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Elcomsoft Case Proceeds; U.S. Claims Jurisdiction

An anonymous reader sent in this Reuters article noting that the Elcomsoft case will go forward. Elcomsoft had asserted that the United States didn't have jurisdiction. This is not really ground-breaking news; Elcomsoft did sell its software to people in the United States and it's not surprising that a U.S. court would claim jurisdiction over this. Elcomsoft is also claiming that enforcement of the DMCA violates the Constitutional right to free speech, and that the part of the DMCA which prohibits distributing devices which circumvent protection measures is so vague that enforcement of it violates the Constitutional right to due process under the Fifth Amendment. (See EFF's archive for more.) One or both of these claims may have a greater chance of success than the jurisdiction claim.

242 comments

  1. Pattern emerging... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Re:Pattern emerging... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    2. Re:Pattern emerging... by KenFury · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Mod this up

    3. Re:Pattern emerging... by atrowe · · Score: 3, Insightful
      America is the land of the free in the sense that one is given the right to speak out against perceived injustice and voice their unpopular opinion in a public forum without danger of repercussions. This is a privilege that quite a few of us take for granted.

      In many countries around the world, you would have been put to death for the anti-government sentiment in your above post.

      --

      -atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.

    4. Re:Pattern emerging... by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      ...yep, he only has to worry about a computer system deep in some inteligence facility flagging his post. Only if he is flagged so much will they investigate and might go after him with fully automatic weapons.

      ...land of the free as long as you don't piss the powerful off.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    5. Re:Pattern emerging... by atrowe · · Score: 2
      Sure thing, buddy.

      Let me guess: You're wearing a hat made out of tinfoil right now, aren't you?

      --

      -atrowe: Card-carrying Mensa member. I have no toleranse for stupidity.

    6. Re:Pattern emerging... by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1, Funny
      Since we're going that way...

      I hear you are known for your fine wool.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    7. Re:Pattern emerging... by Jaysyn · · Score: 1

      OT but is the spelling error in your sig just for irony?

      Jaysyn

      --
      There is a war going on for your mind.
    8. Re:Pattern emerging... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Good catch!!!

    9. Re:Pattern emerging... by ghjm · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Bullshit. There are numerous official repercussions to taking a public anti-government position. You can legally be denied a security clearance. You can legally be detained for questioning. You can legally be denied visas, passports, and (if not a citizen) naturalization or work permits.

      And if you want to talk about being put to death, consider this. According to Amnesty International there are 86 countries whose governments regularly put people to death, and 109 that do not. In these 109 countries you can be said to have the inalienable right to life. As a simple matter of fact, not opinion, on which of these lists is the U.S. registered?

      Yes, the U.S. is a free country. It scores a 1 (the top score) on the Freedom House survey. But so do 28 other nations. 45% of the world's population is free. Freedom is in no way uniquely or even especially an American characteristic.

      -Graham

    10. Re:Pattern emerging... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Uh... which post were you responding to?

    11. Re:Pattern emerging... by zeno_2 · · Score: 1
      America is the land of the free in the sense that one is given the right to speak out against perceived injustice and voice their unpopular opinion in a public forum without danger of repercussions. This is a privilege that quite a few of us take for granted.

      You would hope so

      Basically that guy flamed a corporation on a message board, and was sue'd by that company. The crappy part about it is that he didn't find out about any of this until he was served his judgement. A piece of certified mail was sent which he never recieved, or so he says.. The first time he heard about it, it was a judgement for $450,000 defamation lawsuit that he had lost. There are more and more of these types of lawsuits happening every day.

      Id say that things are going to have to change at some point. The U.S. is policing the internet a bit too much. Why should someone in the netherlands have to worry about what laws are passed in the U.S. when making a piece of software that would let him watch a movie. Well, if you use the internet, then you seem to fall under the umbrella of U.S. jurisdiction. Im sure its illegal to post certain material that we would find to be ok in other countries, but thats alright. Try to do that the other way around and you'll get yer ass handed to you by the DMCA.

      Why should a russian programmer have to worry about laws being passed here. The simple fact that he chose to use a buisness model that involves using the internet to sell software. Its a very common model, it would be silly for them not to do so. They are not breaking any russian laws at all, so it would seem to be ok. First visit to the good ol' USA, and he ends up in the slammer, thanks to the FBI.

      Do you want to start living in a world where anytime you log onto the net, your going to have to abide by every law in every country, because someone from that country might not want it or whatever.. I didn't think so. As I once saw on the back of a VW Bus, I love my country but I fear my government. Ya, we as a country had quite a lot to do with the building of the internet, but its grown quite a bit from then and we dont need to police the whole thing. Lets say that the US had solely invented the automobile, without any sort of help or knowledge from any other country. Now look ahead 40 years, do you think that it would be a bit crazy if you saw that the US has been regulating cars across the world the whole time?

    12. Re:Pattern emerging... by zeno_2 · · Score: 1
      Uh... which post were you responding to?

      Probably the one that you get to when you click parent under his post =)

    13. Re:Pattern emerging... by ignavus · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The US has the size, the geographical isolation, and the natural resources to be very powerful. It is able to defend its freedoms, where many smaller countries (eg Denmark next door to Germany in 1939) could not. It has even (thankfully) aided some of those other countries to recover their freedom, after neighboring bullies opppressed them (see WWI and WWII). It was not unique in assisting the liberation of the world at those times, but its sheer size and economic power made its help very advantageous.

      However, that does not mean that US political culture is the most open and morally and politically free in the world. Nor was it the first country to embrace many of the freedoms it does possess (consider the abolition of slavery and female suffrage - both done elsewhere earlier).
      Nor does it mean that the US has always promoted those freedoms in other countries - it has on a number of occasions promoted tyranny *as a replacement to* democracy - and has happily kept its hemisphere secure at the cost of democracy in other nations.

      Overall, the US's freedom has been a very good thing, but we should not make the mistake of thinking that it is the most free, the source of freedom, or the embodiment of freedom. It is simply the most powerful of the relatively free nations.

      --
      I am anarch of all I survey.
    14. Re:Pattern emerging... by MdntToker · · Score: 1

      Well, if you use the internet, then you seem to fall under the umbrella of U.S. jurisdiction. Im sure its illegal to post certain material that we would find to be ok in other countries, but thats alright. Try to do that the other way around and you'll get yer ass handed to you by the DMCA.

      No, the only reason that Skylarov got his ass in jail is because he broke a US law (albeit a shitty one), then he came to America to give a speech. As soon as you step foot in America, you come under it's laws. It's very simple, if you break American laws, don't step foot in the country. Otherwise, do whatever your respective country allows.

    15. Re:Pattern emerging... by sn00ker · · Score: 1
      No, the only reason that Skylarov got his ass in jail is because he broke a US law (albeit a shitty one), then he came to America to give a speech. As soon as you step foot in America, you come under it's laws. It's very simple, if you break American laws, don't step foot in the country. Otherwise, do whatever your respective country allows.
      I guess I'd better not travel to Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Bharain...
      Why? Because I've been consuming alcohol, and in those countries it's illegal - Totally legal where I live, though.

      You see how seriously FUCKED the US view is, here? "It's legal in your country, but if you come to our country and have been doing it we'll arrest you and charge you for it."
      Some states in the US don't have an age of consent for sexual relations, or the age is very low. I could indulge in legal fornication with a minor in those states, but by your logic I couldn't travel to most other countries in the world because I'd have been breaking their laws regarding age of consent.

      Give me a break. If the US wants to pass fucked laws, that's their perogative. It's not right, however, to try and retroactively enforce those laws against a foreign national who was indulging in a perfectly legal action in their country of residence. Maybe Canada should start arresting American business people who've not exported to Cuba? since in Canada it's illegal to abide by the US embargo on Cuba.

      --
      "God, root, what is difference?" - Pitr, userfriendly
    16. Re:Pattern emerging... by Moridineas · · Score: 2

      Bah, that's a total and seemingly deliberate misinterpration/misunderstanding of simple legal theory.

      If you consumed alcohol IN those countries, it would be illegal. Just like if you sell software IN america that breaks laws, it would be illegal. Very, very simple concept.

    17. Re:Pattern emerging... by quintessent · · Score: 2

      You're right.

      Other countries did abolish female suffrage long before we did.

      Also, many of them brought it back before we did ;)

      (ironic side note: Muslim nations were pioneers of such rights for women much earlier than Christian nations were)

  2. Godspeed, Elcomsoft! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Although I get the feeling that this won't be the case that brings down the DMCA, I think this will be the first of many to chip away at it's foundations. Let's hope that further down the road this disgrace of a law is ruled unconstitutional, stricken from the record and placed in a brown paper pag in the lavvy.

  3. I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the consumer by johnmearns · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I really hope sometime I get to see the dmca used by a consumer against the record/movie/big software industry. I'm not sure how it would best be done, but there has to be a way to make them hate it just as much :)

    --
    "I may disagree with what you have to say, but I shall defend, to the death, your right to say it." -Voltaire
  4. An AP article? by realgone · · Score: 3, Informative
    Um... It was posted on CNN.com with a Reuters tagline.

    Well, things could be worse; at least the letters "a" and "p" were in that last sentence...

  5. Good Let it Go to Court by stoolpigeon · · Score: 1

    I would like to see this law challenged on a regular basis until it has been struck down.

    The whole thing is insane (but this is preaching to the choir)

    I think it is also good that foreign companies will get to see what a travesty this is.

    The more people in the world against the DMCA the better.

    .

    --
    It's hard to believe that's how Micronians are made. Why don't we see it right now by having you both kiss one another?
  6. Jurisdiction by Fjandr · · Score: 2, Funny

    A US court would claim jurisdiction over someone who at one time had breathed air that might possibly have passed over US soil, so that jurisdiction was asserted is not a surprise.

    1. Re:Jurisdiction by fetta · · Score: 3, Insightful
      " A US court would claim jurisdiction over someone who at one time had breathed air that might possibly have passed over US soil, so that jurisdiction was asserted is not a surprise."

      Have you ever done business internationally? I have, and it is not at all surprising that a court in any country would claim jurisdiction over commerce in that country. You make this sound like some kind of evil power grab, when in fact it's just a rational way to do things. Somebody has to have jurisdiction. When I do business in China, I have to deal with Chinese law. When I do business in Britain, I have to deal with British law. Even if I never step foot in those countries.

      If you sell something directly to our citizens, you should expect to comply with our laws. If you don't want to accept that, then don't do business with the United States (or any other country that has laws you don't like). The Internet complicates things in some interesting ways by making it easier to conduct international business, but it doesn't eliminate all other rules. If you want to do business with U.S. citizens while violating U.S. law, don't:

      • use U.S. banks
      • own U.S. assets
      • operate from a country with reciprocal treaty obligations with the U.S.
      • travel to the U.S.
      • etc.


      Now, don't get me wrong.

      I believe that holding an individual employee of a foreign company criminally libel for his company's allegedly illegal acts is a bad idea. (legally questionable and sets a bad precedent for the treatment of U.S. business people overseas)

      I hope that the DMCA gets overturned on other grounds. I think it's both bad public policy and bad law.

      But the argument that "because you use the Internet no nation's laws apply" doesn't fly.
      --
      ** The opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect those of my employers - past, present, or future**
    2. Re:Jurisdiction by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      facetious
      adj.1. not meant to be taken seriously or literally: a facetious remark.

      I was not being strictly serious, and I never once said that because they were doing business on the internet, they should have blanket immunity from national laws. I was simply making a joke about the US legal system, which will find a way to claim jurisdiction over anyone, for any reason, no matter how frivolous. I am well aware that the court has jurisdiction in personam and subject matter jurisdiction. I was not denying that there are legitimate reasons for jurisdiction over internatial figures. It was a joke. :)
    3. Re:jurisdiction by Overzeetop · · Score: 1

      It's true. We Americans, as a collective entity, have forgotten what it really means to be good neighbors in the world. I find many of our actions quite disappointing, mainly because it makes us look bad. There is a great deal of good that we offer to the world: financial aid, manpower for humanitarian purposes as examples. There's also a great deal which isn't so hot, such as commercialism, but which may be rejected. The bad-neighbor part comes when we try to enforce our will/values on other people when we know full well we wouldn't stand for such treatment in reverse.

      The sad part is that it's usually done for a financial or political purpose, not out of some misguided desire to "enlighten" others. At least with the latter, it could be written off as naive. In reality, it's just evil empire-mongering.

      --
      Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
    4. Re:jurisdiction by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      US jurisdiction everywhere, but not vice versa

      Well, a lot of other countries would like to do the same, and Saudi Arabia and China come to mind first; even the french... But nobody has the resources and the drive to actually do it; the "drive" being a huge legal system that already governs the american society at home and the money to push the right laws (DMCA, SSSCA) and the right people (guess who...) in order to make this move possible (from domestic to international domination).

