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DMCA 2, Freedom 0

Politech is featuring this press release from EFF stating Judge Garrett Brown of the Federal District Court in Trenton, New Jersey, threw out the EFF-Felten case challenging the DMCA after less than 25 minutes of debate. DoJ and RIAA both made motions to dismiss the case, which the court granted. We'll have a story about what occurred at the hearing tomorrow. EFF plans to appeal. In addition, 2600 is reporting that they've lost their Appeal in the 2nd Circuit court.

543 comments

  1. I guess... by webword · · Score: 4, Funny

    ...that the $10,000 Wil won on Weakest Link for the EFF will come in handy!

    1. Re:I guess... by Yottabyte84 · · Score: 1, Redundant

      All the charities represneted were given at least $10,000. Win isn't quite the word but the EFF did get $10,000

    2. Re:I guess... by webword · · Score: 1

      Thanks. You're right, of course. I knew it too, but I didn't want to take the time to get it just right. Remember, if I took any more time, I would not have been able to get First Post! :-)

    3. Re:I guess... by webword · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      I k i s s y o u.

      Thanks,

      - The Management

    4. Re:I guess... by webword · · Score: 2

      Of course you realize that won could never mean: "To receive as a prize or reward for performance."

      Thanks for being so clever...

    5. Re:I guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dam, but webword was right. By just bieng there, Will "won" the $10,0000. He was awarded for his performence on the show.

    6. Re:I guess... by webword · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You're right. I wan't even close. I was 3rd or 4th. Thanks for taking the bait!

      By the way, I really like your use of bold. It is an excellent contrast to the white background. Normally, such high contrast makes reading easier. The human eye is very adapted to contrast, especially white on black and black on white. However, when too much bold is used, it tends to bleed on screens. Also, the very use of bold indicates emphasis. When you use too much of it, it tends to lose its effect. That's a shame because your message is very important.

      How do you think we should continue this flame war? We could probably make this really interesting! Do you have any ideas?

    7. Re:I guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they persue the Felton appeal, I won't give them another penny of my money... Wasting fucking time, money, and respect....

    8. Re:I guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Definitely an excellent idea Retardud_1. You are invited to my next party! Can we use colors here? I'd like green, bold, slanted things, like my girlfriend's poopie hole.

    9. Re:I guess... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought Won meant something different. So we are actually talking about Wil Wheaton's roughly 12,700 Won.

  2. This law is sooooo screwed up, it's amazing that it hasn't throttled itself already. Wish it would hurry up and do so.

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
    1. Re:DMCA by jonathonc · · Score: 1

      It's just another conspiracy cooked up between the government and the recording industry. You weren't surprised by this decision were you?. We, the little people, don't matter anymore.

    2. Re:DMCA by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      It's just another conspiracy cooked up between the government and the recording industry. You weren't surprised by this decision were you?. We, the little people, don't matter anymore.


      Do the little people _ever_ matter? The little people are, generally, the Proles of _1984_, worried about winning the lottery and other such mindlessness. They probably even run Windows, too!

      Speaking of little people, I remember a quote from a leader of one of the teacher's unions, regarding the union doing what was best for the children: "when they start paying dues, we'll think about what's best for them."

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
  3. BLING BLING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

    I gotz the skillz to make da Benjamins an dose pay da billz.

    W3RD UP SLUT MUFFINS.

    1. Re:BLING BLING by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      fuck you. fuckin' playa hatin' biyatch. skootch to the hootch!

  4. Felten by terrabit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    As seen a few hours ago on Slashdot I wonder if he will even keep his research on the web after this?

  5. Another one for the bad guys! by SquierStrat · · Score: 1

    Great, one step closer to my dvd player being illegal (Xine). I can actually watch my DVDs in linux....BSOD in windows...err at least when I use my decoder card...thank you crappy drivers!

    Please, we're not "subverting" encryption for piracy purposes, we're "subverting" so we can watch our damned movies! Or so we have e-books read to the blind! This law is so ludicrous!

    --
    Derek Greene
    1. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by glwtta · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The rag-tag bunch of a couple dozen geeks (that being us Linux users) users and a handful of blind people aren't enough to outweigh the benefits of complete content control.

      If the companies behind this considered what you listed to be legitimate uses for their content (for use of which you buy a "license" from them - in the ideal world, of course) then encryption preventing those uses and the laws protecting that encryption would not be there - because let's face it, it doesn't stop real piracy.

      That would be kinda like saying that MS WPA is designed to stop software piracy, rather than casual copying.

      Xine isn't illegal (they don't distribute DeCSS code/binaries spcifically because of DMCA), but watching DVDs on Linux is illegal, not because that's the artifact of some not too well thought out copy protection system, but because you are not supposed to play DVDs on Linux until there is a "proper" player for it.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
    2. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by SquierStrat · · Score: 1

      Of this I'm aware and agree. Btw, xine doesn't actually do any playing...plugins do. Which is nice. Either or, I can't understand what judge in his or her right mind would uphold this law. It seems to violate the first amendment all over the place!

      --
      Derek Greene
    3. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the content really is theres. They have a right
      to protect it. However, they are suck bags in that they monopolize the means of production and distribution and are thus evil and must be dealt with. Unfortunately the courts are mostly evil too.

    4. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by Glytch · · Score: 2

      Either or, I can't understand what judge in his or her right mind would uphold this law. (My bold.)

      Exactly.

    5. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      And as long as you keep buying new DVDs, you'll help pay
      to keep DMCA in law and help out those who love it.


      Now stop buying those DVDs you idiot!

    6. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what do you mean "one step closer"? isn't it already illegal? dude, stop fooling yourself and get a real computer with a real *nix-like os. get a mac.

    7. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by jazman_777 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The rag-tag bunch of a couple dozen geeks (that being us Linux users) users and a handful of blind people aren't enough to outweigh the benefits of complete content control.


      I detest the DMCA. On the other hand, since so much garbage is churned out by the entertainment industry these days, it's kind of like posting a guard around the landfill. Happy hunting!

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    8. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by arkanes · · Score: 1

      An interesting analagy. They DO post guards on landfills. And you know why? So that you have to pay them before you can dump your own garbage out there. It just seems to fitting.

    9. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      benefits of complete content control

      What I don't understand is why having complete control is so important. It doesn't stop piracy, and it sure isn't increasing sales. They don't get any market research from it (most DVD players aren't don't have IPs yet). The only thing I can think of is the extra profits from licensing CSS decrypters, but that can't bring in that much revenue, can it?

    10. Re:Another one for the bad guys! by glwtta · · Score: 1

      From what I can understand it's the whole "if you want it, you'll come to us, pay what we want, and do what we tell you with it" mentality, that will increase sales (as well as profits through higher pricing) once it is achieved. For that to work, you would need (or at least really want, if you are in their position) both a vertical and a horizontal monopoly.

      Of course I could be an alarmist, hysterical geek, and all they are really trying to do is protect themselves from piracy. But somehow I can't see a multi-MUTLI-billion dollar international conglomerate being that stupid, or naive, or whatever. Time will tell I suppose...

      Somone made an excellent point though - it's really reassuring to know that I will never need or want 99.9% of what they are offering. So if the Harry Potter DVD release - $59.99 for the disk, plus $4.95 per play (or just $14.95 monthly) is playable only on MPAA approved, MS produces DVD players ($299.99, plus $2.99 per play, or $29.99 monthly; and obviously your monthly "player license and upgrade" fee) - well, I just wouldn't feel terribly deprived for not being able to watch it.

      --
      sic transit gloria mundi
  6. Well... by Scoria · · Score: 2, Offtopic

    As long as that source exists, DeCSS will exist. There is absolutely no way that the MPAA will be able to remove it from every machine. It's also unlikely that they'll change the CSS standard (old players != compatible with the new standard).

    And what was that quote about encryption? "If encryption is outlawed, only outlaws will have encryption?"

    --
    Do you like German cars?
    1. Re:Well... by BitterOak · · Score: 2, Interesting
      As long as that source exists, DeCSS will exist.

      But this case was never really about DeCSS. The MPAA knows they can't put DeCSS back in the bottle. What it is about is open DVD players that contain CSS decoding circuitry without region coding, Macrovision, and licensing from DVDCCA. If DeCSS were declared legal, what would stop a hardware manufacturer from selling DVD players with no licensing from DVDCCA.

      Ditto for open source Linux DVD players. They'll be just like encryption software used to be. You'll have to download them from some European country since they'll never be part of Red Hat or Mandrake. This is a big win for the MPAA.

      And that's just the tip of the iceburg. The next generation of DVDs which will have high definition video will have a new encryption system, and the MPAA wants to make sure a crack for that is never released.

      By the way, this decision doesn't bode well for Sklyarov.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    2. Re:Well... by Scoria · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Obviously, however, DMCA == DeCSS here at Slashdot. That is the reason my comment was DeCSS oriented. You're absolutely correct, though. The DeCSS (and the RIAA) aspire to capitalize (the "American way") with any method they can utilize.

      For example, the RIAA is attempting to apply a $.02 "performance fee" (they may have already done it) to every played song on a webcast. (This adds up quite quickly, I assure you.) I suppose they figure if they can't outlaw digital music, they can efficiently screw those who would otherwise stream it out of enough money to force them to cease doing so.

      Fair use is quite a grey area; after all, doesn't a Shoutcast stream "for your friends" (but open to the public) qualify as fair use? It's all a matter of opinion.

      And as for MP3s/Vorbis, the RIAA happens to be screwing themselves. There are twenty CDs that I would have never purchased had it not been for digital music. Why? Because there isn't any music on the radio that originated from these bands. :)

      --
      Do you like German cars?
    3. Re:Well... by agentZ · · Score: 5, Funny

      And what was that quote about encryption? "If encryption is outlawed, only outlaws will have encryption?"

      I thought it was: If encryption is outlawed, only gcrqu2 ryfg fgegd vfwtq djxdt.

    4. Re:Well... by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      And what was that quote about encryption? "If encryption is outlawed, only outlaws will have encryption?"


      Outlaws _and_ the State, but perhaps I repeat myself.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    5. Re:Well... by canadian_right · · Score: 1

      "If DeCSS were declared legal, what would stop a hardware manufacturer from selling DVD players with no licensing from DVDCCA." Nothing is stopping them NOW. You can't put the official DVD symbol on your player if it isn't licensed.

      --
      Anarchists never rule
    6. Re:Well... by RDskutter · · Score: 1
      No, No All Encryption would be outlawed so:

      If encryption is outlawed, only bhgynjf jvyy unir rapelcgvba

      would be strong enough for anybody. If you attempt to circumvent this decryption message then you will be committing an offence under the DMCA. This will make you a terrorist since under the new definition of terrorists anybody who has commited a crime will be a terrorist.

      Of course terrorists will be subject to execution by hanging.

    7. Re:Well... by arkanes · · Score: 1

      I believe it's actually patents. I'm sure there are patents on some of the DVD decoding hardware, and you aren't gonna get a license for that if you don't agree to put in all the other crap.

    8. Re:Well... by DCheesi · · Score: 1
      Ditto for open source Linux DVD players. They'll be just like encryption software used to be. You'll have to download them from some European country since they'll never be part of Red Hat or Mandrake. This is a big win for the MPAA.

      Oh yeah, and we all know how effective that limitation was! Fifteen minutes on a scandanavian FTP site instead of five on a local one. Oh, the horror! And I think DVD playback is a big enough 'killer app' to motivate Joe Shmoe to go out and download it, don't you? Esp. if the alternative is paying for commercial Windows software to do it.

    9. Re:Well... by ryanwright · · Score: 2

      If DeCSS were declared legal, what would stop a hardware manufacturer from selling DVD players with no licensing from DVDCCA.

      To hell with DVDCCA. This was created simply as another revenue stream, and shouldn't be legal, anyway. "Here, we've made these DVD things, but we figure the millions we will make from selling them isn't enough. We're greedy pigs, and we want more. So we're going to encrypt them, and if you want to sell a device to play them, we're going to charge you half a million dollars for the rights to do so."

      Screw 'em. If I had the means, I'd sell a high quality standalone "CD player, DVD upgradable" for cheap with empty, flashable firmware. Toss in a firewire cable and a software program to copy DeCSS into the firmware. Sell a million units before anyone knows what happened and let the industry sort it out. Greedy pricks.

      I understand that they've got an investment in the technology and they have the right to recoup it and make a good chunk of money. They're already doing that by selling millions of DVDs. Trying to rake in more cash over the sale of every single player, and preventing consumers from playing legally purchased discs wherever they want, well, I'd like to see the responsible party's head on a platter.

      --
      -Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
    10. Re:Well... by oddjob · · Score: 2

      Well, the RIAA isn't screwing themselves by trying to kill off mp3s, and your example demonstrates the point. The RIAA isn't happy about those twenty CDs you bought because you didn't learn about those bands from media that they can influence. They don't want you to know about any bands except the ones they promote. If musicians learned they could sell CDs without the RIAA members' help, they might not be so willing to sell themselves into indentured servitude to the record companies.

  7. The real by Vegeta99 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ??AA: Too many to count.
    DMCA: 2
    Freedom: 0
    The Rest of the World: +2 "Canada Seems Much Better Right Now" bonus.

    Great. I thought those DeCSS backup freaks had problems, but I just got out a blank and copied DeCSS, SmartRipper, and FlasK to a CD. It's in a jewel case in the floorboards now.

    How can our rights be violated like this? I believe it was T. Jefferson that said every 25 years a revolution is healthy. Well, guys, it's been about TWO HUNDRED and 25.
    Donate to the EFF. I can't follow my own advice, as I'm in debt right now. Write to the judge that handed down the motions to dismiss these appeals. Let them know how you feel. Make sure to let them know they won't get your retainer vote.

    Being a minor in this country sucks. Looks like by the time I'm an adult (2 yrs) it won't be much better.

    1. Re:The real by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      How the hell is this flamebait?
      Please! Moderate without carrying an agenda.

    2. Re:The real by djmoore · · Score: 1

      Somebody, I think, moderated the wrong post.
      This is in no way flamebait.

      Come on, moderators, pay attention!

      --
      In the wrong hands, sanity is a dangerous weapon.
    3. Re:The real by Lunastorm · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If you're willing to fight the revolution, I'll be rooting for you, but don't expect me to actually be a part of the bloodshed. Besides, a revolution isn't necessary. I think all we need to do is go: "Fuck you RIAA and MPAA. Since you want to treat us like yo' bitch, we'll fight fire with fire and listen to non-RIAA music and watch non-MPAA shiznit."

      --
      You die too easily.
    4. Re:The real by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Informative

      In every revolution most of the people sit out. All revolutions are cunducted by a small minority of the population who feels pissed off enough to do something.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    5. Re:The real by Vegeta99 · · Score: 1

      Hey now, revolution doesn't HAVE to be violent.
      I bet if we simply got a very, very large amount of people to well, example: not pay income tax. if the number was sizable enough so that they couldn't jail all of us, they couldn't do anything. Get 5 million or so supporters to say "No tax until the DMCA is gone" - I feel in a way it IS taxation w/o representation - Hard to explain, but it's there.

      Problem with indie (movies) is they're hard to find in a town of only 30K.

    6. Re:The real by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      I bet if we simply got a very, very large amount of people to well, example: not pay income tax.

      Got any ideas? My employer sucks it out of my check before I even see it. What a scam! I suppose I could take 25 deductions on my W-4...

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    7. Re:The real by fossa · · Score: 1
      non-RIAA music and watch non-MPAA shiznit

      Amen to that. Where does one find such treasures though? Off the top of my head I can name two record companies who are not RIAA members (Asian Man Records and Hopeless Records). I don't understand the movie industry nearly as well but I imagine I've never seen a non-MPAA movie (excluding home videos etc.).

      Assuming one can find such gems it will still be a difficult road. Mainstream media is nearly impossible to avoid completely. What's a guy to do when all his friends go to the movies?

    8. Re:The real by Apotsy · · Score: 2, Informative

      Canada is getting very close to having its own version of the DMCA. It may not "seem much better" for long.

    9. Re:The real by arkanes · · Score: 1

      They do that as a "convenience" to you. Talk to your HR department and tell them not to withdraw any and you'll be set.

    10. Re:The real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It seems to be really interesting timing that when I viewed Aposty's comment about Canada,
      that it was at the bottom of the HTML page.
      Underneath it, was the following quotation:

      "When I was crossing the border into Canada, they asked if I had any firearms wit
      h me. I said, "Well, what do you need?" -- Steven Wright "

      I live in NH, and there is a huge motorcycle race every year in mid-June (Father's Day weekend for USA readers). Naturally, the local law enforcement community is enhanced to deal with "potential troublemakers". Scuttlebutt from both sides revealed the amazement of the visiting Canadians about what happens when they attempt to bring their firearms South Of The Border - handguns (which apparently very tightly regulated up there, or at least in Quebec) weren't much of an issue, but the US Customs Service officers used to go bananas over the (semi-)automatic assault rifles and so forth. (I'm reflecting on events of 5-10 years ago, not this year, nor next...)

      Yesterday, I'd have said that it would have been a real irony if Felten had decided to flee north to avoid further difficulties, as if he were a late 60's draft dodger, but today, I suspect he'd be worse off (aside from the weather :-). What a shame that our intellectual freedom is being challenged in the same manner as our right to arm bears, bear arms or send e-mail from a cable ISP. Things don't appear to be any better in Australia, either. It's a shame that those governments (USA, Canada, Australia, et. al) are so bent on RESTRICTING freedoms, instead of spending their energy, taxpayers' money and time going after the real crooks, instead of creating petty new ones.

      Let's not give up the fight. I'm sure that someone out there in Slashdot-land will be able to concoct some really neat methods of tucking it to the RIAA and making the DMCA useless. Please don't stop trying!!

    11. Re:The real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Being a minor in this country sucks. Looks like by the time I'm an adult (2 yrs) it won't be much better.

      Look at the bright side: since you're in high school you don't have to worry about losing your job like the rest of us.

    12. Re:The real by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      Please list some of the Non RIAA and Non MPAA media I can enjoy.....
      Okay that's what I thought.

    13. Re:The real by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go catch some japanese Anime fansubbed off the net... you'll find it's actually quite good. And yes, it is legal.

  8. Judge's Email Address or phone #? by ChiefArcher · · Score: 0

    I got the judge's phone #
    Brown, Judge Garrett E. 609-989-2009

    But... an email address would probably be better for addressing issues..

    ;(

    ChiefArcher

    1. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      609-989-2009
      ^

      That 9 indicates the number you give is a pay phone.

    2. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by ChiefArcher · · Score: 1

      I disagree.. My roomie's Cell phone number starts with xxx-912-xxxx... It's definately not a payphone..
      accidently dialed 911 cuz the 1 stuck once..

      ChiefArcher

    3. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by Brian+See · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not to be a naysayer, but bombarding any federal judge with hate mail or crank phone calls is utterly useless.

      I worked for a federal judge, and protest mail and demonstrations outside the courthouse are summarily ignored by pretty much everyone.

      Anything remotely resembling a threat is likely to be taken quite unfavorably by the U.S. Marshalls, moreover.

      The only lobbying likely to have any effect whatsoever is lobbying of Congress. THOSE are the elected officials who are ultimately accountable to their voting constituents.

    4. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by ChiefArcher · · Score: 1

      I just want to express my opinion.. not hate bombard.. i would rather use email though.. :(

      Anyway.. i'd probably get the secretary or something which could then give an email address..

      I wish judge's were technically literate... and not like my parents.

      ChiefArcher

    5. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by Brian+See · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The /. crowd may be surprised, but many judges are extremely technically literate.

      I've seen federal judges with laptops cross-referencing real-time transcripts of the proceedings during trial. Of course, like any large group of individuals, there are geeks and there are luddites.

      The point was, however, that as a whole, federal judges simply do not care what the general populace thinks of their decisions. That's the beauty (or problem, in some people's books) of the lifetime appointment of Article III judges.

      For better or worse, the founding fathers wrote it into the Constitution, and that's the system we have.

      FWIW, I think it's the best alternative out there. Would we really have had a Brown v. Board of Education with an elected Supreme Court? Or the judicial compromises over abortion and the death penalty?

    6. Re:Judge's Email Address or phone #? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey, i heard that all phone numbers with a 9 in them are pay phones.

  9. Emperor Has No Clothing by Carcass666 · · Score: 1

    The entertainment industry want their shareholders to be fooled into thinking that the industry can implement this technology (which doesn't work) and continue milking the public (and their artists) in much the same way as they have been for the past few decades. They, and their whores in the federal government, have a vested interest in keeping Joe Public uninformed about the charade that their so-called copyright protection gives.

    1. Re:Emperor Has No Clothing by t_allardyce · · Score: 1

      I thought the entertainment industry was on crack and badly needed more money to feed the habit. They implemented these protection systems as a last attempt to increase income so they could get some more gear. (they know they will die soon so what happens after everyone catches on and stops buying is irrelevant). The whole idea of DVD, was not to provide a new format, but to make a format that was designed _totally_ to sell units in the billions for a small overhead, for about 3-4 years before all the copy protection systems would be cracked, the format would become obsolete, and everyone would realise that the quality was total shit.

      --
      This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  10. Freedom of Speech by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I thought freedom of speech was important to Americans?

    So how come you can't say anything in America without getting your pants sued off?

  11. Surprise, surprise. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The entertainment industry bought at least two judges. There must have been a sale.

    ~~~

    1. Re:Surprise, surprise. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      There must have been a sale.

      Nah. Government officials are always cheaper when bought in bulk.

  12. Well, so much for freedom. by juju2112 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Great, just great. This country is going to hell, no one cares, and there's absolutely nothing I can do about it. If they're going to take my freedoms away and not listen to reason, then I officially refuse to be patriotic about anything.

    -- juju

    1. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by LilDebbie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That, my friend, is a sad thing to say. Patriotism is not about agreeing with your elected officials. Patriotism is not about rolling over while the freedom you know and love is kicked out the window. When freedom is on the line, acting patriotic should be a priority.

      I challenge you to be a real patriot. Get out from behind the monitor and write your congressman. No, don't e-mail him/her, they won't read it. Write out long hand your grievances and slap an American flag stamp on the corner. Tell him/her you vote. Tell him/her you know a whole community of people who vote and have similar interests. If you really want to be patriotic, go to D.C. and demand to see your representive/congressman. Raise Hell and be a patriot.

      --

      __
      LilDebbie
    2. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by supabeast! · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Get out from behind the monitor and write your congressman. No, don't e-mail him/her, they won't read it."

      YES, THEY WILL. Some Senators have actually pointed out that right now electronic mail is a better way to go (For an example, CLICK HERE.) because of the Anthrax threats on Capitol Hill. I can personally vouch that politicians read email, because I have recieved multiple personal, specific replies to emails I have sent to my representatives. These were well written letters, not just a generic form letter about a topic with a fake signature stamp.

      On the topic, Americans need to stop buying into the myth that politicians do not read email. This story is spread by:

      1- American media corporations, who want to keep people from contacting representatives. Actually writing a letter and mailing it intimidates some people (Those who do not know how to prepare elegant business letters or have poor handwriting and lack spelling skills.), and is too time-consuming for others. By making sure that the people's thoughts are not heard, companies like AOL and Microsoft make sure that theirs ARE.

      2- Old Guard politicians afraid of progress, the guys like Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond who are afraid of change, especially one that gives a lot of voters a voice in a manner that they do not understand.

      Use email to contact politicians. It works. If a politician will not care about your email, chances are that he is enough of an asshole that he would not care about a letter anyway,.And if a politician expresses disdain for email, note it, and make sure he gets voted out!

    3. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by ryanvm · · Score: 2
      If they're going to take my freedoms away and not listen to reason, then I officially refuse to be patriotic about anything.

      Oh my gawd - tell me you are joking. You need to get some fuckin' perspective you ungrateful sack of shit.

      These rulings suck - I'll give you that. But if you think that they are anywhere near justifying a statement like that than you are so utterly sheltered it's almost pitiable. Almost.

      There are entire countries where people are praying that they'll eat tomorrow. Whole cultures oppressed by their governments. People who can't remember a time that bombs weren't exploding in the distance. I could never name a hundredth of the grave injustices that other governments inflict upon their people.

      But I have to listen to people like you whine, "Waaaah - I want to decrypt PDFs. I hate America!" Ugghh.

      I'll tell you what - why don't you go stay in Afghanistan for a month. Then report back on whether you'd still like to trade your life in the U.S. for a few poorly-crafted laws.

      Oh, and let me assure you, this is not a fucking troll. You have genuinely pissed me off.

    4. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, don't e-mail him/her, they won't read it. Write out long hand your grievances and slap an American flag stamp on the corner.
      They won't read it. The poster might be sending anthrax, don't you know.
    5. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Velex · · Score: 2

      Raise Hell and be a patriot.

      And get arrested for being a terrorist sympathizer

      --
      Join the Slashcott! Stay away entirely Feb 10 thru Feb 17! Close all tabs to prevent autorefresh!
    6. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That, My friend, was a brilliant peice of karma whoring. All you Whore wannabes better watch your asses because LilDebbie is on the loose.

    7. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think someone needs a job at CNN. Ah Yup you are that out of it. As much as I hate sociology i think you might need a course in it. Or maybe logic 101.

    8. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by no_such_user · · Score: 1

      Your congressperson certainly does not read the mail/email/faxes you send, as much as they won't answer the phone call you place. Take a stroll around any DC-area college campus where you'll find the folks who read those messages. Only about 20,000 people writing will cause a bump in the stats compiled and handed to your person.

    9. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by juju2112 · · Score: 2

      Well, most of what you said is right of course. I suppose I just got caught up in the moment and lost perspective. I was only voicing how I felt at the time I read the story -- frustrated.

      However, it's hard to be patriotic knowing that my private e-mail could be read, my phone could be tapped (without a warrant), if my computer is tapped, the anti-virus companies won't help me, my house could be searched (again, without a warrant), and I could be considered a terrorist and thrown in jail for pointing out a security flaw. Thank god i'm not a middle-eastern American, or I might be locked up without a trial.

      And on top of all that, to now know that I can't even post a copy of source code on a website if I want to. I am a programmer. Computers are my life. When I get out of college, what if I decide to do crypto research? Suddenly there will be things that I might find that I will not be allowed to talk to anyone about, or I could be thrown in jail. It's a violation of my free speech. To say I only want to decrypt PDF's trivializes the issue. I want to be able to speak freely on the internet about things in my field.

      I know, I know, i'm not starving, and I have a pretty good life. You're absolutely right. Now is a very good time. But I see where this country is going and I don't like it, and I suspect that this is only the beginning of a much larger shift for this country.

    10. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by |deity| · · Score: 2

      You tell me something. I've seen this whole country get into some kind of patriotism fad. Why?
      If you weren't patriotic before why would a terrorist being able to destroy two landmarks using a comercial airliner, killing thousands of people in the process make you patriotic.

      --
      Environmentalists are their own worst enemy. ~tricklenews.com
    11. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      And get arrested for being a terrorist sympathizer


      Well, the Founding Fathers _were_ traitors. They just had the nerves and the guns to get away with it. The Conferdate States of America had the nerves, but not the guns, so they failed.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    12. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      However, it's hard to be patriotic knowing that my private e-mail could be read, my phone could be tapped (without a warrant), if my computer is tapped, the anti-virus companies won't help me, my house could be searched (again, without a warrant), and I could be considered a terrorist and thrown in jail for pointing out a security flaw. Thank god i'm not a middle-eastern American, or I might be locked up without a trial.


      My grandmother told me stories of the KGB taking neighbors away in the middle of the night, never to be seen again. We're getting there. At least we'll live longer in the Gulags, since we're so fat.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    13. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by juju2112 · · Score: 2

      Here's the thing about writing your congressman: i'm not so sure it's that effective.

      If I were a congressman, when laws were proposed, I would vote my conscience. Think about it: if you're a congressman, you are already into politics. You've probably been into politics for your whole life. You are hard-core enough about issues to actually run for office. That type of person already has their mind made up on an entire range of issues. Are they really going to change their mind for me? Probably not -- not unless it's an issue that they haven't really thought about before.

      Take Judge Kaplan for example. I know, he's not a congressman, but it's only an example. If you've read the court transcripts for the 2600 case, it's quite clear that his mind is already made up. He is a professional judge, and he clearly tries to be unbiased, but he's enough into politics that he just can't help but have his own very strong opinions. Is writing the man begging him to change his mind really going to change anything?

      Now you're right, I should at least try. Perhaps this is the clue for me to be more vocal to the right people.

    14. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by gregbaker · · Score: 1
      I have recieved multiple personal, specific replies to emails I have sent to my representatives. These were well written letters, not just a generic form letter about a topic with a fake signature stamp.

      I have serious doubts. Ever hear of an Autopen? It's a clever dealie that works like a plotter. It grabs a pen and moves it around the page. It's specific job is to reproduce a handwritten signature that's indistinguishable from an original. The very existence of such a thing strikes me as profound, for a reason I can't quite put my finger on.

    15. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by juju2112 · · Score: 2


      Well, the Founding Fathers _were_ traitors. They just had the nerves and the guns to get away with it. The Conferdate States of America had the nerves, but not the guns, so they failed.


      Hmmm.... so this begs the question, were the Confederates patriots?

    16. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Americans need to stop buying into the myth that politicians do not read email.
      1- This story is spread by:American media corporations, who want to keep people from contacting representatives. Actually writing a letter and mailing it intimidates some people.


      More than just media corporations would like people not to write to politicans. A lot of corporate entities and political groups (especially extremists who claim to be representing a "silent majority") would rather people kept quiet. It makes their lobbying harder if too many ordinary people are trying to get their voices heard.

      2- Old Guard politicians afraid of progress, the guys like Jesse Helms and Strom Thurmond who are afraid of change, especially one that gives a lot of voters a voice in a manner that they do not understand.

      As well as giving people a voice who may understand the issues involved (and their potential loopholes) a lot better than the politicans.

    17. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by hotgrits · · Score: 1

      were the Confederates patriots?

      They could have been. The winner writes the history books.

    18. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by ryanvm · · Score: 2
      If you weren't patriotic before why would a terrorist [...] killing thousands of people [...] make you patriotic.

      Uh, what did I say that had anything to do with September 11th? The Afghanistan reference was intentionally topical, but you could substitute dozens of other countries and my point is just as valid.

    19. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by ethereal · · Score: 1

      Well, we still have their faces up on a mountain in Georgia I think, so to some of the U.S. they still are patriots.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

    20. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by fyonn · · Score: 1

      but signatures produced from it are legaly binding, so they are very dangerous machines to own.

      steal your congressman's autopen today!

      dave

    21. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by stealie72 · · Score: 1

      Actually, it's not really a myth (or at least it used to be based in reality).

      I did research on this topic in 1998 that involved surveying congressional offices and talking to IT people there, and they pretty much confirmed that they didn't read email, and ranked it's impact on policy about the same as a postcard campaign.

      However, I think now that they have systems like "Write Your Representative" in place, they'll actually listen, as long as you're a constituent. They'll still ignore you if you don't live in their district, though.

      The basic lesson is, the more thought and time you put into a letter to a politician, the better response you'll get. And it helps to be a big contributor. . .

      --
      I don't have an anger problem, I have an idiot problem
    22. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      I was referrering more to the content of the letter then just the handwriting. There is a big difference between a form letter saying "Thanks for writing, my position on issue X is ..." and a letter that actually singles out concerns and replies with thought out responses to them, which is what I have recieved in response to some of my emails.

    23. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 2

      Another thing is that secretaries are often permitted to sign the name of the person they work under, it is quite a common practice and IIRC when the supervisor permits underlings to sign their own name, that is also legally valid as they are acting as a representative of that person.

    24. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by penguin_dance · · Score: 1

      Actually email is MORE likely to be read than snail mail due to the anthrax scares.

      --
      If you've never been modded as "flamebait" or "troll," you've never tried to argue a minority viewpoint here!
    25. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by congressional_f00l · · Score: 2, Informative

      Acutally, since we're not receiving ANY mail on the Hill, emailing (or faxing) is the only way to go currently. I actually work in a congressional office, and oddly enough, a large portion of my job is responding to constituent mail. As a big opponent of the DMCA, here's a few of my thoughts on how to affect the issue on the Hill. First, since most of you probably don't have contacts on the Hill, writing to your congressman is pretty much the only way to go. Contrary to what supabeast! thinks, most congressmen and senators DON'T read their constituent mail - that's my job. Yeah, you get a personally tailored response, but it's from people like me (vetted by the Chief of Staff or Legislative Director, usually). So, probably the best way to get your congessman/senator's attention is to bombard them with letters, and not just from you, but from everybody that you can convince to write them too. The greater the number of letters (not form letters, but individually written ones - many offices ignore forms), the greater the chance the issue will be brought to the congressman/senator's attention. Also, you should write to Rep. Rick Boucher (D-VA) - he's probably the biggest foe of the DMCA. Also, contact the Cato Institute here in DC - it's a Libertarian think tank, and it's very much against the DMCA as well. Good luck!

    26. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by tsg · · Score: 1

      There are entire countries where people are praying that they'll eat tomorrow. Whole cultures oppressed by their governments. People who can't remember a time that bombs weren't exploding in the distance. I could never name a hundredth of the grave injustices that other governments inflict upon their people.

      Pointing out worse deeds doesn't make bad deeds ok. You don't let a murderer go because somebody else killed more people.

      I'll tell you what - why don't you go stay in Afghanistan for a month. Then report back
      on whether you'd still like to trade your life in the U.S. for a few poorly-crafted laws.


      Or, in other words, "Love it or leave it".

      I'll take the third choice you didn't mention: stay here and get the poorly-crafted laws fixed. Just because it's worse other places doesn't mean it can't be better here.

      --
      People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
    27. Re:Well, so much for freedom. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Man O man , a blue blooded fool.

  13. In case you don't read them normally, by T.Hobbes · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    now might be a good time to look at my .sig..

    1. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uhm I don't see a sig.

      Am I missing something?

    2. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by Karma+50 · · Score: 1

      It's a link to DeCSS. Whooo.

      --
      http://www.thehungersite.com
    3. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you have something to say, say it. Most of us have sig display turned off.

    4. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What sig??

      NR

    5. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by T.Hobbes · · Score: 1

      Nevermind.. I just have a link to decss. I've been perusing slashdot too much lately..

