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Jon Johansen Trial Continues

An anonymous reader writes "The Norwegian prosecution has been allowed to change the indictment in their case against "DVD-Jon" Johansen. There is an English language article on Friday's trial proceedings now available." VG.nett is also covering the trial.

164 comments

  1. DVD Ripping Guides in Linux by Guiri · · Score: 5, Informative

    Too see how things have changed ;) here are some DVD ripping under Linux guides.. http://dvdripping-guid.berlios.de

  2. Hang him. by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    Jon Johansen is an evil h4x0r that in one fell swoop allowed socialist Linux and *BSD hippies to watch DVDs on their computers.
    If there is any justice, he will be hung from a tall tree in the morning.

    Yours truly,

    Jack Valenti

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:Hang him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "Jon Johansen is an evil h4x0r that in one fell swoop allowed socialist Linux and *BSD hippies to watch DVDs on their computers."

      Nope, just allowed them to do so without paying for them.

    2. Re:Hang him. by cnkeller · · Score: 4, Funny
      If there is any justice, he will be hung from a tall tree in the morning.

      Thanks to the new 802.11b wireless tree networks, we'll all have ample notice to resue him...

      --

      there are no stupid questions, but there are a lot of inquisitive idiots

    3. Re:Hang him. by teamhasnoi · · Score: 5, Funny
      If you hang him in Humboldt County, the tree sitters can continue their protest another two months! Make sure you salt him well.

      Sincerely,

      Grizzly Adams

    4. Re:Hang him. by AndroidCat · · Score: 1
      we'll all have ample notice to resue him

      Yeah, we could send in a strike team of those robot butterfly assassins built in Soviet Russia.

      --
      One line blog. I hear that they're called Twitters now.
    5. Re:Hang him. by oliverthered · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      in Soviet Russia the robot butter fly's you.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
    6. Re:Hang him. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong article, asshat.

    7. Re:Hang him. by dazed-n-confused · · Score: 2

      > If there is any justice, he will be hung from a tall tree in the morning.

      You mean "hanged", Valenti, you illiterate poltroon! A picture can be hung; a man is only ever hanged. (Unless you mean he is "well hung"...).

    8. Re:Hang him. by sqlrob · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's interesting. Every DVD I've played on Linux I've paid for.

    9. Re:Hang him. by alexburke · · Score: 5, Funny

      Thanks to the new 802.11b wireless tree networks, we'll all have ample notice to resue him...

      Didn't you mean spanning tree? *rimshot*

      Thanks! I'll be here all day! Try the fish. Tip your waitress!

    10. Re:Hang him. by catman · · Score: 1

      That's interesting. Every DVD I've played on Linux I've paid for.

      So did I - but we aren't using licensed players, are we?

      Next step: Since the Microsoft Office file format is secret[1], according to the EUCD and the DMCA it is a crime to try to read MS Office documents in non-Microsoft programs.

      [1] AFAIK. There was a specification of a Word format available somewehere, what is now known seems to be a result of soon-to-be-illegal reverse engineering.

  3. Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by teamhasnoi · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Not only can we have secret trials, but we can change the charges around until we get the outcome we want! Now we can be the subject of surviellience with out a warrant, arrested for a classified reason, not get to see a lawyer or contact anyone, held for an indefinite amount of time, be termed as a 'enemy combatant' with no constitutional rights, be tried by a secret military tribunal, and if the charges don't stick, we can change them mid-trial.

    I sure feel safer with the deck stacked.

    Yes. I realize this is off-topic. Soon it won't be.

    1. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by anonymous+loser · · Score: 5, Funny

      Prosecution: You're being charged with murder.
      Jon: Murder? With my computer?
      Prosecution: Uh, did we say murder? We meant assault.
      Jon: All I did was write a program!
      Prosecution: Internet Fraud! Exactly what we meant to say.
      Jon: How is viewing a DVD on linux fraud?
      Prosecution: What's linux?
      Jon: A free operating system.
      Prosecution: No such thing! We're charging you with Theft and "Intent to View DVDs on Stolen System"!

    2. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I like the idea of getting sworn testimony from the defendant. Then changing the crime so that his testimony makes him guilty.

    3. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by UberLord · · Score: 3, Funny

      Why would a Microsoft lawyer be doing a murder case?

    4. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 3, Informative

      It's part of the Monty Python skit.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    5. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by UberLord · · Score: 2, Funny

      I was alluding to the fact that there's no such thing as a Free Operating system (or software for that matter) from a MS wannabe perspective. Obviously my level of humour is vastly superior to your intellect and I humbly appologise ;)

    6. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by Avakado · · Score: 3, Informative

      First of all, the trial isn't secret. I've been attending all of it since Monday. The change to the indictment was done with the defender's agreement (he said he thought it was very weird that Økokrim wanted to charge Jon for having gained access to the lock itself. Locks aren't protected by any law.) If the defender had disagreed, the trial would have been restarted, but the amount of extra time that would have taken, combined with the stupidity of the change made the defender think it wasn't worth it (or so he said.)

      --
      The world will end in 5 minutes. Please log out.
    7. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by Fatal0E · · Score: 2

      You realize that this trial is taking place in Norway right? It doesnt seem like that much of a stretch (since IANAL) to assume that Norwegian precedent have 0 (zero) effect on the US legal system.

      I still thnk you're right about Ascrofts intentions but this wont strengthen his positions at all.

    8. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 2

      LOL. I caught your drift. I could not help but envision a Monty Python skit with your Microsoft Lawyer as prosecutor, judge, and jury on this case. A true farce just as Jon is enduring now.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    9. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by ethereal · · Score: 3, Informative

      This is pretty standard courtroom stuff in the U.S., though - the prosecution can pretty much bring new charges, and ask to dismiss existing ones, any time they can talk a grand jury into making the new indictment. The only difference is that you'd essentially have to start a new trial, but all of the evidence from the old one would still be a matter of record. There is nothing unfair about this.