      --
      -- No sig today
    5. Re:jurisdiction by Planesdragon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      surprising? no. Correct? Well, what about Yahoo! vs. France? And does that mean that next time I buy something at Amazon, I can sue them in a german court according to german consumer protection laws if I feel like it?

      Only if you're a German Conusmer. If you live in Germany / German lands (like an embassy) or if Amazon ships to you from Germany (or ships to you in germany), then the laws might apply.

      of course, americans being what they are (single-languaged, specifically) they don't understand what "quid pro quo" means and are perfectly happy to apply the argument only single-sided. (i.e. US jurisdiction everywhere, but not vice versa)

      You're horribly misinformed. The basic principle of international jurisdiction is affect--Elcomsoft did something that affects America in a clear and direct fashion (selling us stuff.) We can bring them to trial for it.

      If they don't like it, they can just stay away from the US, completely. I think there's a little island somewhere that would also like to stay completely away from the US.

      And for the record--yes, the US gives quid pro quo to other nations. Remember the kid who got canned? The US military person who's in a Jappanese jail for rape? There are bunches and bunches of exchanges--both ways--that happen every day. We just don't hear about it because they're so boring.

    6. Re:Jurisdiction by fetta · · Score: 1

      "I was not being strictly serious, and I never once said that because they were doing business on the internet, they should have blanket immunity from national laws. "

      Fair enough. However, some people really do seem to take the view that the Internet shouldn't be regulated at all.

      You do make a valid point - the issue of jurisdiction does seem to get bent completely out of shape at times. The best example is probably the way the commerce clause gets used to make almost everything a federal case.

      --
      ** The opinions expressed here are my own, and do not reflect those of my employers - past, present, or future**
    7. Re:jurisdiction by mpe · · Score: 2

      of course, americans being what they are (single-languaged, specifically) they don't understand what "quid pro quo" means and are perfectly happy to apply the argument only single-sided. (i.e. US jurisdiction everywhere, but not vice versa)

      Which is a big part of the reason the US isn't too popular in many parts of the world right now.
      Though it's not so much "Americans" as the US government and large US corporations. The vast bulk of the US population are more isolationist than imperialist and tend to assume that the US government is too...

    8. Re:jurisdiction by mpe · · Score: 2

      We Americans, as a collective entity, have forgotten what it really means to be good neighbors in the world. I find many of our actions quite disappointing, mainly because it makes us look bad. There is a great deal of good that we offer to the world: financial aid, manpower for humanitarian purposes as examples.

      One very important thing is that where problems are due to the actions of people the one thing you must not do is take sides. The US did this in Somalia, the result was a disaster. The US also did this in Afganistan, only time will tell if this was a good thing or not.

      There's also a great deal which isn't so hot, such as commercialism, but which may be rejected. The bad-neighbor part comes when we try to enforce our will/values on other people when we know full well we wouldn't stand for such treatment in reverse.

      Sometimes not even US values, consider the US trying to bully the Ukraine.

    9. Re:Jurisdiction by Fjandr · · Score: 1

      Yup, many do seem to take that view. I don't believe in much new regulation though. Most issues are already covered by existing law. Few issues surrounding the internet are wholly new, though I'm sure there are some.

  7. We Can Only Hope by kaltekar · · Score: 1

    Hope that they win this thing, if they get it trough to the courts on the 1st and 5th amendments then maybe we can get the damned thing repealed, maybe even stop the CBDTVPA/SSSCA stopped dead in it tracks

    --
    Ahh.. The mind what a wonderful trap!
  8. But will they still sell us spamware? by The+Turd+Report · · Score: 2, Informative

    massmail.ru is a Elcomsoft site that sells spam software. Thanks guys!

    1. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by erroneus · · Score: 2

      Dolt!

      It doesn't matter what they sell!!! It's the law that's the "bad guy" in this situation.

      Not everyone likes porn. Some of us hate it and believe it should be outlawed for all time. Some of us love it too. But we can't have law that would restrict the rights of a few while at the same time guarantee the same to the rest.

      Law is a dangerous tool and you can't weild it against those you hate or those who are unpopular strictly for that reason. Do that and you make yourself a target of an uncontrollable weapon.

    2. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, but Elcomsoft is one of the rare entities out there where savvy geeks are selling tools directly and specifically used to 'mine' email addresses off of web forums like Slashdot for use by spammers.

      That is fucking outrageous and any of the people here who regularly start sputtering when anybody defends a spammer should be fuming about what Elcomsoft sells.

      It's really, really sad that a weasel company like Elcomsoft has somehow become the 'hero' in all of this. They're sleaze, one level worse than somebody who runs an Open Relay and thumbs their nose at anybody who complains.

    3. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by The+Turd+Report · · Score: 0
      Mindless Sheep!

      It does matter. Everyone likes to think that Elcomsoft are a bunch of "Internet Freedom Fighters" who are just trying to free us form the oppressive government. But, when you look at everything they make, you start to see them for what they are. A company that makes programs that are designed to do 'bad things'. Or, maybe you don't mind if spammers come thru your web site and scrape every email address off of it and start selling it on the next "200 Million Email Addresses" CD?

    4. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by bilbobuggins · · Score: 1
      i hope you have another company with an equal or better shot at challenging the DMCA.

      if you can't have the one you love, love the one you're with, b/c unfortunately supporting one spammer is worth the millions of people this could benefit, whether we approve of their business or not.

    5. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by erroneus · · Score: 2

      I'm not saying that I like what they write. I despise it as much or more than you. The problem is that if we say to hell with them because we don't like what they peddle, then you're missing the point entirely.

      First of all, it's somewhat ironic that Russians are sorta defending our constitutional rights on this matter. Second, some people have very strong feelings about the use of P2P software, DeCSS and a number of other popular things. So your very position, when applied to a diffent party, endangers your internet freedoms.

      I don't care about internet mining software. I care about the scum who uses it. I'm honestly surprised that we haven't heard cases where spamming was cited as a motive... not that it would stop anyone from spamming... but still.

    6. Re:But will they still sell us spamware? by The+Turd+Report · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Isn't that kinda like saying you support some dictator because he makes the trains run on time?

  9. Turn About Fair Play by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Funny

    With the U.S. foisting it's values, culture and, worse, laws on other nations, it's only fair that a company from another country come here and shoot down one of ours (and more power to them!)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:Turn About Fair Play by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "With the U.S. foisting it's values, culture and, worse, laws on other nations, it's only fair that a company from another country come here and shoot down one of ours (and more power to them!)"

      Huh?

      I think it's more telling how they want to shoot it down. First by claiming that they don't have jurisdiction. Second after the courts say they do, then they use the fundamental principals of the country against the over bearing law.

      Lets just hope this case doesn't get appealed then overturned because the court erred in determining wether it had jurisdiction.

    2. Re:Turn About Fair Play by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      If the court found in favor of elcomsoft for constitutional reasons, if it then got completly thrown out for jurisdiction reason, that would in no way make the court discision invalid, and it could still be used in future court cases as presidence. Or did you mean something else?

  10. What if ElcomSoft loses? by Dimensio · · Score: 4, Interesting

    What if, after every challenge and appeal, they are found guilty of violating the DMCA. What if after the judgement all employees bog off back to Russia, including Dimitri. How is the US going to enforce a judgement against them?

    1. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Rinikusu · · Score: 5, Funny

      "Reporting live, from Moscow, we've just gotten word that the attack upon the digital terrorist, Elcomsoft by a US gunship, the AC130, was okay by General Ashcroft to curb digital terrorism. Quoting George W. Bush, he said "We shall have NO tolerence for terrorists, digital or otherwise." Behind me is the smoking crater where Elcomsoft existed only minutes ago.

      We're getting word that the headquarters of 2600 magazine were just raided by US special forces in the search for digital terrorist Emmanuel Goldstein. No word on the status of the mission, but let us impress upon the viewer that these are highly dangerous individuals. Special Forces have been trained to fighter router to router, server by server to destroy the menace that is digital terrorism.

      Back to you, John."

      --
      If you were me, you'd be good lookin'. - six string samurai
    2. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by drunkmonk · · Score: 1

      Import restrictions, I would think. The only real way to punish them otherwise would be to sue them in Russian court against Russian laws, which obviously isn't going to fly.

    3. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by gmhowell · · Score: 2

      Seize any funds in a US bank (I assume this means Visa, Mastercard, AmEx, etc.), seize US property/accounts (their web server). Revoke travel visas for members of company.

      Not a *lot* they can do, but they can certainly fuck thems up for them.

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    4. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by MasterD · · Score: 2, Informative

      The US has a treaties to deal with this sorta thing. Cases like this happen all the time. If a Russian comes to the states and murders somebody, he is tried and convicted in the States. He can, under prisoner transfer treaties, decide that he wants to spend the rest of his sentence in Russia instead of in the U.S. (To be closer to family, or because a Russian prison might be better than a U.S. prison, etc.) Under the terms of these treaties, he is transfered back to Russia and serves the remainder of his time there.

      The U.S. has treaties setup with most of the countries in the world that they have normal diplomatic ties to.

      If somebody does commit a crime in the States and then escapes to their home country, these same treties apply and the home country is abliged to capture and detain the accused.

      After all, it is a two way street. If an American were to go to Russia and commit a crime, the Russians would want that individual to get tried in Russia.

      There is a whole division in the U.S. Department of Justice dedicated to dealing with all these prisoner transfers. They negotiate with the local authorities (like individual states or municipalities) in the States and the authorities in the foreign nations to figure out the terms of the transfer.

    5. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      But what if it's not a crime in one country? I'm assuming that the Russian government could demand custody of a person and then free them if they thought that was the right thing to do.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    6. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2

      It would then fall under international law and be dependant on agreements that the US has with Russia in this case.

      You are correct, however, that if the US has no formal agreements with the "offender's" country it would be hard to enforce.

      --
      The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
    7. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      Well the treaty states that russia has a enforce any court US court discision as well as US would have to enforce a russian court descision. Unless of course, a person successfully claimed they were fleeing the other country to volations of their human rights and wanted protection. Which Elcomsoft employees could obviously do when they run to Russia.

    8. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2
      Except he didn't break any laws while in the States. He wrote the DMCA-illegal code in Russia and Elcomsoft sold it in the US. Why aren't they being tried? Why just one of their employees who is no more or less guilty than any other?

      Here's my question. If he gets convicted and sentenced to prison, you say he can opt to go back to Russia. Assuming that's true, and since what he did is not illegal there, wouldn't it be perfectly legal for them to simply release him the minute he gets back home?

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    9. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that the usual practice is to force the foreign national to serve his sentence in the U.S. and then deport him after he serves his time. Can you provide any documentation of these "prisoner transfer treaties?"

      This post does not constitute legal advice. If you need such advice, hire an attorney.

    10. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by sconeu · · Score: 2, Flamebait

      Quoting George W. Bush, he said "We shall have NO tolerence for terrorists, digital or otherwise."

      Unless they're named Arafat.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    11. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by MasterD · · Score: 1

      > wouldn't it be perfectly legal for them to simply release him the minute he gets back home?

      Russia would not do this because then they would be breaking the treaty and the U.S. would not send any more of their citizens back. They would be shooting themselves in the foot for future incidents.

      The biggest problem is normally the states don't want to give up their prisoners to other countries. The governors want to appear tough on crime, and sending bad guys out of state makes them look weak. Especially if they are sent to countries with more liberal laws regarding drugs or death penalty or copyright like in this case. The Feds have to deal with rouge states that don't want to recognize the U.S. treaties. This might be the biggest stumbling block.

    12. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      reread your fucking sig.

    13. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Kintanon · · Score: 2

      So does that mean a swedish citizen convicted of Statutory rape of a 17 year old would be forced to serve jail time in sweden where (I believe) the age of consent is lower than 17? If I'm wrong about that particular country don't flame me, just substitute a country with lower AoC laws.

      Kintanon

      --
      Check out JoshJitsu.info for Brazilian Ji
    14. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by nanoakron · · Score: 1

      *sent to countries with more liberal laws regarding drugs or death penalty or copyright*

      You mean like the rest of the Western World?

      -Nano.

    15. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      better learn the facts.. More like they are indicted war criminals with the last name of Sharon.

    16. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2
      But this damned government of mine wants it both ways. They want our law to apply to actions done in other countries, but not foreign laws to apply to US citizens while here in the States. If a US citizen abroad was arrested for something he did that was perfectly legal before ever leaving home, we'd never stand for it. Do I not dare ever go to China because, regardless of my behavior there, I said something critical of their government while over here?

