A Legal Analysis of the Sony BMG Rootkit Debacle 227
YIAAL writes "Two lawyers from the Berkeley Center for Law and Technology look at the Sony BMG Rootkit debacle: 'The Article first addresses the market-based rationales that likely influenced Sony BMG's deployment of these DRM systems and reveals that even the most charitable interpretation of Sony BMG's internal strategizing demonstrates a failure to adequately value security and privacy. After taking stock of the then-existing technological environment that both encouraged and enabled the distribution of these protection measures, the Article examines law, the third vector of influence on Sony BMG's decision to release flawed protection measures into the wild, and argues that existing doctrine in the fields of contract, intellectual property, and consumer protection law fails to adequately counter the technological and market forces that allowed a self-interested actor to inflict these harms on the public.' Yes, under 'even the most charitable interpretation' it was a lousy idea. The article also suggests some changes to the DMCA to protect consumers from this sort of intrusive, and security-undermining, technique in the future."
I'll try one more time (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nothing like... (Score:2, Funny)
You're not serious! My god They're all over the place. Playing at your local bar, park, what have you. They advertise in the papers sometimes. They're all over this new fangled "internet" thing. Of course the majors are trying to put an end to that. I wouldn't know where to begin, the options are so many. There still might be some decent college stations around. Start here [google.com] maybe? That alone should keep you occupied for the rest of the day.