    6. Re:In case you don't read them normally, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have sigs disabled in my options, because most slashdot sigs are really really stupid.

  14. I wonder... by InferiorFloater · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What could make a judge so hostile to clearly valid academic concerns? Pressure from DOJ or other big-buisiness government interests? The knowledge that her decision ultimately didn't mean squat since the decision would get appealed for decades?

    But seriously, what judge could turn down an appeal here? The decision was obviously one-sided.

    --

    ---------
    Get back to me when my brain starts working.
    1. Re:I wonder... by gilroy · · Score: 4, Funny
      Blockquoth the poster:

      What could make a judge so hostile to clearly valid academic concerns? Pressure from DOJ or other big- buisiness government interests? The knowledge that her decision ultimately didn't mean squat since the decision would get appealed for decades?

      ... really bad experience in a math class in college?


      :)

    2. Re:I wonder... by aozilla · · Score: 2

      What could make a judge so hostile to clearly valid academic concerns?

      How about the fact that he was asking for a declaratory judgement on an issue that the other parties had agreed not to prosecute? Sounds like a huge waste of the courts time to me.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    3. Re:I wonder... by taxman_10m · · Score: 1
      What could make a judge so hostile to clearly valid academic concerns? Pressure from DOJ or other big-buisiness government interests?

      How does the DOJ pressure a judge?

    4. Re:I wonder... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Threaten to sniff his link for pr0n?

      I guess we'll see if anyone get's this. :)

    5. Re:I wonder... by Lucretius · · Score: 2
      What could make a judge so hostile to clearly valid academic concerns? Pressure from DOJ or other big-buisiness government interests? The knowledge that her decision ultimately didn't mean squat since the decision would get appealed for decades?

      But seriously, what judge could turn down an appeal here? The decision was obviously one-sided.


      I think that the reason that this case was thrown out so quickly is that nothing has happened yet. There has been no case proven where someone has published and gotten sued over it yet, so there has been no real constitutional question at hand.

      I think the most important bit of information contained in the press release is right here:

      The recording industry, represented by the Recording Industry Association of America(RIAA) and the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI)Foundation, threatened to file suit in April 2001 if Felten and his team published their research at a conference. They subsequently issued a press release denying having threatened the researchers.


      What I see in this (and it is important to say here that I am not a lawyer) is that there has been no proven conflict as of yet. If the RIAA is denying the threat, then the EFF needs to prove that the threat actually happened. Once they have proved that the threat actually happened, then we actually have ourselves a constitutional question at hand. As it stands right now, there is a supposed constitutional question at hand.

      I personally predict that the next appeal will get the much the same result, until one professor stands up and either stands the RIAA down (in which case they will win de facto and things will start to get published as people get braver), or actually goes to court to battle this out the way it should be battled out.

      Once there is a proven case of free speech being suppressed on account of the DMCA, then you will see the courts actually start to step in and stop the madness (unfortunately, this will probably take quite some time).

      marc
  15. please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh boo hoo, it's now illegal to take someone's else's hard work and rip it apart, stealing its secrets. What will they try to ban next, murder??

    There isn't one good reason why you should be able to rip off the R&D work that companies spend big money on. If you want to buid some device then engineer it yourself. Don't copy someone else's. That's called stealing.

    Oh, and there are two sides to the coin here. Yes, you lose the freedom to take apart other people's stuff. BUT: Other people lose the freedom to take apart your stuff. So instead of sitting around on slashdot all day karma whoring why don't you start a business and start making bank?? You might even be able to get a girl to suck your dilznick if you are rich enough you LOSERS.

    Dr Kool

    1. Re:please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What is a dilznick?

    2. Re:please by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      penis
      cock
      dick
      pee-pee
      wiener
      schlong
      meat-pipe
      johnson
      manhood
      tool
      beaver-cleaver
      bald-headed hermit
      erection
      manmeat
      organ
      member
      rod
      salami
      loins
      prick
      stalk
      wood
      babymaker
      wang

      hey troolls! help me out here.

  16. Re:This is sad... by SquierStrat · · Score: 1

    Umm, it's not about bootlegging! It's about freedom, they're telling us that reverse engineering (which under every other copyright law is legal) is illegal. They're telling us they figuring out how to do what they did, without their help is illegal. That figuring out how to have a computer read e-books to the blind, is illegal. That figuring out how to watch DVDs in an "alternative OS" is illegal. Sorry, bootlegging DVDs is a fricking bitch and sure as hell isn't worth it! The quality is degraded also.

    --
    Derek Greene
  17. EFF snafu by brsett · · Score: 0, Troll

    I have no problem with the ideas and goals of the EFF (and usually I agree with them), but they must be the most incompetent organization known to mankind. Hopefully this is another notice to its members that all the people making decisions at the EFF need to be replaced with folks who have at least an iota of a clue.

    If there are "hundreds" of scientists that are afraid to present their research, PRESENT THE DAMN SCIENTISTS. Good grief, this is ridiculous. First they jeopardize my freedom as a coder by pushing the Corley case up to the District Level when it is clear that Corley is completely unsympathetic, now they fubar this one. Someone please take a lesson from Thurgood Marshall who passed up hundreds of chances to challenge civil rights laws until he finally got a case with facts that were clear cut, and prejudice was obvious (Brown v Board of Education for those interested). This is ridiculous, with friends like the EFF, who needs enemies. At this rate we'll have no freedom left by 2010, whereas if they would just let the non radicals get it worked out we'd be fine.

    Karma be damned! I am so tired of the idiots at the EFF. Mind their own business, and stay out of technology issues they clearly do not understand, and laws they are too incompetent to affect.

    1. Re:EFF snafu by rjamestaylor · · Score: 2
      Someone please take a lesson from Thurgood Marshall who passed up hundreds of chances to challenge civil rights laws until he finally got a case with facts that were clear cut, and prejudice was obvious (Brown v Board of Education for those interested).
      So they should stop trying to defend people and concentrate on their political agenda?
      --
      -- @rjamestaylor on Ello
    2. Re:EFF snafu by Landaras · · Score: 1

      Then how can someone go about fixing the "problem" with the EFF? I'm a National Merit Scholar out of high school, am currently A+ certified, will be graduating with an MIS degree in two years, and then plan to obtain a law degree in Intellectual Property law from Ohio State. What path should I take to keep this crap from happening five years from now?

    3. Re:EFF snafu by brsett · · Score: 1

      So they should stop trying to defend people and concentrate on their political agenda?

      YES. Absolutely. Their mission isn't to defend people, its to protect Electronic Freedom. Corley, et all, can defend themselves -- and certainly do a better job than the EFF, given their current track record. I guarantee there is no shortage of lawyers to defend any DMCA violator, the EFF needs to concentrate on changing the law. We now have several data points that indicate they are unable to defend individuals, its time for them to revise their tactics.

    4. Re:EFF snafu by SumDeusExMachina · · Score: 0, Troll
      Politcal agenda? What political agenda!?

      Honestly, they aren't defending people out of the goodness of their hearts. They are defending people in cases where they hope to forward their political agenda. The parent to your post was pointing out that they are doing so incompently. If you want to concentrate on defending people, why don't you study law and become a public defender?

      --

      Is your company running tools written by ma
    5. Re:EFF snafu by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I won't comment on the EFF, but a year or more ago I had thought that it would be the EPIC in the more prominent position that EFF is today. I really don't know much about the EFF's history, while I know that EPIC is responsible for Privacy.org, and has worked closely with the ACLU. Actually, I think a lot more could be accomplished if the EFF and EPIC were to become one. Or at least, work together alongside the ACLU. They seem to have the same priorities.

    6. Re:EFF snafu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hint: nobody cares about your computer certifications. Go get a degree in law, specializing in intellectual property. Perhaps then, if you have any ethics left, you can make a difference.

    7. Re:EFF snafu by brsett · · Score: 1

      Become a good lawyer. Spend years practicing the craft. Win several high profile cases (its ok if you lose some too :-). Prove yourself to be both effective and reasonable. And 10 years from now give me a call. Let my generation take care of this one, you get the next. Hopefully we won't screw it up too badly before you get there. And since you're young and idealistic, don't let the negativity of many of the stories on Slashdot and my own post affect you. Nothing serious is lost yet, no matter how upset I am at the EFF.

    8. Re:EFF snafu by BitterOak · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I agree the Felton case never had legs, but I don't see what you have against Corley. He was the one guy who didn't back down. He had nothing to gain financially by posting DeCSS, he was just fighting for our freedoms.

      What specifically makes him unsympathetic? Unlike many of the DeCSS posters he didn't engage in profanity while describing the MPAA, and never encouraged illegal copying. If you've heard him on the radio you've probably heard he is an articulate and level-headed guy even though his politics are a little to the left of center.

      Has it gotten to the point where no one with long hair should expect a fair trial?

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    9. Re:EFF snafu by dakoda · · Score: 1

      someone mod'd down a comment about certifications meaning nothing. (or, it was be anonymus coward, dont recall). this is quite true. there is nothign stopping completely incompitent lawyers and judges from making decisions, you would therefore get no special privs.

      also, dont let your certifications go to your head. no offense, i dont know you so i couldnt judge you, and im not, but i have seen /many/ 'certified' morons. this is in no way personal, but just somethign to keep in mind. im sure the eff people think they know what they're doing too. just make sure when you get there, you actually do =) go get 'em, tiger.

    10. Re:EFF snafu by Landaras · · Score: 1

      I'll assume you were being devil's advocate as opposed to a troll. I listed my A+ to show that I at least have something resembling a clue when it comes to technical issues. Can I hold a candle to most of the people here on a technical level? Probably not. But most of the people here aren't capable/willing to get a law degree. The MIS degree and my continued experience in the tech field will differentiate me from most of the others in law school.

    11. Re:EFF snafu by brsett · · Score: 1

      What specifically makes him unsympathetic?

      He publishes the magazine 2600. Read the judge's decision he clearly thought Corley was a Hacker/Cracker, and published a magazine for teaching other people how to hack into systems and steal information. Read the decision (it used to be posted on 2600

    12. Re:EFF snafu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Telling the truth would be a good start.

    13. Re:EFF snafu by Schwarzchild · · Score: 2
      Corley's been on Nightline with Ted Koppel. I did a double take when I saw that. It was a couple of years ago.

      Thought for the moment:
      Does being on Nightline make you respectable?

      --

      "sweet dreams are made of this..."

    14. Re:EFF snafu by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      If you plan to get a law degree in IP, you might want to reconsider. Aside from working full time for a group like the EFF (Unlikely at best.), an IP lawyer who did anything OTHER than promote a corporate point of view would be quickly blacklisted. Just something to think about if you plan to make a living with a degree in IP law.

    15. Re:EFF snafu by peeping_Thomist · · Score: 1
      So they should stop trying to defend people and concentrate on their political agenda?

      YES!!

      --
      Anything worth doing is worth doing badly -- G.K. Chesterton
    16. Re:EFF snafu by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      EPIC, while obviously far more competent than the EFF, is not for defending freedom of speech, but for defending privacy. Groups like this have to specialize, because in a court system full of corrupt judges and politicians like the US courts, the need the specialization to survive.

    17. Re:EFF snafu by truesaer · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Oh, good idea. Only the most deserving people should be defending against being screwed by the DMCA. After all, we might as well wait a few years until the DMCA has been used to destroy all academic research, and the RIAA/MPAA has complete control of the world, and THEN decide to bring a case.


      Seriously, you should either thank your lucky stars that the EFF is doing this, since they're the ONLY people fighting these cases. And the challenges for civil rights were after many years of black people being screwed. Remember slavery? Segregation was pretty deeply entreanched in our society by then.


      The DMCA is new. It needs to be challenged NOW, before it gets to be established law. Just because some moron judge didn't even listen to arguments doesn't mean that the EFF shouldn't sue. Ed felten is a legitimate researcher, and he is plenty sympatheic if that is your concern. Eventually, the EFF will get their day in court, try their case, and then we will see.


      In the mean time, start litigating this stuff yourself or stop complaining if the only people who have the dollars and time to do it have a small setback.

    18. Re:EFF snafu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're a national merit scholar, you can do better than law school at ohio state. That would be a start....

    19. Re:EFF snafu by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2, Informative

      Maybe. But EPIC does do this and the EFF does do this.

    20. Re:EFF snafu by Malcontent · · Score: 1, Troll

      Yes they should be more like you. Instead of fighting injustice with meager funds they should post flames on slashdot. That will teach those evil corporations.

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    21. Re:EFF snafu by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 1

      Uh, huh, well last I recall, there are 2 ways to change law, 1) lobby politicians, 2) take a case to higher courts until it is ruled unconstitional.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    22. Re:EFF snafu by alcmena · · Score: 1

      I completely agree. I have two words that should give people here hope: Larry Flynt.

      However you feel about what Flynt does, he fought like hell to get us many of the First Ammendment rights that we take for granted today. The majority of the population hated him. He kept losing battles in court. He served time in jail...

      ... he won.

    23. Re:EFF snafu by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, but there's no point taking it higher and higher if you don't have the competence to win it at any level...

      From the reading of the case it seems like they made some pretty big errors to get it thrown out (if indeed starting this particular case wasn't an error in the first place) - misreading or misinterpreting certain laws without justifying the interpretation or providing sufficient past references, and presenting some of their arguments incorrectly so that they could not be properly considered. Maybe if they got that stuff right they might have more of a chance.

      From the looks of the ruling:
      - code is free speech.
      - restrictions are content-based. Free Speech protection may not apply because of illegal purposes, not just because it's code.
      - DeCSS might pass as a software player, but the issue seems to be with it leaving the unencrpyted digital result accessible.
      - posting it is barred based on the functional aspects, not restricting the speech.
      - linking to it is prohibited if you are aware of what you are linking to.
      - hooray, someone understands 'fair use'. It's not a list of activities that must be allowed, it's a list of activities that are protected from copyright lawsuits. It also looks like this was brought up and misinterpreted in a case that it wasn't even relevant in. (fair use is not required to be allowed, so why would a program that makes available access for purposes of fair use be inherently legal?)
      - but apparently you can make fair use of a DVD movie! Yes, they actually suggest it's okay, within the fair use laws, to point a video camera at a TV and record the movie. Not the most convenient way to play it on Linux, but still...

    24. Re:EFF snafu by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 1

      Its sounds like you are saying they need to improve, not stop trying.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
    25. Re:EFF snafu by AbsoluteRelativity · · Score: 1

      Or let me put it this way, the only reason to stop is if the case is made impossible by other people (if every judge was owned by the MPAA etc), then I can see dropping your case and changing your tactics.

      --
      disclaimer : My views do not represent those of every one else in slashdot.
  18. not a surprise by multriha · · Score: 2, Interesting
    They didn't lose. It was dismissed simply because never there was no real threat of prosecution in this case.

    They were basically trying to challenege the DCMA based on an empty threat by the RIAA, but because they backed down, and never went any further with, there wasn't any real case.

    1. Re:not a surprise by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm glad sombeody understands. Courts refuse to accept moot cases since there's no risk for one of the parties, so they won't necessarily put up the best defense/arguments they can. And precedence does matter.

  19. No DMCA in Canada by Vagary · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Tired of the laws your brain-dead politicians keep creating? Consider Canada! Sure the weather is a little colder than California, but the taxes aren't as high as you've heard. I think you'll find that business is better up here.

    Ask yourself: What more does the US government have to do before you'll leave? Guess what? They'll do it!

    1. Re:No DMCA in Canada by tifosi · · Score: 1

      and DirectTV is free ;)

    2. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Except for that in typical Canadian fashion, we're already on our way to adopting a similar law. The petition against it (I think by the EFF actually) is long past its due date now, and I never heard about it until about a week ago.

    3. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Bill C-36 passed today, Nov 28 2001. It's the law where if the cops want to forfeit your rights as a Canadian (see the Charter of Rights and Freedoms) all they have to do is associate you with "terrorist".

      Terrorists include, but are not limited to:

      Workers on strike (previously legal)
      Protesters (previously legal)
      Natives/Indians/First Nations people (previously legal)
      Anyone participating in Civil Disobedience (previously legal)
      Motorists that refuse to sign a speeding ticket (previously legal)

      If shit like this keeps up, I'm moving to Russia.

    4. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I see.

      Like hell you do.

    5. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Geek+Boy · · Score: 2

      Yeah the taxes aren't too high when you're a student at Trent, but they sure get high once you start making $100K/year ($62K USD).

    6. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      WRONG WRONG WRONG.

      The candian gov't is doing just that.

      http://buzz.ca/articles/01/07/24/1825207.shtml

      But we've always been about 10 years behind.

    7. Re:No DMCA in Canada by sg_oneill · · Score: 2

      Actually dude, I think that bringing in DMCA stuff will most certainly happen in CANADA, what with all the NAFTA type stuff and whatnot, so you probably can't win anywhere. We got simmilarly reamed over here in Australia

      Oh, and to the replier who got huffy about the US government comment. Chill bro. Just cause someone says your government bites, they aint saying America itself bites. It's democracy dude, and the US is supposed to be the king of it. Without critisism, there IS no democracy! relax. Foreigners being critical of US government decisions does not automatically mean they are enemies of the state or whatever.

      --
      Excuse the Unicode crap in my posts. That's an apostrophe, and slashdot is busted.
    8. Re:No DMCA in Canada by morbid · · Score: 0

      So they should be if you're making that kind of money. You can spare quite a lot for your less well-heeled fellow citezins.

      --
      I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
    9. Re:No DMCA in Canada by herk · · Score: 1

      We're probably on our way down the same road as the US, but who knows where they'll be at that point. Maybe we'll continue to be just a few steps behind and still better off.

      --

      I like ice cream.

    10. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, there's no DMCA yet, but the feds are doing their best to fix that! Look at http://www.flora.org/dmca to see an interesting discussion board on trying to stop this very thing from happening

    11. Re:No DMCA in Canada by cloudmaster · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As an alternative to leaving the country, try *not voiting for the incumbent unless he/she does what you want*. Re-electing career politicians will never change anything.

      Eh, people on Slashdot (who aren't still pissed about the Gore thing) are generally smart enough to know that already. Tell your friends.

    12. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Yakko · · Score: 1
      As an alternative to leaving the country, try *not voiting for the incumbent unless he/she does what you want*

      I feel that this is useless. Politicos are bought, not voted for.

      Try not buying any of the products that are affected by this law... Perhaps less than realistic, but arguably more effective.

      --

      --
      Me spell chucker work grate. Need grandma chicken.
    13. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Zone5 · · Score: 1

      I've never had to sign a speeding ticket in my life in Canada (and believe me, I've had plenty). So am I now retroactively on my way to jail as a terrorist? That'd be a cool story to tell the family at christmas...

      --
      "So on one hand, honey is an amazingly sophisticated and efficient food source. On the other hand it's bee backwash."
    14. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To put it plainly, FUCK the less-well-heeled citizens. They should've paid attention in school, and worked harder to get into a position worthy of good pay. I'm all for helping out the truly unfortunate who are held down through no fault of their own, but not for spoon-feeding a generation of society's leeches who happen to have their hands out wanting a share of MY pie.

    15. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're not welcome in Canada anyway.

    16. Re:No DMCA in Canada by twilightzero · · Score: 1

      Ummmmmm...only one teensy weensy problem with your solution. I know a LOT of Canadians who have moved to the US in order to get a job (including my wife) and I know a lot more IN Canada who would like to do the same. Something about in many fields you'll be either unemployed or working a casual shift job for an average of 7 YEARS before you finally land a permanant, full time position! Sorry, but I'd rather stay here, deal with some annoying politicians, and have a job. Even with the recession here, it's still a lot better than it is in Canada in most areas.

      --

      "Christ what a design! I could eat a handful of iron filings and PUKE a better emergency pump than that!"
    17. Re:No DMCA in Canada by Vagary · · Score: 1

      You've got to keep in mind what those tax dollars buy you. Education, health, recreation, etc. The list goes on and on. Sure, you don't get to sleep on a big pile of cash, but then you'd need that money just to buy a house in The Valley.

      People making $100k/y live pretty good up here, just as they'd live good everywhere outside of Tokyo. :)

    18. Re:No DMCA in Canada by morbid · · Score: 0

      Well, some peopl who did work hard in school have low-paid jobs because the market cannot sustain an unlimited number of well-paid jobs. Also, no one can afford everything all of the time. Have you heard of inflation? Never mind. Go back to the ranch with all your inbred hill-billy brothers and sisters. By the way, Ross Perot isn't president.

      --
      I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
  20. How long did it take to repeal? by itsnotme · · Score: 2

    How long did prohibition in the uhh 1930s (I believe?) to be repealed? I'm hoping that DCMA will be repealed in the same amount of time or at LEAST in less time than that.. since it pretty much comes up to the same level of ignorance that it took to create the same law..

    Will the consitution be able to be upheld in the future if this mess keeps happening? Seems like money is starting to control what our freedom means instead of the IDEAL of freedom..

    Moderation rating: Freedom_Rocks: +1 Insightful: +1
    DCMA Moderation Rating: Freedom_Rocks: -1 Flamebait: +1

    1. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by Karma+50 · · Score: 1

      Prohibition was brought in and removed by amendments to the constitution

      Amendment XVIII - Ratified 1/16/1919.
      Repealed by Amendment XXI, 12/5/1933

      Amendment 18 took effect 1 year later, so 13 years. I would suspect that changes to laws are easier than amendments to the constitution though, so it's hardly a fair comparision.

      --
      http://www.thehungersite.com
    2. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by urmensch · · Score: 0

      take a step back and look how long the prohibition on marijuana has lasted.

      makes me feel rather unoptimistic. :(

    3. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last I checked, we were still UNDER prohibition. Alcohol just became an exception to the rule because it was the substance abused by middle/upper class white male America.

      Bullshit laws can stay on the books for a long time, if a population doesn't understand that the law is bullshit.

      -RofGilead

    4. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      proabition began in the early 20's and was repealed in 1932....coincedence that FDR was president in 32 and enjoyed his cheri?

    5. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about "not before the collapse of global corporate oligarchy"; something that won't happen without either the collapse of the US, mass revolution, all-out nuclear war, comet strike or the total collapse of civilisation, or something similarly heavy.

    6. Re:How long did it take to repeal? by mpe · · Score: 2

      How long did prohibition in the uhh 1930s (I believe?) to be repealed?

      Not exactly, the same kind of policy still exists, with the more catchy name of "the war on drugs". Also the prohibition of alcohol required the US to ammend it's constitution. The more recent version simply uses laws.

      I'm hoping that DCMA will be repealed in the same amount of time or at LEAST in less time than that..

      The DMCA is simply a law, rather than a contitutional ammendment. Though interestingly it appears to comply with the letter of the US constitution, whilst circumventing the intent.

      Will the consitution be able to be upheld in the future if this mess keeps happening? Seems like money is starting to control what our freedom means instead of the IDEAL of freedom..

      Constitutions are only as good as whatever enforces them. In the case of the US constitution it has been being weakened for quite a long time. In many different ways, sometimes for apparently "good" reasons...

  21. Support Slashdot for a good cause! by Calle+Ballz · · Score: 1

    Support Slashdot and take a stand!

    While you're at it... visit here too

    1. Re:Support Slashdot for a good cause! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you say!

      - Not Spudnuts

      p.s. Penis!

  22. slashdot faq by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    Q: is Jeff Bates gay?

    A: He Mos' certainly is!

  23. What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by JoeShmoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Really. Do the issues raised not even give them PAUSE for a moment? This is a professor we are talking about...okay, on the face I can understand the prejudice that exists againt 2600 (even though I also understand the irony of that statement since a judge shouldn't have let his or her own belief affect their judgement) and see why that case was dismissed...but the Felton case?

    WTF???

    This is a goddam professor we are talking about. Speech and professor goes together like bribery and politician. If a professor stands up as says "hey, i'm not able to do my job" what the hell kind of idiot judge says "whatever".

    I thought for sure this was a silver bullet against the DMCA and I can't believe that the EFF is already fighting an uphill battle on what seems blately a first ammendment issue to any first year law student.

    Seriously W-T-F

    Can judges be impeached? Can they have their positions revoked? I'm pretty sure the Supreme Court Justices are appointed for life but what about the lower levels? Is there any way we can start a campaign to get idiots like this off the bench? These people are clearly not representing the people, the Constitution, or anything except Executive Branch and Legislative Branch interests.

    RULINGS LIKE THESE ARE DESTROYING THE F'N CHECKS AND BALANCES SYSTEM

    Unreal.

    - (ANGRY) JoeShmoe

    --
    -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
    1. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Jester99 · · Score: 1

      District judges, I believe are appointed. State circuit, appeals, etc judges are elected by the citizens of the municipality. (Terms range from 3 to 10 years I believe.)

      So all you new jersey /.'ers out there, please do your part next november :)

    2. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by aozilla · · Score: 2

      This is a goddam professor we are talking about. Speech and professor goes together like bribery and politician. If a professor stands up as says "hey, i'm not able to do my job" what the hell kind of idiot judge says "whatever".

      Please. Someone told a professor that what he was doing might not be legal. Nothing more. There is no case. It was a stupid case to begin with.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
    3. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Brian+See · · Score: 2

      Both of these decisions were in federal courts. The Felten case was before a federal judge in New Jersey, and the 2600 DeCSS case was before the United States Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit -- a federal appeals court.

      Presumably, the Felten case will be appealed to the Third Circuit (which must take the appeal if filed), and 2600 will presumably file a cert petition with the US Supreme Court. No guarantee that the Supremes will find this one certworthy, though. Hard to tell without reading the decision...

      New Jersey and New York /.'ers really have little direct say in whether these judges retain their offices.

      What all US voters who oppose these decisions should do is to lobby their (federal) representatives and senators to CHANGE or REPEAL the DMCA. The anti-circumvention provisions of the DMCA were created by Congress, and can be changed by a subsequent Congress.

    4. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by SumDeusExMachina · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Would you calm down? Put a paper bag over your mouth and breathe deeply. OK, now read this:

      This was a case that was dismissed due to the fact that the EFF was suing the RIAA over the RIAA's threatening to sue Felten. Even the (obviously biased) press release was unable to obscure this basic fact. Mind you, this wasn't a suit that would result in penalties for Felten, either criminal or civil. The judge simply made a determination that this was a frivolous law suit. IMHO, the EFF should be spending their donor's money in more responsible manners, and they could probably start by waiting for a clear cut case to come along against one of the people they plan on defending.

      Is there any way we can start a campaign to get idiots like this off the bench?

      Is there any way we can start a campaign to keep ill-reasoned hotheads like you from posting to Slashdot? Judges get to where they are through being throughly qualified for the position, such as having a law degree and serving as a lawyer for a number of years. Being lawyers, they are quite adept at understanding the facts of a situation, a skill that you sorely lack.

      --

      Is your company running tools written by ma
    5. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by ftobin · · Score: 2, Informative

      Please. Someone told a professor that what he was doing might not be legal. Nothing more. There is no case. It was a stupid case to begin with.

      You don't seem to even know what the RIAA sent to Felten. They didn't say "might not be legal". They said:

      Unfortunately, the disclosure that you are contemplating could result in significantly broader consequences and could directly lead to the illegal distribution of copyrighted material. Such disclosure is not authorized in the Agreement, would constitute a violation of the Agreement and would subject your research team to enforcement actions under the DMCA and possibly other federal laws.

      That sounds a tad more threatening "oh, you might not be doing something legal.".

      Quote curtesy of Politechbot.

    6. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by metis · · Score: 2
      and 2600 will presumably file a cert petition with the US Supreme Court. No guarantee that the Supremes will find this one certworthy,

      The chances are nill. The supreme court will take the issue only if different courts interpret the DMCA in significanly different ways or if all courts interpret it in a way a majority of the justice don't like. Given that 2600 is the first case and the decision doesn't seem to be the kind to energize the present court, I'll bet my hat they'll pass.

      PS. I think the EFF had no case here. The DMCA explicitely excludes encryption research. And there was no governmental attempt to silence Felten. Free speach means nothing if people won't speak unless their get a written guarantee that nobody is going to sue them.

      --
      -- look, cheese ahoy!
    7. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Malc · · Score: 1

      This is what you get in a system where judges are political figures. Get politics out of the judicial system and have judges appointed. They will much more likely be more impartial this way. It works very well in many other countries around the world.

    8. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by JoeShmoe · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Oh yeah, that's right. Let's allow the DoJ to arrest Felten and throw him in jail like Skylerov. Let's allow the DoJ to confiscate all of Felten's computers and equipment for years while they stall through the trial process. Let's allow the DoJ to make Felten liable for any infringing action that results from his research. Oh THEN he has a right to bring the matter before a judge?

      RIAA says "publish and we'll sue you or worse, we'll tell the FBI your research is a circumvention device" Why is it frivilous for Felten to come before a judge and say "hey, do they really have a case?"

      There has got to be some legal basis for preventative measures. Look at trade secret laws. There doesn't even need to be damages...just the mere threat of damages is enough for a judge can issue a restraining order. So why doesn't this work in the other direction? Why can't a judge issue a ruling that says "No, the DMCA doesn't apply to what you are doing Felten, carry on." Why does Felten have to do things the hard way and martyr himself?

      Maybe there would be a whole lot less civil disobidience if there was a way for someone to get a ruling before actually breaking the law. Who exactly are you supposed to believe? An unfair law or the judges who interpret it? I read the law and see permission to do something. Big Company reads the same law and sees the exact opposite. Does the FBI listen to my side of the case when Big Company asks them to arrest me? Do they say "oh yeah, good point, you are free to go?" No. Even when Adobe "recanted" Dmitri was still in prison. So then if it's not up to the executive branch, it must be up to the judicial branch. So that is why Felten and the EFF went to court...to ask the judicial branch what this law means. But rather than study it, hear testimony, call experts, and finally make a ruling...the judge ducks the issue.

      Oh, and by the way, wtf kind of crack are you smoking to make the statement that judges "get to where they are through being throughly qualified for the position" Judicial appointments are as based on merit as the electoral college is. They are done completely down political and ideological lines...ie picking judges that are gonna vote the way you want them to vote on the issues that matter to your group. But whether is is Democrat or Republician it seems to me there is an appalling pro-business bias in the judges that have been chosen in the last couple decades. Can anyone even remember an anti-business ruling? I'm not talking about one business fighting with another; can anyone think of a single case in the last twenty years where an individual or non-profit group was victorious in an action brought by a large corporation? Are there any success stories?

      For crying out loud...ten? twenty? years ago the Supreme Court of the United States rules that Hustler magazine had the right to embarass the hell out of a religious figure because, distasteful as the comments were, they were free speech. What do you think the odds are that the same case would have even made it to the Supreme Court if Hustler had instead embarassed a major corporation?

      SDMI hadn't even picked a secure music format. There was *NO* chance of damage or IP theft and still they pissed their pants over Felten's analysis. Why? Because it showed what a ludicrous idea watermarking is. Reactions like this only helps prove that the real intent of the DMCA is not to protect IP or prevent piracy but to prevent the publication or dissemination of any information that embarasses or otherwise injures the reputation of a major corporation and its products.

      - JoeShmoe

      --
      -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
    9. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Oh THEN he has a right to bring the matter before a judge? "

      Actually yes. That's the way the law works.

      You can't sue someone for something they haven't done.

    10. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If Felton published, and it was correct, it would probably be worth and extra $200,000 to him in terms of prestiege, future income stream. Not frivolous.

      Above correct, there was a real threat, so it should have been heard along similar lines to trade secrets. Just remember the fbi has put defenders of the constitution in their wacko basket, along with leftists - see rense.com.

      I figure the right outcome is for anything to be published, except actual executable , working code, with psuedo code being OK.

    11. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Guitarzan · · Score: 1

      Too bad that "oh, you might not be doing something legal" is almost a perfect legalspeak translation of that oh so "threatening" letter.

      Don't flame a guy for telling the truth.

    12. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Freija+Crescent · · Score: 1



      >Seriously W-T-F
      .

      >RULINGS LIKE THESE ARE DESTROYING THE F'N CHECKS >AND BALANCES SYSTEM

      Clearly you are mistaken, the checks and balances have long been gone. I envy those who live abroad, and live in countries that are home to governments that actually work.

      It's going to be a sad day in DC when the people of the United States have to exercise their second amendment rights to protect the few remaining rights they have. Honestly, the whole thing is bullshit nowadays.

      The way our forefathers envisioned this country is a far cry from what it has become. Serving in our military is a duty of the citizens. Serving on a jury is the duty of the citizens. Holding an elected position... is a DUTY of the CITIZENS. Not a privilege. Elected officials do not become gods.. they are still people.. still citizens. When one citizen infringes upon the rights of another.. They get their ass THROWN IN JAIL!

      Then we have the PRESIDENT.. the PRESIDENT.. lie under oath.. WTF!? I know someone who went away for 5 years because of perjury.. and it wasn't even that bad of a lie compared to what Willy did.

      I'm sorry to say it, but the system is too broken to even attempt a fix. The fact is those who are hellbent on becoming government officials choose to do so early in life and then pursue that dream until it happens.. Why on earth are they going to limit their own powers in favor of preserving the freedom of the people?? Sensible term limits.. yeah right.. that will never happen.. A sensible term limit should be as follows...

      1. Elected officials should be given 2 (pronounced TWO, and in no event to be equal or greater than three) years in office.

      2.Once out of office, elected officials will not share any freedoms or immunities that any other citizen of the United States doesn't possess.

      3. By public vote, an official can be tried at ANY point in time in a court of law, by a jury of citizens, to determine if the official is worthy of his or her position.

      4. Any representative, president, etc who choses to defy the people of the United States, and abridges the rights of the people without due cause MUST stand trial. A vote shall be cast by any able voter nationwide. Should the representative(s) be found guilty of unjustly restricting the rights of the people.. the punishment will be a swift and merciful death at the hands of the armed populace. Removing the rights of another citizen, while a citizen, doesn't warrant the death penalty, however doing so as a trusted and elected official constitutes treason.

      5. Any governmental branch that attempts to defer, downplay, or otherwise attempt to stifle such a call to trial by the people shall be immediately disempowered and rendered void. Officials in that branch must then stand trial as prisoners of war on the charge of treason. The punishment for treason is and has always been death.

      This guideline will ensure that elected officials will try to make things better for the common folk.. because that is all they are, and they will be stripped of rank in two years anyways. Also only those with a sincere drive to better this country will pursue an office position. Those who have alternative goals, or who's actions are clouded by so called 'special-interest' groups who have no right to be in this country, should fear holding such a position.