      For those who are saying that they got the testimony, and then changed the charges: it's not like you get immunity for anything you say on the stand, right? If I am on trial for theft, and I happen to own up to a murder, you can bet that I'll be on trial for murder pretty soon too. If you broke the law in more ways than one (not that I can tell whether he did or not), don't admit it in court if you can avoid it. In the U.S., invoke the 5th Amendment.

      The only issue would be if the law itself was changed following testimony; there would then be an ex post facto issue (although who knows how that works in Norway) that would seem to make the trial unfair. But just adding new charges because the defendent admitted to supposedly illegal behavior in open court is not unethical; the defendant and his counsel should know what the law is and have some idea of how to steer clear of other potential dangerous admissions during their defense on the first charge.

      I wish Jon all the best - I think he should be considered innocent. But it doesn't help to make it seem like there's some vast legal conspiracy against him; the events so far have been accepted elements of justice systems worldwide for centuries.

      --

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

    10. Re:Wait til Ashcroft get his hands on this! by Wingnut64 · · Score: 0

      You realize that this trial is taking place in Norway right? It doesnt seem like that much of a stretch (since IANAL) to assume that Norwegian precedent have 0 (zero) effect on the US legal system.

      Yeh, it's not like US law can be applied to other countries...

      --
      echo 'Header append X-HD-DVD "0x09f911029d74e35bd84156c5635688c0"' >> /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
  4. Yeah, we get it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It will continue until its done. We know. We understand how these things work.

  5. I'm sick of this story. by cioxx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Seriously. There aren't any major developments to warrant a story on the front page every 12 hours.

    Give it a rest, and mention it at least every other 2 weeks. There isn't any room for discussion left. Everything has been said 300 times before.

    Mod away!

    1. Re:I'm sick of this story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You call changing the charges after a trial has started, minor? Maybe you'll think differently when it happens to you.

    2. Re:I'm sick of this story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *yawn*

      I would listen to Linus Torvalds read the binary machine code of the latest linux kernel outloud.

    3. Re:I'm sick of this story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Give it a rest, and mention it at least every other 2 weeks.

      Hell, or once every four weeks even!!

    4. Re:I'm sick of this story. by KjetilK · · Score: 4, Funny

      Uhm, they are playing Calvin Ball in court, actually, I would say that is news...

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    5. Re:I'm sick of this story. by Rogerborg · · Score: 2

      Could he get off by singing the "I'm very sorry" song?. Join in with the counterpoint, everyone!

      • Heres the very sorry song. Won't you help and sing along?
        • Bum Bum Bum
      • I blew it!
        • He's sorry!
      • I knew it!
        • So sorry!
      • I'm very very sorry that I took your precious flagggg!
        • Just don't do it anymore you scurvy scalawaggggg!

      Ack! No, I forgot, the one rule about Calvinball is that you can't play it the same way twice. Damn those cunning Norwegian prosecutors, they think of everything.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
    6. Re:I'm sick of this story. by CalvinAHobbes · · Score: 1

      Uhm, they are playing Calvin Ball in court, actually, I would say that is news...

      So anytime now we might read that the Prosecutor "lept suddenly onto a table, donned a mask, and screamed something about a 'bonus wicket' before proceding to race around the courtroom"?

      -CAH

      I wonder what would happen if an impromptu game of Calvinball broke out here on /. ?

    7. Re:I'm sick of this story. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Then don't bother reading it you faggot

  6. text of the article... by nickclarke · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...before it gets slashdotted:

    Prosecution changes charges against "DVD-Jon"

    The prosecution in the trial of Jon Lech Johansen, known as "DVD-Jon" due to his connection with a computer program to decrypt DVD copy protection codes, presented amended charges in court on Friday.

    The changes largely reflect Økokrim - Norway's special force for economic crime - wanting to include charges that Johansen also cracked code that revealed a repository of protection keys. According to the prosecution, this made it possible for the decryption program DeCSS to work on a wide range of films.

    Johansen's defense counsel, Halvor Manshaus, opposed this new development, saying he felt it changed the very nature of the indictment, which the prosecution is not allowed to do while the trial is in progress.

    Prosecutor Inger Marie Sunde argues that the changes only make the original indictment more precise, and so do not represent new charges.

    After consideration Manshaus withdrew his objection to the changes, not waiting for a ruling from the judge.

    "I have objections to how this is done - that changes come now, so late in the trial. I have now formal objections against the changes themselves, rather that we now, after the presentation of evidence is over, get this change - which in my opinion comes without sufficient supporting evidence," Manshaus said.

    "Such a formal objection would mean that we would have to present new evidence and this would in practice lead to a deferment of the trial and we have no interest in that," Manshaus said.

    Throughout the proceeding Manshaus has been extremely brief, trying to get the prosecution to concentrate on what he feels are the actual charges and presenting his counter-arguments far more quickly.

    The trial was originally scheduled to conclude with closing arguments on Friday. This will now take place on Monday, primarily to allow the defense to adjust arguments to reflect the newly worded indictment. Judgment will not fall until after New Year.

    This was the third time the charges against Johansen change. This spring Økokrim amended the indictment to complicity with cracking DVD codes, which means that they do not have to prove that Johansen acted alone. Just before the start of the trial Johansen's defense counsel had the wording of the charges slightly adjusted.

    The trial this week has been dominated by the prosecution's painstaking attempts to argue that Johansen deliberately contributed to the removal of copy protection of DVD films leading to their free distribution on the Internet.

