DeCSS Arguments in CA Supreme Court Case 531
scubacuda writes "According to News.com, California Attorney General Bill Lockyer called DVD-cracking software DeCSS a tool for "breaking, entering and stealing" during a hearing before the California Supreme Court on Thursday. "The program DeCSS is a burglary tool," Lockyer told the judges, adding that the movie studios lose millions of dollars because of piracy over the Internet. (CopyLeft offers this "burglary tool" on a t-shirt)" If you've forgotten what this case is about, see EFF's page about it.
Right... (Score:5, Funny)
Field of Dreams (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Right... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Right... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Right... (Score:4, Informative)
Well, the best part is that copyright infringement is not burglary. It's copyright infringement. That's why there are separate laws to cover each kind of offense.
Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
* screw drivers
* crowbars
* keys
* bits of metal
* credit cards
please, cuff me and send me to the bighouse, i've got a tool shed!
Re:Hrmm (Score:4, Insightful)
Despoite being wrong IMO (and most of yours too I imagine), DeCSS is still seen by the masses as being solely for the purposes of theft.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
More to the point (AFAIC), it's an expression of an algorithm. It's simply a description of a mathematical process.
Come to think of it, the *source* to DeCSS is not really a tool at all. You can't use the source to watch DVDs. I could maybe see justification for classifying DeCSS binaries like lockpicks and slimjims, but the source is more like the description of how to make a lockpick.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Maybe they should hook up w. SCO. Look at the commonality:
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Informative)
Briefly, a contract is a legally enforcable promise between two people. The terms of the contract can be pretty much anything, all it takes is both parties' agreement to the terms. If a DVD publisher sells you a DVD with the promise you can play it for your own personal use, with the provisions that you not gain financially by it and that you only play it on previously approved devices, that's fine. Your agreement to those terms is sealed when you promise to pay $20 for that DVD, and then do so.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
The important point in your statement is the word CONTRACT. You see, I never signed any contract, nor entered into any agreement with anyone when I purchased my DVD. I gave 20$ to the guy behind the register, he put the DVD in a bag, and I left with it. I didn't sign any agreement saying I wouldn't watch the DVD on linux, or smash it with a hammer, or anything.
So unless I'm actually performing an already illegal act (Like sharpening the edge of the CD/DVD and stabbing people with it, or making copies and selling them) then there's nothing that can stop me from doing what I want with the DVD.
There is not a legal prohibition against watching DVDs on linux. There is not a law that says I am performing an illegal act. So, since there was no contract, I've violated no contract law, and since it's not illegal to watch a DVD on Linux (I promise you, it's not. I've checked with quite a few lawyers and judges), I'm not doing anything illegal.
No copyright infringement is taking place as I'm not copying the work nor am I purchasing an illegal copy of the work. No breach of contract as I never entered into any contract, no legal issue at all.
The only POSSIBLE legal issue is the DMCA issue. And I'm pretty sure it doesn't actually apply to home viewing of a video in this fashion though that hasn't been established by the courts yet.
Kintanon
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
It's really simple. I buy a DVD. I own that DVD. I thus have the right to watch that DVD, however fucking damn well I please. Let's not let MPAA double-speak confuse the only relevant issue, which is my right to watch a DVD I've purchased on the platform of my choice, using the tools of my choice.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hrmm (Score:3, Funny)
<troll-feeding mode on>
The limits of the DMCA are being tested by cases like this ...
This is a court case, so we're talking about lawyers. Gotta be pedantic, the whole "when in Rome..." thing :-)
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
The only reason DeCSS could be illegal is the circumvention portion of the DMCA. The only thing protected here is copy prevention schemes. Congress specifically got rid of the access prevention protection.
You can still use access prevention schemes, of course; but it's not a violation of law to bypass one. And CSS only prevents access.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
If that's true, then they're effectively licensing the content to you which means that you should be able to make a copy of the content for backup purposes (for which DeCSS may be used as a legitimate tool), and/or the publisher should make available to you that content at cost for the media only should your media ever become damaged or unplayable. As we know they want to legislate against these too. I'm sorry folks, but you're either selling a license or a copy of the content. You can't have it both ways.