      I really hate to sound like a radical, especially since I do not consider myself one. I too dream of a world of peace and prosperity, but we are not trying very hard to achieve that goal. Don't blame that on our government, blame it on yourselves. Everyday of your life you should be thinking about how to make things right.. how to better our country. Most of us just sit quietly and let others make the decisions... I'm willing to bet most of you reading this don't even vote. And by vote I mean city, state, AND national. Upset that the courts overthrew this case against the DMCA? Pissed off that you weren't the judge on that case? Think you can do better? I think you can. I think we all can..

      And to those in office... I know some of you listen, I've received email replies back.. but most of you ignore us, the people. Don't forget who put you in office.. and don't forget who has the right, as stated in the Constitution, to remove you and/or the entire government body from power. There is growing resentment amongst the people of this once great nation. In the past revolution has followed such events. Do not shrug this off, wake up and listen to your fellow countrymen...

      -freya

      I expect to be arrested by the feds tomorrow.. that's OK, i already called my employer.

      --
      . echo -e \\04 > /dev/hand1
    13. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Booker · · Score: 1

      I agree with most of your post, but..

      Judges get to where they are through being throughly qualified for the position, such as having a law degree and serving as a lawyer for a number of years.

      That's not necessarily true, is it? If I donate enough to some politician, there's nothing to stop them from appointing my law-ignorant self to the bench, is there?

    14. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever heard the term "prior restraint"? It exists because judges can and do prevent people from taking action (ie, something they haven't done). The original poster is right. You can sue someone for something they haven't done if you can show that they plan to it and that damages will result.

      An example would be a company suing to prevent the sale of a product that infringes on their patent or a company suing a whistleblower to prevent him from revealing trade secrets.

    15. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Malcontent · · Score: 3, Funny

      The president lied under oath.
      It was not in a trial, it was in a deposition. The deposition was taken in the context of a civil case (not a criminal one). No judgement was made as to wether this lie was "relevant" and therefore rose to the level of perjury. he was never charged with perjury, never tried for perjury and never convicted of perjury.

      He lied about the whereabouts of his cock. He was asked about where he stuck his cock and when and under what circumstances. The questions about his cock and the whereabouts thereof were asked primarily to embarass him. The republicans who were suing him intended to publish information gleaned from the depositions so that they could talk about his cock on TV. He knew this and he lied.

      Given that the question should never have been asked in the first place I say it's no big deal. The whereabouts (or the shape and the size for that matter) of Bill Clintons cock is not my concern and I for one am not at all concerned that he lied about it.

      I won't comment on the rest of post as it's pretty silly

      P.S. Can you point out the acual lie under oath? Next time you complain about lying under oath you should say "in this depostion he was asked weather or not he stuck his cock in this girls pussy and he lied about it and that's wrong because I really really care which pussy his cock was buried in"

      --

      War is necrophilia.

    16. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by alfredw · · Score: 5, Informative

      Guess again.

      Check out the Notable First Amendment Cases page at the American Library Association. More specifically, see the case of Broadrick v. Oklahoma, 413 U.S. 601 (1973).

      Here is part of Justice Byron R. White's decision:

      Litigants, therefore, are permitted to challenge a statute not because their own right of free expression are violated, but because of a judicial prediction or assumption that the statute's very existence may cause others not before the court to refrain from constitutionally protected speech or expression.

      In other words, you can preemptively sue the government if it is possible for someone to be silenced by a law.

      Ergo Felten was completely in the right.

      Alf
      --
      In Soviet Russia, sig types you!
    17. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can anyone even remember an anti-business ruling?
      Judge Thomas Penfield Jackson, who decided the US v. Microsoft case at the district level (and got the decision just about right, IMHO). Interestingly, Jackson was a Reagan appointee who, at least until the Microsoft trials, had mostly been considered a traditional, pro-business, conservative jurist.
    18. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by sconeu · · Score: 2

      \i{. Free speach means nothing if people won't speak unless their get a written guarantee that nobody is going to sue them.}

      That was the whole point of the suit.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    19. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by wedg · · Score: 1

      There is a recall vote that can be initiated in some cases, depending on your state. Although, I think the recall vote only applies in cases of extreme and gross misjudgement. And repeated cases of said gross misjudgement. Like letting a series of thirty clear cut rapists go free.

      Our judges are very hard to remove from office for the very reason that they shouldn't need to worry about the 'political winds' when making judgments - only the law. Sometimes why a judge makes a decision isn't so clear, and that can be a bad thing, but it isn't necessarily the failing of the whole judicial system.

      As the article said, it is being appealed, and more often than not, appeals courts tend to be more liberal in their judgements than district courts.

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
    20. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by autopr0n · · Score: 1

      Can judges be impeached? Can they have their positions revoked? I'm pretty sure the Supreme Court Justices are appointed for life but what about the lower levels

      Most judges are apointed for like as in the supreme court (although they can get promoted, etc). Some state and county judges are elected though, but not many. Also some states let you give 'no confedence' votes for certan judges. All judges can be impeached, but it's just as hard as getting the president impeached.

      --
      autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    21. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by JoeShmoe · · Score: 1

      To quote my own post:

      "I'm not talking about one business fighting with another; can anyone think of a single case in the last twenty years where an individual or non-profit group was victorious in an action brought by a large corporation"

      US vs. Microsoft was caused by monopoly behavior against Netscape and/or Sun. Consumers for years have been screaming bloody murder about MS tactics but the government never moved until other business suddenly fell victim to the same thing.

      So I don't think this really answers my question.

      Not to mention...the decision was reversed essentially on appeal and so it's not a happy anti-business ruling in any sense. Microsoft might even end up putting 2000 or XP in thousands of schools around the country as "punishment".

      - JoeShmoe

      _

      --
      -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
    22. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by mpe · · Score: 2

      Then we have the PRESIDENT.. the PRESIDENT.. lie under oath.. WTF!? I know someone who went away for 5 years because of perjury.. and it wasn't even that bad of a lie compared to what Willy did.

      Or possibly worst you have someone lieing in court not only do they get away with it but the judge is censored for making less than positive comments to the press after the case.

      Any governmental branch that attempts to defer, downplay, or otherwise attempt to stifle such a call to trial by the people shall be immediately disempowered and rendered void. Officials in that branch must then stand trial as prisoners of war on the charge of treason. The punishment for treason is and has always been death.

      Actually what you describe is "high treason", which is a concept which the USA does not AFAIK have. High treason is considered more serious than treason since an official of the state is capable of doing far more damage and subversion in a far shorter time than and Joe Public.

    23. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by arkanes · · Score: 1

      This case was, at root, an attempt to hold people liable for using clever lawer-speak to intimidate without being legally accountable. As such, it was doomed to failure. It's clear to anyone with more than a pea-brain that the intent of the letter was to intimidate and to silence Felton. The fact that it was wrapped up in lawertalk shouldn't mitigate that, but since theres a huge industry out there of people who make thier living writing lawertalk, and these are the same poeple who become judges, I don't think we'll be able to do anything about this kind of behavior anytime soon.

    24. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So, in the civil side of the judiciary, it is OK for me to write a threatening letter saying I'll sue you if you don't stop picking your nose and eating it.

      Yet, on the criminal side, if I say, "if you don't stop picking your nose I'm gonna take care of your nose problem once and for all, if you know what I mean", with some bloody violent picture that implies a direct threat to bodily harm and violence (the "if you know what I mean" part), well, you're probably gonna have me arrested.

      Hmm...

    25. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Andy_R · · Score: 2
      "Someone told a professor that what he was doing might not be legal. Nothing more."

      It's closer to... 'Someone wrongly threatened a professor who was going about his legitimate academic work with a court case that would waste years of his life and quite possibly leave him penniless and jobless even if he won it'

      --
      A pizza of radius z and thickness a has a volume of pi z z a
    26. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by g1zmo · · Score: 1
      Can anyone even remember an anti-business ruling? I'm not talking about one business fighting with another; can anyone think of a single case in the last twenty years where an individual or non-profit group was victorious in an action brought by a large corporation? Are there any success stories?
      Only in the movies, my friend. Only in John Grisham movies.
      --
      I have found there are just two ways to go.
      It all comes down to livin' fast or dyin' slow.
      -REK, Jr.
    27. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by HighTeckRedNeck · · Score: 1
      can anyone think of a single case in the last twenty years where an individual or non-profit group was victorious in an action brought by a large corporation

      I think they made a movie about a case with Julia Roberts showing a lot of cleavage in the movie. Something about a small red necked woman beating the pants off of a corporation that poisoned hundreds of workers. Go red necks!!!

    28. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by MrResistor · · Score: 2
      The problem is, judges have much more in common with politicians than professors.

      It is possible to get a judge kicked off the bench, but you have to be able to prove that they are corrupt (taking bribes, etc.), and that's pretty difficult to do. Unfortunately, judges can't be impeached on the basis of blatant stupidity. They have to actually do something illegal.

      I guess that's one more thing they have in common with politicians...

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
    29. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by SumDeusExMachina · · Score: 1

      No, actually, you do need to have certain qualifications to serve as a judge. You can't just pay a lot of money to be appointed. You see, there are these silly thing we have here called laws the prevent that from happening.

      --

      Is your company running tools written by ma
    30. Re:What the hell is wrong with the Judiciary by Zone5 · · Score: 1

      And just who should appoint them?

      1. Political figures eager to have judges on the bench who will look favorably on their pet issues?

      2. Other legal profession members eager to have judges appointed who will interpret the law in the way most likely to keep themselves and their cohorts employed and in power?

      3. The uneducated masses who are more concerned with who so-and-so slept with than they are with the pursuit of justice?

      4. Some group of people who just know better than the rest of us and will put in place people who think "the right way" about legal quandaries?

      No matter what you do, corrupt, incompetent, or just uninterested judges will always slip through. The only possible remedy is the prospect of removing a judge who abuses his/her duty, but even that is after the fact. At least election of judges gives SOME opportunity for the interested parties to pre-screen and possibly block bad candidates.

      --
      "So on one hand, honey is an amazingly sophisticated and efficient food source. On the other hand it's bee backwash."
  24. Reject it by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    Not to be overly radical but if you don't like such anti-American laws as the DMCA then the best solution is to stop buying all products from the companies buying such laws. We probably can't afford to buy back our government but we can cut off the money our enemies use to buy the votes in the first place.

    Sure then you have to accept your own responsibility. If you are lazy (we all are sometimes) you just bootleg the product. A better solution is to create high-quality alternate products and offer them to others without all the legal bullshit we're against. Open your specs, open your code, open your documentation, give away what you can and sell the rest without these unethical restrictions. It is our responsibility to make the world better. Whining doesn't do a damn thing.

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
    1. Re:Reject it by sconeu · · Score: 4, Funny

      It's been said on /. before, but....

      Poster #1: MPAA is evil because of the DMCA! Boycott all their stuff!
      Poster #2: Yeah, you're right! We should boycott... hey look, a new Star Trek DVD!
      Poster #1: Where? Cool!

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    2. Re:Reject it by Idolatre · · Score: 1

      It's even worse than that... - Look there's a new Star Wars/LOTR trailer before that crappy movie!!!!!
      - Woah let's see it at the theatre! And if the movie sucks we'll just leave after the trailer! The trailer is gonna be the best moment of my life! God is great hallelujah!

  25. Computer Science Major and Political Science Minor by SuperDuG · · Score: 5, Interesting
    Well I'm a college student with a Computer Science majoy and a Political Science minor because quite frankly I'm tired of all of this. The DMCA was made for a good reason - "to protect copyrighted materials" - but for some reason has become an excuse for power hungry people to get their sobbed stories to give them permission to "push around the little guy".

    The DMCA is a hassel and should definantelly be considered in the supreme court, why it's still in circut court is far beyound me, I guess EFF is just trying to go through the motions of getting it directly to the supreme court. Why the DoJ would make a motion to dismiss is beyound me though.

    The United States division of powers The Legislative Branch is checked by the Judicial Branch THROUGH court rulings, but I guess someone forgot to mention this plain key fact to the DoJ, but wait ... could I be right when I make the assumption that the government is no longer for the people which it represents and more for how well their own pockets can be lined by our fellow extremely wealthy citizens.

    Could corperate Kick-Backs be the main case behind why the DMCA was born and is still alive? Of course not, We are Americans in a democracy for the people and by the people with full and equal representation and rights ... *cough* bullshit *cough* ... we're a capitalistic society and I'm ashamed that anything of this nature is going on. I'm also very surprised that like the DECSS the SDMI cracks haven't hit the open source world yet ...

    Oh well ... just my opinion I could be wrong.

    --
    Ignore the "p2p is theft" trolls, they're just uninformed
  26. process, process... by Meleneth · · Score: 1

    I am nothing even close to a lawyer. I don't even play one on TV.

    However, I just read the DOJ's motion to dismiss - and I think this whole thing is great, because with the amount of court attention this one is going to see we might as well get it up at least to the minor leagues before revealing good tactics ;)

    go EFF!

    --
    remote access CLI with tools is the only friend you'll ever need.
  27. Time to stop the madness by Walter+Bell · · Score: 2, Flamebait

    This entire DMCA debacle makes me physically ill. I find it hard to believe that in America, the land of the "free", the courts and the legislature uphold laws that obviously fly in the face of free speech and everything that the Bill of Rights stands for.

    The only way to fight this very disturbing trend is to grow up and stop hacking. Our programmers need to concentrate on good old fashioned programming projects: improving KDE and Mozilla. Adding more big iron support, filesystems, and other features to the Linux kernel. Making the system more user-friendly. Improving security. These things help everybody and will allow us to overthrow the Microsoft monopoly.

    What we don't need right now is more hacking software. We don't need new versions of nmap and SATAN every week. We don't need any more 'sploits published on BUGTRAQ and we don't need any more software to remove content protection. We don't need any new PTP clients. We need to stop the government from passing these Draconian laws and the only way they're going to listen to us is if we can show them that we can behave without regulation.

    Face it folks - we are a bunch of powerless individuals, not a large corporation. The EFF's budget is about 1/100th of the smallest RIAA member's lobbying budget. We can't fight them on their own terms so the only way we have to preserve our freedoms is to stop abusing them.

    ~wally

    1. Re:Time to stop the madness by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 2
      "The only way to fight this very disturbing trend is to grow up and stop hacking."

      Translation :

      "The only way to fight gags is to shut up"

      Bzzt, wrong answer. What do you think hacking is for ? fun of course, but more importantly, learning (something today's generation of videogame-numbed kids are not doing anymore) : if I hadn't reverse-engineered my ZX81 when I was a kid, I wouldn't know a tenth of what I need to know to be a (hopefully) successful engineer. If someone hadn't carefully analyzed the original 8088 processor, they would never have discovered that interrupts need to be disabled when modifying the stack segment register, and we'd have had PCs that crash at random for no reasons for a long longer.

      I believe you mistake hacking with craking/phreaking/pirating, like the majority of people today.

      "We don't need new versions of nmap and SATAN every week. We don't need any more 'sploits published on BUGTRAQ"

      Yes we do, so you know that Windows XP tries to connect to MSN silently each time you boot, and so you can upgrade wu-ftpd before some sucker hacks your box.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:Time to stop the madness by osgeek · · Score: 2

      We need to stop the government from passing these Draconian laws and the only way they're going to listen to us is if we can show them that we can behave without regulation.

      Oh, so exactly true. I'm a fairly strong libertarian in my want of freedom, but the problem with too many of my fellow libertarians is that they want all the freedoms too, but none of the responsibilities.

      As much as I hate the way that copyright law is used like a club, I can't help but sympathize with content producers when I see the rampant pirating that is condoned and even encouraged on forums like this.

      You want to do something about Draconian copyright law? The next time that you decide that copying a piece of music is worthwhile, don't. Go buy it instead. If your employer isn't paying for their commercial software, call them on it. If your friends or family aren't paying for their cable or satellite programming, explain to them that they're hurting all of us.

    3. Re:Time to stop the madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're full of bullshit. SATAN and nmap are cracking tools, not sniffers. And they don't fix the wu-ftpd hole (really!). I sincerely hope you're not a sysadmin.

    4. Re:Time to stop the madness by Psinoside · · Score: 0

      So you are saying that the only way to get what you want is to make sure you only want what you are given? Ever read Brave New World?

      "that is the secret of happiness and virtue--liking what you've got to do. All conditioning aims at that: making people like their unescapable social destiny." -Huxley

    5. Re:Time to stop the madness by berserker2001 · · Score: 0

      "we'd have had PCs that crash at random for no reasons for a long longer. " ask someone running windows 95, 98, 98se, or millenium edition about this one

      --
      Me lose brain? Uh, oh! (laughter) Why I laugh? -Homer Simpson
    6. Re:Time to stop the madness by man_ls · · Score: 2

      I am going to strongly resist commenting about Win9x operating systems in reply to your comment about PCs crashing at random.

      I agree competely with that - if people didn't learn how to use the technology to its fullest, by TAKING IT APART and messing with it, our computers would still suffer random hardware-related crashes.

      Same with nearly everything. It's too bad that Congress is supported by the large corporations, and a DCMA case has never made it to the Supreme Court.

    7. Re:Time to stop the madness by razboinik · · Score: 1

      Yes, please, The Government, Your Majesty, and MPAA/RIAA/WhateverAA, Your Highness, could you kindly please, I humbly beg your pardon for being so obnoxious, but wouldn't you mind to grant me a little bit of freedom, please?

      I promiss I won't abuse it in any way you might find inappropriate. I will only use the freedom you grant me for the things you approve of.

      Oh, yes, one more thing, I'm very sorry, but may I use the bathroom now?

      --
      (S)-1,2-methylenedioxy-4-(2-methylaminopropyl)-ben zene
    8. Re:Time to stop the madness by david.johns · · Score: 1
      If your employer isn't paying for their commercial software, call them on it.

      Actually, this is also a good suggestion for any OpenSource/FreeSoftware supporter in general. After all, non-free software does cost money, doesn't it? If it doesn't cost, there's no downside for most users.

    9. Re:Time to stop the madness by AvatarADVathome · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Absolutely in agreement.

      At work, we make DVDs. But we don't make MPAA-style DVDs. We told Macrovision that we weren't interested. We don't even use CSS. Our DVD guy wears a DeCSS shirt to work, for goodness sake!

      We've done everything that we can to make sure that people can play our discs on whatever platform they like. We don't believe in taking away rights from the user in order to protect ourselves from piracy, because it's rude AND it's ineffective. We go into forums to ask people how to improve our products, and then we go back and make changes. Our production department goes around marketing to find out what people want. We're putting more product per package with a lower price.

      And then people go pirate our shows? And say that they're justified, because they're just screwing it to "the Man" before they get screwed themselves? That we're such a corporate monolith that we won't even notice or care?

      "We'll pirate what we want until you change your evil, corporate ways" doesn't work when there aren't evil ways to protest against. At that point, you're just making it difficult for me to pay my rent...

    10. Re:Time to stop the madness by fperez · · Score: 1

      Quoting: "the only way we have to preserve our freedoms is to stop abusing them."

      Er, NO! The point is, these are NOT abuses of freedoms. Fair use rights, freedom of research and publication are *fundamental* rights that should be vigorously defended. That includes Felten, deCSS and many others (not all, there are gray cases).

      What you're saying is: 'let's cave in, be nice and they'll leave us alone'. I have news for you: they won't. The more you lower your sight and keep your mouth shut, the harder they'll hit you.

      Never heard how an abusive relationship works? Never heard how a dictatorship works?

      Ideas like yours are exactly the message they want to propagate: behave and we all mighty will let you play in your little sandboxes.

      I'm not saying 'go on a cracking rampage, deface every Microsoft/RIAA/whatever website!'. NO. The fight must be intelligent, the battles well chosen, the arguments clear (people like Felten or Lessig have laid them with pristine clarity).

      But by all means, the battles MUST be fought. The amounts of money behind this are so monstrous that the potential to crush voices of dissent is very large. And very fundamental freedoms are directly and indirectly at stake.

      Cowardice is definitely NOT the way to defend them.

    11. Re:Time to stop the madness by ebyrob · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Well, I just about agree with you.

      Only problem is, I always thought libertarians were rational minarchists(which is what I am). This means only the government that's necessary. I'd say if there's a rampant piracy problem, something to stop it is certainly necessary. You can't pass a law that says no jaywalking then have cops look the other way and expect people to follow it.

      The problem is the DMCA is tantamount to making sidewalks illegal instead of policing for jaywalkers. But by your arguement, if we'd all quit jaywalking we could have sidewalks again. Personnally I feel I deserve sidewalks no matter how they are abused. It's up to the government to enforce the jaywalking(and copyright) rule if they think it's important enough to be worth the trouble. Anything less (like the DMCA) disrespects those of us who follow the rules.

      It's important to question the concept of copyright, because once you do, you realize it's wonderful as a delicate balance. Anything else is... less wonderful.

      This whole line of thought gets me thinking of high school and the childish adults who always asked us to "act grown up". If I'd acted like an adult, I would have walked out of the place and never come back long before graduation.

      As for cable and satellite video feeds... One more arguement against copyright. They couldn't exist without it!

    12. Re:Time to stop the madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Troll? For proposing another viewpoint in a well-supported manner? Come on, mods. That's just plain sad.

    13. Re:Time to stop the madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can't help but sympathize with content producers when I see the rampant pirating that is condoned and even encouraged on forums like this.

      Me too. It's just dumb. It's piracy that started this mess, and it's the continued and encouraged piracy that is fueling it.

      Start paying for music and software for once and it'd be a hell of a lot easier to get rid of the DMCA. Having one stupid law on the books (DMCA) is no reason to break another (Copyright law).

    14. Re:Time to stop the madness by osgeek · · Score: 2

      The problem is the DMCA is tantamount to making sidewalks illegal instead of policing for jaywalkers. But by your arguement, if we'd all quit jaywalking we could have sidewalks again.

      Good point. I don't really like the DMCA, and it should be fixed or eliminated. My point was that I sympathize with the content providers, and it's somewhat understandable that the pendulum on this issue has swung too far the other way.

      The solution to the problem involves not only fixing the DMCA, but also damping the pendulum by reducing copyright violations.

  28. Link to unbiased story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This press release from EFF is very biased and doesn't include a single word of the ruling or proceedings. Is there somewhere we can read about what happened without the filter of propaganda laid over top?

    1. Re:Link to unbiased story? by halflinger_n · · Score: 1

      Um... No.

      You have to put both sides together and actually _think_ to figure that out.

      Three sides to every story...

    2. Re:Link to unbiased story? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Very true. And I sense a B5 fan. ;)

  29. I kind of agree with the court. by burtonator · · Score: 3, Insightful

    OK. I hate the DMCA.

    But the court may have been right here.

    I still don't like the fact that he was even threatened with a lawsuit but legal threats were present BEFORE the DMCA.

    Felten did get to publish his research, he wasn't sued.

    I do believe that this will fall though but we need the RIAA to actually try to use this before we can push this down through the courts....

    1. Re:I kind of agree with the court. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Felten did get to publish his research, he wasn't sued.

      No. Felton first completely censored his own work, ripping out all details on how his attacks functioned. He only was able to state "All of the SDMI methods are all easy to crack, and we cracked them all, but you're going to have to take our word for it, and we can't further the pursuit of knowledge here, because we can't tell you how we did it".

      Uncensored versions of Felton's work did make it to the internet supposedly illegally via www.cryptome.org . Furthermore there were other efforts, specifically I am thinking about the one guy in France who sort of got most of them (though his methods were less precise and he did not fully reverse engineer the encryption for some of them) which made the threats against Felton totally pointless.

    2. Re:I kind of agree with the court. by ConsumedByTV · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So as long as people are only selectivly prosecuted things are fine?

      --


      "Not my manner of thinking but the manner of thinking of others has been the source of my unhappiness." - M
    3. Re:I kind of agree with the court. by ^ · · Score: 1

      No.

      The issue here is that Felten's argument is a First Amendment one. An important consideration in First Amendment cases is the presence of a "chilling effect" on speech This results from a situation in which a person is uncertain whether what's being said is legal or not, and so doesn't speak for the sake of being safe. For example, while the lawsuit threatened against Felten might not have succeeded, its threat was enough to lead him to initially not present the paper.

      The EFF's argument is that the MPAA can, by merely threatening lawsuits, effectively chill a form of speech that might be constitutionally protected. What they're trying to obtain is a ruling that says not only Felten can't be sued, but future researchers can't either.

    4. Re:I kind of agree with the court. by david.johns · · Score: 1
      (IANAL.) Actually, isn't there still the fact that prosecution wasn't followed up? That's barratry, and it's mildly illegal. Except when the RIAA does it?

      Of course, that's a different court case entirely, and doesn't have anything to do with Free Speech, except in terms of practically squashing it.

  30. top ten post-slashdot jobs for CmrdTaco by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    10: The guy who dresses up as the giant burrito at Del Taco.
    9: Microsoft janitor.
    8: Transexual prostitute.
    7: "Make $100000 stuffing envelopes!!"
    6: I can't think of any more.
    5: But the first four were funny eh??
    4: Canada sucks.
    3: USians suck too.
    2: Even though I am one.
    1: Propz to all my dead homiez.

  31. (raising my hand in the back of the classroom) by Technosteve! · · Score: 1

    i'm not that good with the 2600 case because i stopped listing to there off the hook show,(i live in the tristate area i get it live not the streaming crap) but i think that there case for freedom of printing the decss code on there website was perfectly legal but they lost there case. what will happen to 2600? i might be really lazy but why is the case being thrown out with the decryption of the digital water marks by those princeton geeks? yeah i too lasy to read what is going on hell i doubt will read the answer but i just want to say one thing. FREE KEVIN! wait he's out already whats next? HAIL GATES?

    --
    Me and lunchbox here are going to kick your ass.
    1. Re:(raising my hand in the back of the classroom) by Black+Acid · · Score: 2, Informative
      i'm not that good with the 2600 case because i stopped listing to there off the hook show,(i live in the tristate area i get it live not the streaming crap)

      As an avid OTH the user, I highly recommend the show to keep on top of what's going on in the world concerning your rights and topics concering hackers. I agree the streaming isn't all that great, which is why I download unstreamed MP3s. Not only that, but I also make them available on Morpheus. Specifically, the filenamess like


      2600 - Off The Hook - WBAI 99.5FM - WBCQ 7415kHz Shortwave - NYC 8PM EST

      I'm not sure if any other users are sharing 2600 OTH shows, but hopefully they'll become more downloaded (and therefore more downloadable) as the law continues to step on our freedoms.



      I'm eager to find out what Goldstein has to say about DMCA 2 in OTH 11/27/01.

  32. preparations by necrognome · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Call me an alarmist, but the day will come when you and I will need the approval of some government/corporate (as if there will be any difference) organization to release code that has anything to do with "rights management." Of course, everything digital will be a matter of rights management. I am hopeful that Felten and 2600 will win on appeal, but have limited faith in judges and attorneys who seem to know nothing about computer technology. I, for one, plan to store all the "illicit" software I can find on non-volatile media, dreading the day when information is free--pending approval of the powers that be, that is.

    Imagine for a second, that some "Information Approval Board" was running into town, making sure that everyone had the right level of license and security authorization to read a book, or look at an image. Horrifying. Imagine also that the war on "free information" starts with software. Now everyone is "renting" the books and pictures they own.

    Frightened? Here's more. The only thing separating imagination from the current reality is a handful of judges.

    Well, I guess one never misses something until it's gone...

    --


    Let's get drunk and delete production data!
    1. Re:preparations by slackergod · · Score: 1

      Have No Fear, Citizen!
      The Office of Homeland Security will protect you!

      (hey buddy, take a load off,
      look over there... A terrorist!)

  33. Unlikely by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2

    Post-9/11 it seems fairly evident that most people take their rights completely for granted. I'm willing to bet that they care a lot more about drinking.

  34. wrong digit by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

    sorry pal, you're looking in the wrong place. if the 4th digit from the end is 9, it's a payphone, not the 4th from the front

    --
    The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    1. Re:wrong digit by dragons_flight · · Score: 2

      Our home phone is xxx-xxx-9113, so that doesn't work either.

    2. Re:wrong digit by jeffy124 · · Score: 1

      look at http://www.payphone-directory.org/

      you'll see >95% of the numbers have the 9 in the 4th fron the end location.

      the only reason i can think of is that your number was given to you before the FCC standardized pay phones as having that 9 in that position.

      --
      The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
    3. Re:wrong digit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong again. Unless this is something that was just set by the FCC very recently, my cell phone number that I received last month has a 9 in that
      position as well.

    4. Re:wrong digit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I was a kid, our home phone was 838-9117 (don't bother, that was over 30 years ago!)

  35. The EFF expected to win??? by redelm · · Score: 2
    On behalf of the research team, EFF then filed a lawsuit seeking a clear determination that publication and presentation of this and other related research is speech protected under the US Constitution both at this conference and at other conferences in the future.

    IANAL, but I don't think you can get such a determination from any US Court. For better or worse, they only deal in suits with full adversarial participation.


    Had the EFF sued for defamation of character [by the RIAA alleging that Felton was a lawbreaker] or some other tort then the case probably couldn't be so easily dismissed. But nor would it be Federal, either.

  36. This doesn't really matter by ajuda · · Score: 1

    We all know that both sides will appeal this as long as there is a higher court. It's only the supreme court who can really settle this after all. It's only in that court that the judgement really is final. The higher up the decision, the harder it will be for it to be challenged in the future.

  37. Anybody know a good travel agent? by sterno · · Score: 1

    I'm thinking it's getting near time for me to expatriate to a free country.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by msm1th · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm thinking it's getting near time for me to expatriate to a free country.

      Where?

    2. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by Karma+50 · · Score: 1

      Afganistan has just been freed from an oppresive regime. And it's sunny.

      --
      http://www.thehungersite.com
    3. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Swim.

    4. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by sterno · · Score: 1

      Mars?

      --
      This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    5. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come to the UK - for all it's faults it doesn't have the DMCA

    6. Re:Anybody know a good travel agent? by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      Good luck. When ya find that country, please do post back here.

  38. Freedom 0?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    DMCA 2, Freedom 0

    Some guy writes code that opens and could possibly be used to steal a movie, intellectual property if you will, and he is seen as a martyr. Another guy writes code that is able to crack a server with credit card numbers. He is seen as the criminal. Both do it as an exercise, to be able to say it was done. Both pieces of code could potentially be used to steal a great deal of money. Where is the EFF for the credit card guy? Oh, the hypocrisy....

    1. Re:Freedom 0?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think Freedom should have a score much higher than zero. The last hundred years have done more for human freedom than any period in history. To think that a law brings that whole edifice of freedom crashing down because it messes with the way you like to watch DVDs is a bit silly. I don't feel strongly one way or the other about the DMCA, but let's face it: it's not the end of the digital world here.

      I really wish Slashdot would focus more on facts than on rhetoric. Emotion is what gets arguments all fouled up in the first place. Slashdot could easily link to informative articles presenting both sides, but instead choose to provide their readers with half the story. I guess that's their right, but the readers here should realize that's what they're getting.

    2. Re:Freedom 0?! by ShaunC · · Score: 1

      >Both pieces of code could potentially be used to steal a
      >great deal of money

      But only one of them was solicited by the very people who now claim they'd be hurt by it. Remember, researchers were invited to crack the copy protection, and if memory serves they were even offered a prize for doing so. I don't see Mastercard issuing any such challenges, and I don't envision the EFF defending a malicious cracker.

      Shaun

      --
      Thanks to the War on Drugs, it's easier to buy meth than it is to buy cold medicine!
    3. Re:Freedom 0?! by sqlrob · · Score: 2, Funny

      You don't walk into your local Wal-Mart and buy a list of credit card numbers. DVDs are rather common there though.

  39. Pro-active supremes by Sabalon · · Score: 2

    I know that the supreme court may be busy from time to time, but it seems to me that they should be a little more proactive. Right now, for things like this, it seems to be "lets screw it to the people until someone can afford to make it to the system to us."

    It would be nice if (at least on huge legislation like this) they would take a look at it and say "this is crap - it's gone."

    Then again, if they did, then as RIAA/MPAA...er...congress...yeah... is drafting the bill it might help them create a more bullet proof bill.

    Just once I'd like a single edged sword :)

    1. Re:Pro-active supremes by rho · · Score: 2

      Ah, yes. A pro-active Supreme Court. Just what we need. A dias packed with old windbags in black mu-mus dispensing justice as they see fit, without regard for Constitutional limits.

      Arise, Torquemada, arise! We have work for you, yet!

      --
      Potato chips are a by-yourself food.
    2. Re:Pro-active supremes by Sabalon · · Score: 2

      Yuh...I guess that'd kinda harm the seperation of powers. Though the supremes are usually the ones that come the closest to upholding the ideals of the constitution.

      Besides, we all know how much Judge Thomas likes his porn :) (or is most of the /. readership too young to remember that?)

  40. Why the EFF case was thrown out... by dfenstrate · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Although I can see the EFF's point, the publication of Proffessor Feltens work was no longer at contest. They where asking the Judge to step in when he wasn't needed to allow publication, so it could have easily been seen as frivilous.
    I think it's probable there would have been a different outcome if the RIAA hadn't back tracked, and they where attempting to supress academic research.
    Just wait until some RIAA-like organization decides to dig in against a proffessor like felten.

    Then you'll see the sparks fly.

    As for 2600, they're still seen as subversive hackers, and hence are easy targets. Is it right? Nope. We'll see if and when it gets to the supreme court, maybe they can rectify things. Cross your fingers.

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
  41. Simple Solution. by CFBMoo1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I've implemented a simple solution to this problem. For more then a year now I havn't gone to any movies, bought any CD's, rented any movies, or even purchased a DVD player yet in my life. I agree it's quite a boring solution for most people, but atleast my dollars ain't going in to an industry that is stamping on rights of the people who support it with their hard earned dollars.

    I don't think the majority of the world will follow my solution, but it's one that would work if more people took the time to think where their dollars are going. If you want to stop the insanity, then stop giving them the money to get laws like the DMCA and such in to enforcement.

    People, stop making this bed if you don't want to sleep in it. I'm sure there are enough people out there who don't like what the entertainment industry is doing that could hurt their income by boycotting their products.