      Why would Russia really want a treaty with a country that tries Russians for acts that are legal in Russia commited whilest in Russia? If Dmitri is convicted and forced to remain here, that treaty isn't worth the scrap it's printed on.

      I realize I'm preaching to the choir here. But someone needs to take the US government down a peg or two. They evidently aren't listening to their own citizenry or little things like reason or logic; that leaves only the other countries whose citizens are getting screwed by us.

      --
      Dyolf Knip
    17. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Abreu · · Score: 1

      I feel very sorry for you.

      hint: read your sig again

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    18. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by sconeu · · Score: 2

      Hey, I don't necessarily agree with the Bush Doctrine, I'm simply pointing out the inconsistency.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
    19. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by Abreu · · Score: 1

      In that case, my apologies sir.

      English is not my first language, so sometimes (but not often!) I miss things like this.

      --
      No sig for the moment.
    20. Re:What if ElcomSoft loses? by sconeu · · Score: 1

      No problem, Abreu.

      --
      General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  11. This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 5, Insightful

    even though the activity transpired over the Internet the United States still has jurisdiction.

    This is definitely not good news. It means basically that you could even get extradited to be tried in the U.S. if they so request. Not particularly good news for a lot of people starting with Amsterdam's pr0n industry to the Norwegian DECSS guy...

    So it looks like Alan Cox was overreacting: you don't have to avoid going to the States, the'll come after you if they really want. Not funny at all.

    --
    -- No sig today
    1. Re:This is not ok... by jrsp · · Score: 3, Insightful

      No, it sounds like you shouldn't have servers in the US nor receive funds in the US if you are doing something the US does (or may in the near future) consider illegal. The question of whether or not the actions are illegal or should be illegal is totally separate.

      Fire up your offshore servers, folks. Hmm, maybe I should invest in some of those ventures now?

    2. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      if you are doing something the US does (or may in the near future) consider illegal.

      This is even worse... imagine you're coding something that's perfectly acceptable and legal today. If it's deemed illegal next year, would you be still punishable? If it's not software and DMCA, the answer is definitely NO.

      But if it is, is at best "maybe"; this whole thing looks really bad now but maybe it's just me.

      --
      -- No sig today
    3. Re:This is not ok... by hsenag · · Score: 1

      It means basically that you could even get extradited to be tried in the U.S. if they so request.

      I believe extradition laws generally say that you can't be extradited for doing something that wouldn't be illegal in the country you're being extradited from. I'm not sure if this principle is universal, though.

    4. Re:This is not ok... by jrsp · · Score: 1

      imagine you're coding something that's perfectly acceptable and legal today. If it's deemed illegal next year, would you be still punishable?

      Well, if you continued to sell it or make it readily available after learning it had become illegal then I'd say you were in trouble. I do not think you would be punishable for actions taken that were legal when taken, but I'm no lawyer [if you were punishable, I'm all for moving to another country ;)]

      My original point was that if you know something's coming down the pipe, legal issue-wise, then putting a server in the US to do business in the US is a calculated risk. It would be more cautious to find another country to host and manage the enterprise rather than risk having all your effort be for naught.

    5. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 2, Informative

      But the software was developed in Russia and was and still is - NOT illegal there.

      --
      -- No sig today
    6. Re:This is not ok... by EFGearman · · Score: 2

      You would not normally be against the law. If you are doing something that is legal today, but becomes illegal in the future, the US legal system can not bring criminal charges against you for violating the law they just passed. Doing so would be 'Ex Pos Facto' (sp?) which is basically prohibited.

      Now, I'm not saying that you couldn't be held liable in civil court, it's just that anything you did before the law was passed would be allowed as far as criminal court was concerned.

      Provided, of course, you stopped once the law was passed.

      Eric Gearman
      --

      --
      Atomic batteries to power! Turbines to speed!
    7. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      Putting a server in the US is a calculated risk mostly because the US are the only country that have the means, the time and the drive to come after you anywhere.

      And yes, you're probably right...

      --
      -- No sig today
    8. Re:This is not ok... by Ravensfire · · Score: 1

      This is a company doing business in this country - why shouldn't they be required to follow our laws? Would you want a company in, ohhh, say some third world county, with extremely lax laws, sell, ummm, explosives, smallpox virus, or various other things to consumers in the US?

      Okay, rather extreme example, and there are various import restrictions regulating, but the point is that most countries, if you do business with their citizens, will allow you to be tried under their laws. It's not just the US doing this.

      -- Ravensfire

      --
      "But we decide which is right, and which is an illusion"
    9. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      Atually, they should. But everything started with arresting the guy who allegedly wrote the software, keeping him in jail and on bail for 4 months until he agrees to testify... I've heard of killers walking because of smaller procedural errors.

      --
      -- No sig today
    10. Re:This is not ok... by the_consumer · · Score: 1

      Would you want a company in, ohhh, say some third world county, with extremely lax laws, sell, ummm, explosives, smallpox virus, or various other things to consumers in the US?

      Yup, I sure would, and that goes for guns, drugs, and all sorts of other 'contraband'. If I buy a bushel of pot from somewhere where it is legal to sell (is there such a place?) over the web, and stupidly have it delivered to my home, then I'm the one who should be held exclusively liable for breaking US law. If the person who sold it to me subsequently visits the US, they should be free from prosecution, having not violated the law here.

      --
      "If you're thinking what I'm thinking, you're right." -
    11. Re:This is not ok... by (trb001) · · Score: 1

      "The conduct which underlies the indictment includes ElcomSoft's offering its AEBPR program for sale over the Internet, from a computer server physically located in the United States," the judge wrote. "Purchasers obtained copies of the program in the United States ... Payments were directed to, and received by, an entity in the United States."

      Go ahead and mod me down, but if it looks like a duck, and quacks like a duck, but has papers saying it's an ostrich, I'd say it's still a duck...

      --trb

    12. Re:This is not ok... by hsenag · · Score: 1

      But the software was developed in Russia and was and still is - NOT illegal there.

      And as far as I know, noone's been extradited from Russia - Skylarov was arrested while in the US, wasn't he?

    13. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      It's not about ducks and ostriches, it's about how for example Microsoft (and this is really an example, no m$ bashing today) specifies in the shrink-wrap license that everything under the (so called) contract will be judged under some American jurisdiction. Why not extend the courtesy to foreign companies selling software in the US...?

      --
      -- No sig today
    14. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      True. But he was just the first, and this is the first trial test of the DMCA.
      Who knows what will be tomorrow?

      --
      -- No sig today
    15. Re:This is not ok... by renehollan · · Score: 2
      Doing so would be 'Ex Pos Facto' (sp?) which is basically prohibited.

      If it is prohibited, then this is because it is illegal, or, ultimately, unconstitutional.

      Since when has THAT stopped the U.S. government?

      --
      You could've hired me.
    16. Re:This is not ok... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they ship the pot from a depot in the US, receive payment in the US, etc. then they are culpable in the US.

      The Internet is not some 'magical kingdom' where no terrestials laws hold. Some of the people in this discussion seem to think all the rules of commerce were revoked when a bunch of geeks learned how to use modems.

    17. Re:This is not ok... by plugger · · Score: 1

      Hmm, so I travel to Amsterdam and smoke some dope. Does that mean I am liable to arrest if I enter the USA six months later?

    18. Re:This is not ok... by EFGearman · · Score: 2

      If they want to get you, they'll get you. That wasn't my point. The fact that it would be illegal for them to get you was my point.

      All you need is one honest judge.

      EFGearman
      --

      --
      Atomic batteries to power! Turbines to speed!
    19. Re:This is not ok... by GospelHead821 · · Score: 2

      But if you notice, most of the countries from which these so-called criminals come from are not at all happy about what the United States is doing. I suspect if it weren't for the fact that this Canadian man were already in custody here in the United States, Canada would NOT go along with plans for extradition. I think that most of the rest of the world disagrees with us enough that the US couldn't force anybody to extradite without causing worse diplomatic problems than they'd be "solving" by trying the case.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    20. Re:This is not ok... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you buy, sell, or smoke that dope on US territory?

    21. Re:This is not ok... by Sylver+Dragon · · Score: 1

      If I buy a bushel of pot from somewhere where it is legal to sell (is there such a place?) over the web, and stupidly have it delivered to my home, then I'm the one who should be held exclusively liable for breaking US law. If the person who sold it to me subsequently visits the US, they should be free from prosecution, having not violated the law here.

      From the article:
      "The conduct which underlies the indictment includes ElcomSoft's offering its AEBPR program for sale over the Internet, from a computer server physically located in the United States," the judge wrote. "Purchasers obtained copies of the program in the United States ... Payments were directed to, and received by, an entity in the United States."

      The difference here would be, in your analogy, the dope dealer would have come to the US, set up a distribution point, and a store front to sell it to you. So while, yes, you should be liable for the transaction too, the dope dealer is just as liable, because he set up shop inside the country that had the laws restricting such activity.
      While I agree that the US going after Dimitri as it did was wrong (what he did was legal where he did it, and he wasn't the one to bundle it off to the US) it still does not mitigate the fact that Elcomsoft set up shop in the US, in violation of the US laws. Maybe those laws are wrong, and/or suck, but they are the current laws, and if you flaunt them, you should be prepared to pay the penalty. Though, I do hope that this case gets the DMCA killed.

      --
      Necessity is the mother of invention.
      Laziness is the father.
    22. Re:This is not ok... by zeno_2 · · Score: 1

      How can I not sell something to a specific country when im doing this over the internet? Is there any fool-proof way?

      Lets say that I lived in some country that had some pretty lax laws. I create a program that, lets say removes the protection on ebooks. I sell this software to everyone except the united states. This software is gets into the united states, in any number of ways. Would I be held liable at that point?

    23. Re:This is not ok... by rjch · · Score: 1

      Did Skylarov write his software on US territory?

    24. Re:This is not ok... by mpe · · Score: 2

      I believe extradition laws generally say that you can't be extradited for doing something that wouldn't be illegal in the country you're being extradited from.

      Also you can't extradite from anywhere in the EU if the accused could face execution. Possibly any punishment outlawed by the human rights directive.

    25. Re:This is not ok... by bungo · · Score: 2

      Ok, I recommend everyone to read this parent, and the rest of this thread.

      Now go and read the previous Katz article.

      Right, now hands up anyone who doesn't understand why some people around the world do not like or even fear the US?

      --
      "The best part? I became an ordained minister while not wearing pants." -- CleverNickName
    26. Re:This is not ok... by mrbester · · Score: 1

      Okay, rather extreme example...

      Not at all. It already happens (both ways) and the trade is protected by obfuscation between the corporations that are allied to DoD and the government that wants to keep the trade going, no matter what the cost to the sweatshop workers in the Third World country may be. The UK is good at doing this too (to counteract any "US hater!" posts). Read Private Eye and enjoy...

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    27. Re:This is not ok... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mentioning Jon Katz in a serious thread shows that you're a troll (or incredibly gullible).
      In either case - please go away and never come back.

    28. Re:This is not ok... by RogerWilco · · Score: 1

      I don't know about Norway, but the USA is one of the few countries with which the Netherlands do not have an extradiction treaty.
      This is for 2 reasons (AFAIK):
      1) People could get killed by capital punishment
      in the USA. Killing people is illegal in the Netherlands, therefore the Dutch state can not cooperate if the chance would exist that this would happen.
      2) The USA do not want this to be bi-lateral. The USA wants the Netherlands to always extradite people if requested, without that the USA will return the service. (the USA is esp. touchy about US militairy personel)

      Therefore all requests for extradiction are revieved in a dutch court on a case by case basis,
      esp. concerning reason nr. 1.

      Adriaan.

      --
      RogerWilco the Adventurous Janitor
    29. Re:This is not ok... by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      Good points. I had no idea about this.
      Looks like the Netherlands is the place to live in a couple of years. :)

      --
      -- No sig today
    30. Re:This is not ok... by plugger · · Score: 1

      Did Skylarov sell the software in the US, or did he sell it to a Russian software house who then sold in in America?

  12. Re:Bah by jrsp · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not to agree with much of the lawsuit and all, but it sounds like there are some valid reasons for a judge to go ahead with US jurisdiction. Servers physically located in country, funds sent from in country, funds received in country... Sounds like a "presence" existed in the country.

    Now as for DMCA, don't get me started...

  13. Court testing? by mjh · · Score: 3, Insightful
    One or both of these claims may have a greater chance of success than the jurisdiction claim.

    We can certainly hope. The claim that the US doesn't have jurisdiction doesn't discuss the constitutionality of the DMCA at all. Whereas the other claims directly challenge the DMCA, and if those claims are upheld set the stage for overturning that stupid law.