- = - = - = -
To the Office of the Attorney General for the State of California:
I am writing in severe distress over what I consider to be an outrage in the State of California Office of the Attorney General.
Recently, Attorney General Bill Lockyer called certain DVD viewing software "a burglary tool", (see http://news.com.com/2100-1025_3-1011326.html). This is coming from the Attorney General of a State at the forefront of the Antitrust Trial against Microsoft.
As a consumer, I choose my purchases carefully and exercise my rights to the fullest extent of the law. I refuse to run any Microsoft product on my home computers. Instead, I run Linux. I enjoy viewing DVDs that I have purchased legally on my computer. Software such as DeCSS allows me to do that. By referring to it as "a burglary tool" Bill Lockyer is effectively calling me a burglar for watching my own DVDs, to which I take great offense. I am hereby revoking any support I have of Mr. Lockyer and will be sure to educate anyone I know about his efforts to restrict the rights of consumers.
The MPAA is behaving very much like the software industry did (erroneously) in the 80's and early 90's. They have effectively attempted to enforce a "license" on the consumer restricting where, when and how material stored on media such as DVDs can be viewed. However, if my DVD wears but or becomes scratched and unviewable, then neither the publisher nor the MPAA will replace that media. I have to go out and purchase a new copy (effectively an additional license) at full price.
They can't have it both ways. They must either eliminate the use of the effective license, or they must allow copying for purposes of backup and/or replacement of destroyed media at zero profit to the consumer. Any failure to do so constitutes theft against the consumers of California and this Nation. By supporting them, Mr. Lockyer may be counted among them as an accessory.
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately, I'm guessing most of these same judges have themselves or had one of their children download Kazaa, and therefore they've seen that the primary use of P2P seems to be copyright infringement... and then to top that off, they're going to link things like DeCSS as a necessary first-step in that infringement chain. The real question is: can the pro-DeCSS lawyers overcome this impression?
Re:Hrmm (Score:3)
Clearly, we need to outlaw all health and cleanliness items for the good of the people. After all, I saw these things used for all kinds of evil purposes in movies, and never for anything positive...
Re:Hrmm (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Hrmm (Score:5, Insightful)
Right, however, in order to VIEW an encrypted DVD you MUST bypass the copyright protections. This is true by definition for any player/platform. DeCSS has a legitimate use for this particular purpose. The fact that it CAN be used to decrypt DVDs for the purpose of copying them is another matter altogether. I'm sure 99.9% of the time DeCSS is used it's used for VIEWING and not COPYING.
<rant>
Now that that's said, I think it's pathetic that the MPAA relies on encryption for DVDs. History has shown over and over that ALL encryption that is decryptable is breakable by definition. They should stop this nonsense and start prosecuting when they find copyright theft. Anyhow, most DVD copyright theft is probably a straight rip, encryption included. So in effect, the encryption is utterly useless anyhow.
</rant>
Re:Hrmm (Score:4, Insightful)
words are legally very meaningful here, really what you meant to say is that you must 'bypass the COPY protections'
Copyright is a legal right to copy and should have nothing to do with ones ability to copy.
Most of us here are arguing that one way or another we should be allowed the ability to copy content, while understanding that we don't have right to copy, until the copyright expires, except maybe for personal use once we have purchased a copy.
This should be a simple case of reason, copyright law gives us a right to copy content after a certain period of time... this right cannot be realized unless we have the ability to copy that content. So, in a very real and basic way copy controls deprive people of their right to copy. The laws that prevent people from circumventing these copy controls are inherently corrupt.
Corrupt doesn't mean that people were paid off to push these laws through, which may or may not have happened, but they are corrupt laws because they contradict the very basis of our understanding of Copyright. Creators have a time limited right to legally control and profit from the distribution by copy of their work. After this period of time it is part of the public domain and we have a legal right to copy it and distribute it if we please.
A consistent and equitable law would ban copy controls all together, not seek to outlaw their circumvention.
Name calling? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Name calling? (Score:3, Insightful)
I expect this kind of nonsense from "the industry". What's terrifying is they have a DA doing their name calling for them!