    --
    ~~ Behold the flying cow with a rail gun! ~~
    1. Re:Simple Solution. by Lunastorm · · Score: 1

      I just want to say that I completely agree with you and am happy to see that nto every /.er is too in love with the EVIL CORPORATE INDUSTRIES to boycott them. I guess if they were though, there'd be much less news on Slashdot since they wouldn't have anything to bitch about.

      --
      You die too easily.
    2. Re:Simple Solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your refusal to see movies helps more than you think -- it means your friends are also less likely to see movies. If you're going out with them, and you hold firm, your friends will also not see the movie. Now, maybe they'll see it another time, but maybe they won't. And maybe it will make them think about changing their own lifestyles.

    3. Re:Simple Solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is, if everyone was prepared to boycott them completely, they are either very strong or (more likely) don't really want the content that much.

      If they didn't really want the content, there would hardly be a problem with copyright protection on CDs, DVD region coding/CSS, Napster going down, etc. because the alternative (non-big-corporation) product is less affected. Even research in cases like this doesn't matter so much, because nobody would actually want to break the industry's codes.

      Of course, even if every /.er did boycott, there's still the rest of the world to keep buying the products, so that won't make much difference.

      As it is, though, big business has the content that people want. So you gotta convince people (and the government on a more legal basis) of where these laws are unconstitutional, an infringement of rights, or just a pain in the ass; and no more wholesale whinging about everything they do, or they won't listen to the genuine complaints (the Napster case is a bit of a burden, because it tested so many aspects of IP law, wasted in an attempt to defend a company that was clearly and knowingly profiting off illegal activities).

      It works when the average person starts getting hurt by it. Witness the Imruglia CD incident, and I'm sure we'll hear more about that one.

    4. Re:Simple Solution. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good work. Keep with it. You may not see an immediate effect, but I'm sure you will influence many others

    5. Re:Simple Solution. by Canis · · Score: 1
      I am a big fan of "voting with your wallet"; there are certain multinationals I've avoided buying products from for many years now.

      The problem in this particular case is that, even if we get significant enough numbers boycotting them that their profits dip, they're not going to accept this. Either through denial ("how can they not like us?") or outright mendacity, they're simply going to turn around and lie through their teeth. They're going to say, "Look how much money piracy is costing us! We need a tax on blank media to make up for it!" -- as has been implemented in several countries already; and then you end up paying for what you didn't get.

      Maybe we need some kind of web site where you can register your boycott, and perhaps even fill in how much you used to spend before the boycott, so the site can add it all up and see how much the companies are losing as a result of political action not piracy.

      Pessimistically, I feel it probably wouldn't work but it'd be a gesture in the right direction.

  42. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Love the statistics. Did the also come out of your ass with the rest of your post? The DCMA isn't about IP. DCMA is about throwing lawyers at anything that some company finds offensive or embarassing.

    If you want to apply this to murder then Felten is explaining to the world how RIAA is able to kill hundreds of people and the judges just told him he's not allowed to even know how let alone explain it.

    Merrily you troll alone, troll along, troll along...

  43. Patience my boy. by rebelcool · · Score: 2

    The road to the supreme court is a long one. They cannot merely step in on something, unless they are asked.

    --

    -

  44. What about 2.2.20? by famazza · · Score: 2

    What about AC sensorship at 2.2.20? All I saw is that the DMCA citation is still there. When will we know what kind of patch is that?

    Will Tossati allow all the world (but US) to know what's happening inside the kernel?

    Due to a dumb and stupid law the freedom of our kernel is being violated. Why can't we know what the heck was changed?

    I want the kernel freedom back. And I hope that Torvalds and Tossati will bring it back to us. I don't care if this update is irrelevant to me, and for most users. I have the right to know and I want to know!

    Or everything we fight for means nothing? Will Tossati and/or Torvalds allow that a stupid foreign (they are not americans) law to steal our freedom? Will they let DMCA destroy everything we believe (OpenSource/FreeSoftware or whatever).

    I'm very disapointed. Many claims today for quality. I think that we need our freedom back above all.

    --

    -=-=-=-=
    I know life isn't fair, but why can't it ever be un-fair in MY favor!?
    1. Re:What about 2.2.20? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What you have with the kernel logs, is simply evidence that DMCA is a bad idea. But it doesn't help court cases or show a way that DMCA conflicts with higher laws. It is something that should be shown to legislators, not judges.

  45. Huh what? Re:Time to stop the madness by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    The only way to fight this very disturbing trend is to grow up and stop hacking... We can't fight them on their own terms so the only way we have to preserve our freedoms is to stop abusing them.

    I admit to being a little confused: The best way to protect your freedom is to stop exercising it? I always thought that the best way to protect your freedom was exactly to excercise it, long and loud and often.


    Should people be making malicious programs and cracking sites? Surely not. But to say that our best bet lies in being good sheep and just playing along -- that to be heard, we should cower in a corner and plead, "Don't hurt me" -- is simply absurd.


    It won't work, because it never has worked.

    1. Re:Huh what? Re:Time to stop the madness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He means quit downloading shit off Kazaa if you don't own it already. You personally might not do it, but others do. Everyone I talked to a couple years ago considered Napster to be a free music source and didn't care about the legality of it. Even if downloading mp3s you don't already own increases the number of CDs you buy, it's still illegal and gives ammo to the RIAA.

    2. Re:Huh what? Re:Time to stop the madness by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      He means quit downloading shit off Kazaa if you don't own it already. You personally might not do it, but others do

      I was fully aware that was the thrust. But I wanted to flag the incredibly dangerous idea that these freedoms are granted and can be revoked. It doesn't matter how many people "abuse" their right to free speech -- free speech remains a fundamental right of humankind and attempts to restrain it remain unjust.


      Of course, people flagrantly flouting the law doesn't make it any easier to convince people that something serious is going on here, and in that light, the original post was good advice. But don't imply that, just because it makes its harder to exercise our rights, it's equivalent to abdicating them.

  46. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by sith · · Score: 2

    I gotta agree... I'm a csci/polisci double major ... people always say "Thats a weird decision, why are you doing that?" ... then I get to explain what happened to all the rights they assumed they had... sigh.

  47. Welcome to the Bush Presidency... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The gestapo is head of the department of justice, and your phone lines, communique with attorneys and online activities are no longer private. Encryption is virtually useless and the government will no longer adhere to the Freedom of Information Act. Oh, and the government is sending you trojans which are affirmatively ignored by anti-virus software. I guess I'll neglect to mention anything about the drug war and use of round up to kill columbian coffee crops and the environment... I am a republican. Well, I thought I was. I do know I'm not a goddamn nazi.

    Bush Uber Alles

    1. Re:Welcome to the Bush Presidency... by nosferatu1001 · · Score: 1

      Ahem, not all a/v software comes from the US, therefore some companies WILL detect it - ohterwise they are deliberately misleadingly selling a product [they claim it knocks out all known, if they know about it and don't knock it out, hey hey that;s fraud] hence them getting sued

      Now, whether you can do that in the US is a different matter....

  48. Just Don't, Ok? by jonabbey · · Score: 2

    The EFF was pursuing an iffy course of legal action by attempting to sue the RIAA for something the RIAA had already relented on, anyway. Just because this case was dismissed at the district court level doesn't mean that the DMCA has been ruled constitutional.

    Just relax, and for god's sake don't go harassing a sitting federal judge. It won't do one damn bit of good, and it'll give the EFF a bad name. Just write your congress people.. they're the ones that are supposed to respond to democratic complaint.

  49. Re:Nader voters, front and center... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You think it takes 10 months to pack courts? Sen. Leahy is blocking/stalling the confirmation of just about every conservative judge Bush puts forth. I'm a liberal and I can plainly see that. That's the way politics work.

    You think Gore was an enemy of the DMCA?

    Don't blame Nader for Gore's fuck-up.

  50. Steve D. Rules by tradez · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I just wanted to say that Steve D. Rules

  51. Nice knowin' ya... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Eric Corley, Dmitry, etc...

    Looks like it's possible that Eric Corley might be going to prison now (probably for life... 10 * (violations of the DMCA - 1) + 5 = a lot) after all and Dmitry will "only" get life in (federal pound me in the ass) prison if they judge is having a *good* day. They'll probably also be sued for everything they own as well.

  52. You surrendered your freedom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DeCSS would be legal today if it weren't for Napster, Gnutella, and the widespread piracy and freeloading that has clogged the Internet since the fall of 1999.

    Freedom of speech would still exist if it hadn't been so seriously abused.

    You probably have the freedom to drive right now, but if you run over a pedestrian you will lose that freedom very quickly. Same here. Criminals have no fundamental rights.

    1. Re:You surrendered your freedom by richieb · · Score: 2
      Freedom of speech would still exist if it hadn't been so seriously abused.

      If I can't abuse it, it ain't freedom! We're talking about "speech", not hitting people with a car!!! Remember "stick and stones can break my bones, but words will never harm me".

      ...richie

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    2. Re:You surrendered your freedom by Mark+Bainter · · Score: 1
      Freedom of speech would still exist if it hadn't been so seriously abused.

      Assuming you aren't still trolling, you appear to not understand the basic nature of Freedom.

      The bill of rights does not lay out freedoms that have been granted to us by some benevolent government entity. They recognize rights that each person has by virtue of their creation. It is /not/ something that can be 'revoked'. It was this basic concept that underlies everything.

      Don't confuse priviledges (like driving, if indeed that is a priviledge which some don't believe it is) with freedoms.

      Bottom line. We don't have Freedom of speech/religion/keep & bear arms/protection from illegal search, etc because the constitution says we do. We have them because we do. Period. Attempting to restrict or remove those freedoms is tyranny and treason.

      --
      "No nation could preserve its freedom in the midst of continual warfare."
      --James Madison
    3. Re:You surrendered your freedom by richieb · · Score: 2
      Really? Are you a parent?

      Yes (two kids 14 and 10).

      People do all kinds of sick things and transmission of pictures of such things is not illegal. For example, transmission pictures of mutilated bodies are not illegel. But don't you think that being killed is worse!

      What if availability of kiddie porn pictures actually made people less likely to molest real kids? What if the pictures are paintings or doctored up photographs?

      Is trasmission of a photograph of a crime also a crime?

      ...richie

      --
      ...richie - It is a good day to code.
    4. Re:You surrendered your freedom by gilroy · · Score: 2
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Criminals have no fundamental rights.

      Well, first of all, they do. They are still protected by the Bill of Rights, for example; and it's still illegal to, say, randomly beat them.



      Second, one would expect that even someone adhering to this principle recognizes a scaling in it. If you litter, is it really OK for the police to break down your door, drag you to a cell, beat you, and torture you? I would hope not.


      Third, even if you go so far as to say that no criminal has any rights, it would still apply only to criminals ... to people convicted of a crime after a fair trial under due process of law. Things that perforce restrict me before I have been convicted of a crime -- before I have even committed a crime -- things that perforce restrict innocent citizens, are unjust and must be resisted.

  53. Re:Nader voters, front and center... by base3 · · Score: 1

    I suppose it's not important to note that the DMCA became law under Clinton/Gore's watch. But then, I imagine we don't need to let facts interfere with our arguing.

    --
    One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
  54. So move to a country that allows stealing DVDs by glrotate · · Score: 0

    buh bye

  55. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's DMCA, not DCMA, you moron.

  56. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by gilroy · · Score: 5, Informative
    Blockquoth the poster:

    The DMCA is a hassel and should definantelly be considered in the supreme court, why it's still in circut court is far beyound me, I guess EFF is just trying to go through the motions of getting it directly to the supreme court.

    It usually takes quite some time for an issue to percolate up to the Supreme Court. It has to show up at the district and appellate levels for two separate districts. Generally, there also has to be an obvious collision between appellate rulings. The Supremes are loth to get involved with anything, since their authority is largely smoke-and-mirrors. The more a wise man talks, the less wise he is, I guess.

    Why the DoJ would make a motion to dismiss is beyound me though. The United States division of powers The Legislative Branch is checked by the Judicial Branch THROUGH court rulings, but I guess someone forgot to mention this plain key fact to the DoJ,

    You can rant and rave but let's face it: one of the jobs of the DoJ is to defend the government. They are the government's lawyers. So if you sue against this (or any other) law, it's the DoJ who'll show up opposite you in court. And what's more, they're professionally obligated to do the best defense they can, and this motion falls under that. It would have been irresponsible not to file it.


    Right now people like to rag on the US judiciary. But just a few days ago, everyone was aglow (Message Boards are Opions and District Court Denies Injunction against bundlings and DeCSS Injunction reversed).



    Here's my point: Like all other institutions, the federal judiciary is not monolithic. Yet we have a lot of good news coming out of there, too... perhaps more than good. At the very least, these rulings show that the pot is beginning to boil -- that the whole IP mess has wormed its way into and throughout the federal court system, and will soon have to be dealt with.



    If you really believe you're right, how can that be a bad thing?

  57. Do I understand this correctly? by nolife · · Score: 1

    Let me see if I understand this correctly...

    You can conduct and share research that WILL eventually lead to cloning a human, yes that is the creation of a human fucking being, but you can not study the watermark of "protected" music??

    Seems to me that things are slightly out of whack here in the US.

    --
    Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    1. Re:Do I understand this correctly? by IronChef · · Score: 2


      Don't worry, once someone manages to copyright critical parts of the human genome you won't be able to have KIDS without buying a license. After all, you'd be duplicating copyrighted material without permission...

  58. I never said malicious.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree, the EFF should never defend someone like that, but my argument stated that the credit card dude did it just to do it, not profit from it. You would be surprised how many crackers out there crack just for that reason. Sure, one or two are caught, but that is just the media sensationalizing things. As for solicitation, do you really, truly believe that folks at the credit card companies don't solicite outside people to crack their system? That is just plain gullability....

  59. No, I think you're mentally ill. by glrotate · · Score: 0

    Please tell me how the DMCA has adversely affected your life.

  60. Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by supabeast! · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Why didn't the scientists involved just present their research pulicly, and make it a media event? Let the corporate goon squads of the DOJ/FBI prosecute the scientists, in front of the American media, obviously violating their consitutional rights? Or are these scientists willing to go to jail to make a point? Apparently not.

    So here I will make an offer: Someone get me a good presentation that violates the DMCA, along with printed handouts, and time at a conference to present it. Inform the media and the DOJ/RIAA/MPAA ahead of time of what I will be dicussing. Have a lawyer ready to represent me. At that time I will pass out printed photocopies of the presentation and give the presentation. I am willing to go to jail over this if someone else is willing to do the preparatory work. If you can get provide the backing, just drop me an email at supabeast AT supabeast DAWT oh-are-gee.

    1. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by hearingaid · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why didn't the scientists involved just present their research pulicly, [sic] and make it a media event?

      The people who back the DMCA own the media.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    2. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      Touche...

    3. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by AtrN · · Score: 2

      But they don't own USENIX.

    4. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by wedg · · Score: 1

      Tell ya what, I'll do one better. I'll go download 400,000 mp3s from Kazaa - enough that even the RIAA will have to take notice. However, I'll delete all those mp3s before they are even completed - e.g. download straight to /dev/null - just to get the RIAA's attention. And once I've done that, and they sue my bananas off, I'll explain to them how downloading mp3s doesn't present copyright violations in all cases, but it is illegal under every case according to the DMCA.

      And then we can go dance with the DoJ.

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
    5. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 2
      Let the corporate
      goon squads of the DOJ/FBI prosecute the scientists, in front of the American media, obviously violating their
      consitutional rights?


      They wouldn't prosecute an obvious poster boy.


      The initial cease-and-desist letter to Felten was a major tactical blunder, caused by the fire-and-forget attitude of the legal department concerned. Once they realised what they had done they backtracked fast.


      This case is not about actually getting sued, its about the "chilling effect" of uncertainty due to a grey area in the law. The uncertainty caused by this grey area gives the government and media industries much more control over publication than
      a solid boundary would, so they will try to keep the boundary as vague as possible. They can best do this by keeping cases out of court unless they are sure they can win, because if they lose a case then it automatically paints a large area of white over what was previously grey.


      In this particular case the defendents argued that there was no grey, or so little as not to matter. The EFF argued that there was lots of grey and it did matter. The EFF lost, but like them I'm pretty confident that this will be reversed on appeal. They seemed to have a strong case. The "chilling" effect of vague law is taken seriously by the courts.


      Paul.

      --
      You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
    6. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because research scientists are scientists, not political activists. Most scientists are inherently cautious, and academics are often downright cowardly. Most of them have cushy tenured positions, which means they can float through the rest of the lives without dealing with the real world. Why should they risk their necks by making a stand?

    7. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      Downloading mp3s is not illegal, and the RIAA will not do anything about it. If you want to piss them off, record 400,000 mp3s by independent artists and share them all, promoting independent music in a non-cd format. I guarantee you that would piss them off.

    8. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      > The people who back the DMCA own the media.

      Yes, it's all a big shadowy Illuminati conspiracy! Grow the hell up.

    9. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by omnirealm · · Score: 2

      "I submit that an individual who breaks a law that conscience tells him is unjust and who willingly accepts the penalty of imprisonment in order to arouse the conscience of the community over its unjustice is in reality expressing the highest respect for law."

      - Martin Luther King, Jr., "Letter from a Birmingham Jail"

      --
      An unjust law is no law at all. - St. Augustine
    10. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by Omnivorous+Cowbird · · Score: 1

      I don't think that they meant it was a conspiracy, I think that they meant a big media corporation is more likely to be sympathetic to another big media corporation than to an individual. Plus, many of the companies that "bought" the DMCA are conglomerates that do own a large percentage of the media, especially the television media, which is the best way to reach Joe Sixpack.

      --
      ______________________________________
      Ever notice how fast Windows runs? Neither did I...
    11. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by hearingaid · · Score: 2

      I'm a he, not a they, as a careful examination of my email addy would probably show. :)

      Kinda. I was thinking of the latter, though. How much of the media remains free from the direct control of the MPAA or RIAA, and how much of the rest agrees with them on the DMCA? I would suggest, nearly all.

      Which is partly why I pay for Salon, and run my own website. I think this state of things is wrong: we've lost our free press to corporate consolidation rather than government censorship. However, it's still the state of things as they are.

      --

      my old sig used to be funny, but then slashcode ate it and now it's not funny anymore

    12. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by wedg · · Score: 1

      What're you talking about? Downloading mp3s is copyright infringement (both on the downloading and serving ends). It is copyright infringement to distribute anything which you either a) do not own, or b) do not have the rights to distribute, such as is the case in most copyrights, and indeed licenses. Sure, you can loan a book to a friend without infringing upon the copyright, but you can't make a hundred photocopies of the book and sell them on the corner, or even distribute them for free.

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
    13. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by supabeast! · · Score: 2

      Your own post pointed out how wrong you are.
      "It is copyright infringement to distribute..."
      It is NOT, however, illegal to recieve.

    14. Re:Not willing to go to jail to prove a point? by wedg · · Score: 1

      Notice the qualified statement before the one you quoted. Sure, I'd prove myself wrong if it were taken out of context like that. It's the exact same thing as buying stolen merchandise, esp. when you know it's stolen, to make the legal analogy.

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
  61. Way to go FUCKING MODERATOR!!! This is a TROLL??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You couldn't spot a troll if it came up and anally raped you!

  62. I wonder what the price of a Federal Judge is now. by Newer+Guy · · Score: 1

    It must be pretty cheap...after all, they seem to be a herd of morons!

  63. The dystopian future by small_dick · · Score: 2

    America has left it's utopian ideals far in the past.

    Between the DRM movement and the coming "middleware revolution" (Java,.NET), you can kiss the computing industry goodbye.

    I just don't see how freedom can compete with a government that desperately needs middleware to create backdoors--both at home and abroad.

    Nor can it compete with two of the most powerful entities extant today--entertainment and Microsoft Bill.

    Whatever. It's not like freedom hasn't lost before.

    --


    Treatment, not tyranny. End the drug war and free our American POWs.
    See my user info for links.
    1. Re:The dystopian future by mpe · · Score: 2

      DRM right now is a joke. It doesn't exisit. Its not widely implemented. Its fragmented. Why? Why is this.. if these supposedly all powerful corporations are running the government and the world why aren't DRM technologies on every device, on every line, in everyhome, everywhere?

      The simplist reason is that not only does it not work it fundermentally cannot work. Once you give data to someone they can do what they like with it.

  64. Re:Why the EFF case was thrown out... by jacoplane · · Score: 1

    That's one theory. There are many others which are not so optimistic. Let's hope you're right.

  65. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by gilroy · · Score: 4, Troll
    Blockquoth the poster:

    Face it: The whole world is against you. No one cares. The DMCA outlaws things that most people think should be outlawed.

    Funny, I've talked to a lot of people who are far from geeks, much less "pirates". I've told them about the attempt to place unexpirable "access controls" on material slated to be public domain. I've told them about the arrest of a foreign national for writing a program legal in his country. I've told them about the intimidation and outright threatening of scientists who dare to expose flaws in a sham security system. I've told them about being blocked from watching a movie they've bought wherever they want on whatever machine they choose. I've told them about losing their time-honored rights to Fair Use, to First Sale, to archival copies...


    You know what? They don't think any of those things should be occuring. They don't think that reverse engineering for system interoperability should be illegal. They don't think allowing backups should be illegal. They don't think allowing you to read an eBook on whatever machine you choose, should be illegal. They don't think control over your own movie collection should be illegal. They don't think that quotation from a digital source, for the purposes of scholarship, should be illegal. They don't think that scientific research should be illegal.


    So don't get on your high horse and tell me what people think should be illegal and what not. You don't know a thing about what people want. When the mists are lifted, when the DMCA and its implications are laid bare in ordinary language, and not swirled up and hidden behind copyright-lawyerese, then even the "ordinary" people do care.



    In this fight, the problem is not that the majority understand the issues and are against. The problem is that they do not understand the issues. They stand neither against us nor for us, for they have not yet thought it through. In my experience, when they do stop to think about it, when the shape of things is made clear, then the rational citizens I encounter invariable end up quite upset with the DMCA.


    People are only as stupid as you seem to think they are, when they listen to you tell them how stupid they are.

  66. I think you're wrong by Walter+Bell · · Score: 0, Redundant

    The DMCA has made it more difficult for me to share and download media files.

    The DMCA has made it more difficult for me to get a decent DVD player on Linux for the few DVDs that are actually worth paying for.

    The DMCA has made me more concerned that any security related coding I do in the future might actually be illegal.

    I would be willing to stop sharing and downloading pirated software and media files forever in exchange for the repeal of the DMCA. It is a grave threat to free speech and it's worth some sacrifice to see it end.

    ~wally

    1. Re:I think you're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "The DMCA has made it more difficult for me to share and download media files."

      Downloading files you own copyrights to is not illegal. The only thing the DMCA does is keep you from stealing other people's work.

      "The DMCA has made it more difficult for me to get a decent DVD player on Linux for the few DVDs that are actually worth paying for."

      Big deal. Add this to the loooooong list of other things that Linux can't do.

      "The DMCA has made me more concerned that any security related coding I do in the future might actually be illegal."

      Rampant paranoia is just as, if not more dangerous than the DMCA. Alan Cox is probably digging a bunker in his back yard as we speak.

    2. Re:I think you're wrong by gvgisme · · Score: 1
      The only thing the DMCA does is keep you from stealing other people's work.


      Have you even read what the DMCA says? I think not. Take a look at Title 17 section 1201 (the relevent law created by the DMCA). Find in there any requirement that something actually has to be "stolen" in order for the application of the section. Good Luck... There isn't one. Then take a careful look at 1201(a)(2)(A-C) and note the conjunction between them... it's an or. Now look at 1201(a)(3) where "circumventing a technical measure" is defined, and interpret as in the 2600 case. Remember that according to the judge, the authority of the copyright owner is whatever they want -- it isn't an actual part of the measure. That's right, if your code does exactly what theirs does but they say you aren't authorized, you've just "circumvented" their "protections". Now go back to 1201(a)(2)(B) and note that there is no intent or knowledge necessary to invoke that portion, and remember that the "or" conjunction makes that portion alone sufficient to make your code violate the law. That's a lot more than just "keep(ing) you from stealing other people's work".
    3. Re:I think you're wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Downloading files you own copyrights to is not illegal. The only thing the DMCA does is keep you from stealing other people's work.

      No, copyright law keeps you from doing that. The DMCA just makes it difficult to share or download anything, whether or not you own the copyrights. It also makes it difficult and even impossible to exersize fair use rights (there's some Russian guy in jail right now that learned this the hard way, maybe you've heard of him).

      Big deal. Add this to the loooooong list of other things that Linux can't do.

      Bad comparison. If linux can't do something (use a currently unsupported video card, for instance), you or someone else can program it so that it can. Nobody might want to do it, but it's still possible. This can be applied to any task, whether it's an old video card, a printer, a different platform, or running Windows software. Playing legally-bought DVDs, reading legally-bought Ebooks, and other fair-use things are the only exceptions to this, due to the DMCA.

  67. Felten dismissal not as bad as it sounds by Brian+See · · Score: 5, Insightful

    After reading the EFF press release and having read the briefs, I'd just like to point out that things aren't necessarily as bad as they sound (with respect to the Felten case).

    First, I haven't seen any links to an actual published decision. So all of this is really rampant speculation. Take it for what it's worth.

    It sounds like the Felten case was dismissed for lack of justiciability. The judge probably felt that there simply was no "case or controversy" as required by the Constitution for a federal judge to adjudicate a dispute.

    Although the EFF filed for a declaratory judgment (which defines the rights of the party when a dispute is imminent), the judge probably felt that the issue was moot because the RIAA had withdrawn its threats, or was unripe because no actual prosecution took place.

    The bottom line is that the Felten decision appears to ultimately be a civil procedure decision of interest mainly to lawyers. It does NOT appear to operate as an adjudication on the merits of the constitutionality of any part of the DMCA. Even if affirmed by the Third Circuit, it sets no binding precedent concerning the DMCA.

    Is it unfortunate that the DMCA won't be stricken down immediately? Of course. The wheels of justice, for better or worse, often turn quite slowly. The judiciary doesn't react well to Internet time.

    So step back a bit, breathe, and relax before crying chicken little or picking up the flamethrower.

    IAAL, but this is not specific legal advice to anyone, just general ruminations about civil procedure.

    1. Re:Felten dismissal not as bad as it sounds by ProfMoriarty · · Score: 2, Insightful
      So ... in other words, if Felton HAD gone forward and published the paper, along with giving the lecture ... and IF the RIAA had sued him, then he may have a case against the RIAA.

      However, since the RIAA backed off quickly, there is no dispute between the parties.

      Now, an interesting point would be that IF Felton would go forward now, he may not be harassed by the RIAA. Since the RIAA would know that he would fight them. OTOH, it may look like Felton was trying to pick a fight with them, and the judge may rule against Felton on that ... (though judges aren't supposed to)

      Mmmmm ... Beer. The cause of and solution to all of lifes' problems. -- Homer Simpson

      --
      Karma? Karma? I don't need no stinkin' karma.
    2. Re:Felten dismissal not as bad as it sounds by Dr.+Evil · · Score: 2

      That's how I read it. It sounds as though the case cannot be heard unless it is absolutely clear that the particular statute affects the plaintif.

      I think I might have the plaintif and defendant mixed up, but you know what I mean.

      Because it CAN be interpreted that the DMCA does not apply because none of the applications are "commercial", then the DMCA cannot be challenged.

      They even got into why this is the case, and I can't disagree with the reason. The constitution does not want the legal system tied up with abstract debates of law, only current pressing matters.

      It sounds painfully obvious that this case would fail in hindsight. I wonder what the EFF thought they could accomplish. I mean to have a constitutional argument thrown out because the constitution says not to engage in legal bickering seems... well, like the legal team hasn't read the constitution.

      Of course that IS hindsight, and I am not a Lawyer, so there may be something that I'm missing which will appear painfully obvious later.

  68. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by base3 · · Score: 1
    You can rant and rave but let's face it: one of the jobs of the DoJ is to defend the government. They are the government's lawyers. So if you sue against this (or any other) law, it's the DoJ who'll show up opposite you in court. And what's more, they're professionally obligated to do the best defense they can, and this motion falls under that. It would have been irresponsible not to file it.

    Yep, kind of like they're professionally obligated to persue a meaningful penalty against a proven monopoly. Uh, never mind.

    --
    One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
  69. Re:Why the EFF case was thrown out... by starz · · Score: 1

    You Said:
    Just wait until some RIAA-like organization decides to dig in against a proffessor like felten.

    Then you'll see the sparks fly.

    I say:
    It sucks but the sparks should have already flown. Not enough people care to take any action.

  70. Mickey Mouse and national security by Convergence · · Score: 4, Funny

    ``Mickey Mouse is more important than national security; Mickey Mouse has gotten a federal appeals court to agree that they can have scientific research and/or software censored, while the DoJ, representing national security interests, was unable to get an appeals court to censor encryption reserach, publication, or software.'' -- Scott A Crosby

  71. *waving* by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What am I waving for?

    I'm waving good-bye to our rights and freedoms.

    Join me now, you may not have a chance later.

  72. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by pgpckt · · Score: 2

    I am a double major in both at Clemson University. Best of luck to you. I hope people like you and me can fight this kind of crap later.

    --
    Lawrence Lessig is my personal hero.
  73. The future in the digital age by RazzleDazzle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I must comment on a Bruce Schneier talk that was held recently post on the free dmitry site. It was about how the entities are involved with copy protection and the digital age.

    In extremely paraphrased words, copyright owners can not technically/physically stop copying (legal or otherwise) from going on so they are trying to pull the legal angle with things such as the DMCA, SSSCA, ATA, etc. Some of these are obviously quite misguided. Bruce Schneier talked about these things and the history of their inability to completely stop copying. There are countries in the world that do not and will not conform to american companies' wishes/laws/edicts (mostly one-in-the-same anyway); such countries will not apply the DMCA, SSSCA, etc to their people and thus ignore entities such as the MPAA, RIAA, Microsoft, etc

    There will never be a time when millions of people will be overpowered by any entity(ies) technically, legally or any way in the end. There will always be a way around it or thru it or to bypass it. It is just a matter of time before the way is understood. How long did Windows XP last before it was cracked? How long for the watermarking was cracked? How long before CSS was cracked? How long before 802.11b password keys can be revealed?

    Where is OpenBSD based because of encryption laws being to strict in the US? Canada. There are countries out there that don't recognize IP. What is Disney going to do when their beloved life-extended from the public domain Mickey Mouse is used in some defamating way in one such country? Nothing!

    I grasped from Bruce's speech that there are tough times ahead for many but there is no way everyone can be stopped. Just keep persistent and keep trying to figure things out and how they work and in the end this barrage of legal assaults against us and our freedoms will cease when it yields no more results.

    http://www.faircopyright.org
    http://www.eff.org
    http://freesklyarov.org/
    http://www.2600.com
    http://www.senate.gov/~commerce/hearings/071601S ch neier.pdf

    --
    ZERO ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ZERO ONE ONE! Just brushing up for my next big invention: Ethernet over Voice (EoV)
  74. Excellent point! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a powerful voice of rebellion! You know, I used to be for the DMCA, but your insightful comments have really opened up my eyes to the injustice which was here before me all this time!

    The world was black and white; now it's in blazing Technicolor! The EFF should bring you on as a lawyer -- if a judge doesn't overturn the DMCA upon the instant he or she is exposed to your Mona Lisa... your Taj Mahal... your Great Wall (!) of logic and reason, then all hope is truly lost. You are our last, best chance! Lead us into the strange and wonderful new future the mere utterance of your words fashions from the ether!

    1. Re:Excellent point! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're crazy! His comment was inane! Get real! Sheesh!

  75. Fax it!! by dachshund · · Score: 2, Interesting
    No, don't e-mail him/her, they won't read it. Write out long hand your grievances and slap an American flag stamp on the corner.

    I don't think paper mail is the way to go right now-- there's no guarantee anyone's going to take a chance on opening it. Email also gets the shaft.

    A good middle solution is a faxed letter, if you can find a fax number for your Representative.

  76. Re:This is sad... by SquierStrat · · Score: 1

    Bootlegging doesn't necesarilly imply that...least not here in the south. (remember the moonshiners who did their craft for their own use?)

    --
    Derek Greene
  77. Welcome to Corporate Government... by xonker · · Score: 1

    Okay, is there much doubt left that people have almost no voice left in the process of governing the US? With Bush and Ashcroft running amok and bringing us closer to martial law every day, Microsoft actually standing to PROFIT off of the suits being brought against them, and the FBI backing private companies (Adobe) -- what hope do individuals have in the US when they stand in the way of corporate profits?

    1. Re:Welcome to Corporate Government... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Well, you're right. It's Dystopia Realized. Better spend your whole life complaining, or else things could get even worse.

      Now if you'll excuse me, I've got some things to do tonight: invite my friends over to play cards, walk my dog, and lay down with my girlfriend under the stars.

    2. Re:Welcome to Corporate Government... by BigBir3d · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Remember, it was Bill Clinton who signed the DMCA into law.

      "FBI backing private companies" is not new, in fact, it is standard practice.

    3. Re:Welcome to Corporate Government... by 3am · · Score: 1

      and ashcroft and bush are rigorously enforcing it.

      how does the fact that it was enacted under the clinton administration absolve the bush administration of blame?

      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    4. Re:Welcome to Corporate Government... by nathanm · · Score: 2

      Also, if you look at the actual decision, there were 12 amicus curae briefs filed in favor of the defendant (2600). Only 3 were filed in favor of the plaintiff (MPAA), the 2nd of which was filed on behalf of the NFL & MLB by David Kendall, Clinton's personal attorney during the impeachment.

    5. Re:Welcome to Corporate Government... by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

      It doeesn't absolve anything. I was just stating that "both" sides are involved; this issue is neither solely a Republican nor Democratic one.

  78. Intent is what matters by Walter+Bell · · Score: 0, Troll

    "The only way to fight gags is to shut up"

    Not really. Try this instead: "The only way to fight gun control is to reduce gun fatalities."

    Whether that means trigger locks, better ethics amongst dealers, or something else. The government doesn't try to ban something unless there's a problem. And billions of dollars of losses for one of Congress' biggest "sponsors" is a Big Problem(tm).

    The time for reform is now. The time to blow defiant raspberries at The Man has passed. Don't pick a fight with a cop if you've got something to hide.

    ~wally

    1. Re:Intent is what matters by david.johns · · Score: 1
      However, in the case of fatality, it's easy to provide at least a moderately valuable statistic.