    --
    Key to financial independence: Spend less than you earn. Save and invest the difference. Do it for a long time.
  14. Cold War Prognosticators by Beautyon · · Score: 5, Funny

    thirty years ago would never have predicted or even dreamed that a Russian software company would be defending the rights of Americans and going to court in a bid to uphold the American Constitution.

    The 21st century: an upside-down circus!

    --
    ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    1. Re:Cold War Prognosticators by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      They were dragged into this, and their lawyers are american... don't idealize this,keep it in perspective: it's mostly an american fight with the russians as innocent bystanders or, in the worst case, collateral damage.

      --
      -- No sig today
    2. Re:Cold War Prognosticators by The+Turd+Report · · Score: 1

      If you think that Elcomsoft is doing this for your rights, you are sadly mistaken. They are a company; they are doing this so they can make $. If it just happens to effect your rights, that is just coincidence.

    3. Re:Cold War Prognosticators by Citizen+of+Earth · · Score: 0, Troll

      Cold War Prognosticators thirty years ago would never have predicted or even dreamed that a Russian software company would be defending the rights of Americans and going to court in a bid to uphold the American Constitution.

      They probably also wouldn't have guessed that domestic corporations would be more dangerous to American citizens than a nuclear power.

    4. Re:Cold War Prognosticators by Rascalson · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, collateral damage? Where have I heard that term before?

      --
      prisoner# msce18xxxxx. Currently planning my escape.
    5. Re:Cold War Prognosticators by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The 21st century: an upside-down circus!

      Back in that time - the world ad a competition of two systems. Was it bad? something was bad. But at least there was a choice.

      Now there is no competition. There is a dictate of USA to other countries how they should live their lives in order "to protect American interests".

      If USA wants to persue a corporation from the other country it should at first make its law being accepted internationally. Who told that Russia should follow DMCA?

  15. Re:A couple things... by Acideous · · Score: 0, Troll

    When you college dimwits quit slashdot and get jobs in this evil "proprietary" world, you are gonna piss your pants when you discover that its nothing more than shit like the RIAA.

    If anyone here is a politically minded and educated college student, they would have realized this already. Take one look at Enron, the Bush family, and the fraudulent, conspiratorial allegations against ex-President Clinton (the Paula Jones incident never happened, it was a perjury trap), it's hard to remain 'comfortable' in this slimy money oriented black market for power. So rather than be cynical and say 'get used to it', let's be novel and try to evolve ideas and fix the problems!

    I guess I'm just too much of an idealist.

  16. Re:Bah by Dead+Penis+Bird · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, the Internet itself transcends national boundaries by allowing users anywhere to access the information located in a server in one place. However, the one place the server was located was in the U.S. Also, a U.S. entity was involved in taking payments.

    Physical removal of that server stops the flow of such information, unless of course, mirrors were set up elsewhere.

    So it's clearly not a case of pure Internet jurisdiction, since the storage of the alleged infringing information was in the U.S. Think of the server as a lockbox.

    Thus the judge was not infringing on some internet right.

    --

    If I weren't nailed to the penis, I'd be pushing up the daisies!

  17. Best Wishes by CrazyDwarf · · Score: 1

    I am really happy to see someone actually challenging this. We can complain all we want, but until someone has the time, money, and initiative to actually challenge the DMCA in court, it's not likely to change. I'd really like to see this go before the Supreme Court. Their insight will be really interesting to hear.

    In a similar incident, I've discussed with my wife the laws restricting stem cell research and cloning. We both find it interesting that abortion is legal, and yet we can't create "life" and then destroy it. I thought the whole reason abortion was legal (to a point) in the U.S. was because the embryo was not considered to be "life". That, too, hasn't made it into any courts, to my knowledge, but I'd like to see what the courts would say about a well thought out legal argument.

    --
    It's easy to stand out when the general level of competence is so low.
  18. Hypocritical by shawnmelliott · · Score: 1

    I understand the point of Elcomsoft but if one of their points is that they are not under US Jurisdiction then why are they pression so much upon First and Fifth amendments rights. Rights that only apply under US Jurisdiction?

    1. Re:Hypocritical by Dimensio · · Score: 4, Informative

      It's multiple lines of defense. First they argue that they are not bound by US law and if that works then the whole issue is moot. They aren't in any trouble and can go if they please. Now that they've been found to be in US jurisdiction they are arguing that the "law" they violated goes against the US Constitution anyway.

      In other words, your laws shouldn't apply to us...but if they do, then *all* of your laws must apply and by those laws the charges are unconstitutional.

    2. Re:Hypocritical by Wolfier · · Score: 1

      yeah. All your laws are belong^H^H^H^H^H^Happlied to us...

    3. Re:Hypocritical by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      In the immortal words of Bart Simpson:
      I didn't do it, nobody saw me, you can't prove anything!
    4. Re:Hypocritical by M@T · · Score: 2

      In other words, your laws shouldn't apply to us...but if they do, then *all* of your laws must apply and by those laws the charges are unconstitutional.

      Err... whats your point?

      You seem to be implying that not only has the US stepped over international borders to subject a foreign company to the US legal system... they're also not allowed to use the US legal system to defend themselves?

      The *very* large problem with the US at the moment is the inability to engage in a bit of role reversal and see things from the other side of the fence.

      --
      'sapientia potestas est'
    5. Re:Hypocritical by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      I never said that there was a problem. I was just explaining why the company would use two apparently contradictory lines of defense.

  19. Re:Bah by realgone · · Score: 2
    Rather, it sounds as if they have jurisdiction over business transactions that take place entirely in the US of A. To quote the article (quoting the ruling):

    Payments were directed to, and received by, an entity in the United States.

    While I don't agree with the underlying legal assertions of the case, the decision on jurisdiction strikes me as reasonably sound.

  20. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In case you haven't been paying attention, the wall came down in '89.
    A few malcontents aside, the fact of the matter is we are in charge around here.

    Damn uppity foreigners.

  21. Re:Bah by soap.xml · · Score: 2

    I don't even think an amendment to the consitution could help that one.... For the U.S. to have jurisdiction over the internet we would somehow have to convince the rest of the world that we own the internet and that it is ours to control....

    With the stupid laws that the U.S. has been putting into place, and the general distaste for the U.S. from alot of the world, I for one don't see that happening...

    But then again... If your on U.S. soil (wether or not you commited your crime here), and you get tried in a U.S. court... You're ppbly gonna have to hope to God that you have a really good U.S. lawyer to get you off... (or a whole lot of policital reasons for your case to get dropped...)

    -ryan
  22. Quit your whining by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am tired of people going..."oh its an unfair law" well do something about it....vote the bastards that made this law what it is out of office

    1. Re:Quit your whining by CrazyDuke · · Score: 1

      We would if we could find people that we where sure didn't take bribes on the ballot.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
  23. Non-infringing use? by kefoo · · Score: 1, Interesting

    ElcomSoft's program, sold briefly on the Internet last year, allowed people using Adobe Systems Inc.'s eBook Reader to copy and print digital books, as well as transfer them to other computers and have the computer read them aloud.

    Wouldn't that be considered "substantial, non-infringing use", something which has been used to defeat these kinds of cases in the past?

    1. Re:Non-infringing use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wouldn't that be considered "substantial, non-infringing use", something which has been used to defeat these kinds of cases in the past?

      No, because the DMCA isn't like laws of the past.

      For example, Universal sued Sony over the VCR, and Sony wins because VCRs have substantial non-infringing uses.

      So when the MPAA bought the DMCA, they had it written so that it doesn't matter - as long as it breaks the protection, it's illegal.

    2. Re:Non-infringing use? by Sloppy · · Score: 1

      That didn't work for 2600 in the DeCSS case. A different judge might see things differently, though. Judge Kaplan had a pretty weird take on some things.

      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    3. Re:Non-infringing use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly why the DMCA is so problematic. You can be prosectued for circumvention even if the use you make of copyrighted material is covered by the fair-use exception (or some other exception).

      Circumvention is the offense, not breech of copyright.

      In effect this eliminates the fair-use exception, because it means the holder of the copyright can make it impossible to take advantage of the fair use exception without violating the DMCA.

      It's a little bit like making it legal to use a drug, but illegal to obtain it. In that case drug *use* would strictly speaking be legal, but still all cases of drug use would involve illegal acts (obtaining drugs).

      Of course this is also the reason why the DMCA is most likely unconstitutional. To some extent the fair use exception is grounded in constitutional rights (like free speech). Thus a law which makes it impossible to take advantage of the fair-use exception also, presumably, makes it impossible to exercise the constitutional rights that the fair-use exception protects.

      Praksys

  24. Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc... by RedCard · · Score: 5, Insightful


    Jurasdiction has lately been a problem for the courts of the world.

    Elcomsoft: a Russian company that sold product over the internet, and some (ok, most) of it's buyers were in the states.Yahoo France: an American company that peddled its wares to the French people of the world (mostly in France).

    If the US can claim jurasdiction over elcomsoft, does it not follow that france can claim jurasdiction over Yahoo France? And if this is the case, do the American people not forfeit their right to cause an uproar when an American company is subject to non-American rules?

    Food for thought.

  25. Re:Bah by Cutriss · · Score: 2

    Now the courts get to make the laws w/o checks+balances from Congress/president?

    And, more importantly, the people.

    --
    "Mod, mod, mod...and another troll bites the dust."
  26. Re:Bah by lucifuge31337 · · Score: 1

    What do you mean NOW? Subverting the constitution has been going on before the ink on the original document was dry.

    --
    Do not fold, spindle or mutilate.
  27. legal question by dan501 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'd like elcomsoft to win and the dmca to be smitten as much as the next guy, but...

    On what grounds does elcomsoft qualify for consitutional rights? I mean, it's not a US citizen or a US corporation.

    Now, I guess it's weird to think about trying a foreign entity under US laws in the first place. And even weirder to try someone under US laws without US contitutional rights applying, but I thought the constitutional rights that are granted are granted to US citizens (and now corporations), not to the world at large.

    --
    my livejournal is interesting and worth reading - I swear. I know everyone thinks their blog is interesting. mine is.
    1. Re:legal question by erroneus · · Score: 4, Insightful

      You can't have it both ways at once, and I think that's the defense plan.

      If jurisdiction in this case is denied, then the case is won. If jurisdiction is allowed, then they have the right to claim constitutional rights in the U.S. since the courts operate under constitutional law.

    2. Re:legal question by zangdesign · · Score: 2

      IANAL, but only that part of the business that was actually in the US or conducted in the US should be liable under US law. The sales that occur outside the US would be liable under those jurisdictions (ie., completely legal in Russia).

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    3. Re:legal question by mrgaribaldi · · Score: 1

      Now the question is do we extend consitutional rights to servers as well?

    4. Re:legal question by GSloop · · Score: 2

      This whole freaking argument has has me really really pissy! (Sorry, I don't mean to dog you, you're just in the wrong place at the right time...)

      Why the hell shouldn't we treat non US citizens and companies the same as US citizens and companies.

      Herr Ashcroft and all the other Bush Stooge Appointees TM seem to think that since you're not a US citizen, and you're evil, that we should give you different terms that everyone else. Oh, you're not a US citizen, oh, then you don't need dur process...or the right to face your accusers, or the right to a trial by jury, or a innocent unless proven to beyond a reasonable doubt standard.

      This whole mindset is bloody scary. We hold up our justice system, and loudly proclaim that it's the best in the world. That it's really fair, and has the best balance of fairness and justice. Then, when it pleases us, we claim that those who aren't citizens deserve a less (much less IMHO) perfect system. SHEESH!

      I'll only say this once. If we have the perfect system, and want others to follow our lead, we have no business using some "less perfect" system to adjudcate legal cases here in the US. US citizen/company or not, I'm perfectly happy to follow the SAME rules for all. If we can't do this, perhaps we should just create special rules for all those classes of people out there.

      One for EVIL TERRORISTS.
      Another for EVIL RELIGEONS (Like Protestants, Catholics, Muslims, Budhists, Jews, LDS, JW
      How about one for Poor Deadbeat Black and Colored Men/Women/Children - upscale ones are better - and all whites are OK right?
      Now, we need another standard for those deviants Gays and Lesbians, surely you don't expect us to protect them the same as our White, Straight, Rich, Male, Protestants do you?!

      This whole thing of one standard for some, and a different standard for others is the most scary slippery slope I've ever seen.

      Herr Ashcroft and the Bush Stoogies, along with George "Rolling-Blackout" Herbert Walker Bush have set the stage for a colossal shift in the rights of Americans. We've already taken the step of classifying some as different, and then dramatically taking away their rights. Now, all that remains, is for you or me to be suddenly moved to a "different" class. Today it's citizens vs. non, but tomorrow, who knows.

      Cheers!

