DMCA. (Score:5, Interesting)
But, lets extend this a little. There is also issues of consumer protection, where you purchase a product, but then talk about how bad it is, that could violate a term in a license agreement. Or, it could do damage to your hardware and data, but you can get that fixed for a fee. Both these situations could violate a state's consumer protection act.
Re:Not just DMCA. (Score:1)
If I complain to my coworkers that
Re:Not just DMCA. (Score:2)
About time they noticed (Score:2)
Re:About time they noticed (Score:4, Informative)
So how does that constitute ignoring Internet speech issues? Moron.
What's the diff??? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:What's the diff??? (Score:2)
Re:What's the diff??? (Score:1)
Followed by Homer: "NOOOOOOOO!!!!"
Re:What's the diff??? (Score:2)
Which one you are, the prison bitch or the one on top.
Re:What's the diff??? (Score:2)
But if they win... (Score:5, Funny)
As a former (Score:2, Insightful)
card carrying member of the ACLU, (I stopped donating because of their defense of MAMBLA)It's good to see them fight a worthy cause.
Re:As a former (Score:5, Insightful)
I know this is sort of off-topic and I don't mean to call you out personaly, but I'm a very big supporter of the ACLU and you're post sort of struck me.
-B
Re:As a former (Score:2)
Hey, we're all free to donate or not donate to the ACLU. Personally, I find NAMBLA and its members pretty sick and twisted, but I support their right to think twisted thoughts and say twisted things.
Which NAMBLA are you talking about? (Score:3, Funny)
Don't you mean NAMBLA?
Before taking up this DMCA case, which NAMBLA organization did the ACLU defend?
Not gonna work (Score:2)
The problem is that our nation has become a nation of corporations and organizations.
We are a nation of individuals with individual rights.
The government has no business making it illegal to do things that have been legal since the beginning of our nation. We have always been allowed to read books, and until recently we have been allowed to view and listen to movies and music which we purchase.
Hmm, this turned into a bit of a rambling rant, sorry.
Card Carrier (Score:1)
See, that's why I gave money. That's why I'm literally a card carrying menber of the ACLU.
I actually joined after 9/11 cuz the religious right was freaking me out. This most recent news is just extra. I'll be giving them money again this year.
But isn't this exact case already exempted? (Score:5, Interesting)
If he's already allowed to do this type of research, what harm is the ACLU basing their decision on? Won't they just get thrown out of court for bringing an issue that isn't ripe for decision? (i.e. that has no consequences, because the librarian of congress has already crafted an exemption for this research)
Re:But isn't this exact case already exempted? (Score:5, Interesting)
"The copyright law says you can look under the hood under certain circumstances but you can't build a tool needed to open the hood," Beeson said. "This irrational rule is chilling important scientific research in violation of the First Amendment."
Re:But isn't this exact case already exempted? (Score:2)
Assuming that's really true, it is a pretty stupid and contradictory law
No, it's a very cleverly contradictory law, which, presumably deliberately, pretends to provide this exemption, but in fact ensures that the exemption is useless for its stated purpose, in a manner that I can only describe as Kafkaesque.
Also, I seem to recall that it's actually more complicated than what you quoted: actually, you are allowed to build the tool to look under the hood, provided that you are only doing it for the stated purpose, but you still can't give the tool to anyone else, even if they only want it for the same purpose. I.e., the rule against building such tools is precisely what it's an exception to, but the exception fails to extend to the rule against distribution, which would be necessary for it to be of any use.
As a result, only those very few people who have the technical skills to build the tool are actually capable of exercising their rights under this exemption, leaving everyone else in Kafka-land. Honestly, how many of us would have been capable of creating DeCSS on our own? No, I said honestly?
Then again, recognizing that such tools are necessary in order for people to exercise their rights, and letting this override the restrictions, would basically nullify the whole law -- there'd be no point to it then, since using the tools for other (i.e., infringing) purposes was already illegal under regular (pre-DMCA) copyright law. But then, the fact that the DMCA infringes on our right without serving any legitimate purpose has been our whole point, all along, now hasn't it?
In sum, I don't think Hanlon's Razor [tuxedo.org] applies -- this is a case where it really is malice, not stupidity.