Re:Name calling? (Score:2)
The issue is before the CA Supreme Court, though, as a constitutional free-speech issue. It's moved beyond the realm of a civil conflict between parties at that point, no?
This again??? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This again??? (Score:5, Funny)
That argument still gets around from time to time though.
krystal_blade
Re:This again??? (Score:2, Funny)
Clearly the motion picture industry's attitude is softening a little.
Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Funny)
This makes me so angry I want to go shoot someone!
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:2, Insightful)
Accusec by a female reporter of training the boys to be killers, he observed
she was equipped to be a prostitute...
If we simply boycott all of these products, they won't afford sharks (lawyers), and the whole non-argument will eat itself.
Sure, I own some DVDs, but would gladly give them all all away if it would get these idiots to shut their pie hole.
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Insightful)
Wouldn't it be nice if the ACLU was as politically powerful as the NRA?
Disclaimer: I am a Canadian.
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Insightful)
If faced with creeping tyranny, wouldn't you want to be armed, just in case?
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Insightful)
Disclamer: I am not against the 2nd amendment, it is just that that argument is freakin' weak...
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:5, Insightful)
>If faced with creeping tyranny, wouldn't you want to be armed, just in case?
To paraphrase a jurist I heard on the radio recently, the 2nd Amendment isn't our great bulwark against tyrany, the 1st Amendment is.
The upcoming stealth FCC media consolidation deregulation poses a far, far greater threat to democracy than the most rabid gun control advocate.
-dameron
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:3, Interesting)
This is a popular view, and makes it more comfortable to accept the idea of domination by powerful police and military organizations. I believe it to be incorrect.
First of all, an uprising in America would not take the form of such Hollywood scenarios as Red Dawn. It would in all likelihood begin in the urban centers. Urban fighting is very different from fighting in open country, particularly if the pe
Re:Doesn't it seem odd... (Score:3, Interesting)
It's not the weapons, it's the training.
If it were Russian soldiers or Viet Cong instead of clueless civilians, the US Army would take such a beating that it cry "wee wee wee" all the way home.
AAAARRRGGHHH!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
DeCSS is about watching DVDs that I paid for on machines not approved by the MPAA, for example my two linux machines.
It also gives you back the fair use rights that the movie industry is trying so hard to steal, but the primary use for DeCSS is to watch movies on linux.
The only way DeCSS even helps DVD copying is that it allows you to do lossy compression you couldn't otherwise do. DVD "copy protection" doesn't in the least keep you from copying a DVD. I can easily copy a DVD and view it without using any unapproved decryptor.
Re:AAAARRRGGHHH!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
Before you cry foul, the "feature" was intended to prevent the viewing of a DVD on an unauthorized system (one which has no macrovision or region encoding, for example, which is TRUE for region 1 DVDs based on current law, AFAIK).
Nonetheless, you have purchased a product - not a licence. If your DVD breaks in five years, they will not replace it for a nominal media cost, nor will they send you new media should your system change (OTOH, microsoft used to send you 3.5" floppies if you licenced their software and you got it delivered on CD).
Once you've bought it, you should be able to do anything you want to with it, as long as the product (physical disc and information therein) stays with you and, arguably, your immediate family. You can even use it to shim up that door frame that's a bit out of whack. Of course, if it doens't work to shim the door frame, you won't get your money back, as it's not the intended use of the product. If , even with DeCSS it doesn't work on your PC - once again - you won't get your money back. If you put it in your DVD player and it doesn't work, you can take it back and get a replacement, because that IS the intended use.
Try this analogy: you may purchase a lock from Quickset, sit on your living room floor, and pick the lock all you want. You are circumventing their mechanism without a licenced key, but it's your lock and your home. The law has not been broken.
Actually, you got my point exactly... (Score:2, Insightful)
Null
Breaking, entering, and stealing? (Score:5, Insightful)
Rhetoric (Score:3, Insightful)
The basic reality, and it does represent
No surprise (Score:5, Interesting)
Unfortunately, with no large corporate backing at the time, legitimate uses such as this would of course be ignored. When large corporates think they are losing money, the government will come down on their side time after time.