    5. Re:legal question by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      On what grounds does elcomsoft qualify for consitutional rights? I mean, it's not a US citizen or a US corporation>

      The most important thing is that it's not an american corporation; at the current pace of things, soon being a US citizen won't give you any consitutional rights, except to be screwed by the aforementioned corporations. Big time.

      --
      -- No sig today
    6. Re:legal question by GSloop · · Score: 2

      Well, slashdot wiped out my pseudo html tags.

      This whole block...
      One for EVIL TERRORISTS.
      Another for EVIL RELIGEONS (Like Protestants, Catholics, Muslims, Budhists, Jews, LDS, JW
      How about one for Poor Deadbeat Black and Colored Men/Women/Children - upscale ones are better - and all whites are OK right?
      Now, we need another standard for those deviants Gays and Lesbians, surely you don't expect us to protect them the same as our White, Straight, Rich, Male, Protestants do you?!

      ...was supposed to have a [HeavySarcasm] [/HeavySarcasm] tagset around it. Since I didn't preview, oh well.

      Just let it be clear, that I am being as sarcastic as I possibly could be!

    7. Re:legal question by medcalf · · Score: 2

      You do realize, don't you, that once you resort to ad hominem attacks, you've lost the argument?

      --
      -- Two men say they're Jesus. One of them must be wrong. - Dire Straits
    8. Re:legal question by GSloop · · Score: 2

      I don't think I attacked anyone except the Bush Admin. I don't think any comparisons are out of line. Perhaps you disagree, but I see the betrayal of our trust in them, for power and politcal longevity, are quite evil in themselves.

      Herr Ashcroft, is the item I assume you refer to. I really don't think that we're headed down a road that much different than the Nazis. Sure, it doesn't look too bad now, but wait a while. Unless there is some serious turns away from the positions we've set in the last 12 months, we're headed for some very rough times ahead.

      So, no, I don't view my attacks as "ad hominem". In fact, they don't fit the "ad hominem" model. I'm attacking the loss of the very rights that "Herr" envisions or invokes. So, calling Ashcroft "Herr" isn't ad hominem at all. If I said he was an "Ugly Wife Beater" (which doesn't have any bearing on the argument) than that would be an ad hominem attack.

      The fact that I view the administrations actions as Nazi'ish is key to the core of the argument. Same goes for Stooge.

      Cheers!

    9. Re:legal question by bgdarnel · · Score: 2
      On what grounds does elcomsoft qualify for constitutional rights?
      They don't have to. Constitutional rights are not granted to citizens by the government - the Bill of Rights is an explicit denial of the power of Congress to take away those rights. "Congress shall make no law...abridging the freedom of speech"
    10. Re:legal question by spagma · · Score: 1

      If they get tried in as a US company, then they get the rights of a US company.

      --
      If it won't boot, Fsck it!
    11. Re:legal question by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      What, like the confiscation of firearms so that people can't defend themselves against tyranny? Oh, wait -- wrong party. Or supporting racially-focused policies awarding extra privileges to some versus others? Oh, wait -- wrong party. Or, the attitude that one should always look to the State as the provider? Oh wait...

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    12. Re:legal question by UdoKeir · · Score: 1

      The US constitution does not apply to only US citizens or corporations despite what the current resident of the White House his cronies would like you to think.

      If you do a search of the document you will find that the only time the word "citizen" is mentioned is in the qualifications for public office. Only US citizens can run for office.

    13. Re:legal question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The fact that you think it is somehow part lines that drive is issue makes me weep for our future.

    14. Re:legal question by Sir+Tristam · · Score: 4, Interesting
      ...the constitutional rights that are granted are granted to US citizens...
      All right, TIME OUT! It makes me want to scream every time I hear somebody talk about their rights that are granted by the Constitution (or Bill of Rights). This is a very important point when talking about your rights: No rights are granted to US citizens by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Zero. Zip. Not a one. Nada.

      If you haul out a copy of the Bill of Rights (or search on Google if you don't have a paper copy handy), read them very carefully. Look a the First Amendment: Congress shall make no law respecting an establishment of religion, or prohibiting the free exercise thereof; or abridging the freedom of speech, or of the press; or the right of the people peaceably to assemble, and to petition the Government for a redress of grievances. Does it say, "the people shall have the right to peaceably assemble"? No, it says that Congress can't make a law abridging that right, implicitly assuming that the people have that right. Or the rights catch-all amendment, the Ninth: The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.

      The framers of the Bill of Rights, and the Constitution, and the Declaration of Independence believed that rights were granted by a higher power than man or government, and as such could never be granted or taken away by man or government. The Bill of Rights was written, not to grant rights to citizens, but to put boundaries on the powers the government would try to excercise. When you talk about "rights granted by the Constitution", you are actually belittling your rights, as you are saying that they were granted to you by man and thus could be taken from you by man. They can't be; they can only be given away, but that's the road you're starting down when you don't properly recoginze the origin of your rights.

      So, properly recognizing the source of rights as above man or government, is it particually surprising that a foreign entity could offer a First and Fifth Amendment argument in a case? It's not to me. I would view a refusal to allow such an argument as a major threat to the rights of all US citizens, as it would be an implicit assertion that the rights guaranteed by the Bill of Rights are granted (and thus can be taken away) at the US government level.

      We now return you to your normal, light, funny Slashdot, already in progress. Time in.

      Chris Beckenbach

    15. Re:legal question by alkali · · Score: 1
      I understand that Elcomsoft is asserting Fifth and First Amendment defenses.

      The Constitution distinguishes betweeen the rights of citizens and the rights of persons, which term includes aliens as well as domestic and foreign corporations. The Fifth Amendment applies to persons, including Elcomsoft and its Russian employees.

      It is unclear what rights aliens or foreign corporations have under the First Amendment, but it's irrelevant because the argument would be that the DMCA violates the First Amendment rights of US citizens who have constitutionally protected uses for Elcomsoft's product.

    16. Re:legal question by plugger · · Score: 1

      A genuine question: What tyranny?

      Does the public availability of firearms reduce the probability of a repressive government being in charge? Do you have any statistics?

    17. Re:legal question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now, I guess it's weird to think about trying a foreign entity under US laws in the first place. And even weirder to try someone under US laws without US contitutional rights applying, but I thought the constitutional rights that are granted are granted to US citizens (and now corporations), not to the world at large.
      The First Amendment does not grant rights to freedom of speech or the press. The people already have those rights, and the First Amendment is there as an emphatic reminder to government that it may not take them away.
    18. Re:legal question by GSloop · · Score: 2

      Note, that I don't particularly care for the Dems any more...

      BUT at least, they only screwed you subtley. Sure, Ashcroft thinks you should be able to have any firearm you want, but, well, tap and traces should be authorized by the district attorney? SHEESH!

      One more point...thne tyranny of this age is monetary, not force. Actually it does come down to force, but the iron fist behind force is that of financial power. Neither the dems or the reps want you (ave joe) to have lots of power. They want to concentrate it in few hands, so they can stroke and control that power base. Having to satisfy lots of "common" folk isn't too easy, and makes the control of power lots harder.

      It you believe that either of the parties is concerned about you, you're either filthy rich, or deluded.

      Cheers!

    19. Re:legal question by odin53 · · Score: 1

      No rights are granted to US citizens by the Constitution and the Bill of Rights. Zero. Zip. Not a one. Nada.

      This is at least arguable, and definitely not true in a bunch of cases. It's a time-old argument about natural rights v. positive rights, yadda yadda yadda. In any event, you're right that the first amendment doesn't "give" rights, and you're technically right about the 9th amendment, but you're certainly not right about, let's pick one, oh, the fifth amendment. The fifth amendment gives a civilian the right to a grand jury hearing for major felonies -- that's certainly not a natural right in any sense.
      It also provides the Double Jeopardy right -- that is, it gives a person the right to be free from being tried twice for the same crime. I suppose you could distill a natural right principle from it, but by its text and by how it has been handled in the past by many courts, it doesn't sound like a natural right to me. It also gives a defendant the right not to incriminate himself -- it also doesn't sound like a natural right (if a defendant takes the stand, he loses a large part of the right. Does that sound "natural" to you?). Due process and the takings clause -- well, those are definitely arguable, but in no way is it obvious that these two are natural rights, either.

      You're right that the framers believed in natural rights. But certain rights; not every right was natural.

    20. Re:legal question by mpe · · Score: 2

      On what grounds does elcomsoft qualify for consitutional rights? I mean, it's not a US citizen or a US corporation.

      Because the US constitution dosn't grant rights. It restrains the US government from stomping on people's rights. Unless it explicatally states that something only applies to US citizens then it applies to anyone in US territory. (There is ample case law that this includes even illegal aliens and people illegally detained by the US.)

    21. Re:legal question by mpe · · Score: 2

      Herr Ashcroft and the Bush Stoogies, along with George "Rolling-Blackout" Herbert Walker Bush have set the stage for a colossal shift in the rights of Americans. We've already taken the step of classifying some as different, and then dramatically taking away their rights.

      There is an irony that Bush was declared the winner using an interpretation of the 14th ammendment. The piece of the US constitution most under attack here.

  28. Software is still available by DrXym · · Score: 5, Informative

    The eBook software is still available. Obviously you shouldn't click on the links or you might accidentally download it.

    1. Re:Software is still available by gmhowell · · Score: 2

      I didn't download the software, but I would assume that downloading it and applying the registry edit, you would be breaking Elcomsoft's copyright.

      Be careful: they might sue:)

      --
      Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
    2. Re:Software is still available by nathana · · Score: 1

      The eBook Processor doesn't work with newer versions of Adobe eBook Reader, though, as the web site mentions (latest version is 2.2 build 203.2 from October 25th, 2001).

  29. totally stuipd! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    uhm duh, it was a US law that is in question of being broken!!

  30. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by Christianfreak · · Score: 2

    But the way I understand it Elcomsoft actually had (has?) an office with real employees in Chicago. So the US is within its right to claim jurisdiction in the case.

    In the case of Yahoo France, The server that serves up Yahoo France is still in the US and thus France does not have jurisdiction.

  31. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the case of Yahoo this was the difference: The yahoo french site (yahoo.fr??) contained the restrictions that are required by French law. The French government was trying to require that the main Yahoo site, located on servers in the US, also adhere to French law. No jurisdiction there.

    Elcomsoft had servers and performed transactions in the US. Jurisdiction.

  32. Re:Bah by SkewlD00d · · Score: 2

    Ouch, seems like moving your server to a non-extradition country might be a better choice if you're going to do anything quasi-legal.

    --
    The biggest trick the devil pulled was letting lawyers become politicians so they can write the laws.
  33. Scientologists use DMCA against Google by jukal · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I spotted this on vnunet.com. clip:
    The Church of Scientology has forced Google to remove sites from its search engine using the controversial US Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). Lawyers representing the group, created by former science fiction writer L Ron Hubbard, used the DMCA to force Google to remove links to copyrighted material and has compared its actions to fighting terrorism.

    The whole article is here

    ps. simultaneously, this was my 11th rejected posting of 11 postings! - HOORAY!! :)

    1. Re:Scientologists use DMCA against Google by jukal · · Score: 1

      > ps. simultaneously, this was my 11th rejected posting of 11 postings! - HOORAY!! :)

      Oh, it seems I have just lived in a time vortex, or the previous postings about this same old subject to here have been done with headlines that never passed my filter before now :)

  34. Is this a surprise? by nuggz · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This isn't a surprise.
    The US will do what they please, it is one of the reasons people get pissed off.

    The journalist (Pearl?) in pakistan, they want to extradite the accused to the US.
    The crime was murder in pakistan, why extradite to the US? Because he was an American?

    US citizens and the US government want everyone to follow US laws and courts. They are using their power and influence to make countries comply (Ukraine).

    Is this really a shock to anyone?

    Although this is somewhat poorly worded it isn't intended as a troll, sorry I'm an engineer not an editor.

    1. Re:Is this a surprise? by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      Is this really a shock to anyone?

      It's not a shock, but it's not a pleasant reminder either, atually, it'a an escallation of a - already - bad situation.

      Although this is somewhat poorly worded it isn't intended as a troll, sorry I'm an engineer not an editor.

      Rest assured nobody mistook your posting with the editors': you had no typos and nice, clear ideas. :)

      --
      -- No sig today
    2. Re:Is this a surprise? by Sir+Tristam · · Score: 1
      US citizens and the US government want everyone to follow US laws and courts.
      As a US citizen, I don't want everybody everywhere to follow US laws and courts. For that matter, there's a lot of US laws (passed by the legislature and, unfortunately, the courts) that we'd be better off if the US citizens didn't have to follow, too.