    DVDs have a reserve of 408 encrypted keys, where at least one must correspond to a key in the DVD-player in order to access the data. According to Johansen himself, the original DeCSS contained only one key, but this was later expanded thanks to the efforts of friends on the Internet.

    Johansen's defense argues that he and his friends only cracked the code in order to play films legally purchased on a computer using the Linux operating system.

    Much of Friday morning's trial time was spent documenting online conversations between Johansen and his friends.

    DeCSS, was published in 1999 and widely associated with Johansen via reports in the media. Specialist circles have debated Johansen's level of involvement with the actual codebreaking. Johansen also made the program freely available for download via the Internet.

    1. Re:text of the article... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why would it get Slashdotted? It's nothing that we haven't read four other times this week.

  7. Re:I'm happy! by rbgaynor · · Score: 2, Funny

    Sadly only about 45% can write english...

    --
    "Good things don't end with eum, they end with mania or teria." - H. Simpson
  8. Uhh...Umm...Ano... by CrazyDuke · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You can change the charges in mid trial? Smells like BS. I can't quite place why. But it smells fowl.

    --
    Any sufficiently advanced influence is indistinguishable from control.
    1. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by chas.capwell · · Score: 5, Interesting
      You can change the charges in mid trial? Smells like BS. I can't quite place why. But it smells fowl.

      Um, maybe because the trial isn't held in the U.S.? Just because something can't be done in the U.S. legal system doesn't mean it can't be done in another country.

      While I find the idea of being able to change charges in mid-stream a little. . .slimy, it's their court of law. What I do find chilling is that it seems the burden of proving that the change shouldn't be done is on the defense, rather than having the prosecution provide the burden of proof that the change should be done. Any /.ers for Norway care to comment?
    2. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative
      I'm, in Norway, and for that reason I'm posting anonymously, I don't want those moronic idiots coming after me if they don't loose.

      Anyway, you can change details in the indictment, but only details to make it more precise. The defence can protest, in case you would have to start the whole trial all over. First, the defence objected strongly, but then, they probably just went "WTF, whatever, either the judges have allready got the clue, that the prosecutor is a dirty, rotten corrumpted maniac, which she has made abundantly clear during this trial, in which case it doesn't matter, or they haven't grasped it yet, and then there's the appeal, so lets just get it over with."

    3. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by blancolioni · · Score: 2

      You can change the charges in mid trial? Smells like BS. I can't quite place why. But it smells fowl.

      I think the prosecution lawyer is just chicken!

      But let's wait and see how well Jon ducks these new charges.

    4. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by SoSueMe · · Score: 1

      But it smells fowl.
      I'm not being picky about your choice of words, it's just the picture this conjured up.
      A large mess of unprocessed poultry. Now that's foul fowl!

    5. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by k98sven · · Score: 3, Informative

      While I find the idea of being able to change
      charges in mid-stream a little. . .slimy, it's their court of law.
      What I do find chilling is that it seems the burden of proving that the change shouldn't be done is on the defense, rather than having the prosecution provide
      the burden of proof that the change should be done. Any /.ers for Norway care to comment?


      No, the burden of proof is indeed on the procecution's side. However, the proof may scrutinized by the defense. If the defense objects, the court will rule on the issue.

      In this case, the defense must have felt that the court would rule in favor of the prosecution, and/or that it wasn't worth fighting over.

      Note that the Norwegian legal system is not like the anglo-saxon tradition, where a defense and prosecution fight eachother over two different versions of events,
      it's more like the german tradition where the defense and prosecution work from two different viewpoints towards finding a single truth.

    6. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You people have obviously never been to a chicken farm. You don't know foul until you smell fowl crap.

    7. Re:Uhh...Umm...Ano... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The word "prosecution" isn't really correct here. "Aktoratet" (the norwegian term) is required in a criminal case to present the whole case including evidence that would suggest that the defendant is innocent.

  9. Re:I'm happy! by thunderbee · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    And it is quite a sad thing, as speaking at least one other language is rewarding. But then, most of the slashdot readers seem to know but a few hundred words of english, and that would hardly qualify as knowing a language (yes I mean the native english speakers, not foreigners speaking their language AND english) ;->

    --
    In my opinion, Scientology is a cult you should avoid.
  10. Mod parent up! by Raul654 · · Score: 2

    ..too much laughing.. chest clenching up...

    --


    To make laws that man cannot, and will not obey, serves to bring all law into contempt.
    --E.C. Stanton
  11. his lawyer withdrew his objection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    apparently in the interest of moving things along quickly, his lawyer withdrew his protest of the indictment changes.

    Being a total git when it comes to things like this, I would interpret that as his lawyer having confidence that he's pretty well got things wrapped up and that our boy Jon is off the hook?

  12. True by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    True, only read.

  13. What's up with the defense? by szquirrel · · Score: 3, Insightful

    From the article:

    Throughout the proceeding [defense counsel] Manshaus has been extremely brief, trying to get the prosecution to concentrate on what he feels are the actual charges and presenting his counter-arguments far more quickly.

    What, has he got a hot date? What's the rush here? I hope in his haste he's not missing anything that could exonerate his client.

    I guess lawyers in Norway aren't paid by the hour.

    --
    Never approach a vast undertaking with a half-vast plan.
    1. Re:What's up with the defense? by Guppie · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Actually, he was trying to cut down on the Signal/Noise factor in the courtroom. The prosecutor grilled Johansen for hours about "The hacker OS" Linux, what IRC chats he had with the group cracking deCSS, if he had pirated software at home, and so on and so on -not at all realated to the charge.

      Manshaus was short and to the point, trying to convey that the court is about one simple thing: Is descrambling your DVD a computer break-in or not? All the hacker-hype from the prosecutor is only there to confuse the judges, by his reasoning.