Let's hope that uses such as this can be viewed as more legitimate now that the OSS movement has some large backers - IBM and the like.
Likewise.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Just to spite them... (Score:2, Insightful)
Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:5, Informative)
Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD, you need it to be able to decode its content.
Making a bit by bit copy of a DVD will play flawlessly in any DVD player, no problem. The problem comes when you want to build your own DVD player, then you need DeCSS.
Re:Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:5, Informative)
One could add that having DeCSS would enable you to rip a DVD and make a un-encrypted copy. In this respect it could be used for circumventing the copy protection. Nevertheless I will risk the claim that 99.9% of the people using DeCSS is doing so to watch DVDs they have purchased for their hard earned cash.
If you wanted a pirated version it is easier to download one than to make one yourself;-)
Re:Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:5, Insightful)
If that's true, then why was there ever a problem in the first place? Surely this was brought up so many times back when this first started with 2600. Even the MPAA must realize that DeCSS is not necessary for copying DVD's. So while the MPAA and their bribed politicians are claiming it's a burglary tool in court, the reason they went to court in the first place is probably something else. Like that fact that with DeCSS you can watch a movie on an UNLICENSED player.
For the MPAA (though they won't say this in court), this has nothing to do with copy prevention, but everything to do with the when, where, and how you watch a film you paid for. Obviously this is important to them or they wouldn't have dreamed up Region Codes.
How the hell do you get to be a State Attorney General and not have the mental ability to see straight through this?
Re:Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:5, Informative)
So you could go ahead and trade around the encrypted movie and watch it, no problem.
Even with a super duper mega unbreakable encryption, you could still framegrab the video and encode it into divx or whatever. You're downsampling and losing quality either way, it's really six of one, half dozen of the other.
This doesnt stop movie trading, it just prevents the MPAA from collecting CSS licensing for DVD playback devices, and takes away their power to impose region locks on the movies.
It's a strawman argument to protect their artificial regional targetted marketting.
Re:Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:5, Informative)
I don't have any idea what a professional DVD burner would cost.
Re:Again, you dont need DeCSS to copy a DVD (Score:4, Informative)
With all of the competing formats it's a real pain to search out the proper drives. You need a drive that can write DVD-R(A). The A stands for authoring. I don't have a price quote on them, but I'm pretty sure these drives can be had for under $1000 now. There are cheap drives around $100 to $200 that claim "authoring", but it's hard to verify whether or not they actually support DVD-R(A).
Any time you see DVD-R it generally actually means DVD-R(G). the G stands for general. The (G) discs are crippled in that one of the sectors is destroyed. I really hate industry conspiracies that cripple products. There is no reason to ever buy a disk with a destroyed sector over an un damaged disk. Yet no manufacturers sell undamaged DVD-R(G) disks. Everyone buys damaged disks because that's all that's on the shelves.
You need to get DVD-R(A) disks. These use a different dye that can't be recorded on by "ordinary" DVD burner lasers. They are usually a several dollars a piece because very few are made/sold. I did once come across a dozzen or so on e-bay for under a dollar each.
-
Slim Jims (Score:5, Insightful)
Fuck you, Lockyer. (Score:3, Insightful)
Good point. (Score:2, Flamebait)
It's truly appalling.
Re:Good point. (Score:5, Insightful)
So that's how... (Score:2)
They used DECSS!!!
Wait a minute...
krystal_blade
(I really don't have one of those kits that come in a blue box... Really...)
Re:So that's how... (Score:4, Funny)
They stole your hand? That's got to hurt...
So what? (Score:2, Insightful)
Same with DeCSS -- you can use it to facilitate illegal copying, or you can use it for legitimate purposes, like creating backups, viewing the media on devices lacking a built-in DeCSS equivalent, copy short excerpts you are entitled to for journalistic or educational purposes under fair use, or exercising your public
Re:So what? (Score:3, Insightful)
The problem with this is that it can be argued you don't need DeCSS do any of this. Let's look at each one, one a time.