      "People with guns killed xx,xxx people last year."

      "The (IP) industry lost $xxx,xxx,xxx to piracy last year."

      In the first case, count the bodies. In the second, what exactly are you counting?

      Not that I really disagree with the idea that we can improve our image. But I don't think there's a satisfying and appropriate way to do it. I, for one, am not willing to dissociate the idea of freedom with software and utilities like nmap. Imagine if I didn't have access to nmap!! I wouldn't have the tools to test the simplest of firewalling setups I use. Better that these tools are available to all, lockmakers and lockpickers alike.

    2. Re:Intent is what matters by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

      > Not really. Try this instead: "The only way to fight gun
      > control is to reduce gun fatalities."


      Sorry, this also falls under "Not Really". Try this: "The only way to fight gun control is to prove that it doesn't reduce gun fatalities." If it can be proven that gun control doesn't make for fewer gun fatalities, gun control becomes meaningless. To return to the original point, the only way to get laws pertaining to personal freedom repealed is to prove that they're ineffective. Since the intent of the DMCA (at least ideally) is to protect copyright holders without infringing on the rights of citizens, we need to prove demonstrably that the law can't (as it exists today) avoid overly infringing behavior (too easy to pervert the law, too broad in its restrictions), and so is ineffective for its intended use.

      Now, we must consider how to prove that the law is ineffective in this way. Your response is to stop hacking to eliminate laws against hacking. This is not logical, and is roughly equivalent to saying that Rosa Parks would have done more for the equal rights movement by simply moving to the back of the bus when she was told to do so.

      > Don't pick a fight with a cop if you've got something to hide.

      In a very literal sense, if this was a good idea we'd all be British citizens right now. The thing that invalidates the statement is the assumption that the law is fair in defining "something to hide". If the government passed a law saying you weren't allowed (for example) to be Muslim, you'd have "something to hide" if you were Muslim, but you'd be wrong not to pick a fight with the cops (and, by extension, the courts) about it.

      Virg

  79. IANAL by glrotate · · Score: 0

    But I am married to a law student at a top tier law school, and therefore completely qualified to give advice. 1. Start taking practice LSAT's now, you do want to get into a good law school right? 2. Take as many Con Law classes as possible as an undergrad. This will familiarize you with the whole "briefing cases" routine. 3. Read Read Read. Get into the habit of reading 400 or so pages a week of the driest material on the planet. If you don't read the cases before class you will regret it when called on.

    Good Luck.

  80. DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by Seth+Finkelstein · · Score: 5, Informative
    1. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by Hoo00 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      IANAL and MY OPINION

      After reading the decision, it seems that the appeal court considers that decss is not pure speech like a recipe or a engineering blueprint because decss can instruct a computer to execute some functions without the instructor's understanding of what the code does, while recipe and blueprint can't. Therefore, there is more of a functional aspect to decss than the speech aspect.

      Base on this critical point and other more accepted arguments, the appeal court upheld Kaplan's ruling.

      IANAL, but why is code being considered less of a speech just because a stupid machine is able to interprete the code automatically?

      If i create a machine that can automatically cook me a meal by reading recipes, will the free speech protection of those recipes become less?

    2. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by gvgisme · · Score: 1
      If i create a machine that can automatically cook me a meal by reading recipes, will the free speech protection of those recipes become less?


      Or, better yet, if I create a computer program that can act on natural language instructions, does that mean that our speech becomes less protected? What happens when the computer becomes "smarter"?
    3. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by (void*) · · Score: 3, Informative
      I think you've misunderstood the argument. In fact, the Court agrees that code is speech, and that code can have functional aspects. But they also considered that the functional aspect of DeCSS was to decrypt an otherwise encrypted movie, allowing for copyright violations, particularly if posting and linking such a tool to a website facilitates it. And so they made a judgement siding with Judge Kaplan and upheld the decision.


      I am dissappointed. More attention should have been paid to the fact that DVD playing should not be a cartel. The distinction between copyright protection and copy protection should have been better argued. Then the courts would not have blithely ignored this point.


      Sigh.

    4. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by DCheesi · · Score: 1
      I am dissappointed. More attention should have been paid to the fact that DVD playing should not be a cartel.

      That's not the point at all. It's not the job of the judiciary to decide whether a law is moral or not; that's for the legistlature. The courts' job is to determine if it's legal, ie. constitutional. This is where the court failed in its duty. The First Ammendment issue is the *only* issue that matters here, and the court apparently blew it off. If simply linking to the code on another site is illegal, shouldn't they have been arresting those guys with the t-shirts? The double-standard here is amazing.

    5. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by (void*) · · Score: 2

      The First Ammendment issue is the *only* issue that matters here, and the court apparently blew it off. If simply linking to the code on another site is illegal, shouldn't they have been arresting those guys with the t-shirts?


      Logic error. Insisting on people who wear DeCSS T-shirts should be arrested is confusing the expressive part of code with the functional part. It is clear that such an action is wrong. But the functional use of the code, coupled with dissemination with a view towards making the functional code available, by a bunch of HACKERS is unlawful. And once that goes, linking is also unlawful.


      These are not my arguments, merely of the court upholding the appeal. IMHO, any argument based on a smear campaign is wrong.

    6. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

      Did anyone else have problems with the way Acrobat rendered this thing? Bloody hell, it was like trying to read HAXOR crap. And we are supposed to believe this court knows ANYTHING about computers. What a fscking joke.

      Welcome to the land of the fee and the home of the paid.
      By the corporations and for the corporations and of the corporations.

      --

      "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

    7. Re:DeCSS decision now available on EFF site by Hoo00 · · Score: 1

      There is no misunderstanding. The court's argument is based on

      ...that code can have functional aspects

      I don't complain that the code is speech. In fact, the comments that code is speech is the best i have seen so far. The problem is the court buys Judge Kaplan's idea of a functional aspect in speech.

      Come on, people. Speech has no functional aspect. Recipe has no functional aspect. Blueprint has no functional aspect. DeCSS has no functional aspect. The fact that it is easy to execute DeCSS does not exclude the requirement that a thinking normal human being want to click on the mouse and run that program. It takes a lot of intelligent to run that program. My grandma doesn't know how to do it.

  81. Organize to survive - donate to EFF by guygee · · Score: 1

    I hope to hell this gets modded down as redundant: I just donated money to the EFF. I am a long-time member of the UAW and the NEA, because even a superficial study of history reveals that the working classes (that's us) must organize en masse to counter the onslaughts of the vested interests. The first step is political and economic organization within the constraints of the legal system, and if this doesn't pay dividends, action must be extended to mass strikes and protest in the streets. As a group of professionals, we must shed the self-defeating neo-conservative ideologies that have grown to insulate the technical classes from these political realities. As our fathers and grandfathers were rewarded by the rich with home loans and college educations for risking their lives to save the country from Hilter, so should we demand protection of our basic civil rights as payment for saving their elites asses from terrorism.

  82. Another: Giant Black Hole Found by bstadil · · Score: 1

    Looks like Civil Rights in this contry is going down another black hole.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
  83. And I'm a Ninja with bazooka training. by glrotate · · Score: 0
    Nobody gives a rats ass about your education.

    Could corperate Kick-Backs be the main case behind why the DMCA was born and is still alive?

    The reason it's still alive is because no serious issue has been brought before the courts. This was a stupid suit. Perhaps the fact that the law is only used against those stealing the work of others is an issue?

    What I would like to see addressed is the lack of an exemption for backups, and the outrageous penalties. ($100k and 10 yrs?)

  84. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have talked with people who actually agree with the RIAA, even knowing the situation...and that is just something I cannot even fathom.

    NR

  85. Look who matches donations to the EFF by Comrade+Pikachu · · Score: 3, Funny

    (sorta off topic)
    If you work for Disney, Fox, or Time Warner, your employer will match your donation to the EFF!

    Read all about it here.

  86. Playing offense vs. playing defense... by Brendan+Byrd · · Score: 1

    While I somewhat argee with your stance, I really think there's no way to protect against BigCorp, Inc from suing Joe Blow over and over and over and over again, especially the way the RIAA has been doing. Nobody's been punishing the RIAA for all of these damned lawsuits because there's no way to counter it. Eventually, one of these lawsuits hit their mark and do some civil damage.

    If the RIAA loses a suit, they wipe the dirt off their shoes, lose a little money (that they didn't need anyway), and try again.

    If the RIAA wins a suit, people go to jail, get fined, have to pay massive lawyer fees, and freedoms get taken away.

    See, freedom is losing because we can't take the offensive with these damn corporations. We can only hope to defend ourselves. Sure, we cheer when we win, but it's only another day before somebody attacks again.

  87. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 2

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  88. Was the PDF at 2600 scanned by Monkeys? by tk422 · · Score: 1

    Seriously is anyone else having huge problems reading the PDF from the 2600 news link? Its horrible every other word has letters missing...really odd. Anyone got a good mirror with something that is readable?

  89. Oh, geez, brilliance at work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The 2600 appeal decision includes a dismissal of fair-use worries. Apparently, the courts won't do anything until the law is abused to deny access to public domain materials. Conveniently enough, nothing has entered the public domain in decades thanks to the crap extension laws (Sonny Bono act, etc). So as long as nothing is allowed to enter the public domain, future fair-use worries don't matter. Yippee.

    What we need is an honest to goodness content producer with non-trivial cash to pitch a fit. What's Larry Flynt up to these days, besides pushing for journalistic access to the front lines in Afghanistan. (I'm not joking.) I figure the argument could go like this: So long as the content remains copyrighted, he has to keep the permission paperwork around and has to pay inventory tax on the masters. Is it possible to legally relinquish copyright after claiming it? If not, then he needs the copyright to expire to lessen the tax and record-keeping burden. Then if the copyright cannot expire, he's being forced to pay taxes at gunpoint in a very indirect and devious manner.

    shrug. I'm not sure if that would work, but it would certainly be a different angle on the DMCA and other copyright laws. Plus, it'd involve sex, and everyone likes that.

  90. Disagree - not a frivolous lawsuit by (void*) · · Score: 2
    Seriously, I think the judge did not consider the circumstances that merit the case. Either that or the EFF did not make a good case.

    Firstly, SDMI invited the public to crack their watermarking scheme. They offered money as enticement, giving the crackers the option of giving up the prize money should they decide not to assent to their contract. Felten chose the second option. Having cracked it, he is thus free to do as he pleases, since he conducted the research under the auspices of the University. The RIAA threatens to sue. Felten withdraws his paper (this damages his professional reputation!), and then later publishes it having clarified that the RIAA does not intend to sue.

    In other words, the picture reveals that the RIAA was selectively excersing their rights, using the law to chill research.

  91. Well sort of... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

    Except they don't read mail because of anthrax...

    Seriously though - I've written my representatives and congressmen (Gordon Smith and David Wu - Oregon). They have never written back to date - and I've written them thoughtful letters for the last 3~4 years. My last letter I'll ever write to them was an angry one which I accused them of selling out to the ATA and I swore I'd never ever ever vote for either of them again - and I won't.

  92. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 3, Informative

    Funny, I've talked to a lot of people who are far from geeks, much less "pirates". I've told them about the attempt to place unexpirable "access controls" on material slated to be public domain.

    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.

    I've told them about the arrest of a foreign national for writing a program legal in his country.

    You mean for importing a program into this country and distributing it in this country.

    I've told them about the intimidation and outright threatening of scientists who dare to expose flaws in a sham security system.

    Completely irrelevant to the DMCA.

    I've told them about being blocked from watching a movie they've bought wherever they want on whatever machine they choose.

    Somewhat valid point.

    I've told them about losing their time-honored rights to Fair Use, to First Sale, to archival copies...

    Something which is specifically protected in the DMCA.

    You know what? They don't think any of those things should be occuring. They don't think that reverse engineering for system interoperability should be illegal.

    Also specifically protected by the DMCA.

    They don't think allowing backups should be illegal.

    Which it isn't.

    They don't think allowing you to read an eBook on whatever machine you choose, should be illegal.

    Somewhat fair point.

    They don't think control over your own movie collection should be illegal.

    Huh?

    They don't think that quotation from a digital source, for the purposes of scholarship, should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA.

    They don't think that scientific research should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA. You should read it some time.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  93. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by marxmarv · · Score: 3, Interesting
    could I be right when I make the assumption that the government is no longer for the people which it represents and more for how well their own pockets can be lined by our fellow extremely wealthy citizens.
    Close, but perhaps a little too cynical. It is valid (and urgent) to ask why the government has been allowed to advocate its own interests distinct from and in many cases adversarial to the public interest, and whose interest the government really is serving if not the public interest. It may not be that the current regime consciously acts in service of wealth, but that wealth itself, or traits closely associated with wealth, such as photogenicity, a firm handshake, the ability to lie with a straight face and close deals, and the unshakable drive to power, is a prerequisite in the eyes of the majority of the public, and the wealthy, like any other clique, fend for their own. Keep in mind the two "major" parties would have no reason to exist were donations to the parties made illegal.

    I have the sinking feeling that political means won't solve this problem when the two "major" parties fight each other only for show and become instant allies whenever a promising adversary appears. Yet any attempt to apply non-political means would only get the Communists rounded up and killed just like after the Reichstag fire. It appears the most reliable way to be free of the socialist overclass enforcing capitalism for the underclass is to pollute ourselves into infirmity as the Romans did, and wait a couple hundred years for the Visigoths to take Rome again.

    I'm starting to doubt the New Agers' fawning over the Age of Aquarius. Technological feudalism is every bit as comfortable under Aquarius as the socialist collective.

    -jhp

    --
    /. -- the Free Republic of technology.
  94. Things are only getting worse. by rice_burners_suck · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I believe that because existing copyright laws already make it illegal to make illegal copies of information, the DMCA is redundant legislation put in place by greedy corporations, whose interests do not match the best interests of the majority of Americans. If things continue the way they are right now, then next thing you know, you won't be allowed to copy your own data (that you create) without written permission from the governor. (Geez, you might not even be able to make data without a license!!)

    The entire copyright system has been corrupted over the past century or so, the largest corruption being the increasingly long time the copyright lasts. In my opinion, 20 years is more than enough time for a copyright. After that, you'd better come up with something new to sell or you're an idiot. Just so you know, I spend nearly all of my time writing software for heavy duty industrial processes. It is very difficult work. Really. The blood, sweat and tears I put into this work are approaching a level of ridiculousness. Despite that, I refuse to put any kind of copy protection scheme in my software, even though a single instance of piracy makes me lose thousands of dollars. I simply don't believe in putting deliberate defects in my software. Furthermore, I'd be more than happy with a 20 year copyright. Like I said, by the time the 20 years are up, I'd better have something new to offer. This would keep people busy coming up with new things. I think it's idiotic that someone can come up with a song or book or program and profit off it for the rest of their lives, and for the lives of their great grandchildren, as seemingly happens with the copyright system today.

    Think about how much better off we'd all be if people who profit from "nontangible" work are required to keep coming up with new things. An electrician who installs a light switch doesn't charge royalties on each use of that switch for the next 150 years. A mechanic who fixes cars doesn't charge for every mile driven on that car afterwards. Someone who builds skyscrapers doesn't stand at the door and charge people to enter, and then sue people who enter through the back door without paying. If you but a toaster, or a rock, or a screwdriver, or a slab of concrete, it belongs to YOU and you can do with it whatever you want. You can smash it to pieces if you want. It belongs to YOU. Now intangible data is intangible, so I agree that some kind of artificial system needs to be in place so that people can profit from their hard work. But why should someone (even me) come up with something intangible and charge for it through the nose for the next 6,000 years?! That's unfair, and I say that as a person who's career is nontangible work.

    An electrician who profits from installing a light switch has to KEEP INSTALLING LIGHT SWITCHES in order to KEEP PROFITING. The same rule applies to any other job. Therefore, it stands to reason that a person who makes software, or songs, or books, or whatever should have to KEEP MAKING whatever they're making in order to KEEP PROFITING. I think that makes sense. If the electrician or [insert name of any other tangible job here] has to do it, so does the person making intangible DATA. Otherwise, you end up with idiots who strike it rich on some stupid work of theirs and spend the rest of their lives doing drugs, getting all kinds of piercings and tatooes and sexually transmitted diseases and stuff, because they just keep profiting off their work FOREVER. That's wrong. They should have to continue coming up with new material or get a real job. There will be less problems in the world!

    Therefore, I believe the DMCA is a trash piece of legislation, and it should be repealed. Again, the DMCA is a law in MY favor, but I don't like it. Furthermore, I think that the limit on copyright should be changed to 20 (or at MOST, 30) years. Finally, I think the penalties for copyright infringement should be heavily reduced. It's absolutely ridiculous that a copyright violator can spend more time in prison under the DMCA and other laws than some murderers.

    But it probably won't happen. The world is like any other system with problems: Things tend to get worse, not better. I think the whole human race has been going downhill ever since the beginning. Sure, we have technology and stuff but when it comes down to it, people now get punished for listening to music as if they killed people. Of course, that may just be the Brandy Alexanders talking. (1/3 parts each: Chocolate liqueur, Brandy and Cream, in case you're wondering. It's an old drink. Most bartenders have to look it up.)

    Oooooooh well.

    1. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Bongo · · Score: 1

      I think the whole human race has been going downhill ever since the beginning.

      A sort of Romantic notion. But it's also been going uphill--it's called the "Dialectic of Progress", or, "Good news, bad news". Every evolutionary advancement becomes itself a new problem that has to be solved.

      We could still be apes, and the planet wouldn't suffer, but then what's the point of a planet if it can't breed minds? The biosphere creates an environment where a noosphere can emerge.

      Somewhere right now a highly skilled person is writing a song. Somewhere right now a highly skilled person is targetting a bomb. Good news, bad news.

      Offtopic (not really): I'm curious whether in the grander evolutionary pattern, it's necessary that corporations aquire all this power, (such as permanent control of IP), and become bigger than countries, thus making it necessary that an organisation bigger than countries be formed to put them back in line. ie. a World Government. A world government may be the only body big enough to tackle the environmental crisis (irrespective of whether it's warming or cooling, and exactly when oil will run out).

      PS. I must try that drink...

      Read A Brief History of Everything

    2. Re:Things are only getting worse. by mpe · · Score: 2

      Therefore, I believe the DMCA is a trash piece of legislation, and it should be repealed. Again, the DMCA is a law in MY favor,

      Possibly in your favour. The recent changes in copyright appear to be far more in favour of corporate publishers/middlemen than the people who actually produce the material. Honestly what use is a copyright term longer than the average human lifespan to any person?

      but I don't like it. Furthermore, I think that the limit on copyright should be changed to 20 (or at MOST, 30) years.

      Possibly even a shorter period. Maybe even with some kind of "use it or loose it criteria".

    3. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Dr.+Manhattan · · Score: 2
      I think it's idiotic that someone can come up with a song or book or program and profit off it for the rest of their lives, and for the lives of their great grandchildren, as seemingly happens with the copyright system today.

      Oh, no. That's not how it works. The great-grandchildren of the author don't make any money. The great-grandchildren of the executives of the publishing company who extorted the rights from the author make the money.

      --
      PHEM - party like it's 1997-2003!
    4. Re:Things are only getting worse. by G00F · · Score: 1
      "I'm curious whether in the grander evolutionary pattern, it's necessary that corporations aquire all this power, (such as permanent control of IP), and become bigger than countries, thus making it necessary that an organisation bigger than countries be formed to put them back in line. ie. a World Government. A world government may be the only body big enough to tackle the environmental crisis (irrespective of whether it's warming or cooling, and exactly when oil will run out)."

      Its called "We the people". We, me and you, andeveryone else, needs to stand up and claim our rights time and time again. Its a pitty so many people just don't care, and makes it even worse for those who do and do fight.

      --
      The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
    5. Re:Things are only getting worse. by markmoss · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The great-grandchildren of the author don't make any money. The great-grandchildren of the executives of the publishing company who extorted the rights from the author make the money. IIRC, the rights do have to eventually revert back to the author, so if there is still any money to be made the author's great-granchildren will get their share. Unfortunately, the creator's share has generally be 10% or less, and there is no sign that this share is increasing at all as technology drives the physical cost of publication to essentially zero (for music and software).

      The exception to the rule that rights revert to the creator is "work for hire". That's fair enough when the work is essentially a corporate creation. There was one underhanded attempt to change this; a Congressional staffer, at the end of a session when nobody was reading what they were voting for, snuck in an amendment that made all musical recordings work for hire. (You get one guess as to what industry that guy is now working for.) When the musicians noticed it, they went to Congress and got it overturned. At the hearing, no one at all dared show up and try to defend this change, and certainly no Congressman wants to have 100 rock stars campaigning against him. But it took time, and so the record companies own outright most of the recordings made that year...

    6. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Blimy - where to start

      In my opinion, 20 years is more than enough time for a copyright. After that, you'd better come up with something new to sell or you're an idiot.

      Why? If I write a book or record a song it can be just a valid/artistic/enjoyable/valuable in 20 years time as it is now. Eg. Lord of the Rings, To Kill A Mocking Bird , all the Beatles songs etc, etc. Ok you may not agree with my taste ( who does ) but I'm sure you have read some old books and listened to some old music. Why should you get it for free ( as in beer )?

      Just so you know, I spend nearly all of my time writing software for heavy duty industrial processes. small snip I refuse to put any kind of copy protection scheme in my software, even though a single instance of piracy makes me lose thousands of dollars. small snip Furthermore, I'd be more than happy with a 20 year copyright. Like I said, by the time the 20 years are up, I'd better have something new to offer

      Yes because software generaly does not have so longer life - but other copyright material does!

      I think it's idiotic that someone can come up with a song or book or program and profit off it for the rest of their lives.

      Why? Again, they have put the work into it, that's their living. It is nothing like an electrician changing a light switch, it is a creative process. If the author didn't create it, it would not exist - simple as that. So again, why shouldn't they benefit from it?

      Otherwise, you end up with idiots who strike it rich on some stupid work of theirs and spend the rest of their lives doing drugs ... blah, blah, blah There will be less problems in the world!

      No, there would be less books, novels, songs, records etc, etc because the effort to create such works ( and yes it is effort ) would not be worth it.

    7. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should you get it for free ( as in beer )?


      Because that's the whole freaking point of information.. It is a cumulative thing, which replicates between vessels (human brains, digital media, etc) at nearly no cost. The more information we have, the better this world is.

      IP laws exist to artificially give the creator power over their creation to make money with it. This is a Good Thing(tm), however, what the laws are being used for is sickening. The creators don't even own their works anymore (see: Work for Hire), instead the corporate middlemen use laws like the DMCA as their means of keeping their stranglehold over the artists and consumers they exploit.

      No, there would be less books, novels, songs, records etc, etc because the effort to create such works ( and yes it is effort ) would not be worth it

      A few thousand hackers disagree with you. Ever hear of The Love of the Game? That's why most people draw or sing or paint or write music or code or anything else. Payment is an added bonus, and an important one at that. But don't let the old American dogma of making money cloud the creative roots that IP is truly based around.

    8. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because that's the whole freaking point of information.

      But if we talk about novels, songs etc we're not talking about information. Anyway, why should information be free? Why not be able to make money from knowing something and telling other people. Copyright doesn't stop you from using information you read in a book, it stops you stealing the information in a book - theres a difference!!!

      The creators don't even own their works anymore (see: Work for Hire), instead the corporate middlemen use laws like the DMCA as their means of keeping their stranglehold over the artists and consumers they exploit.

      Wrong. If I create something eg write a book, I have copyright over it - not some publishing company. I can give a publisher those rights - in return for money, if I like the terms, if I don't like the terms I walk away - with the copyright. Simple.

      What you (or some here) seem to be saying is that if I write a novel, all and sundry have a right to copy it at will, now whose screwing the author and artist????

      A few thousand hackers disagree with you

      I'm not talking about open source software, but remember, out of those thousands of hackers, how many hold a full time job ( effectivly selling information to employers - not exactly free )

      That's why most people draw or sing or paint or write music or code or anything else. Payment is an added bonus, and an important one at that.

      Yes, and ask those people if they would prefer to do those things or their normal job and guess what most of them would say.

    9. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Simulant · · Score: 1

      "I think it's idiotic that someone can come up with a song or book or program and profit off it for the rest of their lives, and for the lives of their great grandchildren, as seemingly happens with the copyright system today." AMEN! Mod this up!

    10. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Simulant · · Score: 1
      Why? If I write a book or record a song it can be just a valid/artistic/enjoyable/valuable in 20 years time as it is now. Eg. Lord of the Rings, To Kill A Mocking Bird , all the Beatles songs etc, etc. Ok you may not agree with my taste ( who does ) but I'm sure you have read some old books and listened to some old music. Why should you get it for free ( as in beer )?

      No... the question is "Why should you KEEP GETTING PAID FOR IT?"

      Why? Again, they have put the work into it, that's their living. It is nothing like an electrician changing a light switch, it is a creative process. If the author didn't create it, it would not exist - simple as that. So again, why shouldn't they benefit from it?

      How can you honestly say that creating (often trivial) IP is somehow instrinsicly more valuable than say, growing food or building houses or healing sick people, or any of the thousands of other things people do? How many times should the IP creator be compensated?

      No, there would be less books, novels, songs, records etc, etc because the effort to create such works ( and yes it is effort ) would not be worth it.

      It strikes me as utterly sad and cynical that the foundation of your argument is the belief that the only reason people create anything is for monetary compensation. How depressing. You are probably right that there would be fewer books, songs, etc... but I guarantee you the quality would improve. I don't see that as such a bad thing.

    11. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Sheetrock · · Score: 1
      But if we talk about novels, songs etc we're not talking about information. Anyway, why should information be free?

      Disregarding the semantics about whether or not books, songs, movies, software, or anything else you can copyright is information, I believe that we can agree on one thing: none of them are created in a vaccum. A chess program I (hypothetically) write today is built with basic programming principles that others have shared, inspired by several other chess programs that I have executed on my computer, created to emulate the styles of different chess masters over the years, and developed with artifical intelligence algorithms pioneered by others to work with hardware documented by others and designed years ago with components invented decades ago. I depend on inventions and theories of hundreds or thousands of people to develop my product, and so does anyone else.

      What you (or some here) seem to be saying is that if I write a novel, all and sundry have a right to copy it at will, now whose screwing the author and artist????

      I'm a different user than the one you're replying to, but I'd argue that very few people here are saying "Scrap copyright." I certainly don't think that copyright is something we should do away with. The feeling I get is that many of the posters here (including me) believe that copyright terms have been extended much too far. I had always been taught that copyright is intended to fairly compensate content creators for their work. However, I've also read that the copyright term was set to expire at a non-ludicrous point so that authors, musicians, etc. will continue to create and benefit society.

      If this is the case, copyright terms should actually be getting shorter. We've got faster publication times, better shipping, and this global economy thang that they didn't have at the end of the 16th century. Extended copyright terms are putting a brake on the sharing of information and culture both on those holding the copyrights who have less incentive to develop and on those who would bring us the innovations of tomorrow but can no longer borrow from yesterday to create them.

      --

      Try not. Do or do not, there is no try.
      -- Dr. Spock, stardate 2822-3.




    12. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Err, 18th century, not 16th century. Math never was my strong point. Then again, I guess the basic concept of copyright didn't start in America either. Whatever.

    13. Re:Things are only getting worse. by Bongo · · Score: 1

      Its called "We the people". We, me and you, andeveryone else, needs to stand up and claim our rights time and time again. Its a pitty so many people just don't care, and makes it even worse for those who do and do fight.

      Yes, and by "We the people" you presumably mean, "Earthlings" and not just "Americans" or "My neighbourhood".

      I mean, that's all I was saying, that "We the Americans" aren't going to "save the planet". It's going to take the agreement of "We the people of Earth". And right now, corporations, driven by profit, are the ones who see the World as their market. They are trans-national in a way that most people don't identify with. (If "We the people of Earth" sounds odd or just wrong, then you probably don't identify with that view either.)

      So as we all start using the same products, (Gap, McDonalds, Windows everywhere and all that), the planet becomes a smaller place and we start being less "Us v. them" and more just "All of us, We the people of Earth".

      So all I wondered was whether the corporations are, in a way, accidentally doing us a favour, because, by trying to exert themselves everywhere, they give all of us (the Chinese, the Americans, the British etc., ie. We the People of Earth) a sort of common issue, or even enemy.

      And seeing as the corporations are trans-national, We will demand a trans-national body to keep them in check and represent us... ie. a World Government.

      And a W.G. would just happen to be useful for deciding what action to take about the environmental crisis (whatever shape or form it can be scientifically shown to have). For without a W.G., no country will let itself be put to a disadvantage by cutting pollution and hurting it's economy, while other countries continue expanding and polluting. And we've got the whole third world still waiting to catch-up to our developed pullution levels.

      Anyhow, just a thought. And waaaaaaay OT :)

  95. MOD THIS UP! by (void*) · · Score: 2

    I could not have said it better myself.

  96. Told you so... by kcbrown · · Score: 2
    Felten should not have presented his work when he did, since by doing so he blew his own case out of the water.

    Why the hell didn't his lawyers advise him of this likely outcome, or why the hell didn't he follow their advice?

    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  97. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Elbereth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why was this moderated up to "+5, insightful"?

    It's just one-sided propaganda. You don't bother to tell the other side of the issues (most of it is straw-man arguments and/or unreasonable -- but not all!), and you even go so far as to make up things.

    Where in the DMCA does it give the RIAA the right to have control over your DVD collection? I must have missed that part.

    Look, I'm not saying that I like the DMCA. I'm just saying that to demonize something like that causes people look up the facts of the matter and really come to dislike your position.

    Remember how the governmnet used to lie through their teeth and tell us that one puff of marijuana would warp your mind and get you addicted to crack the next day? Well, it was obviously bullshit, people knew it was bullshit, and nobody paid any attention to it. If you make up your own straw-man arguments (and invent ridiculous things like "the government has their hands in my movie collection!"), you're not doing any good for the anti-DMCA lobby.

    How exactly has the DMCA hurt you personally, anyways? It has yet to hurt me at all, as I never really had the right to make backups of my stuff in the first place (EULAs, copy protection, etc). The DMCA is practically a non-issue in my life, though I do find it distasteful.

    If there was a law that actually forbade me from making backup copies of my compact discs, then I'd get pissed. The DMCA does not do that. Read it some time.

  98. I must be missing something by 3.1415926535 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm reading through the 2600 ruling, and there's a section on here about the DMCA's constitutionality. The court says that because the DMCA deals with only the "functional" aspect of speech, it's "content-neutral". Since it's content neutral, it is therefore (this is the part I don't get) okay under the First Amendment.

    How does this work? Does this apply to other types of speech as well, or are they just making this stuff up as they go?

  99. The Bitches of the Corporations by Lunastorm · · Score: 1

    What you're asking these fools to do is impossible because they have become the bitches of the corporations. As a whore fiends for more crack from her local pimp/dealer, they fiend for the plethora of crap released by the RIAA and the MPAA. They do not seek alternatives or liberation from their master because they are addicts who don't mind the occassional anal rape, just as long as they have their dope. For that reason, I feel that they deserve whatever the fuck the RIAA and MPAA throw at them until they realize they are nothing but bitches and start making some shit that people want to hear or watch.

    --
    You die too easily.
  100. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by noahm · · Score: 1
    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.

    Huh? The DMCA outlaws methods of circumventing copy protection. DeCSS is illegal under the DMCA even if it is used to copy public domain material. When the copyright on a work expires and the item goes in to the public domain, you have the legal right to copy it, redistribute it, whatever. However, under the DMCA, you do not have the legal right to own the tools needed to copy the work. That is precisely the source of a large part of the injustice of the DMCA.

    Copyright violation is illegal and should (and will) remain so. However, the DMCA bans information solely on the basis that it can potentially be used to facilitate the violation of copyright, even if it has potential for perfectly legal use. That is unjust and wrong.

    The arrest of Dmitry Sklyarov is unjust because the tool he created has perfectly legal uses. Prosecuting people over DeCSS is unjust, because DeCSS has perfectly legal uses.

    The DMCA is a misguided and dangerous law that needs to be fought until it is corrected.

    noah

  101. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Grit · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.

    This is not true. The anticircumvention portions talk about devices and technologies which are used to protect access to copyrighted works--- it is the technology itself which is illegal. It doesn't matter whether DeCSS is used to access copyrighted or non-copyrighted works, the "device" itself is still illegal. (The judge in the 2600 case said that this issue wasn't yet "ripe" because nobody's tried to prevent access to non-copyrighted works yet.)

    Interestingly, a tool which is legal today (say, a DES cracker) might become illegal tomorrow if somebody starts using a content protection scheme which it defeats.

  102. What country do you live in? by Malcontent · · Score: 2

    You don't mean the US supreme court do you? You think they would actually rule against corporations? The only way that would happen is if the corporation or the CEO was a vocal supporter of and a large donor to the democratic party. Since most corporations are run by republicans and give a ton of money to the republican party no way in hell is this supreme court going to rule against them.

    --

    War is necrophilia.

    1. Re:What country do you live in? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Donating to the Democrats probably wouldn't help either. IIRC the DMCA was created while the Democrats were in power. Lets face it, both parties are heavily bought, and will do anything for more bri^H^H^Hgenerous campaign donations.

  103. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by UnifiedTechs · · Score: 2

    They don't think allowing backups should be illegal.

    Which it isn't.


    No, but if I am in possession of the software that is able to make those backups I can be arrested. The problem is that while making backups is legal any device I may possess to make those backups could be considered a "circumvention device" and is illegal. It becomes a catch 22, I can make and be in possesion of backups, but the way I make those backups is illegal.

    I could harp on some other points but this one really stood out to me.

  104. if the DMCA doesn't allow unauthorized decryption, by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By ReADiNG tHIs, YoU arE dECrypTiNG sECuRe TrANSmisSioN aNd In VioLAtioN oF thE lAW!!!

  105. Re:Reject it No kidding how many of you buy dvds? by |deity| · · Score: 2

    So, they are cool new toys, if the movie industry thought people would stop buying dvds they wouldn't back laws like these.

    Do you just like to complain and do nothing? This christmass ask your friends not to buy you dvds, don't buy them as gifts for others, and let people know why you are doing it.

    I doubt that will happen, though. The people who frequent this website like to flame and start arguments over programming languages, but they don't tend to ever do anything.