    2. Re:What's up with the defense? by RickHunter · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Yes, of course all the hacker-hype is there to confuse the judges. If the persecutor manages to convince the judge(s) that, if they let Jon go, they'll be all over the newspapers as soft on hackers and terrorists, they're not going to let Jon go even if they think he's innocent. It worked with Kaplan and 2600. Hopefully, judges in Norway will be a bit smarter.

    3. Re:What's up with the defense? by LarsG · · Score: 1

      they'll be all over the newspapers as soft on hackers and terrorists

      Ehh.. The Norwegian newspapers have shown more sympathy for Jon than they have for the prosecution. Besides, "terrorist" doesn't produce quite the same knee-jerk reaction in Norway.

      --
      If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
    4. Re:What's up with the defense? by catman · · Score: 1

      If the persecutor manages

      I don't know if that was intentional - but that is in fact the way she's coming across in the courtroom. The facts of the case are indisputed, she's been trying to show that what Jon did is illegal. So far it has been shown to be largely irrelevant - nomad gave the reverse-engineered CSS source to dod, too. I suppose that in the final argument on Monday the persecutor will try to show that whoever buys a CD agrees to play it only on licensed players. Unfortunately, no such agreement has been found anywhere except in the collective mind of Økokrim.

      I think Trond Øgrim is on to something when he writes that the DVDCCA lied to the MPAA about what CSS could do, and are trying to cover up by making Jon the fall guy.

      Rather than admitting that the crypto locking was about as secure as two pieces of cellophane stuck together with chewing gum, they blame the fiendishly clever hackers ....

    5. Re:What's up with the defense? by catman · · Score: 1

      Bah - undisputed, sorry.

  14. Please just wait until something new is written by skydude_20 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Thursday December 12, @03:57PM
    http://www.vg.no/spesial/bakgrunn/?id=698
    Friday December 13, @08:53AM
    http://www.vg.no/spesial/bakgrunn/?id=698

    So yeah, written up differently, but I think still a repeat if you use the same links for different slashdot stories, that both made the front page!

    Thank goodness I give my money to the local zoo instead of a slashdot subscription, cuz the zoo monkeys do a better job with my money.

    --
    Jesus saves souls and redeems them for valuable cash prizes
    1. Re:Please just wait until something new is written by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI: That is the link to the page with all JJ-stories in English.

  15. And I'm glad running jokes are still in. by Ted_Green · · Score: 1, Offtopic
  16. Slow news day by Mothra+the+III · · Score: 0

    I agree, there must be something else going on in the world thats interesting to nerds.

    --
    Worst. Sig. Ever.
  17. How it happened .. (almost) by AftanGustur · · Score: 5, Informative


    Here is a short event log of how things happened.

    What the Norvegian prosecutor is doing is claiming that Jon broke the protection on the DVD keyblock. He didn't.
    In fact it was a real professional cryptographer Frank Stevenson that demonstrated how to (a) defeat CSS without a key and (b) how to recover all the keys from the keyblock.

    And yet the brave Norvegian prosecutor is going after a kid ... His ancestors must be turning wildly in their graves ..

    --
    echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    1. Re:How it happened .. (almost) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Actually, Frank Stevenson was the defence main witness. First, the defence withdrew the witness, because the prosecutor had drifted so far off topic it wasn't much use anymore, but the prosecutor decided she wanted to hear him out. Bad mistake on the prosecutor side.... He pretty much killed their case.

      That's why they have to be playing Calvin Ball in court.

    2. Re:How it happened .. (almost) by Ch_Omega · · Score: 3, Informative

      "....And yet the brave Norvegian prosecutor is going after a kid ... His ancestors must be turning wildly in their graves .."

      ... uhm, Inger Marie Sunde is a she.

    3. Re:How it happened .. (almost) by Avakado · · Score: 3, Informative

      What the Norvegian prosecutor is doing is claiming that Jon broke the protection on the DVD keyblock. He didn't.

      No it's not (I've attended all of the trial, I should know.) The prosecutor is trying to claim that Jon distributed the source and the binary code the for the program that enabled him and others to unritghtfully gain access to the _disc_keys_ and the movie data. Frank Stevenson demonstrated how to find the disc keys without a player key.

      --
      The world will end in 5 minutes. Please log out.
    4. Re:How it happened .. (almost) by nordicfrost · · Score: 2

      What the Norvegian prosecutor is doing is claiming that Jon broke the protection on the DVD keyblock.
      Almost. He is charged as an accessory to this, not as the main offender. That Frank Stevenson guy must have cojones the size of grapegruits. He met in court as a witness this Thursday.

  18. In Soviet Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Funny

    ...you joke about Americans having less freedom than you do.

  19. What did he do again? by surprise_audit · · Score: 5, Funny
    Can someone give me a quick rundown of what happened here?

    The way I remember it, Jon was arrested in Norway because the MPAA told the Norwegians he was being a bad boy. Was that a DMCA thing or before that? If it's a DMCA thing, why the fuck is he being tried in Norway, with Norwegian attornies and Judge, for breaking a US law outside the borders of the US?

    Jon didn't even give anyone the finger by showing up in the US to deliver a talk about DeCSS, unlike Skylarov and his piece of code.

    If the Norwegians caved in because the MPAA threatened them, here's how the conversation should have gone:

    MPAA: we want you to prosecute Jon for breaking CSS.
    Norway: Fuck off!
    MPAA: we'll embargo DVD shipments to Norway!
    Norway: Fuck off! We've got diplomats and tourist all over the world that can ship us DVDs.
    MPAA:But they won't work in your region coded players!
    Norway: Fuck off! We've got Jon-boy and DeCSS...

    1. Re:What did he do again? by jaredcoleman · · Score: 2

      Except, that Norway is a member of WIPO which says that its members must respect the copyright laws of other nations.

