DeCSS, From the Beginning
An anonymous reader sent in a link to a presentation given by Tom Vogt at HAL 2001. He reviews the whole CSS/DeCSS mess from the beginning, which makes a it a nice backgrounder for people who are wondering what the Sklyarov, 2600 and other cases are all about.
Ever wonder if there's any connection between these virus outbreaks and the issues the RIAA nad MPAA hold dear? Maybe I'm starting to sound like one of those "conspiracy theorists", but it seems funny that when an issue such as the fundamental loss of freedom presented by the DMCA is before us, it is eclipsed in the media by these horrible nasty internet worms and viruses. And at the end of the day if there is any mention of Skyarlov, it's "Oh...he's one of THEM!" (a hacker) and he's immediately equated with the authors of Code Red or Sircam and immediately he's views (and those of others like him)are invalidated, and he and all the other hackers should be locked up and the key thrown away, and humanity will be able to breathe easier and all will be well in MPAA-land!
You're using her as bait, Master!
Sadly this story does not get the attention in the media that it really should. Yes there are a few blurs about 'Fair Use' here and there, but nothing that really that is open in the public forum. The only problem is that this is not some simple story, it's a rather hard and complex issue, one that the avg. American wouldn't know about or really give a fuck about. Public apathy will doom us in the end.
Frankly if Sony and Paramount, etc. want to encrypt their media offerings then the should be forced to give a copy of the decrypting key to the Lirbary of Congress to held in escrow. The day that the copyright ends, those keys become public domain. End of story. No endless extentions to the life of the copyright either.
I also feel that copyright should move to be more like patents, 20 years to explot, then 'The End', public domain.
III.IIVIVIXIIVIVIIIVVIIIIXVIIIXIIIIIIIIVIIIIVVIII
What happened to 2600's appeal of the court decision about DeCSS? Last time I heard from it, the judge had asked some questions about different forms of free speech, which they answered a long time ago.. and then, no news at all, not on slashdot and not on 2600.com..
Did all media totally lost interest in the case and forgot mentionning the outcome? Or is it really taking so long for the judge to decide?
If you're not a locksmith, it's illegal to posess lock picks in many jurisdictions. The analogy to debugging tools is left as an exercise for the reader.
I heard at one point that it was a voice vote. Now, I would hope that Congress wouldn't be so irresponsible to pass such huge legislation in a way that didn't leave us with any record of who voted for and against it, but if they were responsible, we wouldn't have this damn thing in the first place. And it does serve as an explination as to why it's so hard to find a voting record.
Where are we going, and why am I in this handbasket?
They have one. It's called a lockpick, and it's perfectly legal. Locksmith's use them all the time. And it's also perfectly legal for you to pick the lock on your own car or house if (say) you locked the keys inside.
B5 DVDs (Score:-1, Offtopic)
by Anonymous Coward on 11:40 AM August 12th, 2001 EDT (#44)
Anyone know if they're gonna release the series on DVD? That's one boxed set I'm gonna buy no matter how much I hate MPAA and WarnerBros/TNT.
When "additional digital encrypted inputs to the ears and eyes" are possible, there will be no need for laws making them mandatory. The content providers will release only for those inputs and the sheep will rush to the surgeons.
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.
To understand the DeCSS issue you have to understand the deeper issue of media control. The Internet is a communications media much in the same way that the air is a communications media for voice communications.
To see what is really going on in attempts to control the Internet are substitute the word air for the word Internet in the following headline:
Internet control necessary: predators using the Internet to go after YOUR (Children/Money/Identity (choose one))
If anyone tried to use the above in an attempt to control the air it would be obvious to anyone with the snap of the village idiot that they were trying to get a strangle hold over everyone. That is what the battle is over. DeCSS is a test case: One in which people can be easily confused with plausible lies into misunderstanding. This is NOT just about money - it IS about obtaining a strangle hold over humanity.
www.anti-dmca.org
eurorights.org
Every bloody emperor has his hand up history's skirt [Peter Hammill/VdGG]
Simple solution: Because the DMCA is now law, we know that the majority of congresscritters voted for it. Therefore, if they were in office at the time, odds are they voted for it and it's safe to vote against them next election.
Sure, maybe you'll vote out somebody that actually voted against the law, but it's their own fault for not speaking up more loudly against the law and generally help the law come about through their inaction.
All I can say to everyone complaining about the whole DeCSS affair is: DON'T BUY ANY MORE DVD'S. Send money to the Electronic Fronteir Foundation (www.eff.org). Voting with your wallet is the most effective thing you can do, aside from being the subject of one of these lawsuits, which most of us do not have the $$ to do.
For the record, I'm 33, and I think your coworker is a closed-minded imbecile. Anyone who isn't even willing to discuss the issue deserves scorn, IMO, regardless of their age.