Creating backups:
I love this "logic" (Score:3, Insightful)
Politics, duh. (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course he is on the side of the DVD Copy Control Association, he is on the side of the movie studios... They have deeper pockets and are more likely to win him the election then the technogeeks in silicon valley's burst bubble...
Somebody ought to check the calendar (Score:2)
Governor Davis was elected last year to a 4-year term, so that means Lockyer won't be running until 2006 at the earliest. Unless someone is anticipating that the petition to recall Davis is going to be successful, in which case the recall election would be anywhere from September 2003 - March 2004, depending on when the last signatures are turned in.
Logical Conclusion (Score:5, Insightful)
Number of daily downloads (Score:3, Insightful)
However, in one indication of the money that is at stake, Lockyer cited estimates that as many as 350,000 movies are illegally downloaded from the Internet every day.
Does this even sound reasonable?
If each move filled a cd at 700MB then they're claiming that 245TB of movies are downloaded on a daily basis. That seems a tad high to me.
Re:Number of daily downloads (Score:3, Insightful)
Take all the irc channels, ftp pubs, kazaa, usenet. Say 1000 sources with 350 downloads per day.
It sounds about right. No doubt he also includes legitimate downloads like divx.com in his math.
Also realize, though that 99% of that is porn. The number gets pretty realistic, conservative even.
CSS doesn't control Piracy (Score:5, Informative)
I am happy! (Score:2)
I've always said: (Score:3, Funny)
Oh, wait... no one wants to go spend $20 to take themselves and a significant other to the movie theatre for one showing of "The Hot Chick," but they'll rent it or buy it on DVD for the EXACT SAME PRICE for multiple viewings? Guess my idea of "customer value" should have been thrown out a long time ago along with my ideas that are counter-culture to the new socialism: Sue companies to get rich!
Silly me.
He's a whore for Big Entertainment (Score:3, Insightful)
Its a necessary tool. (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course the MPAA could argue that copyright expiration is so far in the future that any consideration of post-expiration is ridiculous. And I might agree.
O/T: Your Sig (Score:5, Funny)
I've wondered about that. The old version of windows update allowed you to agree to the EULA displayed in a box before the text had loaded, so I agreed to an empty EULA. Another version used an editable text box for the EULA. I replaced it with text stating that a 51% share in Microsoft Corporation became my property as a result of accepting the conditions, and clicked Okay. This leaves us with two options. For a contract to be legally binding, it must be legally binding for both parties so either EULAs are not legally binding, or I own MS. If the second is true then Balmer, you are so fired.
The Boston Strangler Returns (Score:5, Insightful)
--Jack Valenti, head of the MPAA, in congressional testimony. [edgecity.net]
Who's burglarizing who? I buy a car, I get the keys. Ford doesn't have the right to tell me where I can drive; I bought the car, and I bought its keys. If they come in and take the keys away from me, am I not the victim of burlary?
Too much intellectual property handwaving. Sellers don't have authority over buyer's uses, as some rather racist folks in whitebred towns discovered as their old homes were bought up by upwardly mobile *gasp* minorities.
--Dan
Not purchase: license (Score:3, Informative)
The industry's point of view (and backed up by law) is not that they've sold you something, but that you've bought a license. Which means that they get to tell you the terms by which you can use it.
Re:Not purchase: license (Score:5, Interesting)
The industry can think what they want; the moment they put their product in a retail outlet, apply sales tax appropriate for a consumer good, and advertise using slogans like "Buy it today!" (Blockbuster), they sold it.
Imagine if every purchase you made came with a list of conditions. Imagine how often you'd ignore that list.
--Dan
Re:Not purchase: license (Score:4, Funny)
Hahahahhaha (Score:5, Interesting)
If the consumer perceives it as being a sale, and isn't told otherwise, then it's a sale. As in, they now own that DVD in the same sense that they own a book they buy.
Not only is their license invalid, and thus it's just an ordinary sale, like the sale of a book, but their license is also completely unenforcible, which means irrelevant. Encorfing their license would mean violating the privacy of millions of Americans and stepping into their homes, to prevent them from watching DVD's on GNU/Linux. No court is going to allow that. So, in other words, the MPAA's "license" is moot on two terms.