Re:But isn't this exact case already exempted? (Score:4, Informative)
But that exemption explicitly does not permit a researcher to write and distribute software that decodes the encrypted blacklists. Because Edelman wants to do just that, the ACLU argues, the Library of Congress' decision is insufficient.
Re:But isn't this exact case already exempted? (Score:2)
The DMCA's limited exemption for some forms of reverse-engineering also does not apply, the lawsuit claims. According to the DMCA, reverse-engineering must be done for "the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program" necessary to create similar software.
Because Edelman's purpose is instead to critique filtering software, the ACLU says, he could be liable under the DMCA unless the court intervenes.
Can you guys please read the bloody article before posting.
Re:But isn't.. But But (RTFA !) (Score:2)
Wow, excellent question...
Oh wait, no it isn't. RTFA!!!!
From the article:
Filter-hacking protections
There is some legal immunization for blocking-software researchers. When enacting the DMCA in 1998, Congress ordered the Library of Congress to weigh exemptions to the law's broad prohibition against circumventing copy-protection techniques.
In October 2000, the Library of Congress ruled that "the case has been made for an exemption for compilations consisting of lists of websites blocked by filtering software applications."
But that exemption explicitly does not permit a researcher to write and distribute software that decodes the encrypted blacklists. Because Edelman wants to do just that, the ACLU argues, the Library of Congress' decision is insufficient.
The DMCA's limited exemption for some forms of reverse-engineering also does not apply, the lawsuit claims. According to the DMCA, reverse-engineering must be done for "the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program" necessary to create similar software.
Because Edelman's purpose is instead to critique filtering software, the ACLU says, he could be liable under the DMCA unless the court intervenes.
Support (Score:2, Interesting)
Where do I send an e-mail?
&
Where do I send a hand written letter?
Let me (us) know and I'm lickin' stamps. It's the LEAST I (we) can do, and I'd rather do something than just reading about it. I know, I know, hope and pray for the universe to hit a state of harmony in order for the courts to see the evil-doing(TM) in the DMCA, that'll help too!
House.gov and Senate.gov (Score:5, Informative)
Where do I send an e-mail? Where do I send a hand written letter?
If you want to contact those 535 Americans who have the power to get rid of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's circumvention ban once and for all, you may contact them here:
Write Your Representative [house.gov]
Write Your Senators [senate.gov]
OT: It's actually 534 for now (Score:2)
Re:House.gov and Senate.gov (Score:2)
The Lessor of 2 Evils... (Score:2)
You know the stories I am talking about. "The ACLU has filed suit on the State of Florida for being called the Sunshine State. Mark Walbourne is allergic to the sun and feels inadiquate that he lives in Florida and people refer to it as the Sunshine State in his presence."
Its probably not popular to the slashdot crowd, but the ACLU is just as weak-minded and lame as the DMCA
Re:The Lessor of 2 Evils... (Score:2, Interesting)
if we give our support to the ACLU when they pick a good fight, and ignore them when they pick a stupid one, they might eventually figure it all out.
Ah, the DMCA (Score:5, Insightful)
Of course, that is cost-prohibitive to the corporations. Why sue someone over a $10 CD's worth of music.
But:
A criminal remedy is just a civil remedy that the government pays for.
Ta da.
-- Paul
Re:Ah, the DMCA (Score:2)
Question re: methodology (Score:2)
I'm sure this has been tried at some point or another. Anyone know what the legal results were?
Irony (Score:2)
Ah, well... we'll take 'em where we can get 'em. ANY ruling that goes against the DMCA is a good start, and even a case that loses can serve to publicise the DMCA's faults.
Great Test Case, but... (Score:2, Informative)
In a test case like this, what we're looking for is an unimpeachable plaintiff -- someone whose motives can't really be questioned, who actually has a good reason to want to do what he's doing, who has great credentials, and who's really bright. They've got that in Ben; he basically has the clout of Harvard University behind him. Not to mention the near-total respect of everyone at the Berkman Center; they refer to him as their "boy genius".