You can have my keyboard when you pry it out of my cold, dead hands.
Cliches aside, I have been thinking for a while that geeks and the NRA now have a lot in common. The key to the issue is an interpretation of the constitution. Many of us believe that the DMCA is an abridgement of our first amendment rights. Let's do what the NRA does, let's lobby. Maybe we don't have the time or money to go to Washington, but we U.S. citizens can slashdot our senators and our representatives. My one e-mail may not make the difference, but if we all send a polite e-mail expressing our concerns, we can make a difference. Contact your senators and representative. Let them know. They are becomming aware that there is a growing population of the technologically savvy. If they hear from enough of us, they will listen.
Where, exactly, does the constitution say that? If you are refering to the second amendment, why would it apply in the DeCSS case?
Hmmmm. "The right to keep and bear arms..." - does US Government, Inc, still classify encryption as "munitions"? Maybe the 2nd amendment can be made to apply after all...
Hacker Public Radio is our Friend
Hmmm...the setting for Fight Club 2?
I am not in favor of DeCSS, or in favor of the way the MPAA has hounded people for using it. I am very much in the middle on this subject, thinking neither side is truely right, but neither is truly wrong. One thing I have noticed is that the pro-DeCSS side continually focuses on the "pirates" duplicating and sell DVD movies for profit, but completely ignores the people trading DVD movies on the internet. If you check any of the major file-sharing services (Morpheus, Gnutella and any of it's "front ends", etc) you will see hundereds of movies being traded every day. This piracy is completely different than the "pirates" selling copied DVDs as the real thing, and is also what the MPAA is focusing on. By ignoring these pirated copies (which do benefit substantially from DeCSS) you are fighting the wrong war. While the MPAA points this out, the pro-DeCSS forces point to other pirates and say "Well, we aren't as bad as them! Go after them instead!". This is a sure way to lose the war. This subject needs to be addressed in one way or another, and not just ignored. DeCSS can (and is) used for piracy, and just ignoring that fact will guarantee a lose in court. This si a subject that needs to be discussed, and either an explanation, or reason, or way to avoid it has to be found if you want any chance of coming out on top. Just pointing out that their are worse forms of piracy going on won't make any think that your's is okay.
"Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
IP law is a system of law describing what people can and cannot do over Internet Protocol-based networks. The MPAA and RIAA (Motion Picture Associaton of America and Recording Industry Artist's Association) decided that IP-based networks were a bad thing, since it became possible to transmit files over the networks containing copyrighted materials (data) without authorization.
The problem is that you can't really state that something like that is illegal, without making IP itself illegal. Take voice over IP (voIP) as an example. You could theoretically say something, a catch phrase, that is well known from a movie that the MPAA would consider copyrighted - would that then make voIP illegal ? No, of course not.So the RIAA and MPAA are really fighting a losing battle here. Even if they ban IP-based networks entirely, what about BBSes? Or even if they banned electronic communication entirely, what's stopping you from cutting CDs with copyrighted materials on them and swapping them with other CD cutters? They could try and ban CD-Rs, but there'll always be SOME way of getting information to people without paying the corporation which holds the rights to that information.
Cedric Balthazar Rotherwood
Sun Certified Programmer for the Java Platform +
System Admin. for Solaris
No decision has yet been rendered. I'm sure Slashdot will cover the result, even if CNN and MSNBC don't.
Whatever the result, expect an appeal to the Supreme Court.
I don't need large brains to have a good time.
definately not in the netherlands, seeing that that was a lockpicking workshop on HAL2001...
//rdj
No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
--Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
Someone using DeCSS never agreed to that license, so the license for them would be invalid. The law in question prohibits circumvention of an access method.
2600 says it was a voice vote, as well as unanimous.
In 10 years I hope to get artificial vision implants, because of my poor eyesight.
Imagine, I can watch something, then use my built-in TiVO in my bionic eye to watch again and again.
Think the DMCA means I can't go to a movie theater or watch a DVD?
"So it begins... The avalanche has already started. It is too late for the pebbles to vote."
I wonder how all you who support this and the similar BS would feel if someone put out simple instructions for a tool to unlock and start any car, especially yours.
Specious argument. Your car is yours, and if you want to take the rear seats out and put them in your living room, you can. You can't do that with your DVD because the mpaa doesn't want you to.
A much more realistic argument (again involving your car) is that it's as if your car only runs on gas with a certain additive in it, and the only way to get that additive is by buying official [ford | gm | other car co] brand gasoline. Even if that gas only cost marginally more than regular gas, you better believe that manufacturers would come up with that additive so you can add it to any gas, until, that is, the car companies go after the manufacturers of the additive. What then when the car company starts going after people making the additive at home for their own use? That is the situation we're in right now with CSS.