    2. Re:What did he do again? by Xtifr · · Score: 2

      But the DMCA isn't a copyright law. It's about providing information (irrespective of copyrights) which can potentially be used to violate copyrights. It's as if it were illegal to write manuals for photocopy machines (except photocopy machines aren't digital, and therefore aren't magical and dangerous in the eyes of the powers-that-be).

    3. Re:What did he do again? by LarsG · · Score: 2

      But the DMCA isn't a copyright law.

      But the non-circumvention parts of the DMCA came from the 1996 WIPO Copyright Treaty.

      --
      If J.K.R wrote Windows: Puteulanus fenestra mortalis!
    4. Re:What did he do again? by yggdrazil · · Score: 1

      Norway's legal definition of illegal hacking has long been "to break a protection" to gain access. it seems to me this is what the prosecution is going after. And Jon Johansen seems to be vulnerable to two such breaches:
      - Breach of protection by getting authentication codes out of Xing DVD player
      - Breach of protection by distributing an unauthorized program that breaches the DVD protection codes

      My personal opinion:
      - He might very well be found guilty.
      - This makes Økokrim look stupid. I have little respect for them. They should use their resources on real computer crimes.

    5. Re:What did he do again? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

      I can well imagine the MPAA telling Norway that Jon was up to something fishy. However the rest of your account is rather improbable. I suppose the normal legal process ran its course. The Norwegian prosecutors' office examined the MPAA claim against Norwegian law, and found that they might have a case. On the strength of that they decided to prosecute. Many other countries would (rightly) have done the same, except perhaps the US (not trying to be a USA basher here, but the US is notoriously lax in bringing suit against their own citizens or companies when asked to by foreign countries, even when those citizens or companies turn out to be in violation of US law).

      Jon is being tried for breaking Norwegian law, not US ones. It'll be a shame if he is convicted, but it isn't a shame because he is just a kid, and it will not be the fault of the DMCA, or other silly US laws, or the MPAA, or whatever. It will be Norwegian law at fault here.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    6. Re:What did he do again? by surprise_audit · · Score: 2
      Ah, I get it now - Jon's being hammered for trying to watch DVD's he owned on a computer he owned running an OS he downloaded.

      So, next question - didn't Jon also download the original CSS code-breaking program? Couple of guys in Belgium or Germany or somewhere wrote it, if I recall. Maybe they could get him on illegal munitions trafficking too. Oh wait, that's the USA's crazy law, classifying encryption products as munitions. Nevermind... :)

      I don't imagine anyone's caught those dudes yet? No, of course not - they're hackers that go by pseudonyms so nobody can find them and they're probably waaay more dangerous than a teenage boy...

  20. Slashdotted? by fredrikj · · Score: 1

    Get Slashdotted? Aftenposten is a newspaper, not some arbitary site run off someone's DSL line. Tell you what, it most likely has more readers than Slashdot does.

    1. Re:Slashdotted? by kvasi_lepton · · Score: 1

      There are 4.x million people in Norway. I think Slashdot have more readers than Aftenposten.

    2. Re:Slashdotted? by KjetilK · · Score: 2
      I don't think so. Dagbladet just announced that they had 1.5 million unique visits a month.

      However, I agree, the Aftenpoften server can take this hit easily, this post should be modded "Redundant" now that that fact is evident.

      --
      Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
    3. Re:Slashdotted? by Joey7F · · Score: 3, Funny

      Not all of Dagbladet's unique visitors are Norwegian ;) Like me...

      Jeg les Dagbladet hver dag og jeg er ikke fra Norge og jeg er ikke Norsk.

      --Joey

    4. Re:Slashdotted? by Brummund · · Score: 1

      Your Norwegian is quite good. Impressive! I'm amazed that someone not living in Norway bothers to learn Norwegian :-)

      (By the way, we don't use caps in words describing nationality, like "English", "French" etc. Instead, we spell it with small caps, ie. "engelsk", "fransk" and "norsk".)

    5. Re:Slashdotted? by Joey7F · · Score: 2

      True, I forgot :)

      I am "bothering" to learn Norwegian because of three things:

      1. The language itself is cool
      2. Norwegian Girls
      3. Norwegian Scenery

      I visited Norway about three years ago and was very impressed. Since then, I have been learning Norwegian because I would like to spend a semester studying there.

      I know that you all speak English (very well, I might add) but if you visit for any length of time, it is only polite to make an attempt to snakke litt norsk.

      I have also heard there is no greater compliment to a person of another country than a foreigner attempting to speak their language :)

      --Joey

    6. Re:Slashdotted? by catman · · Score: 1

      I have also heard there is no greater compliment to a person of another country than a foreigner attempting to speak their language :)

      True, and we're all enormously flattered when someone takes the trouble to learn a relatively useless and obscure language like ours :)

    7. Re:Slashdotted? by Joey7F · · Score: 2

      How is that funny? I actually do read Dagbladet.no almost every day.

      --Joey

  21. Subtle Sounds of Desperation by 4of12 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I mean, if the prosecution has been fiddling and adjusting the charges this much it pretty much says either that

    1. they don't feel they have precisely focussed their case,
    2. they didn't understand the technology and are constantly learning more about it
    but in either event, their competence is called into question at the very least, or else the motivation for bringing up the charges was not done under the same rigorous way that Norwegian citizens could hope to expect.

    I hope the jury gets the same sense of shoddiness in the prosecutions case that I'm getting.

    --
    "Provided by the management for your protection."
    1. Re:Subtle Sounds of Desperation by muon1183 · · Score: 2, Informative

      Just thought I should point out that this isn't a Jury trial. In Norway, one doesn't have the right to a jury trial. Nonetheless, your point is valid, and even more relevent, since a judge is much more likely to notice this than an untrained jury.

