Slashdot Mirror


News.com Links to DeCSS Program

zorglubxx writes "In less than a week News.com has published 2 articles ([Oct 3] and [Oct 7]) talking about copyright law and the DMCA where they LINK to DeCSS. Not source but compiled Windows version called DeCSS.exe. News.com know that 2600 lost their fight for linking to DeCSS so I wonder why they are doing this. Trying to make a point? Civil disobedience? An honest mistake?" Update: 10/08 02:51 GMT by T : An anonymous reader writes "In the time between when I read the first and second referenced articles, the links were updated to point the DeCSS gallery rather than DeCSS.exe"

17 of 249 comments (clear)

  1. Laws only work by pyman · · Score: 4, Insightful

    if people want to keep them...

    --
    a ^= b; b ^= a; a ^= b;
  2. Exploiting Different Standards? by RailGunner · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Could it be that news.com is simply pointing out the obvious double standard given to "hacker" sites like 2600.com and "reputable news sites" like news.com?

    Seriously, if CNN.com would have originally linked to DeCSS do you think it would have gotten sued? (I know, pretend for a moment that it wasn't part of the AOLTimeWarner conglomerate though, and you'll get my point.)

    Hopefully, a court case WILL come of this, and maybe we'll get a Judge with a clue that realizes the DMCA restricts your First Amendment rights.

    1. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by neuroticia · · Score: 5, Insightful

      More likely News.com will be notified that they are in violation of the DMCA, and asked to cease and desist. Upon recieving notification, the author of the article that linked to DeCSS will be fired and blacklisted. (Or whoever created the link. The author might have nothing to do with it being a link.)

      I really believe that if the Most Important Person in the World(tm) himself, ie: the head of the RIAA, were to post a link to DeCSS, the rest of the RIAA would go after him like a herd of rabid bunnies on crack.

      That said... Yes. News.com is a more 'valid' publication in the eyes of many than 2600 ever will be, and thus harder to go after for posting legitimate news... But "harder" doesn't mean "impossible". Remember, the RIAA is well-funded by all the CDs they overprice, and all the artists they rip off.

      -Sara

    2. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by monkeydo · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Seriously, if CNN.com would have originally linked to DeCSS do you think it would have gotten sued?

      Of course not. CNN would have taken down the link when they got the cease and desist letter. Their lawyers would have told them, "Sure you can fight it, but does that link actually have any value?"

      --
      Si vis pacem, para bellum
      The only thing more annoying than a Libertarian is an (un|mis)informed Libertarian
    3. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by JWW · · Score: 5, Insightful

      The DMCA is a bad law, and as citizens of this country we can choose to disobey bad laws.

      That's really the definition of "Civil Disobedience".

      I choose not to obey the DMCA every time I watch a DVD on my Linux machine at home. It takes a pretty shitty law to make watching a movie that I bought on my computer a crime. Its also a really pathetic act of civil disobedience, I mean come on I'm just watching a movie. Arresting people for doing this would be absolutely ridiculous.

      These corporations that are pushing this crap better start watching themselves. In the war against the consumer the consumer is just beginning to understand how much control over what they buy that they are losing. If the restrictions being talked about for HDTV (copy bits and all that garbage) come to pass I think that will be the last straw.

    4. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by Dr.+Mu · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The DMCA is a bad law, and as citizens of this country we can choose to disobey bad laws. That's really the definition of "Civil Disobedience".

      Well, you're half right. The half you left out is that you do it in a publicly conspicuous manner, so as to attract the attention of law enforcement, and be willing to pay the consequences of arrest and apprehension. Disobeying bad laws in the privacy of your parents' basement doesn't really count as "civil disobedience".

    5. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by chuckles1335 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Its also a really pathetic act of civil disobedience, I mean come on I'm just watching a movie. Arresting people for doing this would be absolutely ridiculous.

      Actually because being arrested for watching makes it a "good" act of civil disobedience because it is so rediculous.

      The stupider the thing you are arrested for under a law the more ridiculous the law looks

    6. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "That's really the definition of "Civil Disobedience"."

      Nah, that was the definition 100+ years ago. Today it involves chaining yourself to things, overturning cars, smashing windows, generally blocking public right-of-ways and using/damaging private property and then claiming that the First Amendment protects all this. None of it actually involves breaking a specific law that you're protesting.