The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
Today is day one at SIGGRAPH, and there has already been a course on Public Policy issues, including mentions of Sklyarov, DeCSS, the Felten case, and others.
During the presentation, USACM co-chair Barbara Simons announced that tomorrow ACM is going to release a "declaration" strongly in Favor of Felten, and that ACM is going to take a strong stance on the Felten case. The group is starting to worry that the anti-circumvention provisions are getting close to "criminializing" a lot of work being done by ACM members, and they think that some of the papers being submitting for an upcoming conference are close to doing the same thing Felten did and that there could be trouble. They said that ACM is going to take some strong anti-DMCA stances.
Check out the web site in the morning for the declaration. It's not up yet, but it will be up at http://www.acm.org and/or http://www.acm.org/
"Yes.. no matter what the culture, folk dancing is stupid." -MST3K
If you're not a locksmith, it's illegal to posess lock picks in many jurisdictions.
Wonder how many burglars actually pick locks anyway...
I'm just waiting until somebody arrests somebody from M$ under the DMCA.
The law is a nice lad donkey with a ribbon around her eyes. While its okay when she's just holding some scales, (who knows what she's weighing?) I KNOW I wouldn't let my kids swing a double edged sword around blindfolded.
Somebody will get miffed and being reverse-engineered and take M$ to court. Then the DMCA will be quickly made un-enforcable.
MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
I just bought a new Linux PC as my main desktop machine. Nice box: and it even has a DVD drive. Finally, I can watch the DVDs I bought (and paid for) in my office.
Not. I found a DVD player alright (xine), but all it will play is one DVD, that is not encrypted (ghost in the shell). I have watched it twice already.
Now I'd really like to watch the others that I bought. But the suits say I cannot. Worse, the American suits - I am neither American, nor living in the USA. And yet, I cannot find a downloadable player anywhere that works.
Another issue: my DVDs are also a mixture of regions 1, 2 and 3! I know the suits will say that this is bad of me, but I live in Canada and work in Hong Kong and London (UK). So naturally I do not restict my buying behaviour to the time that I am home.
It's not FUD. Sowing FUD is "creating unreasonable fear of what might happen". This is annoyance at what HAS happened..
Michael
---
BDOS ERR ON A:>
> Upon reading of the 100+ page license for CSS
.pdf files available with procedures, but not the
You read a copy? Is the following author's allegation true?
> The CSS License
> Is only available under NDA, or so it seems. The DVD CCA website makes a few
> license itself. There are a number of references to NDAs on the DVD FLLC website (FLLC is the Format Logo Licensing
> Corporation, which apparently licenses the DVD logo you see on every player and DVD disc).
> In a presentation, John Hoy, president of DVD CCA, mentions that the CSS license consists of "218 carefully crafted pages",
> and until someone violates the NDA and leaks the actual document (both Lemuria.org and Cryptome would surely be
> happy to publish it) . . .
It's hard to obey the rules when there are barriers to learn what they are.
Geoff
I think I see a trend here. Maybe for them it really would be easier to muzzle the entire internet than to produce p
OK, we have DeCSS... do we have code that actually ENCRYPTS stuff with CSS? What if people widely started encrypting their own works with CSS, (not as secure encryption, just as slightly-better-than-ROT13) then there would be an obvious reason to have it.
Could decrypting your own work actually be illegal?
sig fault
No, misguided, unconstitutional laws penalize everyone. Proper laws go after the perpetrators and leave everyone else alone.
Does anyone have a list of which senators and representatives voted for the DMCA? I tried the LOC, but all I got was when it was passed, not the voting records.
Please, please, please let me get this one in meta-mod.
I see even classic Slashdot is now pretty much unusable on dial up anymore.
MPAA wanted to shut off your DSL and wanted your server offline? I always love it when private entities try to be the law enforcement (a good recent example: Acme Rent A Car and speeding fines). They don't have that type of authority. MPAA only has the authority to ask you to remove the copyrighted material, and that's it. If you don't comply, they can sue you and get the court to decide what you should do. But that's it. By wanting to shutdown the server and revoke your internet access, they overstepped their legal bounds. It's the ISP's job (not MPAA) to determine whether or not you violated their Terms of Service and whether or not to knock you offline.
The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
Upon reading of the 100+ page license for CSS, I had a thought- DMCA isn't protecting the encryption; it's protecting the license for CSS. Wrap a weak encryption around a product, and only allow legal decryption if you agree to an onerous license. It doesn't matter how weak the encryption is, that's not the point. The point is to force agreement to the terms of the license. This seems to have legal ramifications, since if the purpose of the encryption is not to encrypt, but to activate the DMCA and thereby force the licensing terms, then it's not really encryption; it's a licensing ploy. So perchance then it doesn't fall under DMCA anymore, since the intention of the scheme isn't really encryption but licensing?