      --

      There's no sig like SIGSEG
    2. Re:Subtle Sounds of Desperation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong.

      This is not a jury triel but there is one judge and two "laymen" (jurors if you will). Whatever the outcome, the case can be appealed after the verdict here and Jon would get a Jury trial. It can get appealed there as well before it will end up in the supreme court.

    3. Re:Subtle Sounds of Desperation by catman · · Score: 1

      This is a low-level court where there are three judges: one administrator who has the formal law education, and two lay judges - in this case they have been selected for their knowledge about the subject of the trial. Any appeal would be treated in a court with a jury, where size of the jury can vary, IIRC. Serious crimes are tried directly in the jury court and bypass the lower court altogether.

      How do I know? I have served as a lay judge at this level three times.

  22. The *real* reason why CSS broke! by AftanGustur · · Score: 5, Insightful


    From:
    http://www-2.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/DeCSS/FrankStevenson/ analysis.html

    CSS was designed with a 40 bit keylength to comply with US government export regulation, and as such it easily compromised through brute force attacks ( such are the intentions of export control ).
    Moreover the 40 bits have not been put to good use, as the ciphers succumb to attacks with much lower computational work than which is permitted in the export control rules.
    Whether CSS is a serious cryptographic cipher is debatable. It has been clearly been demonstrated that its strength does not match the keylength. If the cipher was intended to get security by remaining secret, this is yet another testament to the fact that security through obscurity is an unworkable principle.

    --
    echo '[q]sa[ln0=aln80~Psnlbx]16isb572CCB9AE9DB03273snlbxq' |dc
    1. Re:The *real* reason why CSS broke! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The keys are in every single player. Trusted client problem.

    2. Re:The *real* reason why CSS broke! by hbmartin · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Yes, you are correct. A friend of mine who worked for Intel on CSS said the encryption is so weak they had to hide the algorithm itself from decompilers and such.

      --
      Karma: Bizzare (mostly affected by varying internal caffeine levels.)
    3. Re: The *real* reason why CSS broke! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      The keys are in every single player. Trusted client problem.

      But only one key was discovered by reverse engineering. The protocol allows for key revocation (sort of) by pressing new discs without the compromised key.

      The algorithm was analyzed, as the parent post explains, and it was found that a brute force approach could find the master key for any disc.

      So the _real_ weakness is not due to the trusted client aspect. It simply does not matter when the algorithm itself can be broken with a brute force approach in a matter of minutes or seconds on a modern PC.

    4. Re:The *real* reason why CSS broke! by karlm · · Score: 2
      You are correct. The CSS cipher is vulnerable to an attack similar to the one against the GSM phone "A4" cipher. You guess the initial state of all of the shift registers except the largest one, then from the cipher output you deduce the initial contents of the largest shift regster. IIRC, this means that the CSS cipher is as hard to crack as a 16-bit key cipher without flaws. (In the case of A4, you need to guess 40-bits of the key nd check the others, and the checking requires some slightly more complicated linearalgebra due to the non-standard register clocking, so it ends up being equivalent to about 44-bit key strength, assuming you use some advanced sparse matrix inversion techniques devloped in Russia.)

      With DVDs, the disc master key is encrypted with itself and stored on the disc, which makes the guess and check step in key recovery much easier. Once you have the disc master key, you can start cracking the 400-some player keys, with some of the computation parallelizable across all of the player keys you're trying to crack.

      --
      Copyright Violation:"theft, piracy"::Anti-Trust Violation:"thermonuclear price terrorism"<-Overly dramatic language.
  23. Re:In Soviet Russia by Capt.+DrunkenBum · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yeah,and in Americia they are beginning to realize that it is no longer a joke.

    --

    Not everyone deserves a 320i

  24. They are extending the charges by CausticWindow · · Score: 1

    wanting to include charges that Johansen also cracked code that revealed a repository of protection keys

    So, they are extending the charges, not just changing them. Probably because something surfaced during the trial.

    --
    Do you know where you're drumming from?

    --
    How small a thought it takes to fill a whole life
  25. Re: Jake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    whenever I see this topic, I think of Jake Steed

  26. CSS vs. CSS by k-hell · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In danger of maybe repeating earlier posts, I thought I'd add a link to Håkon Wium Lie's (CTO in Opera Software and the guy behind Cascading Style Sheets) view on the current DVD trial case. He sees clear analogies between the movie business' wish to decide how the content of a DVD should be played, and the wishes of Microsoft and the likes who among other things want to use proprietary and possibly encrypted formats on the Web.

    1. Re:CSS vs. CSS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      From Hågon's page:
      No one, not even Jon, has watched an entire movie decrypted by DeCSS

      Yeah! And when asked, no one has ever watched porn or smoked pot. C'mon gimme a break!

  27. contains 'profit!' joke, +5 hilarious! by magister707 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Step 1: In Soviet Russia, Natalie Portman petrifies YOU.
    Step 2: Imagine a Beowulf cluster of hot grits down my pants.
    Step 3: ???
    Step 4: Profit!

  28. Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by dmoen · · Score: 5, Informative
    This is really a technical question.

    The article says: The trial this week has been dominated by the prosecution's painstaking attempts to argue that Johansen deliberately contributed to the removal of copy protection of DVD films leading to their free distribution on the Internet.

    But as far as I know, you don't need to decrypt a DVD in order to pirate it. You can just copy the encrypted data, optionally post it on the internet for your friends to copy, then burn the encrypted data onto a blank DVD. Isn't that right?

    If that's true, then the prosecution case is considerably weakened. You only need deCSS if you want to convert the video to another, more convenient format.

    Doug Moen

    --
    I have written a truly remarkable program which this sig is too small to contain.
    1. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by nagora · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Isn't that right?

      Yes, in fact DeCSS is a crap way to pirate DVD's.