    7. Re:Exploiting Different Standards? by JWW · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I'm happy that the Founding Fathers didn't follow the same reasoning, revolution is not mentioned on your list.

      And I'm sorry if Linux players didn't pay a royalty. Actaully they (Xine in my case) did not do anything wrong, I had to take action to enable DeCSS myself, and this is precisely why Xine operates that way. One would think that if they wanted to, they could pay a royalty and offer a player capable of playing any encrypted DVD.

      But again why should it be against the law to use my DVD's any way I see fit. I can modify my car any number of ways, and while it may void the warranty, it does not make the modifications themselves illegal.

  3. Rhetorical question or what? by Otter · · Score: 5, Insightful
    This falls under the "How the hell could we know the answer?" category.

    But given the statement "But when Linux programmers wrote the DeCSS.exe utility to play DVDs on their computers.." with a link to something clearly labelled as a Windows app and the absence of any reference to 2600 or linking, I'd confidently guess that it never occurred to the writer or editor that there could be anything illegal about such a link.

  4. News.com is within it's rights by ageitgey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There is no law in the US against linking to DeCSS. News.com is a news organization and is reporting the news as they see fit. If the DVD-CCA decides to bring suit against News.com and got a judgement forcing them to to stop linking, then they would have to remove the links.

    But it is unlikely that the DVD-CCA would try something like that. They already have enough bad press in the tech sector, the last thing they need is bad press in mainstream news channels.

    This is the same reason slashdot doesn't get raided by some government agency everytime a poster puts a link to DeCSS in a comment. There is no "don't link DeCSS law" and there is no legal ruling (yet...) preventing slashdot from posting DeCSS links in discussions.

    --
    Uninnovate - Only the finest in engineering.
  5. 14th Amendment? by FreeUser · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Hopefully, a court case WILL come of this, and maybe we'll get a Judge with a clue that realizes the DMCA restricts your First Amendment rights.

    Perhaps 2600.com could file suit under the 'equal protection under the law' clause. Technically, this sort of double standard is unconstitutional:


    No State shall make or enforce any law which shall abridge the privileges or immunities of citizens of the United States; nor shall any State deprive any person of life, liberty, or property, without due process of law; nor deny to any person within its jurisdiction the equal protection of the laws. [emphesis mine]


    Now, a literal reading might allow the federal government to be unfair, while requiring fairness from state governments, but I cannot imagine even our frighteningly corrupt supreme court interpreting the clause in such a fashion.
    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  6. Mistake? No. Human nature? Yes. by nuxx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm willing to bet that the reason news.com linked to a copy of DeCSS is because one would commonly expect that it would be all right to do so. Most laws are based on common sense and common morality. The DMCA goes against these tenants and tries to get one to do things that go against human nature and reasonable expectation of sharing of information.

    News.com just did what makes sense. The DMCA doesn't.

  7. How this is related to the Napster lawsuit... by fmaxwell · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is like the Napster lawsuit. Napster would be alive and thriving today had it been started by Microsoft or AOL rather than by a college student. No court would ever have held that a major corporation was responsible for copyright violations of its customers/users.

    News.com is in no real danger because they are part of the "establishment." If sued, they will go to court, wave the flag, use variations of the same arguments that 2600 did, and, unlike 2600, prevail. Although it sucks, I am coming to believe that the judicial branch has been bought off just like the other branches of government -- or have been stocked with appointees that value the interests of major corporations with much higher regard than the rights of individuals and small businesses. Just look at the 180 degree turn the Justice Department did with regards to the Microsoft lawsuit when the Bush administration came into office.

  8. Re:Laws only work (with money) by phorm · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Yes and no. Often laws work if a small amount of people with a lot of money want to keep them and are willing to fight with high-priced lawyers to keep them around. The laws may be tossed in the end, but the pricey lawyers can manage to keep them around and kicking for quite a few years.

  9. Can you say test case? by declana · · Score: 4, Insightful

    First, the Corely DeCSS injunction is limited to the plaintiffs in that case. Second, the author of both articles is none other than the EFF's Declan McCullagh. How much you wanna bet he's itching to become a name defendant . . . ?

  10. Reason for DeCSS link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    uh...... all this speculation as to why news.com posted a link to the DeCSS program is all fine and good. But has anyone bothered to actually email the site, or the articles' author to find out why they put the link into the story?

    .....Or shall we just continue speculating?


    dan.