    Oh, not everyone, but the vast majority here will sit on their couch and watch the latest dvd while pondering how corrupt our government is and how unfair the courts are.

    --
    Environmentalists are their own worst enemy. ~tricklenews.com
  106. Re:Way to go FUCKING MODERATOR!!! This is a TROLL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i'm the one who moderated this.
    AND
    I
    AM
    A
    TROOLL!!!!

    buwahahahaaha.

    feel me anally rape you now!
    woot!!!!!!

  107. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My problem at the moment is not the DMCA, but what it can be used to permit.

    It doesn't take away "fair use rights", because those are rights not to be prosecuted for an activity, rather than a requirement that it be possible. It doesn't in itself stop you making backup copies or contradict the Amendments or whatever.

    What it can be used to do is protect and extend some existing laws... copyrights continuing long after the work passes into public domain through technological protection that is illegal to break (hopefully it wouldn't last that long, but it might be interesting to see the balance of rights in a real 'fair use copyright'/'public domain' case against the DMCA). And in itself it doesn't stop you playing a Region 1 DVD in a Region 4 player, but it can be used to stop people from allowing you to do so.

    Really I can't see it as particularly evil on it's own, but it doesn't really have much to recommend it and in combination with other bad laws, it's a killer.

  108. DMCA debate on campus by RainbowSix · · Score: 4, Informative

    At Carnegie Mellon University on Friday there is going to be a moderated debate between David Touretzky of DCSS webpage fame, and Michael Shamos who defended the DMCA in court against Touretzky.

    Here's the link: http://calendar.cs.cmu.edu/scsEvents/demo/554.html

    --
    --------
    It's OK to be social, just don't tell anyone about it.
  109. Not anymore... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is true that 20 years ago, -9xxx numbers were reserved for payphones. That was before the phone company started running out of phone numbers and needing new area codes. Nowadays, every possible number is assigned.

  110. speaking of copyright... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    star wars episode vi return of the jedi

    by

    lawrence kasdan and george lucas

    from the novel by george lucas from the novel

    second draft - december 19, 1982

    1 space 1

    the boundless heavens serve as a back-drop for the main title, followed
    by a roll-up, which crawls into infinity.

    episode vi:

    revenge of the jedi... luke skywalker has returned to his home planet
    of tatooine in an attempt to rescue his friend han solo from the
    clutches of the vile gangster jabba the hutt.

    little does luke know that the galactic empire has secretly begun
    construction on a new armored space station even more powerful than the
    first dreaded death star.

    when completed, this ultimate weapon will spell certain doom for the
    small band of rebels struggling to restore freedom to the galaxy...

    pan down to reveal a monstrous half-completed death star, its massive
    superstructure curling away from the completed section like the arms of
    a giant octopus. beyond, in benevolent contrast, floats the small,
    green moon of endor.

    an imperial star destroyer moves overhead toward the massive armored
    space station, followed by two zipping tie fighters. a small imperial
    shuttle rockets from the main bay of the ship and hustles toward the
    death star.

    2 int imperial shuttle - cockpit 2

    the shuttle captain makes contact with the death star.

    shuttle captain command station, this is st 321. code clearance blue.
    we're starting our approach. deactivate the security shield.

    death star controller (filtered vo) the security deflector shield will
    be deactivated when we have confirmation of your code transmission.
    stand by... you are clear to proceed.

    shuttle captain we're starting our approach.

    3 int death star - control room 3

    operators move about among the control panels. a shield operator hits
    switches beside a large screen, on which is a display of the death
    star, the moon endor, and a bright web delineating the invisible
    deflector shield.

    a control officer rushes over to the shield operator.

    officer inform the commander that lord vader's shuttle has arrived.

    operator yes, sir.

    the control officer moves to a view port and watches as the imperial
    shuttle lands in the massive docking bay. a squad of imperial
    stormtroopers moves into formation before the craft.

    4 int death star - main docking bay 4

    the death star commander, moff jerjerrod, a tall, confident technocrat,
    strides through the assembled troops to the base of the shuttle ramp.
    the troops snap to attention; many are uneasy about the new arrival.
    but the death star commander stands arrogantly tall.

    the exit hatch of the shuttle opens with a whoosh, revealing only
    darkness. then, heavy footsteps and mechanical breathing. from this
    black void appears darth vader, lord of the sith. vader looks over the
    assemblage as he walks down the ramp.

    jerjerrod lord vader, this is an unexpected pleasure. we're honored by
    your presence.

    vader you may dispense with the pleasantries, commander. i'm here to
    put you back on schedule.

    the commander turns ashen and begins to shake.

    jerjerrod i assure you, lord vader, my men are working as fast as they
    can.

    vader perhaps i can find new ways to motivate them.

    jerjerrod i tell you, this station will be operational as planned.

    vader the emperor does not share your optimistic appraisal of the
    situation.

    jerjerrod but he asks the impossible. i need more men.

    vader then perhaps you can tell him when he arrives.

    jerjerrod (aghast) the emperor's coming here?

    vader that is correct, commander. and he is most displeased with your
    apparent lack of progress.

    jerjerrod we shall double our efforts.

    vader i hope so, commander, for your sake. the emperor is not as
    forgiving as i am.

    5 ext road to jabba's palace - tatooine 5

    a lonely, windswept road meanders through the desolate tatooine
    terrain. we hear a familiar beeping and a distinctive reply before
    catching sight of artoo-detoo and see-threepio, making their way along
    the road toward the ominous palace of jabba the hutt.

    threepio of course i'm worried. and you should be, too. lando
    calrissian and poor chewbacca never returned from this awful place.

    artoo whistles timidly.

    threepio don't be so sure. if i told you half the things i've heard
    about this jabba the hutt, you'd probably short-circuit.

    the two droids fearfully approach the massive gate to the palace.

    threepio artoo, are you sure this is the right place? i better knock, i
    suppose.

    6 ext jabba's palace - gate 6

    threepio looks around for some kind of signaling device, then timidly
    knocks on the iron door.

    threepio (instantly) there doesn't seem to be anyone there. let's go
    back and tell master luke.

    a small hatch in the middle of the door opens and a spidery mechanical
    arm, with a large electronic eyeball on the end, pops out and inspects
    the two droids.

    strange voice tee chuta hhat yudd!

    threepio goodness gracious me!

    threepio points to artoo, then to himself.

    threepio artoo detoowha bo seethreepiowha ey toota odd mischka jabba du
    hutt.

    the eye looks from one robot to the other, there is a laugh then the
    eye zips back into the door. the hatch slams shut. artoo beeps his
    concern.

    threepio i don't think they're going to let us in, artoo. we'd better
    go.

    artoo beeps his reluctance as threepio turns to leave. suddenly the
    massive door starts to rise with a horrific metallic screech. the
    robots turn back and face an endless black cavity. the droids look at
    one another, afraid to enter.

    artoo starts forward into the gloom. threepio rushes after his stubby
    companion. the door lowers noisily behind them.

    threepio artoo, wait. oh, dear! artoo. artoo, i really don't think we
    should rush into all this.

    artoo continues down the corridor, with threepio following.

    threepio oh, artoo! artoo, wait for me!

    7 int jabba's palace - hallway 7

    the door slams shut with a loud crash that echoes throughout the dark
    passageway. the frightened robots are met by two giant, green gamorrean
    guards, who fall in behind them. threepio glances quickly back at the
    two lumbering brutes, then back to artoo. one guard grunts an order.
    artoo beeps nervously.

    threepio just you deliver master luke's message and get us out of here.
    oh my! oh! oh, no.

    walking toward them out of the darkness is bib fortuna, a humanlike
    alien with long tentacles protruding from his skull.

    bib die wanna wanga!

    threepio oh, my! die wanna wauaga. we -- we bring a message to your
    master, jabba the hutt.

    artoo lets out a series of quick beeps.

    threepio (cont) ... and a gift. (thinks a moment, then to artoo) gift,
    what gift?

    bib shakes his head negatively.

    bib nee jabba no badda. me chaade su goodie.

    bib holds out his hand toward artoo and the tiny droid backs up a bit,
    letting out a protesting array of squeaks. threepio turns to the
    strange-looking alien.

    threepio he says that our instructions are to give it only to jabba
    himself.

    bib thinks about this for a moment.

    threepio i'm terribly sorry. i'm afraid he's ever so stubborn about
    these sort of things.

    bib gestures for the droids to follow.

    bib nudd chaa.

    the droids follow the tall, tentacled alien into the darkness, trailed
    by the two guards.

    threepio artoo, i have a bad feeling about this.

    8 int jabba's throne room 8

    the throne room is filled with the vilest, most grotesque creatures
    ever conceived in the universe. artoo and threepio seem very small as
    they pause in the doorway to the dimly lit chamber. light shafts
    partially illuminate the drunken courtiers as bib fortuna crosses the
    room to the platform upon which rests the leader of this nauseating
    crowd: jabba the hutt. the monarch of the galactic underworld is a
    repulsive blob of bloated fat with a maniacal grin. chained to the
    horrible creature is the beautiful alien female dancer named oola. at
    the foot of the dais sits an obnoxious birdlike creature, salacious
    crumb. bib whispers something in the slobbering degenerate's ear. jabba
    laughs horribly, at the two terrified droids before him. threepio bows
    politely.

    threepio good morning.

    jabba bo shuda!

    the robots jump forward to stand before the repulsive, loose- skinned
    villain.

    threepio the message, artoo, the message.

    artoo whistles, and a beam of light projects from his domed head,
    creating a hologram of luke on the floor. the image grows to over ten
    feet tall, and the young jedi towers over the space gangsters.

    luke greetings, exalted one. allow me to introduce myself. i am luke
    skywalker, jedi knight and friend to captain solo. i know that you are
    powerful, mighty jabba, and that your anger with solo must be equally
    powerful. i seek an audience with your greatness to bargain for solo's
    life. (jabba's crowd laughs) with your wisdom, i'm sure that we can
    work out an arrangement which will be mutually beneficial and enable us
    to avoid any unpleasant confrontation. as a token of my goodwill, i
    present to you a gift: these two droids.

    threepio is startled by this announcement.

    threepio what did he say?

    luke (cont) ... both are hardworking and will serve you well.

    threepio this can't be! artoo, you're playing the wrong message.

    luke's hologram disappears.

    jabba laughs while bib speaks to him in huttese.

    jabba (in huttese subtitled) there will be no bargain.

    threepio we're doomed.

    jabba (in huttese subtitled) i will not give up my favorite decoration.
    i like captain solo where he is.

    jabba laughs hideously and looks toward an alcove beside the throne.
    hanging high, flat against the wall, exactly as we saw him last, is a
    carbonized han solo.

    threepio artoo, look! captain solo. and he's still frozen in carbonite.

  111. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by bnenning · · Score: 2
    How exactly has the DMCA hurt you personally, anyways? It has yet to hurt me at all


    When they came for the Jews...


    as I never really had the right to make backups of my stuff in the first place (EULAs, copy protection, etc)


    Don't be so quick to accept the theory that EULAs have any legal force. If software is a purchase and not a license, as this judge seems to realize, then you're perfectly free to break the copy protection, or rather you would be without the DMCA.


    If there was a law that actually forbade me from making backup copies of my compact discs, then I'd get pissed. The DMCA does not do that.


    Well, you already can't back up DVDs, and what about the new "copy-protected" CDs? Anything that enables you to back them up is going to be a "circumvention device".

    --
    How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  112. Public domain by |deity| · · Score: 2

    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.

    The DMCA can be used to prevent material from entering the public domain. If it is illegal to create a tool that can circumvent encryption or copy protection then how can that work ever become avaliable to the public.

    I care more about this issue then most of the others. If the corporations would give in trust a single copy of each work, to be put in trust for when the copyright ends.

    Not that I plan on living long enough to ever see anything created in the last 20-30 years go into the public domain. I would really like my great-great-great-great-grandchildren to be able to see Fight Club, when the government quits extending copyright and allows something to go back to the public domain.

    --
    Environmentalists are their own worst enemy. ~tricklenews.com
    1. Re:Public domain by aozilla · · Score: 2

      The DMCA can be used to prevent material from entering the public domain. If it is illegal to create a tool that can circumvent encryption or copy protection then how can that work ever become avaliable to the public.

      FUD. All it takes is one single person (possibly working outside the U.S.) to decrypt the work and then distribute it. If necessary that can even be done legally (either working outside the U.S. or by creating a tool specifically to decrypt public domain works), but that's not even necessary, because as long as the decryption is done, anonymously, further distribution and use is perfectly legal. Your great^4-grandchildren will have no problems seeing Fight Club, just save that copy of DeCSS you have lying around for the day when it becomes legal to decrypt it.

      --
      ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  113. The short list of why he's unsympathetic... by sterno · · Score: 1

    Because he's a hacker...
    Because he publishes a hacker magazine...
    Because he's got long hair (I'll take your word for it, I don't have a photo handy :))

    Has it GOTTEN to the point where no one with long hair should expect a fair trial? I thought it had been there for the past couple hundred years, but perhaps I missed something.
    Just read the transcripts from the original trial and it's stunningly obvious how unsympathetic he is. It is not because of anything he's actively doing but an image that he portrays none the less.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:The short list of why he's unsympathetic... by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

      A couple hundred years ago, the people without long hair wore wigs to make up for it.

      --
      __
      Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
  114. Mark my words by Saturn49 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    When the smoke and mirrors all fade (on both sides), the part of the DMCA that deals with DeCSS and Dimitri (yes, I've actually read it) will boil down to this:

    The DMCA cannot hinder free speech - it actually says that IN the DMCA (thus preventing the DMCA to be struck down as unconstitutional). But distributing a mechanism to break encryption is illegal, and probably will stay that way.

    Source code will fall under free speech, and therefore will be able to be distributed at will.

    Binaries will not. They will fall under the DMCA because they don't fall under free speech.

    Distributing all the pieces (compilers, source, etc) to CREATE the binaries will be ok. Just as it is perfectly legal to distribute the materials to make a bomb. AFAIK, even building one isn't a crime. Using one or distributing bombs is a big no-no.

    I'm just waiting for the precedent to be set that code is free speech. It will happen. The hoopla around DeCSS proves it is utterly stupid NOT to let code fall under free speech. Try printing a binary on a tee-shirt though.


    Other parts of the DMCA (including the ones that cover fair-use) will also be contested, and the precedents will be set.

    1. Re:Mark my words by psin+psycle · · Score: 1
      Try printing a binary on a tee-shirt though

      I wonder if you could make some fractal representation of the binary and print that on ties. You might end up with a pretty trippy tie if you did that!

      --
      Need a website host? Try out http://WebQualityHost.net
    2. Re:Mark my words by Canis · · Score: 1
      It might not (directly) hinder free speech, but it will certainly hinder fair usage, including education and (thus indirectly affecting speech) quoting for the purposes of review or comment.

      Take a look at this quote from the decision. Maybe I'm misunderstanding the precise legal implications. In fact, I'd quite happily have my mind set at rest about it -- because the way I'm reading it at the moment, I'm quite flabberghasted by what it says:

      First, they contend that subsection 1201(c)(1), which provides that "[n]othing in this section shall affect rights, remedies, limitations or defenses to copyright infringement, including fair use, under this title," can be read to allow the circumvention of encryption technology protecting copyrighted material when the material will be put to "fair uses" exempt from copyright liability.13 We disagree that subsection 1201(c)(1) permits such a reading. Instead, it clearly and simply clarifies that the DMCA targets the circumvention of digital walls guarding copyrighted material (and trafficking in circumvention tools), but does not concern itself with the use of those materials after circumvention has occurred. Subsection 1201(c)(1) ensures that the DMCA is not read to prohibit the "fair use" of information just because that information was obtained in a manner made illegal by the DMCA.

      If I understand this correctly, it's saying "You're not allowed to access protected material by circumventing an access control mechanism; but if you do (but you mustn't because it's illegal) you would hypothetically be allowed your fair use rights."

      Does the judge really think this is right or even the intention of Congress? Remember that access control is not limited to "only letting you use what you've paid for", it can be any arbitrary controls the copyright owner can find a technical way to enforce.

      To draw a parallel: Imagine if polling stations were allowed to turn people away at the door based on any arbitrary prejudice they liked; "We're not letting you in to vote because you're [white / black / male / female / gay / straight / republican / democrat / libertarian / whatever]."

      If this decision was applied to that situation, it would seem to be saying, "It's illegal for you to force your way into the polling station and vote. Should you do so, however, you'd be allowed to actually vote before we throw you in prison; since your right to vote is still available to you, this is perfectly fair and constitutional. Have a nice day."

      Am I reading this right? Have I missed something? And am I the only one who thinks this is obscene?

    3. Re:Mark my words by Saturn49 · · Score: 1

      I read the DMCA as allowing the circumvention of access control mechanisms, but denying the right to _distribute_ the circumvention tools.

      Thus, it is more like a maze setup in front of the polling booth. If you can get through the maze, you can vote. But you can't distribute maps telling others how to get through the maze.

      The DMCA has several sections that outline and maintain the ability to reverse-engineer cryptography - the actual process of reverse-engineering is not illegal. But distributing tools to crack the encryption is illegal. From what I've read, the DMCA is the ultimate anti-script-kiddie-law ever conceived.

  115. Checks and Balances by sterno · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think the checks and balances are intact for the following reason:

    I'm just as afraid of Bush and Ashcroft screwing up our country as I am of the judiciary. Let us also not forget that congress' wisdom was what got this stuff into court in the first place. The checks and balances are just fine... each branch of government is exceptionally capable of screwing everything up!

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  116. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by alsta · · Score: 3, Informative

    "The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain."

    This is true, but the DMCA places hurdles on Copyrighted material ever being forced to become Public Domain.

    "You mean for importing a program into this country and distributing it in this country."

    Not to re-hash an old debacle, but he is an employee of a company that did this. He didn't personally traffic this for his own demise. He may be guilty of being an employee of this company which carried this traffic to our borders, but shouldn't it strike you as strange if Bill Gates was personally indicted for enacting a monopoly? In this country, a company is legally a person.

    "I've told them about the intimidation and outright threatening of scientists who dare to expose flaws in a sham security system.

    Completely irrelevant to the DMCA."

    No it isn't. The DMCA specifically states that circumvention of a reasonable attempt to protect Copyrighted material is illegal. Hence it is illegal to point out flaws in a security system which would allegedly aid circumvention. Aiding and abetting.

    "They don't think that reverse engineering for system interoperability should be illegal.

    Also specifically protected by the DMCA."

    Then how come the DeCSS thing is such a problem? Perhaps because the DMCA does in fact protect against circumventing protective measures on Copyrighted materials?

    "They don't think allowing backups should be illegal.

    Which it isn't."

    Again, circumvention of a protective mechanism is prohibited under the governing of the DMCA. So copying a DVD or copy protected music CD is illegal. Even for purposes of backups. Because the CSS is considered a reasonable attempt of securing the Copyrighted material.

    "They don't think that scientific research should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA. You should read it some time."

    Specifically exempt from the DMCA if there is an approval from the Copyright holder and/or if the subject is in the Public Domain and/or if the subject isn't reasonably protected. But since poor mechanisms of protection are accepted in Court, I don't blame the scientists of being afraid.

    The DMCA has been applied in all of the above cases, in terms of supressive measures to maintain information/studies captive or openly challenged in Court. I think your literal interpretation of the DMCA shows exactly how easy and how dangerous it is to get the wrong idea about something so evil.

    --
    Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think. -Ayn Rand
  117. Re:Nader voters, front and center... by Glytch · · Score: 3, Insightful

    No, blame the 63% of eligible American voters who just didn't bother to vote at all.

    Land of the free? Don't make me laugh.

  118. DCMA 1 -- Freedom 1 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll
    For those of us who _work_ for a living, unlike Eric S. Raymond who (for all I know) lives on disability checks (he has cerebral palsy) we value the DCMA.


    It's important to be able to protect your assests from copying. People should have to pay for movies and music. I know that sounds horrible to commies like you, but that's the truth.

    If artists didn't get paid for their work, there would be no more art.

    1. Re:DCMA 1 -- Freedom 1 by gvgisme · · Score: 1

      What about those of us who have paid for our movies and music and then are prevented from actually accessing them by this overbroad law. The DMCA has absolutely nothing to do with copying, and everything to do with control over what has already been sold. The only way to fix this law is for Congress (or the courts, if they have the guts) to preserve the first sale doctrine by emphasizing that the buyer of a copy of a work has the right (i.e. authority of the copyright holder) to access that work as they please.

  119. Avoiding sacrificial lambs by sterno · · Score: 2

    This is a legitimate lawsuit because it attempts to establish legal guidelines for publication of such things. As it stands right now, the mere threat of lawsuit is sufficient to keep many people quiet. If this goes to court at least people know where they stand. If the court had ruled in favor of Felten, then any loose lawsuits would be seen as frivolous against the background of this case law.

    Now, we don't know what will happen. Some person will have to be the sacrificial lamb to find out what the limits of this law are, and that person will suffer for it.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  120. what the problem feels like to me... by antistuff · · Score: 1

    often when ive tried to explain these sort of things to people, the just dont belive me that it exists. they think i must be misunderstanding it or somthing because there is no way a law like that could ever get passed. i think that says a lot for how riduculous this all is, when normal people think that it is so horrible it could never happen.

    i tell them to wait a few months, the rate thigns are goign theyll end up being affected by somthing eventualy (dont mean just dmca, also other new laws that are being passed).

  121. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Elbereth · · Score: 1, Troll

    When they came for the Jews...


    Holy shit, you mean the DMCA actually allows racists to kill people?

    This is the sort of argument that I'm talking about. You can't even defend your position without a straw-man argument.
  122. 2600 Was Well Reasoned by one-egg · · Score: 2, Informative
    IANAL, but I've been reading court decisions for a pretty long time. The appellate decision was extremely well written and well reasoned. We may not like it, but given the way they presented and analyzed the relevant arguments, I think this case will hold up on appeal to the Supreme Court. If I were the EFF, I'd drop it right now. As another poster pointed out, you have to choose your battles. The best thing that could happen would be to have the Supreme Court deny certiorari.

    I found only one really serious legal error in the entire opinion. On page 64, the judges state in a footnote:

    However, those who maintain the linked sites can instantly make their protected material available for linking by Corley by the simple expedient of deleting DeCSS from their web sites.
    That's sophistry. Corley alleged that the prohibition infringed his freedom to link to other material on those people's sites. It is not incumbent on those site owners to choose whether Corley links, or to take action to make his linking possible. One might as well argue that a protestor wearing a prohibited obscene T-shirt should remove the offensive clothing to make it possible for a TV news show to carry footage of the protest.
    1. Re:2600 Was Well Reasoned by gvgisme · · Score: 1

      I noticed that too. But consider even further -- if a website owner didn't want Corley to report on the contents of his website, all he would have to do would be to include DeCSS and inform Corely about it. Think about that.

  123. MOD PARENT UP by Sarcasmooo! · · Score: 2

    Up, I say! UP!

    hoohah

  124. someone is a little paranoid by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You write conspiracy theories in your spare time.

    Yes american media sits in rooms thinking up ways to keep the public in the dark and away from there reps.

    ...............

  125. Communication is key... by corky6921 · · Score: 1, Offtopic

    I am sure you have a great point, but it is obscured by your clear lack of grammatical skills. I must warn you: even though you may think that being an engineer means that you don't need to communicate with other people, this is NOT the case.

    No one has perfect grammar, but to be able to make an eloquent point in writing is crucial, regardless of your job title. You lose your audience if your prose is rife with spelling mistakes and poorly constructed sentences. On the other hand, if you can easily sum up the benefits of your idea, you can win supporters -- even if that idea is as simple as going forward with a project you have at work. Never forget that those pointy-haired bosses about whom you like to joke are the ones who will be reading resumes and project proposals of yours. They could reject them based not on content, but on presentation. It makes a difference.

    I urge you to take a writing skills class before you graduate. Not only will it help you get a job by writing a good resume, but it will help you keep that job by being able to communicate with others effectively.

  126. More pragmatic by horza · · Score: 2

    I don't buy CDs until they come down to the price I am prepared to pay for it. When an album gets released for 14ukp it makes me sick (I'll never understand why the cost of production plummeted between the switch from tape to CD but prices actually increased), but when I see one I want for under 10ukp I buy it immediately. When going to see a film I refuse to pay 9ukp for a seat but will watch in North London for 3.50ukp. Renting a DVD in the library costs me 2ukp instead of 3.50ukp in a video store AND I know the money is going back into an institution that is vital for a healthy society. Plus I make sure I get a chipped DVD player. If I buy a legitimate copy of a DVD in the USA why am I banned from playing my legitimate bought copy of a film? If I am going to live in a capitalist society then I am going to try and work the rules to my advantage. This an attempt to check an abuse of power, and is a financial issue not a moral issue (unlike for instance Esso trying to destroy the planet). The moral blame lies with corrupt politicians passing such a law. And, as you say, apathetic people rolling over and accept being treated like doormats. You don't have to retreat into being a Tibetan monk, just don't let people walk all over you. The advantage of a capitalist society is that if people exercise a bit of patience... most companies can't afford to and will drop prices to that which people are prepared to pay.

    Phillip.

    1. Re:More pragmatic by mpe · · Score: 2

      I'll never understand why the cost of production plummeted between the switch from tape to CD but prices actually increased.

      Part of it is that the CD is portrayed as being the "better" media, so is worth more, thus can be sold for more. You see exactly the same thing happening with DVD vs video tape. Odds on the extra profit isn't going to the actual people who's creative effort is appreciated though.

      If I buy a legitimate copy of a DVD in the USA why am I banned from playing my legitimate bought copy of a film? If I am going to live in a capitalist society then I am going to try and work the rules to my advantage.

      This is the point, many corporates actually want something which is only capitalist for them. The same way they like the idea of "globalization" when it means they can get raw materials and labour from the cheapest possible source. But not when it means that customers (and for that matter retailers) can purchase goods from the cheapest source. Be they DVDs or clothing...

    2. Re:More pragmatic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's exactly what I do. I only buy CDs when they are priced reasonably ($14US is my personal limit). Additionally, I won't buy anything with that dumb CD copy protection on it. Although with how the RIAA has been acting lately (trying to keep their hacking activities legal, for one) I'm considering boycotting RIAA CDs altogether. Trouble is I seem to have trouble finding indy bands I like (I'm assuming I just have bad luck with this).

  127. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by sithlord2 · · Score: 1




    Huh? The DMCA outlaws methods of circumventing copy protection. DeCSS is illegal under the DMCA even if it is used to copy public domain material.


    DeCSS is a tool to decrypt the movie. Why would would you want to encrypt public domain material ?
    For public-domain material, encryption has no use at all...

    --
    ...You are over-qualified and under-paid. If we give you a raise, we will break the cosmic balance of the universe.
  128. Newspaper headlines 3 march 2002 by zmooc · · Score: 1
    4 American scientists granted political asylym
    AMSTERDAM - 4 American scientists were granted political asylum in the Netherlands. They applied for it in december after they were being prosecuted for publishing scientific work which has become illegal under the DMCA which became effective in 1998. The situation for [computer and math] scientists in the USA has become comparable to the situation in the USSR during the cold war. More scientists are expected to follow these 4.

    IANAL but I think scientists (which are being prosecuted) that would apply for asylum right now would make a good chance. Someone should just try it; it'll wake the US up.

    --
    0x or or snor perron?!
  129. Oh that's a good one!! by ebyrob · · Score: 1
    The government doesn't try to ban something unless there's a problem.

    I bet you also think that because it's THE LAW, you should follow it!! Oh and here's another one: Since we see slow changes, they must be the explanation for everything!

    As for gun control. How many people were robbed/raped/murdered/oppressed last year because they *didn't* have one? The amendment comes second because it was meant to protect the one just before it...

  130. Thought on the "Your Rights Online" lady by zyqqh · · Score: 2

    What /. really needs is a second form of the "Your Rights Online" icon. Take the same Lady Justice, bent over, getting raped in the rear by good ole' Uncle Sam. I'll gladly volunteer my gimp skills, as long as _this_ article's icon gets changed to that.

    --
    // zyqqh
    1. Re:Thought on the "Your Rights Online" lady by RDskutter · · Score: 1

      I'll second that

  131. um...just a couple comments by Jack1Eye · · Score: 1

    Judges get to where they are through being thoroughly qualified for the position, such as having a law degree and serving as a lawyer for a number of years. Being lawyers, they are quite adept at understanding the facts of a situation, a skill you sorely lack.

    Judges tend to be the people who step on the least amount of toes and frankly most of them are not very adept at all(especially at the lower levels). Generally someone rewards his friend by appointing them a judge and trust me these judges won't ever forget who appointed them. It's hard to be a judge as it requires the right friends, but once you are a judge, you're pretty much a judge for life. You would be amazed at the sheer incompetence of some of the judges in the American and Canadian judicial systems as they were appointed many years back and completely seemed to have jumped off the common sense train.

  132. I don't see why not by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    The RIAA has said spesificaly that they would not sue him. He was suing them for threating to sue him.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  133. It's odd by inKubus · · Score: 1

    Strange, and not very likely, but it seems odd that this whole terrorism/war thing happens right during the midst of some of the most important changes to society since well, World War II, and specifically, the Atomic Bomb. Now it is information, money, power that is at stake, rather than the fate of the Earth. It is now that we are dividing up power for the next 50 years. Right now we are undergoing amazing changes, many of them in the digital world which pretty much affects all other fields of study. I mean, would DNA research have made their discoveries without the advances of computing and information technology. I think not. Would business even been capable of managing this massive amount of money they make without the advances of computers? Odds are most certainly against it. Doesn't it follow, then, that laws limiting the development of technology today will limit our technological evolution in the future? Until now, technology was mainly limited by nature. In the last 20 years, technology has become limited by marketing. In the last 3, technology has become regulated by law. It's almost as if someone who is gaining a lot of money and power and information right now is not willing to give up their position when we find something better. So they repress it. OR perhaps they are sure their way is the best, but we all know nothing is perfect. Remember back, I ask you, to September 10th, 2001. Everyone slightly worried about a minor recession, mainly in stock prices, on a waning technology sector. We all just ignore the giant event under our noses. The California power crisis. California can not afford power. Now, California buys power at market prices, just like everone else. So Everyone Else was paying the same outrageous prices for power, we just had government regulations in place. It's a classic case of a bug in the system. The "market" created overly high prices which really mean nothing, and created a huge loss on PAPER. So naturally, every power company lost billions and is GOING TO NEED TO BE MAKING IT UP over probably the next 5 years. What does your computer run on? Power. What do hotels and airports run on? Power. What does everything in the economy run on? Power. I think you see my point. We are dependent on power, and it is in fact a very major expense for many large corporations. So even say a 10% increase in power expenses can affect a company that uses a lot of energy; some companies run a small bottom line and that 10% can upset the balance. I recieved a letter FROM THE PWER COMPANY speaking about a DOUBLE in power prices by NEXT SUMMER. So, in order to make up for it, they must lay off many hundreds of employees. Perhaps this could be the reason for this sudden rise in unemployment. You see, in this long, drawn out explaination, I am trying to show that this is all too convenient. Perhaps maybe looking at the big picture rather than the one AoL/Time Warner wants you to see. They want you to forget the past, forget what was so nice about those days. Make us feel like we don't have a choice. Well, we do. As a mass, we are the consumers, and we have the ultimate choice. But by passing these idiotic lies, they are removing our choices, and by doing, limiting our rights to affect our own destiny. I am not a conspiracy theorist, but surely you must admit, based on knowledge of previous shinanegans in the U.S. Government, that it IS possible for something as horrible as a terrorist incident, and even a WAR, to be used as justification for changes (including new laws) in our country that are against the constitution. It's strange how all these cases (landmark cases) are scheduled now (after this incident), and how they are all simply dismissed, because in light of the "horrible incidents" they are petty and don't deserve to be debated. Benjamin Franklin said we should always be suspicious of authority, especially those who try to make changes you know are wrong under "the guise of security." We are simply going along with this, because CNN tells us of "threats of terrorism" and we are "at war". With what? With whom. Prove it! And today, it was the pot in the kettle when President G. Dubya Bush says the recession we are now facing is a result of Terrorism and the Long War we are about to Fight. WE WERE FACING RECESSION BEFORE SEPT. 11TH BECAUSE OF THIS POWER THING. Hey, just look at your power bill, and how much of your income it takes before you label this Flamebait.

    And if the feds bail out Enron in the next 6 months, you can bet everything I said is true.

    --
    Cool! Amazing Toys.
    1. Re:It's odd by ethereal · · Score: 1

      You are nuts.

      In Illinois at least, the power to run an entire household (ok, with gas heat but otherwise all electric) is cheaper than the cost of my internet access for the month, it's cheaper than my phone bill for the month, in fact the electric bill is about the cheapest bill that I have to pay every month. Maybe you folks in California should just not destroy your power industry, and it will treat you right in return :)

      Oh yeah, and 75% of this cheap power is nuclear which probably helps a lot with the cost since it doesn't fluctuate like gas/oil. Although we're in trouble if there's ever an accident, I admit.

      --

      Your right to not believe: Americans United for Separation of Church and

  134. Um, no by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    YES. Absolutely. Their mission isn't to defend people, its to protect Electronic Freedom

    That isn't the case at all. EEF was created to help defend people as well as change the law.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  135. Learn to read by autopr0n · · Score: 1

    if youd've read one sentance further, you'd have gotten to the part where he said he was going to get a law degree.

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
  136. Hope for a Supreme Court review? by JoeShmoe · · Score: 2

    I just saw over on CNet this article:

    http://news.cnet.com/news/0-1005-200-8011238.htm l

    Correct me if I'm wrong, but it looks like New York Appeals Court is saying one thing and California Appeals Court is saying the opposite?

    Pure speech versus non-expressive speech...which is the accurate description of DeCSS?

    It seems to me that since we have two conflicting rulings between states, there would be a pressing interest in escalating the issue to the federal level? Or is it possible for two different standards to be applied in two different regions?

    Suddenly I'm a lot happier to be a Californian, even though it was the f'n studios that started the whole DeCSS fiasco to begin with...