      If that's true, then the prosecution case is considerably weakened.

      You have confused "law" and "justice"; there is no connection between the two.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    2. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by bmwm3nut · · Score: 3, Interesting

      this is assuming that you can get hold of the encrypted data. i'm no expert in this field, but you'll need a dvd drive that can read the raw data...i don't think that's easy to come by. but i could be way wrong on this

    3. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by Zone-MR · · Score: 4, Informative

      As far as I know it isnt that easy. CSS is actually cleverer than you think.

      From what I understand, CSS makes use of codes embedded in a factory-written part of the DVD media. Standard DVD burner and media combinations do not support this marking of a disk as CSS-scrambled. Of course making a perfect replica of a DVD would mean that decrypting it isnt neccessary, but standard DVD-writers just don't support this.

      If you want to create your own encrypted DVDs, you can buy special [more expensive] 'Authoring' media, (as opposed to the 'General Purpose' DVD-R media which is the consumer standard). AFAIK though, the data written to the disk must be encrypted with keys matching those embedded on the fabricated part of the disk.

    4. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by cdn-programmer · · Score: 0

      This would be true. There IS no method that can be used to protect a DVD. Let me explain.

      A DVD carries about 4-5 GB of data. Apparently part of the DVD is non-recordable, Thus if you try to copy the DVD in a burner part of it cannot be written. So what? Just relocate...

      An exabyte tape drive carries about 4-5GB. With a trivial amount of work one can copy the WHOLE DVD out to the tape. This is rather obvious. Tape drives were designed to be written to and DVD's were designed to be read. perhaps these idjots (read RIAA and MPAA) have in mind to outlaw computer devices that you can write to. Oh? did I forget that you can copy to your hard drive instead of say a tape? did I forget that exabytes are now obsolete? did I forget that there are LOTS of new tape drives that can handle anywhere up to 120GB or more?

      Now - having done so... the issue becomes how to read it back in. This is rather trivial as well. Most computers support a read function. Perhaps the idjots will lobby to ban this as well.

      Having read the data from whatever media it has been recorded onto the job simply becomes one of stuffing the data into the program that was designed to decode it. Any device driver will do this.

      All that is needed is to write a DD that will emulate the DVD player. The operating system needs to be told that it has said DVD player out in hardware land. The Device driver does this. So the device driver then implements a virtual DVD player and the job is done. Why bother with DeCSS... but if you read papers on the CSS system it was pretty trivial to defeat the scheme anyway.

      Perhaps the idjots would like to legislate against intellegence. Hell - throw all cleaver people in jail! What we are seeing is the attempted criminalization of the art of computer programming. The Norweigan prosecutor is attacking US. All of us. Next we'll hear that VMWare is illaegal because it will run winders and this allows a person to watch a DVD in linux.

      Oh, perhaps the DVD reader does the decoding... well - this is fine too because then all that is required is the DD that drives the player has to spin off a copy. This is rather trivial as well because at the DD level we get a buffer full of data... that can be sent to another DD like the one that runs the hard drive with a rather trivial amount of work.

      IMHO the conspiracy is that the RIAA and MPAA want only their corporate buddies (M$?) to be able to play a DVD because this will quash linux use. With patent law in one hand independant programmers are tied up in what they can do... and with DMCA style laws in the other hand users are tied up with what they can use. The winners are the monopolists who can then force artists to sign draconian contracts that bind them for years and prevent them from being able to distribute their material.

      Meanwhile it is rather interesting that the internet content "we" develope that causes millions of people to pay their ISP's just happens to fall into a "safe Harbour" so that AOL for instance gets free access to any content we create and can distribute it to their 33 million odd customers without compensating us in any way.

    5. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by jetmarc · · Score: 2, Interesting

      > If you want to create your own encrypted DVDs, you can buy special [more expensive] 'Authoring'
      > media, (as opposed to the 'General Purpose' DVD-R media which is the consumer standard).

      There is another difference between "Authoring" and "Consumer" as well. It has a different
      surface coating and is written with a slightly different laser frequency. So you can write a
      logically 100% correct DVD with decryption key area, but it won't play in "consumer" players
      for physical reasons. Much like CD-RWs don't play in old CD players.

    6. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by Herkum01 · · Score: 2

      CSS is actually cleverer than you think.

      Clever enough to keep hundreds of Chinese Kiosks from selling pirated DVD's in the streets?

    7. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2
      And how many people are willing to transfer several gigabytes of movie over the net?

      Net based movie piracy only became practical once DVD encryption was cracked, as they could then be recoded using DivX which made transfer feasable.

      Remember you could pirate CDs before MP3, just that nobody did.

    8. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's that easy for commercial counterfeiters. It is not that easy for regular citizens, for two reasons:

      1. Consumer DVD recorders and blanks are artificially crippled so as to be unable to write to the area that contains the CSS decryption keys. (The crippled technology is what they call "DVD-General"). Professional recorders ("DVD-Authoring") do not have this restriction, but are extremely (artifically?) expensive.

      2. Most prerecorded movies are long enough to require single-sided, dual-layered discs. DVD burners (whether General or Authoring) can only burn single-layered discs -- dual-layered discs must be manufactured in a replication plant. So even if CSS never existed, current technological limitations would inhibit casual copying.

    9. Re:Don't need deCSS to pirate DVDs? by Zone-MR · · Score: 1

      "Clever enough to keep hundreds of Chinese Kiosks from selling pirated DVD's in the streets?"

      No, not at all. If you followed the thread through you would see that it was in response to a question about weather or not DVDs can be copied without decryption.

      Of course CSS turned out to be useless, but that was thanks to DeCSS. I find it higly amusing how the movie industry hires the best subcontractors who claim to have developed an 'unbreakable' technology. They threw millions at securing DVD. And all it took was one person skilled and knowledeble enough to outwitt them.