Curtains for windows?
So it looks like out chief criminal in charge out of all this stuff is "John Hoy". This is important. One of the things that a criminal mind hates is exposure, especially of their crimes.
Sounds like a job for some someone out there skilled in investigation. It _is_ important. As it is noted:
Judging from the history of these organisations, and the extreme care everyone has shown to make the various arrangements as complex and bullet-proof as possible, the main reason is almost surely an attempt at exploiting the law and legal system to the fullest extent, and the avoidance of cartel and anti-trust investigations.
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
One line of questions I'd like to see MPAA answer would be:
1) Do they believe in the fair use rights for consumers?
2) Do they believe in the right for anyone to reverse engineer any technology.
If yes, that would imply that any user or group of users would be allowed to playback any DVD's in any ways they (the consumer) see fit?
How would MPAA suggest a consumer to exercise their rights to create a tool to playback a DVD without infringing on the DMCA?
And how would said tool not end up being a tool for copying as well?
Second: Did this piece of legislation get any media attention before we figured out what a crock it is? My guess is that no one figured that it was that big a deal, and very little attention was placed on the wording. Very few pieces of legislature are closely scrutinized. You might be surprised how much is passed with this little effort.
In the House, it passed by voice vote, but here are the bill's (H.R.2281) sponsors and cosponsors:
- Rep Coble, Howard (Sponsor)
- Rep Berman, Howard L. - 2/11/1998
- Rep Bono, Mary - 6/5/1998
- Rep Bono, Sonny - 9/26/1997
- Rep Conyers, John, Jr. - 7/29/1997
- Rep Frank, Barney - 7/29/1997
- Rep Hyde, Henry J. - 7/29/1997
- Rep McCollum, Bill - 1/27/1998
- Rep Paxon, Bill - 6/5/1998
- Rep Pickering, Charles (Chip) - 6/22/1998
Coble was also the one who moved to suspend the bylaws and pass the law by voice vote.Yes, you realise some stuff along the way. Maybe my opinions are even better considered now than they were 20 years ago. But that does not mean they have changed.
Michael
---
BDOS ERR ON A:>
It's impractical because it's their keys used in the algorithm. Even if you encode something with CSS, you need to encode it to the keys of licensed devices. By encoding to their keys, you're giving permission to decrypt something. It would be like me writing my masterpiece, and encrypting to someone's public key, then going after them for breaking my encryption and destroying my IP rights by decrypting it. Unless I was forced to encrypt to something they can decrypt (ala key escrow), it was my choice to encrypt to them.
Now, one thing I haven't seen discussed... Has anyone approached the CCA about becoming a licensed user of CSS? How much can be published? If the licensed app is GPL'ed, how much of the CSS code goes for the ride? $10k isn't all that much, in the scheme of things.
What I guess I'm really failing to grasp is how the movie industry major players can have this kind of control without being considered a Cartel.
One of the defining characteristics of a cartel is price collusion. When [mpaa | riaa | airlines | other greedy bastards] get together to fix prices, the FTC starts sniffing around.
The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake
Coble was also the one who moved to suspend the bylaws and pass the law by voice vote.
Some one in an earlier thread mentioned that the EFF can't post a roster of the vote because it would embarass members of the house so much that future disscussion/negotiation would be impossible.
But we do know there are few congressmen who are so bought there is no hope.
Is there a legal way to confront Coble in the senate during it's session and make him explain why he thought this matter required special consideration? Why should anyone request anonimity, in the face of overwhelming popular support?What is the motivation to keep the results a secret?
I'd like to see that on the CNN live broadcast.
Novel theory: Modern Man evolved from psychopath
I'd get mad at the manufacturer for fitting lousy locks into cars, and demand that they fix it. In the meantime, I'd write a thank you letter to the honest person who exposed it (instead of keeping quiet and starting his own car-stealing gang).
Sure it could be defended as a tool to help drivers who locked their keys in their car
NO, it could NOT be defended that way. It could be defended as a warning for customers about a low-quality product ("Unsafe At Any Speed", anyone?)
You see, unlike DVDs, there is NO legitimate use you can make of somebody else's car without the owner's authorization. Therefore your attempt at analogy failed, but I felt like refuting it anyway.
Auctally, the contract/license agreement you sign doesn't allow open sourcing of the code, because then otherwise anyone could just find out how it works. So, you can't "legally" license an open source DVD player.
Surely you can share the algorithms with your development team though... What's stopping my development team from being about 10,000,000 people?
Also, who's going to pay the $10k?
Depending upon the fine print, I might.
The truth about Scientology, Xenu, and you: Operation Clambake