    - JoeShmoe

    _

    --
    -- I wonder which will go down in history as the bigger failure: the War on Drugs or the War on Filesharing
  137. Rights to view the DVD you bought? by bbn · · Score: 1

    Third, the Appellants argue that an individua who buys a DVD has the "authority of the copyright owner" to view he DVD, and therefore is exempted from the DMCA pursuant to subsection I 1201 (a) (3) (A) when the buyer circumvents an encryption technology in order to view the DVD on a competing platform (such as linux). The basic flaw in this argument is that it misreads subsection 1201(a)(3)(A). That provision exempts from liability those who would "decrypt" an encrypted DVD with the authority of a copyright owner, not those who would "view" a DVD with the authority of a copyright owner. In any event, the Defendants offers no evidence that the Plaintiffs have either explicitly or implicitly authorized DVD buyers to circumvent encryption technology to su port use on multiple platforms.


    So you apparently might have the right to view the DVD but not the right to decrypt it, not even if you can't view it without decrypting.

    And just because you bought and payed for the DVD, the studios never agreed that you had the right to view it on a device of your own choosing.

  138. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by vidarh · · Score: 4, Insightful
    You don't get it. Any copyrighted material enters the public domain after a while - in the US the constitution specifically grants congress only the right to pass law that grant copyright for a limited time. So if you buy a DVD today, the contents of that DVD will enter the public domain at some time.

    However, if that DVD uses CSS, and it is the only source you can get the content from, you're stuck. Even though the work is in the public domain, and you can legally copy it, under the DMCA you can't legally obtain the tools for breaking the encryption used.

    Thus, copy protection via encryption can be used artifically extend your copyright protection, since you can go after anyone that copies the work even after it has entered the public domain, and get them thrown in jail for violating the DMCA. Even the threat of that will be a major protection for the movie studios and others.

    As I see it, the DMCA is in part a way for the US government to work around the restrictions placed on it by the US constitution.

  139. Farenheit 451 by Salsaman · · Score: 2
    This situation reminds me of the film 'Farenheit 451'.

    Everbody who reads Slashdot should memorise one line of deCSS, so that we can reconstruct it when they come round to burn the books, CD's and hard drives.

    1. Re:Farenheit 451 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI the book came first.

      Having everyone who reads Slashdot memorize part of DeCSS might not be such a wise idea. Most of us are modded-down trolls and skript kiddies, you know. ;)

  140. Linux DVD players still OK by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 2
    At least I think so, but IANAL.

    I've just ploughed my way through the entire 2600 appeal judgement. It was heavy going since the posted document appears to be a scan of the raw transcript, complete with phonetic typos and dropped letters.

    The meat of the judgement is on how the "functional" aspects of DeCSS weigh against its "expressive" aspects. Two key elements seem to have wieghed against 2600 in this case:

    1. 2600 explicitly advocated using DeCSS to break the law. Such advocacy is not protected speech. Just as your right to swing your fist ends at my nose, so does your right to tell someone else to swing their fist. If 2600 had advocated using DeCSS purely for "fair use" purposes then they would have had a much stronger case.
    2. DeCSS, as posted, is a key component in the illegal ripping of DVDs. This does not require the user to read and understand DeCSS, just to compile and run it.

    So now consider a hypothetical DVD player for Linux. Its distributed as source, but if compiled and run unmodified then it simply plays DVDs in exactly the same way as any licensed player. The bulk of DeCSS is to be found inside it, and any user with a modicum of technical knowledge could add a one line patch to make the player to divert a copy of the decrypted data into a separate file.

    It seems fairly clear to me that the distribution of this program, even in source, would be protected under the First Amendment. At the very least the MPAA would need to get a separate injunction to cover it, and to obtain such an injunction they would need to overcome the functional vs expressive hurdle.

    In the 2600 case the DeCSS code was distributed in a form which, when run without modification, would create an unencrypted copy of a movie. But our hypothetical Linux player would not do this. For the purpose of a would-be DVD copyright breaker the program has no use. The fact that a one-line patch could turn it into such a program is irrelevant, just as the cryptographic weakness of CSS was irrelevent to its being an "effective" content protection measure for legal purposes.

    Suppose the Linux DVD player allows you to grab screenshots, or even extract short clips? It would probably still be protected, since such extracts would generally be for "fair use".

    What would push this hypothetical player over the line would be publishing instructions for making the 1-line patch, especially if accompanied by a suggestion that this be used to break copyright law. Even then, it would be the patch instructions that would be the legitamate target of DMCA enforcement, not the player.

    Paul.

    --
    You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
    1. Re:Linux DVD players still OK by ickle_matt · · Score: 1

      Unfortunately not: pp 30-31

      Third, the Appellants argue that an individual who buys a DVD has the "authority of the copyright owner" to view the DVD, and therefore is exemted from the DMCA pursuant to subsection 1201 (a) (3) (A) when the buyer circumvents an encryption technology in order to view the DVD on a competing platform (such as linux). The basic flaw in this argument is that it misreads subsection 1201(a)(3)(A). That provision exempts from liability those who would "decrypt" an encrypted DVD with the authority of a copyright owner, not those who would "view" a DVD with the authority of a copyright owner. In any event, the Defendants offer no evidence that the Plaintiffs have either explicitly or implicitly authorized DVD buyes to circumvent encryption technology to support use on multiple platforms"

      Ie. Buying a DVD does not grant any right to view it, especially not on Linux.

  141. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by clare-ents · · Score: 2

    "
    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.
    "

    Like an ebook of Alice in Wonderland which is out of copyright.

    Is it legal to circumvent the access controls on this since it's out of copyright?

    --
    Only two things are infinite, the universe and human stupidity, and I'm not sure about the former. (Einstein)
  142. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by mpe · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You can rant and rave but let's face it: one of the jobs of the DoJ is to defend the government

    However they appear to be currently rather selective about doing their job. Otherwise we would have expected them to have squashed (revokation of of corporate charter and arrest of those who lied in court) Microsoft a few months back.

  143. Offshore intellectual capital banks? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    "This judge apparently believes that the fact that hundreds of scientists are currently afraid to publish their work
    and that scientific conferences are relocating overseas isn't a problem,"


    How long before we see countries that haven't passed a DMCA-style law become a magnet for researchers in a similar way that some countries have become a magnet for capital banking services?

    Brain-drain anyone?
  144. Can't this be a good thing? by Peter+Winnberg · · Score: 1
    Let's begin with the fact that I'm not a lawyer.

    If DeCSS is ruled illegal under the Digital Millenium Copyright Act and ruled as free speech under other laws, see here. Isn't this just evidence that the Digital Millenium Copyright Act limits free speech?

    I know that the Bunner case is not a complete victory, it's just the preliminary injunction against him was overturned but still.

  145. RIAA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    wonder who would like to know about the RIAA, might be liable for copyright enfringement...

    Did you know they are using software (HeirMenu's) from DHTMLlab - Internet.com. and Didnt Pay for it... if you talk with cristina the liscensing person from Internet.com she will verify this...

  146. The motion was not about frivolousness by werdna · · Score: 5, Insightful

    RIAA says "publish and we'll sue you or worse, we'll tell the FBI your research is a circumvention device" Why is it frivilous for Felten to come before a judge and say "hey, do they really have a case?"

    The motion was not about frivolousness of the underlying questions (whether Felton could publish) and it was not about whether there was a case -- it was about whether there was a controversy.

    Federal courts only have jurisdiction under the U.S. Constitution over "cases and controversies," and cannot give advisory opinions. If there is no actual dispute between the parties, the Court must not hear the case.

    That was the basis for the motion to dismiss. RIAA said, "Whoops, we were wrong -- we're not going to sue if you publish." So Felton sued for a declaratory judgment.

    There are exceptions to the requirement that a case be justiciable, and arguably this was such a case, capable of repetition yet evading review and infringing closely on the limits of the First Amendment by chilling free speech. That was the issue before the Court.

    The subtle, totally legal, justiciability question was always hard. On the merits, I think it was very close, particularly absent an elaborate pattern and track record of sending letters to other researchers, though I liked EFF's first amendment "chilling" argument quite a bit. But I could easily see the question going the other way, and surviving an appeal.

    But don't get this wrong -- this is not a victory for DMCA on the merits, not by a long shot. It is a procedural loss for the EFF for persisting to bring a case on facts that the RIAA was smart enough to drop. This goes to picking one's battles -- this could have been a good one for the anti-technology regulation movement, but it was not to be. Precisely, by the way, for that reason.

  147. First sale doctrine by Paul+Johnson · · Score: 2
    Hmmm. I don't know exactly what the court was trying to say here. For that matter, I don't think I understand what 2600 was trying to argue. The legal status of using DeCSS to make fair use of purchased material was not at issue.


    The recent decision on first sale seems to me to apply here. Regardless of the fine print, if you buy a DVD you own both it and the copy of the data thereon. Viewing that data by any means cannot be considered a violation of the rights of the copyright holder even if done on an unlicensed player. Likewise, a bona-fide player could not be argued to be a "protection circumvention device" if it honours the protection flags on the disk.


    In any event, the Defendants offer no evidence that the Plaintiffs have either explicitly or implicitly authorized DVD buyes to circumvent encryption technology to support use on multiple platforms


    Which is not to say that such evidence could not be found, merely that 2600 failed to present it in this case.


    I think that if a case actually hung on this point then it would not be difficult to establish that purchasing a DVD implies that you are allowed to look at the movie it contains, and that this implied license does not contain any implicit limitation as to the technology you can use to do so. Even if there was an explicit clause in the fine print on the back of the case it would certainly not be legally binding in the UK, and probably not in the US either, although UCITA might make this an interesting question in some states.


    Paul.

    --
    You are lost in a twisty maze of little standards, all different.
    1. Re:First sale doctrine by ickle_matt · · Score: 1
      Hmmm. I don't know exactly what the court was trying to say here. For that matter, I don't think I understand what 2600 was trying to argue. The legal status of using DeCSS to make fair use of purchased material was not at issue.

      In the Appelate Reply Brief submitted by EFF/2600 on 19th March they argue that the ability to make non-infringing use of DeCSS is limited by the decision, and that if DMCA does allow fair use to be restricted in this way(and others) then it is unconstitutional.

      The Appelate reply brief states that:

      The Studios argue that a purchaser of a DVD containing their movies does not receive legal "authority" to decrypt the work. Studios at 63 n. 43. Instead, they claim that "authorization by the Studios [upon purchase of a DVD] has been limited to accessing DVD content via authorized equipment." Id. But where and how has this authority "limited"? Nowhere during or after the purchase transaction are consumers informed, much less contractually bound, to view the work only on "authorized equipment." To the contrary, DVDs are sold with no contractual restrictions whatsoever.

      thereby placing the onus on the Plaintiff to show that authority is limited (I think - IANAL).

  148. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Happy+Monkey · · Score: 2

    I don't think you know what a straw-man argument is. That was hyperbole. Obviously, the DMCA isn't the same as the Holocaust. However, your argument that the DMCA isn't bad because it doesn't hurt you personally is the same as the "When they came for the Jews..." statement. You may wish to make arguments that the DMCA isn't bad in general, but you said How exactly has the DMCA hurt you personally, anyways? It has yet to hurt me at all, as I never really had the right to make backups of my stuff in the first place (EULAs, copy protection, etc). The DMCA is practically a non-issue in my life, though I do find it distasteful. If it's a bad law, it's a bad law, even if it only hurts some guy in Intercourse, PA who lives with his parents.

    --
    __
    Do ya feel happy-go-lucky, punk?
  149. land of the ?? by bug1 · · Score: 1

    irony

  150. What the fuck are you Yanks doing down there? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Why are you letting idiotic laws like this get passed? Now all I have to do is wait for your stupid laws to be exported to my country. Great.



    Yeah, democracy is great alright... it produces such brilliant crap like this. Thanks USA.



    Land of the free, my ass.

  151. Telegraph your congressdrone by wowbagger · · Score: 2

    If you don't want to be troubled to write a physical letter (and don't want your dandruff to be mistaken for anthrax) then go to Western Union's site and telegraph your congressdrone. Telegraphs get read since they cost money.

    Bury them in Western Union messages and they will perk up!

  152. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And... you can still copyright a work that includes public domain material.
    How many /. people have kids? If you do, I'd gather it is pretty likely that you have a book of "Grimm's Fairy Tales", or "Mother Goose" stories. All the stories and fairy tales are PD, but the books are copyrighted.

  153. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Sodium+Attack · · Score: 2
    Funny, I've talked to a lot of people who are far from geeks, much less "pirates".... You know what? They don't think any of those things should be occuring.

    In other words, you tell them your side of the story only, and--surprise, surprise--they agree with your side of the story.

    People are only as stupid as you seem to think they are, when they listen to you tell them how stupid they are.

    People are only as anti-DMCA as you seem to think they are, when they listen to you tell them how anti-DMCA they are.

    --

    Never take moderation advice from sigs, including this one.

  154. Gore voters, front and center... by Sodium+Attack · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think you've got it backwards--Gore cost Nader the election. After all, if all Gore voters had voted for Nader instead, Nader would have won.

    --

    Never take moderation advice from sigs, including this one.

  155. Not that bad by Martin+Spamer · · Score: 2


    Tactically this is not necessarily a bad thing. The EFF can appeal to a higher court even if EFF had won, RIAA would have appealed to a higher court.

    RIAA et. al. have essentially unlimited resources to fight these cases.

    EFF, have limited funds so quick cases in a lower court preserves EFF legal funds.

    Further more if you keep losing in the lower courts you can maintain a tactical advantage by retaining the initiative until the last stage. The decision of the highest court is then binding on all lower courts.

    The RIAA does not have the advantage of losing in lower courts, imagine the headlines if they lost at any level.

    "MPA/RIAA lose as DCMA ruled unconstitutional"

  156. People are stupid. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Have you ever met a politician?

  157. Outcome Tax by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    You can tell your employer not to do this, and they'll stop. Be forewarned, however, that it's against the law, since you can be fined for withholding too little (or too much, for that matter). You're not likely to get anything worse than a fine (unless you then don't pay your taxes), but it'll still cost you.

    Virg

    1. Re:Outcome Tax by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      However, you can just mail in your quarterly payment yourself that satisfies the minimum requirements to not be fined. This is what self-employeed people and contractors have to do.

  158. CPCDI by aicra · · Score: 0

    There is considerations, unfortunately.

  159. Quantum Network by datian · · Score: 1

    I keep dreaming of a network that communicates via quantumly entangled particles, undetectable and unstoppable. Your IP address would finally be completely divorced from the land lines. As drastic and unimaginable as it might seem, it is still possible for the government to shut down the internet by shutting down all the physical connections.

    They managed to establish a quantum connection during an experiment in Geneva a few years ago. It would be cool if one of you Slashdot Uebergeeks out there had a do it yourself hack we could implement.

  160. E-mail works! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I have been e-mailing my senators/congressman for the better part of the last two years about issues that I feel are important. Since I live in NH (read: Bushland) my opinion is usually in the minority for my state. However, I have received a letter of response to EVERY SINGLE E-MAIL, even a personal one.


    Take the time, write a letter. Democracy only works when the people are involved.

  161. Maybe it was the wrong suit by HardCase · · Score: 2
    Clearly the DMCA is a horribly flawed law, but in the end it didn't prevent Professor Felton from publishing his work. He did publish and the judge dismissed the suit because of that very fact.

    After reading the lawsuit and early reports of the dismissal, it seems to me that the suit alleged that RIAA used the DMCA to prevent Felton from publishing his work. Unfortunately in this case, he did end up publishing, so it seems that the judge really didn't have any choice but to throw it out.

    I think that this would have been a better case if Professor Felton would have been prosecuted under the DMCA. I think that he would have had an excellent chance to then show that the DMCA is unconstitutional. In this case, however, the judge was bound to be rather narrowly focused and the question finally came down to whether or not the DMCA prevented Felton from publishing. He published, therefor it makes his case pretty weak.

    I have no doubt that a similar situation will arise and a researcher will be prosecuted for publishing "protected" material. When that happens, I'm sure that the DMCA will fall.

    -h-

  162. unintelligent post by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    fuck the dmca, fuck judge garrett brown, fuck the federal district court, fuck the doj, and uber-fuck the riaa. fuck all those freedom raping pieces of shit.

  163. USA's P.R. and Marketing Departments by Anarchofascist · · Score: 1
    I find it hard to believe that in America, the land of the "free",...[snip]
    "Land of the Free"(tm) and "Home of the Brave"(tm) are clever marketing slogans used by the USA's Public Relations Department to create one extra happy-face in each city, allowing them to reduce the actual quality of life.

    Oh, and I can't believe that anyone (except the corporations) are happy about paid corporate lobbyists. How come it works? Aren't you living in a Democracy? Clearly not.

    --
    Once more unto the breach, dear friends, once more, Or close the wall up with our American dead!
  164. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    The DMCA outlaws methods of circumventing copy protection.

    "that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title"

    Copyright violation is illegal and should (and will) remain so.

    I disagree.

    However, the DMCA bans information solely on the basis that it can potentially be used to facilitate the violation of copyright, even if it has potential for perfectly legal use.

    Only if those potential uses are sham uses, and the work is primarily created or marketed for copyright circumvention. There are many many software products which have the potential to be used for copyright circumvention, and almost every one is not at all affected by the DMCA.

    The arrest of Dmitry Sklyarov is unjust because the tool he created has perfectly legal uses.

    And if those uses were a significant reason that the product was marketed in the U.S., then he will be found not guilty.

    Prosecuting people over DeCSS is unjust, because DeCSS has perfectly legal uses.

    Oh please. DeCSS was created to circumvent copyright. It was marketed to circumvent copyright. Those legitimate uses are merely incidental. This is not only the ruling the courts made, it is the truth.

    The DMCA is a misguided and dangerous law that needs to be fought until it is corrected.

    The DMCA merely helps enforce a misguided and dangerous law that was already on the books - copyright law.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  165. No DMCA in Canada yet, hopefully not ever by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Canadian government is considering DMCA-type legislation; it's not clear yet whether they're going to implement it, but it is clear that the behind-the-scenes folks have a good understanding of why it would be a bad idea. The question, really, is whether the lawmakers will listen to their own experts. I have high hopes.

    I maintain a links page relating to the "DMCA in Canada" issue. On that page are links to my own submission, at ~24000 words the longest one they received in their public comment process; also the government copyright-reform Web site, the Edifying Fellowship of Ook (arguably the most creative submission), etc. I'd urge anyone interested in Canadian copyright law to check these documents out.

  166. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 1

    It doesn't matter whether DeCSS is used to access copyrighted or non-copyrighted works, the "device" itself is still illegal.

    If the device is not primarily made or marketed to access copyrighted works, it is not illegal.

    The judge in the 2600 case said that this issue wasn't yet "ripe" because nobody's tried to prevent access to non-copyrighted works yet.

    And likely never will be.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  167. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    No, but if I am in possession of the software that is able to make those backups I can be arrested.

    Wrong again. Possession is not illegal. RTFDMCA.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  168. This isn't our case. by gdyas · · Score: 2

    I think the 2nd circuit was right in this case. Felten has already publicized the information in question in the suit without consequence, so there is no longer an explicit prohibition against him. Thus, it was only proper that it be dismissed.

    You see, when you go to court you can NOT argue for some larger philosophical point of law. You need to argue your position on the merits of your specific case, and in Felten's case the information had already been made public. He'd already presented it. RIAA had already publicly backed down and thus he's under no threat not to publish.

    Here's an analogous situation to this using current events. There are about 600 people being held incommunicado by our gov't with regard to terrorism investigations. If Amnesty Int'l wished to sue for their release their case would be rejected for the same reason -- they're not an affected party because nobody they represent was held. They would have to represent someone who is to sue the gov't.

    What's going to happen now (as I put on my Karnak hat) is that Felten/EFF are going to send a writ of certiorari to the Supreme Court and the Supremes are going to reject it for the exact same reason. You need to either be experiencing or be under direct threat of experiencing an adverse consequence. You can't just sue because the DMCA is a bad law (which we all know it to be). You have to be suffering under an effect of that law while prosecuting your case in order to be able to prosecute.

    --

    The only tool you've got against psychosis is experience.

  169. Choices, lack of them. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By now, it should be quite obvious that EFF never ever had a chance fighting the DMCA. The judges are just laughing at them. What's less obvious is why the average slashdotter thinks EFF or anyone else has a chance of fighting this in court.

    Hopefully, some people will start standing up for a fair law soon, the government abandoned that concept a long time ago. Dont get me wrong, I dont want to promote terrorism.. but considering how much the government seems to be against it, they sure dont make it easy to be taken seriously in other ways.

  170. The ACLU is full of politically correct whackos by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, the privacy and freedom of speech bits are good, but the ACLU can't seem to confine themselves to that. They've also become the nazis of policical correctness, demanding things like an equal rights ammendment (does this mean single sex bathrooms will become illegal?), punishments for police departments that give more speeding tickets to blacks (what if there just honestly are more blacks who speed?), and other such useless crap.

  171. Re:Checks and Balances...Meh... by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

    Pardon my cynicism, but it seems the only current truth (reading between the lines) of "C&B" is:

    Big Corporations write the "Checks" to give judges, lawyers, and politicians bigger "Balances".

    Those are the "checks and balances" of our political and judiciary system today.

    --
    Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
  172. Second Bill of Rights by NetRanger · · Score: 1

    I would like to propose more amendments to the Constitution.

    Amendment 28

    No law restricting the Right of the People to engage in academic study of copyrighted and patented materials shall be passed, or to restrict the reverse engineering for the purpose thereof, nor to participate in the free discussion of the merits thereof.

    Amendment 29

    Section 1. No government body shall engage in the restriction of the Right of the People to free speech, regardless of the medium which the People shall express themselves.
    Section 2. No law shall be passed which allows an individual to be held liable for directing others to material which has been deemed harmful to any party, given the individual is not the original author.

    Amendment 30

    Section 1. No branch of government shall grant a copyright or other guaranty of exclusive rights to intellectual property beyond fifty years from the original date of the original grant.
    Section 2. Those items which are deemed vital to national security shall be exempted from this provision. Section 3. No laws from other sovereign nations which extend grants of intellectual property beyond this scope shall be recognized.

    Amendment 31

    Thou shalt read Slashdot.

    --
    -- We live in a world where lemonade is artificial and soap has real lemon.
  173. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by cc_pirate · · Score: 1

    You're right. Possession isn't. Trafficking is. So if you are an uberhacker who has infinite understanding of all things and can code your own DeCSSes,etc., then you are COVERED. If you are a regular Joe, then you are screwed, because the uberhackers will go to jail or be sued into the poorhouse if they give you a tool to exercise your fair use rights.

    This defacto makes possession illegal. Especially if you can be thought to be trafficking.

    Welcome to the corporate republic, and don't give me any bull$hit about how much better off we are than Afganistan or some other 3rd world hellhole because I don't give a $hit. This is America and this $hit shouldn't happen here.

    Oh well, I guess all good things must come to an end. Any bets on who our "Hitler" will wind up being? He'll have all these great surveillance tools with no oversight and no constitution to worry about because it is "content neutral". What a fscking joke.

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  174. Wait a minute, the DMCA is a weapon! by A_Non_Moose · · Score: 1

    The meathod in which the RIAA used the DMCA is the same as if you point a gun at someone w/o firing it.

    That, in and of itself, is a *crime*.

    Granted it is a misdemeanor, but it is still *illegal*. The precedant has already been set with physical media such as a weapon (gun) what about a law?

    We know the law is wrong. We know it is being used "in a threatening manner". We know it is being used to "intimidate someone to 'death' (physical/social/monetarily/pursuit of happiness and/or acadameia)".

    Hell, if we have laws to keep ppl from pulling weapons frivalously, what is there to stop corporation from doing the same with laws?

    Anyone?

    --
    Have you read the moderator guidelines? Well, have you, PUNK? (and I want a Karma: Gnarly option)
  175. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    This is true, but the DMCA places hurdles on Copyrighted material ever being forced to become Public Domain.

    Read my other posts, this is complete FUD.

    Not to re-hash an old debacle, but he is an employee of a company that did this. He didn't personally traffic this for his own demise.

    He is charged with both personally trafficking it and being part of a conspiracy to traffick it. He may or may not be guilty of that, but that's what he is charged with.

    He may be guilty of being an employee of this company which carried this traffic to our borders, but shouldn't it strike you as strange if Bill Gates was personally indicted for enacting a monopoly?

    Would it strike you strange if the kingpin of a drug-smuggling operation was charged with drug trafficking offenses even though that drug operation was incorporated in another country?

    Then how come the DeCSS thing is such a problem? Perhaps because the DMCA does in fact protect against circumventing protective measures on Copyrighted materials?

    Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a)(1)(A), a person who has lawfully obtained the right to use a copy of a computer program may circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a particular portion of that program for the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program that are necessary to achieve interoperability of an independently created computer program with other programs, and that have not previously been readily available to the person engaging in the circumvention, to the extent any such acts of identification and analysis do not constitute infringement under this title.

    Again, circumvention of a protective mechanism is prohibited under the governing of the DMCA. So copying a DVD or copy protected music CD is illegal. Even for purposes of backups. Because the CSS is considered a reasonable attempt of securing the Copyrighted material.

    I guess I was wrong that backups were specifically exempted. I couldn't find it. But copying for the purpose of backups it perfectly legal, because it does not involve decryption. It is also likely to fall under fair use.

    Specifically exempt from the DMCA if there is an approval from the Copyright holder and/or if the subject is in the Public Domain and/or if the subject isn't reasonably protected.

    No permission is necessary. Only the requirement to make "a good faith effort to obtain authorization before the circumvention"

    But since poor mechanisms of protection are accepted in Court, I don't blame the scientists of being afraid.

    Afraid of what? An injunction? Circumvention does not fall under criminal law.

    The DMCA has been applied in all of the above cases, in terms of supressive measures to maintain information/studies captive or openly challenged in Court. I think your literal interpretation of the DMCA shows exactly how easy and how dangerous it is to get the wrong idea about something so evil.

    Show me these cases. All I see is Dmitry, who was trying to capitalize off of circumventing copyright, and DeCSS, which was hit with an injunction which forced them to stop distribution. I see nothing inherently evil with the DMCA, it just seems like a way to enforce the evil that is copyright law.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  176. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by SiliconEntity · · Score: 1
    "They don't think that reverse engineering for system interoperability should be illegal.

    Also specifically protected by the DMCA."

    Then how come the DeCSS thing is such a problem? Perhaps because the DMCA does in fact protect against circumventing protective measures on Copyrighted materials?

    The legality of DeCSS has yet to be established. All of the court proceedings so far are preliminary.

    In fact, one of the main issues in controversy is whether DeCSS was intended for the purpose of system interoperability. Defenders of DeCSS argue that in fact it was created by reverse engineering Windows software for the purpose of creating Linux DVD viewers. Opponents of the program argue that it was created to allow copying movies from DVD disks and sharing them illegally. They point to the fact that the initial release was on Windows and was associated with hackers (using the term in the pejorative sense).

    In fact DeCSS can be used for both purposes, which makes the interoperability defense somewhat problematic. If it could only be used for interoperability then the defense would be much stronger. But since it can facilitate privacy as well, the defense may not work. It appears that the court is leaning towards this view given the preliminary decisions.

  177. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 1

    Like an ebook of Alice in Wonderland which is out of copyright.

    Is it legal to circumvent the access controls on this since it's out of copyright?

    Yes.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  178. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    If you are a regular Joe, then you are screwed, because the uberhackers will go to jail or be sued into the poorhouse if they give you a tool to exercise your fair use rights.

    Consider DeCSS. Neither has happened. You're being paranoid.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  179. Really, they didn't pay for DHTMLlab stuff? by Svartalf · · Score: 2

    Somehow I am not surprised.

    --
    I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
  180. You're missing the point by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    > Please tell me how the DMCA has adversely affected your life.

    Sorry, but that's not relevant. To wit, segregation laws did not adversely affect my life, since I'm white, but I can't in good conscience accept that as a valid reason not to have repealed those laws. If a law steps on the rights of individuals in violation of the Constitution, even if I'm not one of those people, it's my responsibility as a citizen of the U.S. to fight to have that law repealed. That's the "...by the people" part of "Government of the people, by the people, for the people."

    Virg

  181. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by cc_pirate · · Score: 1
    Consider DeCSS. Neither has happened. You're being paranoid

    Oh, yeah, you are right.. NOT! Ask Johanssen about whether or not he went to jail for writing DeCSS. He sure as $hit did!! They took all his PCs too. And he was in FINLAND (or some Scandavian country)!!!

    Imagine if he'd been HERE. He'd have been bent over some sink and raped with a baton by some fascist police ba$tard like that Hatian immigrant.

    I am not being paranoid (well, except maybe for the rape comment). I apparently know the facts, unlike you.

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  182. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    Oh, yeah, you are right.. NOT! Ask Johanssen about whether or not he went to jail for writing DeCSS. He sure as $hit did!! They took all his PCs too. And he was in FINLAND (or some Scandavian country)!!!

    I searched on google and the only information that I can find on his arrest says that the charges were contributory copyright infringement, not violation of the DMCA. I also can't find any evidence that he spent a single day in jail. You may be right on this one, but if so I find it hard to believe that the Dmitry case is getting so much more publicity, considering that Johanssen was not trying to profit off DeCSS.

    Imagine if he'd been HERE. He'd have been bent over some sink and raped with a baton by some fascist police ba$tard like that Hatian immigrant.

    I suspect that if he were here no criminal charges would have been filed.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  183. slightly off topic...prelude to thing to come by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Soon, my friends, soon, this "Turbo Capitalism" (not my term, stolen from a really good book..don't have MLA citation at the moment) will run its inevitable course.
    a) transnational corporations will have more power than any one nation state
    b) the small number of extremely rich will be extremely rich, the majority of people will be terribly poor.
    c) this will happen on a global scale, soon the poor of every nation will all be opressed by the rich of a few corporations
    d) global "laws" will continue to enslave those that are 1. not rich and 2. not afraid of those who are
    e) finally someone will rally all the common men to revolt against the corporations..the new elite that have power greater than the states.
    f) the states will have to side with either corporations of people.
    g) a global revolutionary war will take place. I'll be fighting with the rebels for the rights of the people (sound familiar, America?), my country be damned if it chooses the other side.

    If America chooses the side it appears to be choosing, it is no longer America, the home of the free, it's America the home of the rich..just like all the anti-s claim. Not only will it piss me off if America chooses the transnational corporations and the benefits of the elites over traditional rights, but it will piss me off even more because it is America, the country founded on a belief in a common set of unalienable rights. I pity the nation states that chooses the wrong side of this battle. You thought England f*ed up in 1776, wait till this happens on a global scale. I'll personally clone Tom Paine from his DNA (we mysteriously lost his body in the atlantic you know) and bring him back to life. I'll get Malcom X back too. I'll free all of our middle and lower class soldiers from the prisons of america (where they were sent for questioning the system, or smoking pot) and we'll rally the world against this evil greed.
    Seriously, why are half the adolescent black male population of America behind bars, cause rich fat white men are afraid of them, thats why. Well f that and f the corporations. when the time is right, when they have gone too far, it will happen. And when the revolution happens the DMCA won't mean squat. So just wait, and it'll be cool.

  184. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by jbridge21 · · Score: 2

    Some of the major mirror sites, including my own, have had copies of the SDMI crack papers ever since they came out. It's a paper, and not code which usefully breaks some algorithm used widespread publically, which is why it hasn't gotten more widespread distribution.

    You can see both the original hacksdmi.org web site with download files, and two papers describing how to remove the copy protection, at http://censored.firehead.org:1984/hacksdmi.org/

  185. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by cc_pirate · · Score: 1
    I searched on google and the only information that I can find on his arrest says that the charges were contributory copyright infringement, not violation of the DMCA. I also can't find any evidence that he spent a single day in jail. You may be right on this one, but if so I find it hard to believe that the Dmitry case is getting so much more publicity, considering that Johanssen was not trying to profit off DeCSS.

    I think he spent the night in jail from what I remember (he posted here after). However, the point is that you said I was being paranoid about people being arrested for violating the DMCA if they write DeCSS tools. This clearly shows I am not. It has happened and will continue to do so.

    I suspect that if he were here no criminal charges would have been filed.

    Perhaps you should discuss this with Dmitry. While we're at it, perhaps we could discuss the futility of violence with the city fathers of Carthage....

    But even on the amazingly far off chance you are right about criminal charges, he still would have been sued for every dime he's ever going to make by the MPAA (see various DeCSS lawsuits going on now, including 2600).

    The bottom line is that the DMCA is a way for media corporations to make money off of their creations forever, in every format ever devised, with indefinate copyright and absolutely no fair use whatsoever. This is their utopia and this law is written (very cleverly) to acheive it. We, the citizens of the United States of America, are being screwed over by the corporations with the willing and paid help of our representatives.

    --

    "There are laws that enslave men, and laws that set them free. " - Sean Connery as King Arthur

  186. Intellectual Property Laws Unconstitutional by dh003i · · Score: 1

    The simple fact is, all intellectual proprty laws -- except perhaps trade secrets -- violate freedom of speech. They either create prior restrictions on free speech or impose harsh and unreasonable post-publication punishments for excercising the right to free speech.

    As for trade-secrets, there's nothing wrong with a company keeping a secret. They have as much a right to do so as you or I do -- this falls under the right to privacy. However, just like you and I, their right to privacy is not protected at the expense of freedom of speech, except perhaps against the government. If I keep a private diary, that's a right I have protected under privacy-rigths. However, if I leave my diary in a park and someone transcibes it and publishes it, I have no cause for issuing grieviances. If I wanted to keep it private, I should have protected it better.

    On the other hand, if someone steals my diary from a private place which I've secured, they still cannot be prevented from publishing it -- that would be prior restraint. If we're to have a concern for free speech, they also cannot be subject to personal liabilities: that would also have a chilling effect on freedom of speech. What they can be liable for is what they must have done to get a private diary that I have secured: for breaking into my house and stealing a piece of my property. My privacy rights may have been violated by this person, and he may be punished in respect to the violation itself; but not in respect to any speech he may want to say about my private affairs. He can be held liable in civil court for violating my right to privacy, intrinsic; no consideration of the effects of any speech he spoke may be considered. He is also, of course, criminally liable for breaking into my house and stealing my proprty.

  187. Ashcroft/DOJ says circumvention research is legal by morgue-ann · · Score: 1

    One thing that came out of this is that the DOJ claimed that the *intent* of creating a circumvention device matters. If it's used only to demonstrate a weakness, it's kosher. We'll see whether they hold to their own opinion when they're on the other side of the aisle.