      The recent case you cite--the journalist kidnapped and killed in Pakistan--should remain totally in Pakistan. Several years ago, when a US kid in Singapore was going to be caned for vandalizing cars, the US really had no business stepping in and trying to get his punishment changed. When we have a US sailor accused of a rape in Okinawa, we should determine if he will get a fair trial. If so, turn him on over; a fair trial in Okinawa should be as threatening to an innocent man as a fair trial in Des Moines (Iowa).

      While I believe that, in too large a part your statement is accurate, I just wanted to let you know that I don't think it's 100% accurate.

      Chris Beckenbach

    3. Re:Is this a surprise? by Stonehand · · Score: 2

      Don't forget that, at least before Musharraf and possibly afterwards, the Pakistani ISI was quite thoroughly allied with the Taliban; and even now, there are numerous sympathizers. There are sufficient pro-Islamist elements in Pakistan, including people still inside the government, to provide another motive for the US government wanting Pearl.

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
    4. Re:Is this a surprise? by csteinle · · Score: 1
      There are sufficient pro-Islamist elements in Pakistan, including people still inside the government, to provide another motive for the US government wanting Pearl.
      So pro-Islamist is what, exactly? Terrorist? Anti-America? Or just supporting the Islamic religion?
    5. Re:Is this a surprise? by Mr.+Sketch · · Score: 1

      Wow, now we know where the inspiration for Microsofts business model and practices came from. They modeled it after the US Government! So no wonder they won't get nailed for being a monopoly, the US is already a monopoly and they can't convict one of their own.

    6. Re:Is this a surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      'Pro-Islamist' usually means somebody invoved in the frentic and violent Islamic fundamentalist movement. It is not a term used to tar the whole of Islam, which is a religion that many reasonable people practice.

      Think of it this way: the terrorists in Islam are just a bit more militant, but no more extreme, than the most rabid Christian fundies in the west.

    7. Re:Is this a surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It boggles the mind to think that you have not yet been weeded out by natural selection. Do you honestly think you are witty or clever?

    8. Re:Is this a surprise? by elefantstn · · Score: 2

      "Islamist" is distinct from "Islamic" or "Muslim," is usually used to denote fringe extremist groups.

      --
      If it ain't broke, you need more software.
    9. Re:Is this a surprise? by rjch · · Score: 1
      This isn't a surprise. The US will do what they please, it is one of the reasons people get pissed off.


      Got it in one. From where I sit (.au) it seems that quite a few Americans (politicans being among the worst) have a massive inferiority complex that manifests itself in feeling the need to control anything they possibly can.

      US citizens and the US government want everyone to follow US laws and courts. They are using their power and influence to make countries comply (Ukraine).


      Add to that every country that has a visa waiver agreement with the US - the US is now trying to force every one of these countries into supplying their citizens with biometric passports if they want the visa waiver to remain in place.

      Although this is somewhat poorly worded it isn't intended as a troll, sorry I'm an engineer not an editor.


      Neither is this post. The vast majority of Americans that I meet are decent, friendly people. As always, it's the minority that gives the majority a bad name. God knows the same thing applies to Australians - very, very few of us go around wrestling crocodiles or doing very stupid things with snakes, but God only knows the Crocodile Man (and Paul Hogan to a lesser extent) have given us that image.

      (Sometimes I wonder if the crocodile man must have been American - he's certainly mad enough to be one...)
    10. Re:Is this a surprise? by mpe · · Score: 2

      US citizens and the US government want everyone to follow US laws and courts.

      Most real US citizens tend towards not bothering the rest of the planet. Wanting everyone to follow US laws (or even US invented laws which may not even apply in the US) is more at attribute of the US government and some of the larger "corporate citizens".

    11. Re:Is this a surprise? by Troed · · Score: 1
      Most real US citizens tend towards not bothering the rest of the planet.


      We know. It's sad.

    12. Re:Is this a surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      may be not 'a shock' .. but it is shocking

  35. In other news... by jhines0042 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Movie studios and record labels argue that the law is necessary to keep people from indiscriminate and unauthorized copying of films and music over the Internet, where digital material is so easily digested and transferred.

    ... Congress passes the new Super Special Saftey Congestion Act that would make it illegal to own, operate, or traffic in any vehicle which did not contain government approved GPS tracking systems. Representatives of the lawmakers stated that any car can be used as a getaway vehicle from a bank robbery or as a lethal weapon in a hit-and-run situation and that this law is necessary to keep people from indiscriminate and unauthorized driving of cars on the road.

    --
    42 - So long and thanks for all the fish.
    1. Re:In other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you may have thought that was funny, but it isnt, see this : www.fangsinc.com

  36. Challenging Jurisdiction... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    was a waste of time. There was no way a US court would not grant jurisdiction over a defendant who sells products in the US.

    Their other claims are also pretty far fetched. The best Constitutional attack on the DMCA is that its anti-circumvention measures are written to apply to all types of material, not just copyrightable material. That probably goes beyond the scope of what the Constitution allows.

    Free speech: We already have the trade off of a loss of free speech in exchange for the protection of original works. This is basically the same thing as saying that the DMCA steps outside of the boundaries of copyright.

    I'd need to look into it more to say what they were trying to do with due process.

  37. Re:I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the consum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I really hope some Russian court drags an American company over to defend themselves writing software that breaks Russian law. Or China. Then things will change.

  38. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by bleuchat · · Score: 1

    Except that Yahoo! is based in Sunnyvale, CA, obviously under the jurisdiction of the United States. Elcomsoft, with servers in the US, and currency being exchanged to and from entities inside of US boarders, also falls under its jurisdiction.

    Yahoo! France did have to comply, if you remember.

  39. No big surprise or disappointment by mikethegeek · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When did you EVER hear of a US federal judge ever ruling that he didn't have jurisdiction?

    Rarely (if ever) happens. I do think the Constitutionality question is their best defense. "Fair use" is derived from the Constitution's own copyright provisions.

    Also, the main intended use of Elcomsoft's product (access to e-books for the disabled) would seem to fall under the DMCA's own interoperability clause. Not to mention, the lack of such features may make E-books illegal under the Americans with Disabilities Act (but I'm unsure of this)

    However, the "interoperability" provision of the DMCA was TOTALLY blown off by his Imperial Highness, "judge" Kaplan in the DeCSS case, when such a clause would seem to make it legal to circumvent CSS for the purpose of making a Linux DVD player (which is why DeCSS was written).

    One of the worst problems with the DMCA and the DeCSS case is not just that it's a bad law (it's worse), but that the courts have let the IP cartels pick and cboose WHAT parts to enforce and what parts to ignore. They are getting the most favorable interpretation of the DMCA possible, while ignoring the parts that temper this and make at least a token attempt at "fair use".

    IMO, this may eventually make it easier to strike the whole thing down. The more extreme and umprecedented the DMCA is interpreted, the more likely it is to be an obvious clash with the Constitution.

    --
    === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
    1. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by mikethegeek · · Score: 2

      To clarify one point in my post above... "judge" Kaplan not only failed to apply the required Constitutionality test to the DMCA (which his oath of office requires), but he allowed the MPAA to rewrite it in his court to little resemble even what was passed by Congress.

      --
      === The price of freedom is eternal vigilance
    2. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by Royster · · Score: 3, Informative

      When did you EVER hear of a US federal judge ever ruling that he didn't have jurisdiction?

      Last month? A US Federal judge ruled he had no jurisdiction over the Taliban and Al Queda prisoners held at the US Naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba.

      That said, it is prudent for a defendant to raise every conceivable objection prior to trial. This is common and they are usually dismissed, but they do provide opportunities for appeal. Courts of Appeal (and even the Supreme Court) are more likely to listen to these arguments than a DIstrict Court.

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
    3. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by erroneus · · Score: 2

      HAHAHAHA...

      but that the courts have let the IP cartels pick and cboose WHAT parts to enforce and what parts to ignore.

      I know this is unrelated, but that has been my argument against Christianity all my life!! They routinely select parts of their Bible to ignore. Gay churches? Christians who eat bacon on their cheeseburgers? Hahaha... ignoring the stuff we don't like is a habit of U.S. Americans. Hey, I was born here... I see it every day.

      By the way, I hate brussel sprouts, so if they are on my plate, I'll ignore them... too bad my mother's law superceded the U.S. federal courts... *sigh*

    4. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by chfleming · · Score: 1

      It's called doublespeak and it is true of stupid people all over the world.

      You need to read 1984.

    5. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by Planesdragon · · Score: 2

      but that the courts have let the IP cartels pick and cboose WHAT parts to enforce and what parts to ignore.

      I know this is unrelated, but that has been my argument against Christianity all my life!! They routinely select parts of their Bible to ignore. Gay churches? Christians who eat bacon on their cheeseburgers? Hahaha... ignoring the stuff we don't like is a habit of U.S. Americans. Hey, I was born here... I see it every day.


      You know, oddly enough, I can rebut and stay on-topic...

      Dealing with the bible--it's a history book that contains the rules, not a rulebook. It's logically impossible to follow every command given therein. But, if you really want to know why Christians don't follow the Kosher laws, look at the Book of Acts.

      (St. Peter was shown a vision of non-kosher food animals and told to eat. He didn't want to, but God essentially said "it's all right, do it.". Hence, Gentiles and Bacon Cheeseburgers became part of the religion.)

      Getting back to the law. There are always parts that are enforced and parts that aren't. It's part of the balance between the right of the government to enforce the law, and the right of the individual to privacy / political speech / etc. Just like Blue Laws (laws proscribing "good" sex and prohibiting other kinds) are very rarey used, and just like speeding tickets and Conspiracy charges aren't enforced every time that the stated crime happens.

      The fact that the RIAA prompted parts of the DMCA to be enforced and others overlooked says more about the rather split voice against them rather than any sinister ability of them. Were the positions reversed, the FSS would be leaning on the courts to ignore EULAs...

    6. Re:No big surprise or disappointment by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Rarely (if ever) happens. I do think the Constitutionality question is their best defense. Fair use is derived from the Constitution's own copyright provisions. "

      Just where exactly in the Constitution does it talk about copyright? Did you skip seventh grade or something?

  40. I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the_consumer by the_consumer · · Score: 1

    I'll get right to work on that ;)

    I wonder if my brain qualifies as a "digital device"?

    --
    "If you're thinking what I'm thinking, you're right." -
  41. First Post by Grue_Food · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Sorry everyone, I just had to say it.

  42. Oh brother... by MantridDronemaker · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    Your comments are pure partisan drivel. Neither political party has a squeaky clean record (and your Enron example simply proves that). The DMCA has been around for more than one political regime anyways, might want to just check out which senators voted for or against it.

  43. Re: the age-old abortion argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be distracted by shadows. The reason abortion needs to be safe and legal has nothing to do with whether a fetus is "alive" or a "person".

    It's about poor people having the same recourse as rich people. It's about being able to receive an education and become a productive, happy citizen even if you make a mistake at age 14. It's about stopping multi-generational cycles of poverty and teenage pregnancy. It's about creating taxpayers instead of welfare recipients.

    Similarly, the fetal tissue research legislations are about getting re-elected, or currying favor with wealthy zealots. It has nothing to do with killing or not killing. The USA has never had any big problem with killing people, or we wouldn't have green-lighted Saddam's invasion of Kuwait, or helped out with the fire-bombing of Dresden, or put Ferdinand Marcos in power, etc. etc. etc. etc ad nauseum.

    Don't be distracted by shadows.

  44. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by gmhowell · · Score: 2

    I thought France already successfully did this, and prevented Yahoo from Nazi item auctions?

    --
    Jesus was all right but his disciples were thick and ordinary. -John Lennon
  45. ...in other news... by erroneus · · Score: 5, Funny

    All the drivers in the U.K. are to be cited for reckless driving for not adhering to U.S. traffic standards. It has been reported that operators of motor vehicles in the U.K. have been defying U.S. law which states that traffic is to keep to the right side of the road.

    One U.S. official said under condition of anonymity, "...those bastards have no respect for the law! Defiantly driving on the wrong side of the road like that! You'd think they owned their own country or something! They're Revolutionary Rebelious Terrorist!!"

    Clearly since U.S. law states that all drive on the right side of the road, all the rest of the world should comply with our safety standards -- after all, it is for their own good. We have roads and they have roads. They are connected by sea-lanes and air traffic. There is enough of a connection between our countries that our law should apply to them.

    1. Re:...in other news... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meanwhile some U.S. residents are being sued for breaking the DMAC for trying to unscrew a Roberson (Square head screws used by low tech Canadian home hardware) with a Philips screws driver.

      The Canadian home hardware company claims that the said screw is a copyrightprotection device allowing only people who purchase the required screw drivers to fasten/unfasten. Any tempering of it is illegal under the DMCA.