He must have missed some of his law classes (Score:3, Insightful)
His incompetence in IT matters could have been excused, but seems to be on the same level.
Confusing Burglary with Circumvention (Score:4, Interesting)
Mr. Lockyer seems to be confusing the act of Burglary with that of Circumvention. DeCSS is not a tool for stealing or copying DVDs, but a tool for decoding a DVD for use in a DVD player, i.e. one created for Linux.
This would be like accusing someone who breaks into a car, but doesn't take anything, of grand theft auto. I think Mr. Lockyer needs to spend a few more years in Law School or at least read over the criminal legislation.
The irony, as they say, is priceless. (Score:5, Interesting)
The advertisement I got when I come into the comments page was for the Intel C++ compilter.
If DeCSS is a burglery tool, Intel, Microsoft, and other assembler/compiler makers should be charged with "aiding and abetting".
Not a PIRACY tool at all (Score:2, Interesting)
There are contantly stories mentioning DeCSS and file sharing in the same breath as piracy. While both may be in conflict with the law they are quite different and everything should be done to explain the differences between the two. ie
File sharing/DeCSS = personal, between friends, not for profit.
Piracy = for profit, does
Re:Not a PIRACY tool at all (Score:3, Informative)
To VIEW your DVDs on your computer generally requires decryption software to view it. THIS was the main reason DeCSS was written, remember? So that people could watch the legally purchased and owned DVDs on their totally legal and legit linux systems.
Copying is also legal and legit for backup purposes. Period. This you CAN do with the correct burner in bit-by-bit manner but such are not in general custody of most users. Copying is peripheral to DeCSS in the first place, just FUD-talk by MPAA crimina
Piracy is such a harsh word (Score:5, Funny)
(hand over one eye)
ARRRRRR-chiving!
Re:Piracy is such a harsh word (Score:5, Funny)
Don't panic. (Score:5, Funny)
It's only a matter of time before SCO [sco.com] decides they own the rights to all motion picture technology and tries to sue the RIAA.
A huge piece of what's wrong with our legal system (Score:5, Insightful)
The truth of the matter is that DeCSS is no more a burglary tool than a Dremel tool, and a middle class jury, who doesn't sit on media corporation boards, isn't going to give a damn about this case. The only way to make them care is to charge the issue with the illusion that someone is going to be "breaking, entering, and stealing" into their house to abduct their kids.
Unfortunately, although Lockyer is successfully relating the issue to something that the jury may be able to comprehend, he's also hopelessly obscuring the truth, and most middle class people aren't going to know the difference between a codec and a hole in the ground, so they aren't going to be able to discern the deliberate obfuscation.
Judges should be educated about technology before trying cases like this, and then prevent counsel from either side from making misleading statements like this. This would greatly even the playing field in the legal arena, and probably stop many of the misinterpretations of the DMCA. If all judges who deal with technology could be educated to at least being literate with the terminology, they would be able to dismiss legal actions that try to use the DMCA in a way that it wasn't intended (if there is such a thing).
Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
There are no juries in a state Supreme Court. He was making the argument to a justice, who can be expected to understand issues enough not to fall for such rhetoric.
The "middle-class jury" you so disparagingly reference is not making any major policy changes; they're deciding on findings of fact and leaving the actual legal maneuverings to the trial judge. Beyond that, most sweeping decisions are appealed.
Judges should be educated about technology before trying cases like this, and then prevent counsel from either side from making misleading statements like this.
To a large extent, judges ARE educated about technology before trying cases like this. And why should they "prevent counsel from either side from making misleading statements like this" when they could simply RECOGNIZE them as misleading and NOT BE MISLED?
Yes, the system may have its faults, but the ignorance of your post makes it abundantly clear that you're not one to prescribe fixes.
so now it's a trade secret? (Score:5, Interesting)
How did this go from stealing copyrights to stealing trade secrets all of a sudden? Exactly what part of the DVD is a trade secret? It can't possibly be the encryption, because nobody's interested in that part, they want the content. The content itself is certainly no trade secret, since it is widely distributed and available to anyone with a Blockbuster card.