    In their own words:

    "Plaintiffs' alleged conduct is not proscribed by the statute"

    "While Plaintiffs' computer programs have the additional capability of actually circumventing access controls, they are allegedly not designed or marketed for the purposes of actually getting access to the copyrighted material itself."

    The DOJ asserts that Dmitry fails the "is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of
    circumventing protection afforded by a technological measure" test of 1201(b) while ignoring 1201(c):

    (c) Other Rights, Etc., Not Affected. - (1) Nothing in this section shall affect rights, remedies, limitations, or defenses to copyright infringement, including fair use, under this title.
    (2) Nothing in this section shall enlarge or diminish vicarious or contributory liability for copyright infringement in connection with any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof.
    (3) Nothing in this section shall require that the design of, or design and selection of parts and components for, a consumer electronics, telecommunications, or computing product provide for a response to any particular technological measure, so long as such part or component, or the product in which such part or component is integrated, does not otherwise fall within the prohibitions of subsection (a)(2) or (b)(1).
    (4) Nothing in this section shall enlarge or diminish any rights of free speech or the press for activities using consumer electronics, telecommunications, or computing products.

  188. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    I think he spent the night in jail from what I remember (he posted here after). However, the point is that you said I was being paranoid about people being arrested for violating the DMCA if they write DeCSS tools. This clearly shows I am not. It has happened and will continue to do so.

    Again, I don't think he was arrested for violating the DMCA. I'll check the slashdot archives to see if I can confirm this.

    And when I referred to you being paranoid, I meant about the DMCA restricting fair use, or even doing anything to stop the distribution of circumvention tools. Yes, some people will go to jail, but it is likely to be only those who attempt to profit off the creation of those circumvention tools, like Dmitry.

    But even on the amazingly far off chance you are right about criminal charges, he still would have been sued for every dime he's ever going to make by the MPAA (see various DeCSS lawsuits going on now, including 2600).

    2600 is a corporation trying to make a profit off the distribution of DeCSS. I have very little sympathy for them. As for the creator of the product being sued into bankruptcy, it is sad, but it's not all that bad. Just ask OJ Simpson.

    Also, there is a very big jurisdictional question as to whether the federal government has the right to enforce a law against the act of an individual creating a product which does not in and of itself infringe copyright if that individual does not engage in the commerce of that product. I would suspect that such a prosecution would be deemed unconstitutional under the 10th ammendment.

    The bottom line is that the DMCA is a way for media corporations to make money off of their creations forever, in every format ever devised, with indefinate copyright and absolutely no fair use whatsoever.

    I always thought that was the Sonny Bono Copyright extention act that did that. Seriously, the DMCA is nothing more than a very slightly more effective way to enforce the copyright laws which are already on the books. The main reason people are getting so up in arms about it is that they are so used to breaking copyright laws in their daily life.

    I oppose the DMCA on the same grounds that I oppose copyright law, but I feel that it is going to have very little effect on the mass majority of the public, so I dislike the high levels of attention it has been getting from people claiming that its effect is much worse than it actually is. I support fighting against the DMCA and copyright law through the creation of copylefted (by my definition, not RMS's) software which can easily nullify their effect if only 10% of the particular industry used it. I support fighting the constitutionality of the DMCA where appropriate (sadly, it seem seems to be well contructed enough to make that approach somewhat useless), and modifications of the constitution in order to protect against it and other laws like it.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  189. Explanation, Hopes, Criticism, and Solutions by dh003i · · Score: 1

    In regards to explaining the decision of the court to dismiss the suit, I believe it was because no actual issue was presented before the court. Because the RIAA backed down, there was no tangible case to examine in which Felton's rights were being violated. As they know the DMCA is unconstitutional, this is likely to be the strategy of the RIAA: threaten people as much as possible with the DMCA, back down when they seriously challenge. That way, you can effectively scare people into obeying the DMCA, while not ever risking having the DMCA over-turned on grounds that it is unconstitutional.

    I certainly hope that somehow, Felton's lawyers find a way to bring this case before a court. There are indeed constitutional issues at stake. Perhaps they could bring it to court regarding the chilling effect on Prof. Felton's free speech, that he has to fear that entities -- from RIAA and the SDMI to individual music companies -- may sue him retroactively. In any case, if Felton's lawyers cannot convince a judge that there is an actual tangible situation at stake, the case is likely to be dismissed; I sincerely hope this is not the case.

    Now, I will divulge on a tangent issue relating the the insufficiency of our current legal system.

    This, as I've mentioned before, is a major flaw in our system. Before a court can rule on the constitutionality of a law, an actual case must be before it. This means that someone's life must be on the line -- their money, or freedom -- before the issue is considered. This creates an unacceptable risk to the citizens of the US: if we are to overturn an unconstituional law, we must wait until someone violates it an puts their life on the line for a "test case." This clearly needs to be fixed. Any laws should be subject to constitutional challenge on a theoretical basis, irrelevant of whether or not a case is before the court. This is currently the system operating in Germany.

    Another unacceptable flaw in our laws permeates every law ever created: vagueness, or lack of clarity. Laws are vague and difficult to understand. This is because they were poorly thought out and what they mean is very debatable(i.e., DMCA), because they were simply worded poorely as all laws are, and/or because they are unnecessarily long and thus trying on the average person who tries to read them. To fix this, laws should have to be written in Orwellian fashion: minimal use of words, minimal use of long words, and clarity being the most important. There shoiuld be no "thou's", no "shalls", no "whereforths", no "whenceforths", no "thees", no "thys", no "said persons", or any of the other antiquated British bullshit that currently bloats our laws to obesity. Furthermore, the number of laws should be minimized, as should the length fo each law. In our current system, it is impossible for the average person to know every law. This is wrong. If people cannot possible know the laws, they cannot possibly be expected to obey them. The net sum of laws in any state should be able to fit in 20 pages of text.

    Of course, the last major flaw in our current laws is, as briefly alluded to, their volume. Simply put, there are too many laws. Does there really need to be a law in Florida against fucking birds? Does there really need to be a law against prostitution or gambling? What about a law agaisnt sodomy? Or the laws against voluntary incest? These laws are completely unnecessary; they serve no purpose other than to propagate religious fanatacism.

    So what I propose is this: (1) Minimize the length of all laws; (2) Maximize the clarity of all laws, eliminate words that cannot be understood by 90% of the population, and in no case, should there be any words longer than twenty characters in the law; (3) Minimize the number of laws by eliminating useless laws; (4) Allow courts to decide on the constitutionality of laws before an actual case is at stack: better yet, require that all laws passed be ran through a commission of experts on the constitution to determine their constitutionality, and lastly the Supreme Court.

  190. To the Supreme Court? by rsimmons · · Score: 1

    Is it better in the long run for this sort of case to be won in a lower court? Or, is it better for these sorts of cases to lose until they are brought before the Supreme Court, and the DMCA itself could be found unconstitutional? IANAL....

  191. Coming Out of Tax by virg_mattes · · Score: 2

    > However, you can just mail in your quarterly payment yourself
    > that satisfies the minimum requirements to not be fined.


    Agreed, but since the original goal is not to pay the taxes (as a civil disobedience thing), that would be defeating the purpose.

    Virg

  192. DVD ads by acerbix · · Score: 1
    Most DVD ads use the word Own it somewhere. For example: This Ad
    It doesnot say license it, or You can only play this on players that we approve of or even mention the fact that the content on the disc is encrypted.
    Two points here :

    1) If I own something, I am free to do whatever I please with it. If I own my house, I am free to make whatever changes to my house that suits my needs. The architect or builder doesn't come running down the street with a court order to stop me, even though I am modifying the architecture which could be the intellectual property of the architect. The car manufacturer doen't sue me if I indulge in speeding. Yet the DVD manufacturer seems hellbent on exercising control on the DVD even after ownership has been transferred to me. Why is that legal, again?

    2) If the manufacturer does not let me know that the DVD is encrypted, and claims that I "own" the copy in their advertising, and then trys to tell me what I can or cannot do with my copy, isn't that tantamount to fraudulent advertising?

    I don't claim to understand law, but something looks very wrong here from a commonsense perspective.

  193. binary by Cardhore · · Score: 2

    Computer source code is binary.

  194. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by tsg · · Score: 1
    The DMCA only covers copyrighted material, not material which is in the public domain.

    From the DMCA, Section 1201(a)(2)(A)
    No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title;
    DVD's encrypted with CSS will eventually become part of the public domain. Not all DVD's will become part of the public domain at the same time. So when will it be legal to distribute DeCSS? As long as there are DVD's encrypted with CSS that are not part of the public domain, selling the program to access the DVD's which are will be illegal.

    >I've told them about the intimidation and outright threatening of scientists who dare to expose flaws in a sham security system.

    Completely irrelevant to the DMCA.


    How? They threatened to sue him under the DMCA.

    >I've told them about losing their time-honored rights to Fair Use, to First Sale, to archival copies...

    Something which is specifically protected in the DMCA.


    No it isn't. Section 1201(c)(1) only protects fair use as a defense to copyright infringement, not to circumvention.

    >They don't think that reverse engineering for system interoperability should be illegal.

    Also specifically protected by the DMCA.


    Section 1201(f) only protects "identification and analysis", not dissemination of the results. Meaning the only people who can use the information are the person who do the reverse engineering. And they have to own a legal copy of what they are trying to reverse engineer. Hence the DeCSS case.

    >They don't think allowing backups should be illegal.

    Which it isn't.


    No, but distributing the program which allows backups to be made is. Hence Dmitry Sklyarov.

    >They don't think that quotation from a digital source, for the purposes of scholarship, should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA.


    Again, the distributing the program which allows normal users to do this is illegal.

    >They don't think that scientific research should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA.


    But publishing the results of the research is not. Hence Ed Felton.

    You should read it some time.

    Maybe you should take your own advice.
    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
  195. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >You know what? They don't think any of those
    >things should be occuring. They don't think that
    >reverse engineering for system interoperability
    >should be illegal.

    Reverse engineering already is legal, at least in theory.

    Reverse engineering involves thinking along the lines of "how does this work?" and then communicating those thoughts to others. Thought is mental speech, and is thus protected under the 1st amendment of the U.S. Constitution. Communicating is also speech, and is thus also protected under the 1st amendment.

    Furthermore, we can assert that a right to reverse engineer exists under the 9th amendment ("The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people"). The 9th amendment was added to the Constitution in order to allow the people to be able to say, "I have the right to do this, even though it is not stated explicitly in the Constitution". Thus, we can assert a general right to reverse engineer things under the 9th amendment. We might justify such a right by noting that reverse engineering promotes competition and some degree of public oversight of companies, both of which are good and necessary things in a capitalist economy.

    Let me explain what I mean by "in theory" above:

    The 1st amendment states that Congress may pass no law infringing freedom of speech. No law means no law. It does not mean one law, two laws, a dozen laws, or as many laws as Congress can get away with. The 14th amendment extends this limitation on passing laws that infringe freedom of speech to the state governments. Thus, in principle, neither the federal nor the state governments could pass any law which could be construed as preventing reverse engineering, which is a form of free speech. For example, contract law can not take away the right to reverse engineer something, and thus all those terms in shrink wrap licenses that prevent reverse engineering are (at least in theory) unenforceable (the entire license is in principle unenforceable, of course, but I won't go into that). Further, no law can prevent the distribution of tools related to reverse engineering (a tool that assists in engaging in one form of free speech) any more then a law could prevent the distribution of printing presses (a tool that assists in engaging in another form).

    In practice, however, the courts have in practice permitted some laws that do infringe freedom of speech (actually a surprising or perhaps even appalling number of such laws), in much the same fashion that they permit a great many laws that infringe the 2nd and other amendments.

    Some of these laws, while generally highly flawed, do have at least of grain of sense behind them. For example, laws restricting speech relating to national security (i.e. if you have a security clearance, and do classified work, you don't have freedom of speech to talk about the work you do) do make sense, when properly written and appropriately limited.

    Nevertheless, in theory, such laws should not exist. The courts are supposed to require that the Constitution be amended when Congress and the President want to do something that violates the existing document, rather then "aiding and abetting" the legislative/executive branches in doing these things in spite of the Constitution (by "doing these things in spite of the Constitution" I mean "breaking the law"). After an appropriate amendment to the Constitution is made, then it becomes legal for the government to pass such laws, and not before.

    Unfortunately, expecting judges to do the right thing seems to be a bit too much to expect. After all, these people have merely sworn an oath (i.e. given their word) to uphold the Constitution. How much can we seriously expect a person's word to be worth?

    Power corrupts and people are imperfect: those are two of the most fundamental truths of human nature.

  196. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DVD's encrypted with CSS will eventually become part of the public domain. Not all DVD's will become part of the public domain at the same time. So when will it be legal to distribute DeCSS?

    Complete and utter FUD. It doesn't need to be legal to distribute DeCSS, you can distribute the unencrypted work, or distribute a crack specifically for a certain DVD.

    Completely irrelevant to the DMCA.

    How? They threatened to sue him under the DMCA.

    Anyone can threaten anyone under anything. That is completely irrelevant to the law itself. Felton did not break the DMCA.

    No it isn't. Section 1201(c)(1) only protects fair use as a defense to copyright infringement, not to circumvention.

    Actually, having read that in the recent DeCSS appeal ruling I was quite disturbed. I still find it highly unlikely that such a charge could possibly be constitutional under the 10th ammendment, however. While it's one of the places the law can be attacked constitutionally, it's quite easy for congress to patch up that ambiguity if that does happen.

    Section 1201(f) only protects "identification and analysis", not dissemination of the results. Meaning the only people who can use the information are the person who do the reverse engineering. And they have to own a legal copy of what they are trying to reverse engineer. Hence the DeCSS case.

    DeCSS has zero to do with reverse engineering. The creator of the software has testified as such. Dissemination of the results may be technically illegal (although personal non-commercial dissemination which does not effect interstate commerce is likely not). In any case, we have seen by the DeCSS case just how effective that is. You should also note that my statement was that reverse engineering was legal, not dissemination of the results.

    No, but distributing the program which allows backups to be made is. Hence Dmitry Sklyarov.

    Backups can be made regardless of CSS encryption. The decryption is necessary to view the DVD, not to copy it.

    Again, the distributing the program which allows normal users to do this is illegal.

    And again, you should be more specific.

    They don't think that scientific research should be illegal.

    Specifically exempted from the DMCA.

    But publishing the results of the research is not. Hence Ed Felton.

    Highly unlikely, unless you mean publishing of results which are cirumvention code.

  197. examples from 2600 decision of prot. and unprot. by cnicolai · · Score: 1

    * First Amendment does not protect instructions for violating the tax laws
    * First Amendment protects instructions for engaging in a dangerous sex act
    * First Amendment does not protect instructions for building an explosive device
    * Instructions, do-it-yourself manuals, [and] recipes are all speech

  198. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    If the device is not primarily made or marketed to access copyrighted works, it is not illegal.

    I'm glad you feel that way. I wish the judge, whose opinion actually matters, felt that way, too. As it is, it is the "potentially infringing" use that sways him. When pressed, the DVDCCA was unable to offer even a single instance wherein DeCSS was implicated in violating copyright.


    On the other hand, it was used by quite a number of people to view DVDs on Linux boxes, a completely legitimate use.


    So apparently it's not a weight of usage argument after all. DMCA bans things like DeCSS on the mere potential of their misuse. It's like banning hammers because they could be used to kill someone.


    Before the DMCA we had strong copyright laws -- some would say too strong -- that provided more than adequate tools to prosecute people actually engaging in copyright violation. The Content Cartel didn't like those laws because they required actual effort to uncover "piracy", assemble a case, etc. It's much easier to make the mere possibility of infringing illegal; the case is much easier to make, then.


    It just didn't matter that this completely upends American standards of justice.

  199. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:


    DVD's encrypted with CSS will eventually become part of the public domain. Not all DVD's will become part of the public domain at the same time. So when will it be legal to distribute DeCSS?

    Complete and utter FUD.

    You keep using that word. I do not think it meanms what you think it means. :)

    It doesn't need to be legal to distribute DeCSS, you can distribute the unencrypted work, or distribute a crack specifically for a certain DVD.

    How are you supposed to distribute an unencrypted version of the work, if you are prohibited from using tools that decrypt the work? Or will it become the responsibility of each person to write his/her own version of deCSS -- without ever discussing any aspect of it with any other person -- so that he/she can decrypt works and allow the perfectly legitimate public domain usage of them?
  200. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:


    You can rant and rave but let's face it: one of the jobs of the DoJ is to defend the government

    However they appear to be currently rather selective about doing their job. Otherwise we would have expected them to have squashed (revokation of of corporate charter and arrest of those who lied in court) Microsoft a few months back.


    One might have wished they had continued their aggressive pursuit of Microsoft -- I know I wish they had. However, there is a world of difference between prosecuting a case and defending one. In the Microsoft thing, the DoJ was one of the initiators; they brought the suit. It's an active thing. In the Felten case, the researcher sued the government, and they defended. It's a reactive thing. Ethically, I believe, the DoJ cannot simply allow the progress of suits against the US government to proceed without challenge.


    It's sort of along the lines of, your defense attorney isn't interested whether you're guilty. He's there to do his best to spring you.

  201. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by gilroy · · Score: 2
    Blockquoth the poster:

    Where in the DMCA does it give the RIAA the right to have control over your DVD collection? I must have missed that part.

    "This disc is intended for sale or viewing within Region 1 (US and Canada) only."

    The DMCA does not do that. Read it some time.

    People keep saying that. I don't know if I intend to be insulted. I have read it. It does make illegal things that allow the exercise of long-established rights.
  202. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by tsg · · Score: 1

    Anyone can threaten anyone under anything. That is completely irrelevant to the law itself. Felton did not break the DMCA.

    It's not irrelevant if the law can be read as if he did break it. It's irrelevant if it's not a credible threat. If I threaten to sue you for libel because you disagree with me, that is not a credible threat and libel law is irrelevant. The threat from the RIAA was a credible threat because it's not unreasonable for the law to be read as if his acts would be illegal. This is the whole point of the Ed Felton suit. He wants someone to say, "yes, this is ok" so if he receives another threat, he can be confident his actions aren't against the law.

    Complete and utter FUD. It doesn't need to be legal to distribute DeCSS, you can distribute the unencrypted work,

    What if the unencrypted work isn't available? Or, if it is, why should I download a many GB file of a movie I already own when a few KB file will give me access to it? Making it legal but extremely inconvenient is little better than making it illegal.

    or distribute a crack specifically for a certain DVD.

    As far as I know, the algorithm which cracks one CSS protected work can be used on another, especially if you have the source code.

    DeCSS has zero to do with reverse engineering. The creator of the software has testified as such.

    Whether or not that is true doesn't invalidate my point. Which is...

    You should also note that my statement was that reverse engineering was legal, not dissemination of the results.

    Without dissemination of the results, there is little use in reverse engineering in the first place. The DMCA requires that the person doing the reverse engineering legally obtain a copy of the program or device they are trying to reverse engineer. Why bother making it run on another platform if you're the only one who can use it and you have a copy of the original?

    Backups can be made regardless of CSS encryption. The decryption is necessary to view the DVD, not to copy it.

    Actually, I was talking about Dmitry Sklyarov creating a program to make backup copies of Adobe's Ebook format which did not allow backup copies. But you raise an interesting point. If the encryption doesn't prevent copying, how is it a copy control mechanism?

    Highly unlikely, unless you mean publishing of results which are cirumvention code.

    That is exactly what I mean. An important part of the scientific method is peer review. This requires access to the methods used to get the results. This means someone else must be able to repeat the experiment and obtain the same results. In encryption research, it is necessary to publish the code used to circumvent the encryption so that others may do the same and verify the results. Without publication of the results, there is little point in doing the research.

    --
    People's desire to believe they are right is much stronger than their desire to be right.
  203. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by alsta · · Score: 2

    "He is charged with both personally trafficking it and being part of a conspiracy to traffick it. He may or may not be guilty of that, but that's what he is charged with."

    I will settle for that.

    "Would it strike you strange if the kingpin of a drug-smuggling operation was charged with drug trafficking offenses even though that drug operation was incorporated in another country?"

    According to recent history, Microsoft has received a number of law suits and among the largest, the DoJ vs. Microsoft. Both the Sklyarov and Microsoft cases involve criminal charges. In none of the cases were drugs involved. And Sklyarov was not a kingpin. He was simply here. Guilty by association.

    "Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a)(1)(A), a person who has lawfully obtained the right to use a copy of a computer program may circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a particular portion of that program for the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program that are necessary to achieve interoperability of an independently created computer program with other programs, and that have not previously been readily available to the person engaging in the circumvention, to the extent any such acts of identification and analysis do not constitute infringement under this title."

    Good catch? If you purchase a PC game on CD-ROM and wish to use it with a backup copy to protect your original, you would not be endorsed to persue this by the proprietor. Fair Use is something of the worst enemy of Big Business. Fair Use means less sales. In essence, you are allowed to play the game, thus circumventing the protection lawfully. But you aren't allowed to make a backup.

    "I guess I was wrong that backups were specifically exempted. I couldn't find it. But copying for the purpose of backups it perfectly legal, because it does not involve decryption. It is also likely to fall under fair use."

    It involves circumventing a copy protection scheme. Once circumventing the finite state machine which was designed to disallow copying, you've committed an offense against the DMCA. The DMCA does NOT specifically state that it only concerns encryption. Back to the example of the CD-ROM. An oversized TOC or faked bad sector would suffice as attempted protective mechanism, provided that the operation of the program in question would require those "defects" in order to run. The DMCA would override Fair Use.

    "No permission is necessary. Only the requirement to make "a good faith effort to obtain authorization before the circumvention""

    Essentially the same thing. Most likely this effort would require e-mail, fax and letter requests. Most likely one form of communication or other would reach a corporate lawyer and be disallowed in writing. Why? Because no proprietor would like to divulge the internals of its technology to the Public Domain. Essentially this gives the proprietor full reign in what is premissible and what isn't.

    "Afraid of what? An injunction? Circumvention does not fall under criminal law."

    BUT THE DMCA MAKES it a criminal act to circumvent a finite state machine which aims to limit serialized duplication or disassembling of that very machine or target data.

    "Show me these cases. All I see is Dmitry, who was trying to capitalize off of circumventing copyright, and DeCSS, which was hit with an injunction which forced them to stop distribution. I see nothing inherently evil with the DMCA, it just seems like a way to enforce the evil that is copyright law."

    Well let's look at Felten vs. RIAA... There are clear threats of litigation, thus suppression. Read here:

    http://cryptome.org/sdmi-attack.htm

    The DMCA is THE tool for corporations to enforce and suppress free speech. To mention another case, is the DeCSS case. The problem with that case is not that DeCSS would aid in illegal mass distribution of copyrighted material, it is the fact that the CSS algorithm would bear no merit as a copy protection device. The only way for the MPAA to protect itself from this is to make DeCSS illegal and thus earning itself cases to relate to, should this type of software appear again. The problem is that license fees would be lost, and region coding would be circumvented. Big Bucks, nothing else. And in the quest for the Almighty $$$, First Sale, Fair Use and various other Freedoms are effectively circumvented.

    --
    Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think. -Ayn Rand
  204. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, these are the LUSERS who nod sympathetically
    and have a drink later that night with their buddies talking about the freenik who is fighting
    a lost cause, and don't get involved, and don't
    do anything but listen to you spout so they can get it over with.
    Grow up.

  205. problem is... by ironfroggy · · Score: 1

    ...people dont give a flying flip. The average American has either no opinion on the DMCA or no rightfully educated one. So, there just aren't enough people to counter it. And, with all the buzz about the "War", people care less. As a matter of fact, on Sept. 11 that's one of the first things I said, "Great, now no one will counter DMCA, they'll just care about this." Not that we shouldnt care, but we need to watch more than one thing in our government at a time. They aren't single-tasking.

  206. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 1

    So apparently it's not a weight of usage argument after all. DMCA bans things like DeCSS on the mere potential of their misuse. It's like banning hammers because they could be used to kill someone.

    You're a moron.

    * (A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing protection afforded by a technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title in a work or a portion thereof;
    * (B) has only limited commercially significant purpose or use other than to circumvent protection afforded by a technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title in a work or a portion thereof; or
    * (C) is marketed by that person or another acting in concert with that person with that person's knowledge for use in circumventing protection afforded by a technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title in a work or a portion thereof.

    Feel free to reply, but I'm done talking to you about it. RTFDMCA.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  207. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by noahm · · Score: 1
    Only if those potential uses are sham uses, and the work is primarily created or marketed for copyright circumvention. There are many many software products which have the potential to be used for copyright circumvention, and almost every one is not at all affected by the DMCA.

    That's precisely the problem. "...the work is primarily created for copyright circumvention". Aside from the original author of the work, who's to say what the primary purpose of a work is? Hell, the primary purpose of Dr. Felten's work is to merely prove that SDMI is a flawed approach to preventing copyright. Yet RIAA is (apparently) going to succeed at using the DMCA to prevent him from presenting that work. Surely you don't think that the primary purpose of his research is to facilitate copyright infringement.

    Oh please. DeCSS was created to circumvent copyright. It was marketed to circumvent copyright. Those legitimate uses are merely incidental. This is not only the ruling the courts made, it is the truth.

    Well, if you say so. I suspect, however, that there are a great deal many more people using DeCSS for purely legitimate purposes than for copyright infringement. How many Linux DVD player projects depend completely on its existance? I can think of at least 4 or 5, but I can't name any DVD copying software for any OS that depends on DeCSS.

    If I might ask, what do you believe should exist in place of copyright law? Do you believe that all intellectual property should belong to the public domain? I agree that copyright law has major problems (especially after the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension), but I am not sure that legal protection of ownership of intellectual property is a bad thing.

    noah

  208. DMCA unconstitutional by AnoniMoose+Cowherd · · Score: 1

    The bottom line is that the DMCA (or parts of it) is unconstitutional, and we want to prove it in court.

    I wonder if it is possible to for Joe Schmoe to create a trivial encryption scheme, and his friend Harry Hacker to 'break' it and publish. Then Joe sues Harry, and the whole constitutional shit can be opened up, with all parties playing their proper part, correctly.

    Any objections?

    --
    - AnoniMoose Cowherd
  209. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by noahm · · Score: 1
    Is it legal to circumvent the access controls on this since it's out of copyright?

    Yes.

    Yes, you're right. However, it's illegal to posess the tools needed to circumvent the access controls on a work, even after the copyright expires. So whether or not it's legal to circumvent the copy protection is completely irrelevant. You can't legally do it anyway.

    noah

  210. Build it and they will come. by MikeFM · · Score: 2

    The point isn't only to boycott, that only works if you have a LOT of people actively boycotting that were actively buying before. If you want to fight the MPAA then it is a must to produce alternative products to the ones they offer.

    Of course the opensource community isn't likely to make huge multimillion dollar movies at this time but we should be active in the independent films and in promoting alternative DVD technology. No-region unencrypted DVD's that don't pay the MPAA protection money. When you seriously challenge someone at their own game they take you more seriously than if they just think your a pirate. At the same time you're making more options for other consumers to avoid those tainted products. :)

    --
    At what price learning? At what cost wisdom? The price is a man's peace of mind, and the cost is his life.
  211. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2
    Complete and utter FUD.
    You keep using that word. I do not think it meanms what you think it means. :)

    The E2 node on it says "Essentially propaganda used by certain groups, companies, nations and/or people in order to invoke F.ear, U.ncertainty, and D.oubt about something." I find that perfectly applicable to what you are doing (spreading unjustified fear) when you try to say that the DMCA will affect the free dissemination of public domain works.

    How are you supposed to distribute an unencrypted version of the work, if you are prohibited from using tools that decrypt the work? Or will it become the responsibility of each person to write his/her own version of deCSS -- without ever discussing any aspect of it with any other person -- so that he/she can decrypt works and allow the perfectly legitimate public domain usage of them?

    It only takes one person to decrypt the work. After that it can be freely distributed without anyone having to do any further decryption. I have my copy of DeCSS (and no, possession is not illegal), so if no one else will do it, I will offer to decrypt any public domain work protected by CSS for you. Besides, distributing DeCSS to someone for the sole purpose of decrypting public domain works would not be a criminal act, and since no one would be injured, no one would have grounds for a civil suit either. Even in the highly unlikely case that you got caught, someone had some ridiculous grounds for saying they were injured, and you lost the case (all three of which are extremely unlikely), you would have to pay a maximum of $2500 in statutory damages. BFD.

    Neither the government nor any corporation is going to waste its time chasing around people doing this. And that's why your statement is FUD.

    BTW, nice nested blockquote method, I've decided to "steal" it (I wonder if it works on most browsers) :).

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  212. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    However, it's illegal to posess the tools needed to circumvent the access controls on a work, even after the copyright expires.

    BZZT. Sorry, possession is not illegal under the DMCA, nor could it ever be, since possession of a decryption tool without intent to distribute does not fall under any of the provisions of Article I, Section 8 of the Constution (which would likely be the copyright clause or the interstate commerce clause). A law against possession of decryption tools would be unconstitutional under the 10th ammendment.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  213. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    Hell, the primary purpose of Dr. Felten's work is to merely prove that SDMI is a flawed approach to preventing copyright. Yet RIAA is (apparently) going to succeed at using the DMCA to prevent him from presenting that work.

    This is not the case. Felton already presented the work. The RIAA has agreed not to prosecute him. Felton then sued the RIAA to get a declaratory judgement. The court denied to rule on that declaratory judgement, presumably because he had no standing and the case was moot (though I haven't been able to read the ruling).

    I suspect, however, that there are a great deal many more people using DeCSS for purely legitimate purposes than for copyright infringement.

    By the wording of the law, use is irrelevant if the product is created or marketed to circumvent copyright. This case would be a lot different if the RIAA sued someone for making a linux DVD player which did not allow access to the unencrypted MPEG.

    If I might ask, what do you believe should exist in place of copyright law?

    Absolutely nothing. Contract law could be used in some cases, but that would mainly be for B2B dealings.

    Do you believe that all intellectual property should belong to the public domain?

    Pretty much, although there wouldn't really be a term "public domain" any more, for obvious reasons.

    I agree that copyright law has major problems (especially after the Sonny Bono Copyright Extension), but I am not sure that legal protection of ownership of intellectual property is a bad thing.

    IMHO, authors of creative works would actually be better compensated, because the true intellectual property will always be something that is part of them, something that no one else can take away. As a software programmer, I can certainly say without a doubt that a good programmer is irreplacible for maintaining or improving his work. Even with the best documented and cleanest written software in the world, the original author(s) will always have an advantage over others. I suspect that the same is true of writers and performers, and as such I suspect that copyright law is unnecessary to provide incentive to almost all of those authors. Good authors of any type of work create because it's what they love, or what they do best. As long as they are going to make a decent living off those creations, they will continue to create. Good creators might make $50K a year instead of $500K a year, but I don't think this is going to act as a deterrent because those who are good at something tend to not do it just because of the possibility of huge salaries.

    Maybe I'm wrong, and in any case, I doubt I'll see the end of copyright law during my lifetime.

    --
    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  214. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by noahm · · Score: 1
    BZZT. Sorry, possession is not illegal under the DMCA, nor could it ever be, since possession of a decryption tool without intent to distribute does not fall under any of the provisions of Article I, Section 8 of the Constution (which would likely be the copyright clause or the interstate commerce clause). A law against possession of decryption tools would be unconstitutional under the 10th ammendment.

    OK, but the point of my post is still valid. Even after copyright expires, the law must be broken in order for one to get the tools that allow you to circumvent access controls, even though you do have the legal right to what's on the other side of the access controls. Of course, the law need not be broken if you're on of the very few people in the world capable of cracking CSS without outside information.

    The DMCA cases really sound like the lawmakers are trying to reclassify fair use rights as fair use privilages, privilages that we can't complain about losing when they're taken away.

    Maybe it is possible that, with the advent of widespread digital communications, copyright law really is obsolete and the DMCA is just a flailing, panicked attempt to prop it up for a bit longer. Maybe copyright can't work as intended anymore... I just wish all this junk would go away so I can spend my time thinking about more interesting problems.

    noah

  215. Re:cry me a river you CRIMINAL by aozilla · · Score: 2

    OK, but the point of my post is still valid. Even after copyright expires, the law must be broken in order for one to get the tools that allow you to circumvent access controls, even though you do have the legal right to what's on the other side of the access controls.

    Maybe, and maybe not. It is unclear as to whether every single instance of circumvention software changing hands is considered trafficking. Even if that changing of hands is considered trafficking, no one is injured, so no one is able to initiate a civil suit, and criminal suits are also not valid, because the "trafficking" is not done for the purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain.

    If that doesn't ease your fears, maybe this does. I have a copy of DeCSS. I don't remember where I obtained it from. If any public domain work is encrypted using CSS, send it to me. I will decrypt it for you and send it back. I'm sure there are others who will do the same.

    The DMCA cases really sound like the lawmakers are trying to reclassify fair use rights as fair use privilages, privilages that we can't complain about losing when they're taken away.

    Fair use simply means that you can't be prosecuted for copyright infringement for certain uses of a copyrighted work. It doesn't mean that you can't be prosecuted under the interstate commerce clause, and it most certainly doesn't mean that the copyright holder of a work is required to help you perform that fair use. In fact, it is the right of the copyright holder to prevent fair use through technological means.

    Maybe it is possible that, with the advent of widespread digital communications, copyright law really is obsolete and the DMCA is just a flailing, panicked attempt to prop it up for a bit longer.

    That is my own personal belief.

    I just wish all this junk would go away so I can spend my time thinking about more interesting problems.

    I'm not sure exactly why you need to spend your time thinking about the DMCA. If you're not a copyright infringer... Let me restate that, since I don't know anyone who's never infringed on copyright (basically anyone who's used winzip or the old netscape). If you're not a major copyright infringer, or willfully helping others to infringe copyright, you don't have anything to worry about from the DMCA. The point of the DMCA is to get the Dmitry's of the world, who make a living helping others break the law, because we are a nation of lawbreakers, so it's impossible to go after everyone.

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    ok then your [sic] infringing on my copyright! Could you as [sic] me next time before STEALING my comments for your own?
  216. Re:Computer Science Major and Political Science Mi by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    "You can rant and rave but let's face it: one of the jobs of the DoJ is to defend the government. They are the government's lawyers."

    That's funny. I thought they were supposed to defend the constitution.

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?