  46. Not quite by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

    Yahoo stopped allowing Nazi related auctions on its US site, but still requested a ruling from a US Court that the French court had no jurisdiction over its US site. This is because 120 other countries would have followed France in getting other "objectionable" auctions banned

  47. Re:I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the consum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Adobe would be a candidate, Russian law prohibits software that doesn't allow customers from makeing backups. The irony would be delicious, the justice poetic.

  48. Longshot by homer_ca · · Score: 1

    This motion to dismiss was like a halfcourt shot at the halftime buzzer. Not much of a chance, but you had to try it. No big deal. Just go on with the trial.

  49. Umm... by Sheepdot · · Score: 1

    Not *all* US citizens and not *all* of the US government want everyone to follow US laws and courts.

    There is a big difference between saying "You're being rude" to the person who is rude and "you're being rude" to the the group of people of which he is a part of.

    I can assure you, most USian Slashdot posters here *don't* fit the description of what you seem to think the average US citizen is. And if you really don't want people to take what you say as a troll, don't categorize all US citizens as bullies. There's a large chunck of the US that is either isolationist or pacifist and disagrees with most foreign actions.

    1. Re:Umm... by Troed · · Score: 2
      I get all my old posts moderated down -1 Offtopic whenever a certain person gains moderator status (or if he has multiple accounts, I don't know). See my history for proof. I also get numerous replies to my signature.


      That's weird. It seems that USian Slashdot posters are like the rest of the american John Does - they actually believe that Israel is nice and that all arabs/muslims are terrorists. How come they're the only one with this view? How come there are daily protests in all big cities in Europe against Israeli warfare against Palestinians? How come food-chains in Norway are boycotting Israeli fruit because of this? How come myself - 27 year old white well-educated male with neither jews nor muslims as close friends give money to Palestinian help-organisation and actively in mail and in my Slashdot signature URGE people to actually learn the truth about the most serious conflict in the world themselves?


      I don't know - but the last time this was brought up here at slashdot a USian slashdot poster told the moderators to mod myself and another poster down before we "strapped bombs to teenagers" or something as stupid.


      Now, what was it you said again?


      Remember: Nelson Mandela was marked as a terrorist by the South African leaders, and put in prison. All freedom-fighters have been called terrorists. If you'd care to read up on the Israeli-Palestinian conflict we might have chance to stop the US arms supply to Israel. Rockets against rocks, you know.

  50. Adobe files aren't really copy protected by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This should be an interesting case that, hopefully, gets the law off the books due to being unconstitutional.

    I don't really understand how the DMCA can apply here. Adobe's PDF files are in no way protected from copying by their "protection." You can easily copy the entire file just as you would copy any other file. Correct me if I'm wrong but I believe that it only prevents you from printing the file. So, does AEBPR circumvent copy protection or just re-enable needed functionality?

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  51. Jurisdiction v. constitutionality of DCMA by food-n-bev · · Score: 2, Insightful
    "The conduct which underlies the indictment includes ElcomSoft's offering its AEBPR program for sale over the Internet, from a computer server physically located in the United States," the judge wrote. "Purchasers obtained copies of the program in the United States ... Payments were directed to, and received by, an entity in the United States."

    Seems that the jurisdiction argument is pretty weak. Just a smokescreen?

    Elcomsoft is also claiming that enforcement of the DMCA violates the Constitutional right to free speech, and that the part of the DMCA which prohibits distributing devices which circumvent protection measures is so vague that enforcement of it violates the Constitutional right to due process under the Fifth Amendment.

    Amen and hallelujah! There's a big difference between the manufacturer of a tool that can be used to break into cars and the person who uses that tool.

    Die, DMCA! Die! Die!

  52. jurisdiction by Tom · · Score: 2
    Elcomsoft did sell its software to people in the United States and it's not surprising that a U.S. court would claim jurisdiction over this.


    surprising? no. Correct? Well, what about Yahoo! vs. France? And does that mean that next time I buy something at Amazon, I can sue them in a german court according to german consumer protection laws if I feel like it? I bet Jeff Bozos will not like that news.

    of course, americans being what they are (single-languaged, specifically) they don't understand what "quid pro quo" means and are perfectly happy to apply the argument only single-sided. (i.e. US jurisdiction everywhere, but not vice versa)
    --
    Assorted stuff I do sometimes: Lemuria.org
  53. European law and US law ? by aepervius · · Score: 2, Insightful

    So The french gov can't take yahoo to respect Anti racism local law. But DMCA has to be respected by outside company on a pure US law. Since the US law has precedent and can judge crime done on Internet in its own country, then I do not see why (beside applicability) french law can't apply for a crime done in France. Beware Yahoo.com, and other company, the US govt may just have set a nice precedent for tons of lawsuit.

    --
    C. Sagan : A demon haunted world:
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0345409469/
    visit randi.org
  54. Re:I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the consum by tapin · · Score: 1
    I don't know about "for the consumer", but several companies (Napster, a few ISPs I think, maybe AIMster?) attempted to use the DMCA against the *AA industries.

    If I remember correctly, the response from the *AA each time was basically "Of course that's not what we meant when we wrote the law, and here's our expensive lawyer to explain what we *did* mean."

    I'm not holding out much hope for the bnetd case.

    This isn't a signature, but a final line to make sure my final line above isn't skipped.

  55. Thank God the Russians are willing to defend us. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What a sad, sad, state of affairs when US citizens have to rely on the Russians to defend them from their own government.

  56. An Immodest Proposal... by RalphTWaP · · Score: 5, Funny


    *grinning*

    Imagine for a moment that this isn't /.

    Well, damn, to start, I guess that you'd say this particular modest proposal comes on the heels of a thrilling class for a new TPS report system. Somewhere between that, and reading more, new, and improved evidence of my country's collective insanity, I think it might just be time to propose something.

    Now, don't get me wrong, I don't really think that the proposal included herein could ever be adopted, in fact, I think that among other things, it would guarantee that the U.S. government become even more ineffectual.

    Of course, I'm not sure there's anything much wrong with that.

    With much more adieu:

    A Modest Proposal; Congress's own Sandbox

    Whereas the Congress of the United States in recent years has at times errantly passed bills (which, were of course enacted into law by the largely disinterested executive branch) which patently subvert, abuse, and remove Constitutionally granted rights; and whereas the enforcement of those selfsame laws does embarass and continually deflate the image of America itself in the global arena, I find it necessary to propose that the Judicial branch of the United States government be empowered (in a proper use of the verb "to empower" I mean, both given the responsibility for, and the authority to....) to create for Congress a special organization with the intended purpose and justification as outlined below.

    1. To act as a "legal sandbox" for bills submitted.

    Much akin to my beloved bounds-checker Purify ( *snickers are heard off text* . . . *a quote plays* "What do you fu^H^H !@#$!@%^*(& mean there's a memory leak . . . . Oh, it's in a Win9X system DLL? . . . . um, sure, why not"), the purpose of this "legal sandbox" would be to allow Congresscritters to "test" the legalese (and even the content) of the bill against the Constitution.

    Unfortunately, of course, the much shortened interface "const bool isConstitutional(struct Bill* pb);" didnt make it into the interface of the latest MS grammar checker. This implies that real, breathing, perhaps even thinking people (or at least hypertrophied Perl scripts) will have to comb through the bills submitted and actually (wait for it)

    Think.

    I know this is a terrible price to pay, but the US Supreme court seems like it might (at times) be up to the task, or at least up to picking the right scripts (a little Perl, a little Sed, mix, stir with PHP and bam, "Court-In-A-Box").

    2. To act as a source of informed Amicus Curare *smirks* information to all parties in future action

    Hardly a difficult sort of solution (albeit somewhat final), the information gleaned from close legal study of the bills submitted would be made available to all, and directed to courts considering cases under the bills in question.

    Presumably, of course, these two chartering planks would be sufficient statement of course; however, I am sure that providing a summary of the probable constitutionality and research into the related issues to the Judicial Branch would be required. In addition, I suspect that a large number of concerned citizens would request access to this information.

    Of course . . . now we just have to figure out how to raise an exception in Congress, perhaps something like "std::assert(!congresscritter_instance.isCorporate Stooge());" would do the trick, though I'm pretty sure the results would be largely similar to "std::assert(false);", so, if I were scratching in some dirty test code for the "Universe 1.1a" revision, I'd pro'lly just write the second, afterall, it saves an invocation.

    1. Re:An Immodest Proposal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It'd never happen. You think Asscraft would give up power like that? What kind of crack are you eating?

    2. Re:An Immodest Proposal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, while that seems like a good idea, US Courts can't do that. Under Article 3 and some statute under Title 24, US courts can only try "actual cases and contraversies" meaning that a case has to have real parties who have a real stake in the actual case. Believe it or not, there have actually been cases thrown out becasue the parties did not break the law but were considering breaking it and wanted a declaratory judgment. It's wierd, but the courts defend it for some reason.

    3. Re:An Immodest Proposal... by Scooby+Snacks · · Score: 4, Insightful
      ...remove Constitutionally granted rights...
      Just a note. It's a subtle distinction, but a very important one.

      Rights are not granted by the Constitution; they are enumerated by it.

      Think about it for a moment. The Founding Fathers went into it with the attitude that [people] are granted certain inalienable rights by their Creator . This means that there are certain rights which are never to be infringed upon by governments, and that all people have these rights merely by drawing breath. This presumption is embodied in the 9th amendment.

      Just felt like I needed to say that.

      --

      --
      Runnin' around, robbin' banks all whacked on the Scooby Snacks...
    4. Re:An Immodest Proposal... by Bronster · · Score: 2

      This means that there are certain rights which are never to be infringed upon by governments, and that all people have these rights merely by drawing breath.

      Ahh - this we can deal with.

  57. Sweeping Generalizations by nuggz · · Score: 2

    I think most people understand that such wide ranging generalizations are only an impression of the majority or widely held opinion.

    I know many of the people "here" don't fit into these generalizations, and would be offended if I was actually refering to them personally.

    Plus, it is my opinion, I can be wrong too, but that is the point of a discussion isn't it?

  58. help natalie!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  59. Interesting logic in Elcom argument by Seth+Finkelstein · · Score: 2
    The rejected jurisdiction argument makes for, ahem, interesting reading:
    The Internet belongs to no country alone, but to all countries collectively. It is in a jurisdictional sense like the oceans or the air and space. Because it is an omnipresent shared resource, it is, and must be, by nature extraterritorrial. While transactions occurring solely on the Internet may have an impact on nations and/or their citizens, this fact does not and should not automatically imbue the effected country with jurisdiction over the actions of persons transacting on the Internet. Whether jurisdiction over the actions of persons operating exclusively on the Internet can be asserted is, like all questions regarding the application of extraterritorial jurisdiction, a matter of law and policy.
    No comment.

    Sig: What Happened To The Censorware Project (censorware.org)

    1. Re:Interesting logic in Elcom argument by carm$y$ · · Score: 1

      Basically it reads "nobody owns the Internet, but the Internet can't be a 'free' zone - so we have jurisdiction". No further comments, indeed.

      --
      -- No sig today
    2. Re:Interesting logic in Elcom argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In other words, 'Because we choose to pretend cyberspace is real, rather than just a place where people throw around words without regard to territorial boundaries, we elect to pretend we're not subject to the laws that our 'meat puppets' dwell within.'

      What a bunch of fucking hippie cyber-hooey from the early 90's.

      Mondo 2000 isn't being published anymore, boys. Get over it.

  60. VOTE FOR NATALIE PORTMAN (NAKED & PERTIFIED) ! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
  61. The case itself is BS, but jurisdiction... by tuxlove · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I believe the US courts have the right to hear the case, based on the amount and nature of the US activity of Elcomsoft. That's pretty clear and straightforward. I also believe that Russia and perhaps other countries would also have the right to take legal action as well, if any of their laws were broken.

    It's pretty simple. Elcomsoft's e-commerce was taking place in the US, using US servers and US companies to do the transactions. Should the US not have jurisdiction over operations taking place in the US just because the company in question is headquartered in another country? What if Enron or the like moved their headquarters to Bermuda - should they then not be liable in the US for ripping off people in their US operations? There are countless cases where foreign companies with operations in the US have been taken to court in the US, so this is nothing new. Who would want it any other way, aside from those who would benefit from skirting the US legal system?

    This is all aside from the legitimacy of the case itself. I think the DMCA is a steaming pile of bits and needs to be obliterated, and that the case against Elcomsoft is garbage. To determine the truth of that belief, the case has to be heard in the first place. And it needs to be heard in the country where the alleged lawbreaking actually transpired.