There is one potential problem: he's already written software that does nearly what he wants to do without violating the DMCA. For the ACLU's last test case on filtering, he wrote a script that tried to access everything in non-porn categories of Yahoo's directory, keeping track of what it wasn't able to access. This is a reasonably good (though not perfect) method of determining the contents of the blocked-sites list. We have to hope that the court doesn't decide that scripts like the one Ben already wrote are "good enough," and that there is no legitimate research need to create and disseminate a program that decrypts the list itself.
Re:Great Test Case, but... (Score:3, Interesting)
Far enough? (Score:2)
Finally (Score:2)
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Interesting...you generally dislike the ACLU (Why? Because they actually DO protect the real rights of citizens? Protect minority rights?) but then state that they usually choose arguments that are winnable. Clue: those fights are winnable because they are right. They are winnable (and won) because the only people that truly get to make judgements about what is and is not Consitutional are ultimately the Supreme Court judges. The ACLU wins becuase 1) they are right, and 2) those with a Constitutional clue and a true hold on the morality of protecting the minority from the tyranny of the majority agree with the ACLU in the end.
If this weren't the stone cold fact, then the ACLU wouldn't win. They win because they are right and the majority-based public opinion world doesn't get to determine what is and is not a Constitutional right.
Re:Finally (Score:2)
There are many people and organizations that I admire and yet dislike. They are not mutually exclusive states of mind, even here in the western world.
Re:Finally (Score:2)
Very well. The usual problem is that (unlike you, it seems) people who "dislike" the ACLU generally refer to them as "commies" or worse and would be happy if they went away, generally because they are protecting the rights and speech of a minority that said person would otherwise have no problem with crushing/squelching/trampling upon.
I wondered if you were in this mindless, dangerous group and it appears you are not.
what a quote... (Score:2)
His request was flatly refused because, according to an emailed reply from an N2H2 representative, "I am sure that you have enough intelligence to know that [the list] is proprietary information and will not be shared. I am also sure that life will some day bring you greater things to do with your time."
That's what the blocking software company sent to this guy when he requested the full blocking list.. I bet that guy's wishing he had been a bit more professional when he wrote that e-mail...
Finally someone *else* steps up (Score:2)
For the sake of the EFF I'm very glad that the ACLU is taking up this cause. The EFF has only so much money- far fewer people donate than you think- and money is their limiting resource: if they had more, they could take on more cases. Even with their limited budget (much, much smaller than the ACLU's) they fought the DMCA. Now they can move funds to equally important technology cases without fear that the DMCA is legally unopposed. Being ahead of the curve is expensive: you don't get the same sympathy donations from the general public. I've written it before: [slashdot.org] join the EFF [eff.org] so they'll be there (on principle *and* with enough funds) for You.
Too Hypothetical (Score:2)
We plan to do X, and we're afraid that we will be sued and/or prosecuted under laws Y. Can you please tell us whether or not X will be legal?
The problem is, you can come up with any number of possible X and Y's of this form and ask a court for an opinion. Courts would be swamped if they had to rule on every possibility like this. Courts prefer to deal with actual disputes, not hypothetical ones. They may throw this whole thing out on that basis.
In this particular case, while Edelman *plans* to pursue this research, don't forget that he's entering Harvard Law School in a couple of months. From what I've heard, that's a pretty challenging program. He may not have that much time on his hands to pursue his hobby of saving the world. So until he actually engages in the activity, it is all hypothetical.
Further, while the suit envisions various responses that N2H2 and/or the government might bring, based on the DMCA and the license agreement, these are again entirely hypothetical. If the court does rule on these matters, nothing would prevent N2H2 from proceeding on other grounds not anticipated by the ACLU. So the court would be faced with the same lawsuit twice, and its efforts to rule on the hypothetical case would turn out to have been a waste of time.
In the end, ruling on hypothetical actions and hypothetical responses usually involves too much uncertainty to make the effort worth the court's time. Sometimes they will do it if it is a sufficiently important case, but more often they'll say, come back when there is an actual dispute with facts on the table. That's basically what happened with the Felten case, and chances are the same thing will happen here.
One reason Felton's case got thrown out (Score:2)
Re:Text of the Press Release (Score:2)
Re:Text of the Press Release (Score:1)
Re:Text of the Press Release (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:22 years old? (Score:2)
Re:The best part is... (Score:2)