Arrogance, insanity, or both? (Score:3, Insightful)
So let me get this straight. I can sit in my home, with a DVD I purchased in full, and by the act of playing that DVD on my Linux computer, I have forcibly invaded the private premises of the media industry and stolen their property?
We've known for years that words like piracy and theft are intended to have an emotional effect, (unless, of course, groups of Scandanavian teenagers are storming container ships on the open sea and stealing DVDs) but burglary?!
The only support for the application of the concept of burglary is phrases such as "hacking into mechanisms to protect trade secrets". Does this indicate that the man who may one day be governor of California believes that a copy of a DVD is to be considered the private property and premises of the MPAA?! And what trade secret is violated by skipping the forced commercials at the beginning of the video? It is shocking that someone would walk into a courtroom and have the gall to suggest that a DVD in my own home represents homestead rights and privileges of the MPAA! Regardless of the outcome, I have to wonder about a world where someone would even attempt to make a point so utterly devoid of reason.
Can somebody please tell me that he is just being stupid? Please, someone post something about attributing to evil that which can be explained by incompetence. I really need something like that to get me through the day.
Yeah! (Score:3, Funny)
What? er... nevermind.
Copyleft now a defendant?! (Score:5, Funny)
"Well the inevitable has happened, Copyleft is now named as a defendant in the DVD-CCA case in California. "
Just for selling a shirt with the code printed on it?! I can't compile a shirt!
'Begin lameness
I know the shirt is soft wear, but this is ridiculous
A lockpick is a burglary too (Score:3, Interesting)
Geeze... doesn't this sound like basic High-School logic courses? Just because once group uses a tool for a purpose does not make the tool criminal, and does not make other groups using the tool criminals.
Meanwhile... a warrant is out for the inventor of the coathanger, after it was discovered that this device could also be used as a tool for burglarizing vehicles...
California residents READ THIS! (Score:3, Interesting)
http://caag.state.ca.us/consumers/mailform.htm
and enter a consumer complaint. I said that I owned a DVD player and some DVDs, and that the California Attourney General's office was trying to prevent me from watching the DVD on my Linux computer.
What next, rape and murder? (Score:3, Interesting)
This abuse of words without regard to their meaning (but with regard to emotional effect) is getting alarming. According to them, you can perform B&E in your own house if you do something wrong with a DVD.
It amounts to "A and B are crimes. B sounds much worse, so let's call all the A crimes B crimes so they look like worse fiends."
"The program DeCSS is a burglary tool,"
If this is the case, then I suppose it is a short matter of time before DeCSS is claimed to be a weapon used in crimes of murder and rape.
If this keeps up, sometime next year, some MPAA or RIAA flack will be the first to accuse a disc pirate of committing genocide.
Bill Lockyer's Contributors (Score:3, Interesting)
RIAA - $15,000.00
Sony Pictures Ent. Inc. - $5,000.00
Howard S. Welinsky (Warner Brothers Sr. VP) - $4,000.00
MPAA - $2,000.00
Paramount Pictures Group - $2,500.00
The Walt Disney Company - $2,500.00
Twentieth Century Fox Film Corporation - $2,000.00
Universal Studios, Inc. - $2,000.00
Alan F. Horn (Warner Brothers CEO) - $1,000.00
MGM And UA Services Company - $1000.00
Note that these amounts are only a small portion of about $12 million US in contributions. The largest portion of contributions comes from other big business (Telecom, etc), law firms, and casinos.
-Greg
Re:I say.... (Score:2)
Nah ... the RIAA keeps chainging their web hosting co - 4 times since november [slyck.com] and it's now being run by - get this - an accounting firm.
Re:Foolish analogies (Score:3, Interesting)
Yo... but CSS restricts fair use. Perhaps DeCSS is the slimjim that breaks into your car when you lock yourself out. MM.. make that a rental car even. You don't own the car, but you have the right to enter it (even if you don't have the keys at the moment), so it's hardly breaking and entering. Nor is it stealing when some