    1. Re:The case itself is BS, but jurisdiction... by tuxlove · · Score: 1

      Oh, and an additional note. If Elcomsoft had only used Russian e-commerce servers and had no real US presence, then the US courts wouldn't have had any say whatsoever. Reminds me of how France tried to force Yahoo to stop selling Nazi antiques, even though Yahoo's operations were based in the US in all respects. Now THAT was a bullshit case if I ever heard one. It's stupid to think that any country should have the right to claim legal jurisdiction over what takes place wholly in another country. If Elcomsoft had done the smart thing and used offshore servers, they would be in the clear, and any US claim to jurisdiction would be as specious as France's legal attack on Yahoo. But they didn't, so now they have to deal with the US courts. Of course, I'm not sure what the US can do except force them to close down all US-based operations and possibly convict/fine them in absentia.

  62. Not Funny... by gillbates · · Score: 2

    This is closer to reality than you think. It started with the radar guns and cameras at stoplights in Arizona. In the not too distant future, it will be illegal to drive a car without a functional GPS installed, and the Feds will be able to track your driving habits without a warrant, and or sell them to mass marketers...

    --
    The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
  63. Re: the age-old abortion argument by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Abortion is about poor people, primarily those of the wrong racial background, being encouraged to kill their young. That was a huge motivating factor in Margaret Sanger's pro-contraceptive movement. It isn't even a 'dark conspiracy' or anything.

  64. The 5th amendment argument, good argument by Odinson · · Score: 2

    No due process, no need for judges. Self preservation will kick in. What judge would take away his/her own power like that. What got 30 states attention in the MSFT monoply case? Setting a precident taking away their right to proceed over interstate commerce.

    The DMCA is really is a big fat due process violation, a play for the courts power if you will. If you want to shut down a website you should have to visit a judge, get a warrant, and have the cops serve it. Just like homicide investigations have to do for every mass-murderer.

    But of course ebooks anywhere anytime are worse than mass-murder.... and the constituion is dated and unshiny... so they might have a case...

  65. What the fuck are you talking about?!? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Speak English, man!

  66. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by Dyolf+Knip · · Score: 2
    The server that serves up Yahoo France is still in the US

    I did a traceroute to yahoo.fr and I'm pretty certain there's a trans-Atlantic hop in there. The trace crosses into ebone.net, which is physically based in Europe.

    I think the simplest way to solve this whole thing would be for France to snatch the first Yahoo! employee to come along and demand consistency from the US government. If Dmitri isn't released, then France's 'hostage' goes to trial for selling Nazi paraphernalia. It'd be certain to get attention.

    --
    Dyolf Knip
  67. Circumventing Access Controls by Sloppy · · Score: 2

    I don't really understand how the DMCA can apply here. Adobe's PDF files are in no way protected from copying by their "protection."

    When people talk about DMCA outlawing "copy protection", they are translating the legalese into layman's terms. What DMCA actually outlaws is "circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access". And then it also outlaws trafficking in things that "primarily designed" to do that.

    That covers more than just copy protection. You can "circumvent access" in ways other than cracking copy protection.

    Some other items of interest: DMCA then goes on to define some of the terms:

    to ''circumvent protection afforded by a technological measure'' means avoiding, bypassing, removing, deactivating, or otherwise impairing a technological measure
    and
    a technological measure ''effectively protects a right of a copyright owner under this title'' if the measure, in the ordinary course of its operation, prevents, restricts, or otherwise limits the exercise of a right of a copyright owner under this title.

    This has basically been interpreted as meaning that if you make a tool that lets the user do anything that they otherwise weren't able to conveniently do, and this in some way involves a copyrighted work, then you're in trouble.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  68. Re:Bah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People in other countries do not like to be told what to do. That's the type of things that gets the rest of the world mad at the U.S.

    Unfortunately U.S. does that a whole lot.

  69. A nice article in Observer, take a look by mentin · · Score: 2, Informative

    A nice article in Observer "Limit copying and we may end up copying the USSR":
    http://www.observer.co.uk/business/story/0,6903,67 2840,00.html

    --
    MSDOS: 20+ years without remote hole in the default install
  70. Re:I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the_consum by NanoGator · · Score: 2

    'I wonder if my brain qualifies as a "digital device"?'

    No, but your hand does. =)

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  71. US has no jurisdiction over entities in Russia by dh003i · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Please, this is bull-fucking-shit.

    The company is based in Russia. The US has no jurisdiction over an entity in Russia, and trying to claim so is violating the sovereignty of the Russian people.

    Trying to "fine" this Russia-based company is absolutely outside of US jurisdiction. Presumably, their funds are in Russia. That being so, the US cannot fine them. A US judge could not enforce a fine against a Russia-based company, because no US entity has any jurisdiction in Russia.

    Now, if the court wants to require that Elcomsoft close down their US servers, or perhaps take actions specifically against parts of Elcomsoft within the US, that, they have jurisdiction to do. For example, they'd have jurisdiction to shut down Elcomsoft branches in the US, to shut down Elcomsoft servers in the US, etc.

    Whether or not such is constitutional, is another question alltogether.

    Preventing them from distributing that software IS a violation of THEIR free speech rights; not to mention a violation of consumer's rights to fair use. I feel strongly that eventually the DMCA will be ruled unconstitutional, if not by this judge, then down the line by the Supreme Court. The DMCA is destined to fall before the Supreme Court. When it does, if the USSC has any worth and deserves any respect at all, the DMCA will be declared unconstitutional.

    But constitutional issues aside, the current issue is a very troubling issue of sovereignty. What I fear is that this fuckwit of a judge is going to try to fine the company in Russia, which is beyond any US court's jurisdiction (because the company's funds/money are in Russia, no US court has the jurisdiction to demand anything be done with those funds).

    If the ruling this fuck of a judge made is left untouched, it creates huge problems for us. It would, in effect, mean that if I made a website criticizing the Chinese government, China could bring charges against ME -- a US Citizen -- for violating China's laws. That's what this is really about. The US is trying to enforce ITS laws on foreign entities/citizens.

    What fucking bullshit.

  72. DMCA fears by cannacoke · · Score: 1
    Scarcastic filter off
    How long will it be before someone trys to use the DMCA against the 1st amendment because it allows for speach on how to crack encription.
    Scarcastic filter on

    Oh My Head
    CanNaCoke

  73. Re:Jurasdiction. Elcomsoft, Yahoo France, etc etc. by SwingGeek · · Score: 1

    That would be true if France had the same amount of political power as the United States.

    Of course this isn't the case, and the US government will do whatever they can get away with.
    Do you really think they're concerned with being fair? Congress will try to get it done their way, without regard for what anybody else wants.

  74. This case is a waste of my tax dollars by t0qer · · Score: 2

    His company sold a product that broke e-books encryption, his defense site says.

    His program was used to help blind people read

    Bullshit, the blind have so many alternatives to e-books it's silly to claim that.

    Ever hear of the Americans with disabilities act? If a blind person couldn't read a book because it was ONLY published in e-book format, they could have sued the publisher for not giving them fair access.

    The greatest books in the world are available in pure ASCII text format. You don't need an e-book for them, just a simple text reader like "more" or cat *.txt | more. It's absurd for his defense to even try and take the bleeding heart approach to this case.

    I think Sklyarov did something bad, I'm sorry if people disagree with me. It wasn't up to him to mess with adobe's IP. If e-books were really that bad then the marketplace would have decided to NOT BUY THEM. Thus e-books would have become yet another page in the book of really shitty idea's by really stupid marketing people.

    On the publisher side of the coin, it was a bad decision to publish their books in a format that could not cater to all potential customers.

    Let me ask slashdotters this question, have you ever in you job been asked to do something you felt was morally wrong, or on the
    gray side of the law? Did you do it? Once I was asked by a CEO to scan his concubines e-mail to see if she was dating some other exec at the company. Did I do it? No because I felt that was wrong, had nothing to do with the work I did.

    Citing another example, a few months back I was asked by a friends father to help him streamline his spamming operations. Did I do it for the money like a good little whore? No because I knew my actions would have further reaching
    implications than the money would have ever lasted.

    So fuck you and your sissybaby case Sklyarov. Before you sat down and did anything, you should have asked yourself "Is helping people pirate copyrighted
    material right?" You shit your own nest, now sleep in it motherfucker! Maybe you'll think next time instead of blindly whoring yourself out for your boss.

  75. test case by oliphaunt · · Score: 2

    so what we need is a couple of good test cases, right? Presumably someone at EFF can make a list of a couple of key props that are currently holding up the DMCA and Hollings' new bill (whatever it's called this week) and then we can systematically kick them out so the whole table collapses.

    I volunteer to do some kicking. I'm tired of waiting for an elected representative to represent me. I'm willing to go to jail over a principle.

    come on, who wants to be a martyr?

    --




    Humpty Dumpty was pushed.
  76. age of consent by nanoakron · · Score: 1

    Offtopic, but...most of europe has age of consent below 17:

    Austria: 14
    Bosnia: 16
    Bulgaria: 14
    Croatia: 14
    Czech Rep: 15
    Denmark: 15
    Finland: 16
    France: 15
    Germany: 14
    Hungary: 14
    Iceland: 14
    Italy: 14
    Ireland (Rep.): 17
    Luxembourg: 16
    Netherlands: 12
    Norway: 16
    Poland: 15
    Portugal: 14
    Romania: 14
    Russia: 14
    Serbia: 14
    Sweden: 15
    Switzerland: 16
    UK: 16

    Iraq and the US are some of the only countries with 18 as their age of consent.
    Check it out: www.ageofconsent.com

  77. the violation in question was IN the U.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    The company is based in Russia. The US has no jurisdiction over an entity in Russia, and trying to claim so is violating the sovereignty of the Russian people.

    The U.S. can prohibit them from selling their software to the U.S., though.

    Preventing them from distributing that software IS a violation of THEIR free speech rights

    What free speech rights? You just said they are Russian. How does the U.S. Constitution apply to them?

    What I fear is that this fuckwit of a judge is going to try to fine the company in Russia, which is beyond any US court's jurisdiction (because the company's funds/money are in Russia, no US court has the jurisdiction to demand anything be done with those funds).

    If someone smuggles contraband into or out of this country, they can be jailed or fined. Just because the product in question is software doesn't mean it is exempt. Look at the former crypto-export laws in the U.S.

    It would, in effect, mean that if I made a website criticizing the Chinese government, China could bring charges against ME -- a US Citizen -- for violating China's laws.

    No, but if you designed a Falun Gong how-to manual and started selling them IN China, then sure, they might try to throw your ass in jail.

    You need to calm down and think about the whole situation rationally before spewing off all the alarmist junk.

    1. Re:the violation in question was IN the U.S. by mpe · · Score: 2

      What free speech rights? You just said they are Russian. How does the U.S. Constitution apply to them?

      When was the first ammendment rewritten to add "... except when said laws are applied only to non US citizens".

  78. It will be screwed in Russia too by jdoeii · · Score: 1

    A DMCA-equivalent bill was introduced to Russian parlament (Duma) a couple weeks ago. The bill is even worse than DMCA. The first reading is scheduled for this month. The law cannot be applied retroactively, so maybe they will not be prosecuted in Russia, but won't be allowed to continue.

    This DMCA madness got to stop. I hope EU is smarter than US or Russia and does not turn corporate greed into law.

    By the way, Elcomsoft is no freedom fighter. The company is a bunch of scambags who make a living by selling spam tools. It they go bancrupt, the amount of spam will be reduced.

  79. Re:I'm waiting to see the DMCA used for the consum by Abreu · · Score: 1
    AC says:
    Adobe would be a candidate, Russian law prohibits software that doesn't allow customers from makeing backups. The irony would be delicious, the justice poetic.


    Could you post a link that backs your claim?


    That sounds almost too good to be true, and most likely Skylarov's associates, friends and family in Russia would be perfectly willing to do this.

    --
    No sig for the moment.
  80. Dubyaism by Snover · · Score: 1

    Could've sworn the quote was as follows:

    "We, um, will have NO tollerance for... these dangerous and mendicial[sic], uh, TERRORISTS, digital or, if they're not digital, if they're terrorists...we'll pay them back, because...TERRORISM is bad, and it is with great RESOLVE that we, err, eliminate these TERRORISTS and restore the, uh, inalienable justice...that the United States grants to every citizen of, erm, TERRORISM, because it is with great resolve that we push forward. Thank you."

    --

    [insert witty comment here]
  81. *points* Mod immediate parent up.... by RalphTWaP · · Score: 2

    *grins* Thanks Scooby, and ftr/ I absolutely agree with you that in the view of the Constitution (as a document, with living, historically placed authors, as it was conceived) the rights of man are being enumerated.

    My most fundamental fear is that, in current theory (and practice) the rights once seen as given to man by their Creator . Are now seen as given to man by the Government.

    In truth, I'm not sure that these rights aren't given to man by the conventions beneath which he chooses to live; however, I am certain that I don't want the Government believing that it granteth and it taketh away....