  29. Re:How it happened .. (almost) [Addendum] by AntiFreeze · · Score: 5, Insightful

    There's a nice synopsis about Jon's lies and the "truth" behind DeCSS here. Not what you're talking about, but a very nice corollary.

    --

    ---
    "Of course, that's just my opinion. I could be wrong." --Dennis Miller

  30. Re:How it happened .. (almost) [Addendum] by KjetilK · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Actually, the prosecutor's case rests more or less solely on this post. Jon has posted a very interesting message to the mailing list of Electronic Frontier Norway (at my request) that quite clearly shows this is badly out of context.

    --
    Employee of Inrupt, Project Release Manager and Community Manager for Solid
  31. Re:In Soviet Russia by tomhudson · · Score: 2

    Coco 2/3 cpu clock doubler IIRC

  32. Re:How it happened .. (almost) [Addendum] by css-truth · · Score: 3, Interesting
    A different viewpoint


    I read through a lot of the list and several things struck me. Overall,
    I see the list as lending a lot of credibility to Johansen's case. I
    don't see it casting doubt as to this.

    Overall, I think the livid-dev mailing list shows Johansen was trying
    to contribute to Linux (and FreeBSD) and shared code with Derek Fawcus
    as a liason to bring this about. He clearly believed _before_ he was
    arrested that his actions were consistent with the DMCA and measured
    them carefully.
  33. Re:In Soviet Russia by IsoRashi · · Score: 1

    dead horse beat YOU to death!

    --
    This is not the greatest sig in the world, no. This is just a tribute.
  34. ...ample notice to resue him... by dpilot · · Score: 2

    "resue"?

    Freudian slip or spelling error?

    Do you want to SUE him again, or do you want to RESCUE him?

    --
    The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
  35. Your sig: Enter the monitor by MickLinux · · Score: 1

    Aaah.

    ROR
    LDA #$40
    STA $66C0

    aaah. For the good old days when Assembly language was Assembly language, men were men, and us computer geeks were unknown.

    Actually, I didn't know the CALL for the miniassembler, so I memorized opcodes.

    --
    Correct Horse Battery Staple: 72 bits of entropy. Enter "Correct H" into google. When it generates the phrase, that's
  36. Mmm... Calvin Ball :-) by rsborg · · Score: 3, Informative
    Uhm, they are playing Calvin Ball in court, actually, I would say that is news...

    For those who are a bit confused about the rules of Calvin Ball...

    Its only absolute rule is you can't play it the same way twice.

    --
    Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
  37. Why isn't Bill Gates being tried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
    1. Re:Why isn't Bill Gates being tried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      I asked that back in the 80s. The answer then, as it is now, is -- he's rich. He was born rich, and then, through unethical and legally questionable business practices, became very rich.

      Otherwise, I can't see why he wasn't sued for fraud, legal misrepresntation, restraint of trade, and a lot of other things that his company got away with while he was in charge.

      He's rich. As a result, he won't be personally sued.
      --
      AC

    2. Re:Why isn't Bill Gates being tried? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the law refers to a criminal act not a civil suit

      Monopolizing trade a felony; penalty

      Every person who shall monopolize, or attempt to monopolize, or combine or conspire with any other person or persons, to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce among the several States, or with foreign nations, shall be deemed guilty of a felony, and, on conviction thereof, shall be punished by fine not exceeding $10,000,000 if a corporation, or, if any other person, $350,000, or by imprisonment not exceeding three years, or by both said punishments, in the discretion of the court.

  38. Anticapitalist laws by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The thing that has struck me as absurd about the whole DRM mess, and its DVD-specific issues, is that the proponents of such laws, who undoubtedly think of themselves as capitalists, are acting in a markedly anticapitalist fashion. The end result in this case is a young man being tried for breaking through an informal anticompetitive arrangement between the MPAA on one hand and Microsoft and Apple on the other.

    The same is true of region coding: it is a method of creating artificial scarcity, i.e. of anticompetitive market manipulation.

    And this, in the end, is what most of the wrangling decried on Slashdot is about -- companies that were formerly highly competitive using their success to suppress competition that might lead to their downfall. Unfortunately, so accustomed are "capitalists" to admiring gigantic corporations that they can, without blinking, swallow the notion that anticompetitive behavior is a form of competition. It is indeed, but only in a political sense, not a market sense, and market competition is what capitalism is about.

    --
    Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    1. Re:Anticapitalist laws by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      market competition is what capitalism is about.

      No, aquisition of capital is what capitalism is about. Preferably, through a rather selfish notion called "profit", which involves taking as much as you can from someone else, while giving back as little as you can in return.

      Capitalism suffers from monopolies and cartels; socialism suffers from greedy, selfish people trying to ruin the system for everyone.

      Hmm... now that I think about it, maybe there isn't such a big difference after all. ;-)
      --
      AC

  39. Major media oblivious by porkface · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Why is this trial not being recognized by any of the major news outlets? It's of fairly great significance to big media as well as people involved with new technology, and yet I can't find mention of it on TV or even at the greatest depths of any of the major news agency websites. I can see why Disney might want to keep it quiet, but as for the rest of the world, I'm at a loss for understanding on this one.

    1. Re:Major media oblivious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I expect Disney, MPAA etc are waiting on the outcome. If the prosecution lose the case you'll never hear a thing about it on the news. If they WIN it will be on every news program loudly proclaiming how yet another evil hacker has been roundly defeated by the forces of good...

  40. The Norwegian court's mascot must be a kangaroo. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That or a puppet or maybe a kangaroo puppet. In any case, I'm sure it involves jumping up and down with a stick up their ass.

  41. Re:In Soviet Russia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is slashdot, remember? Want to see beaten dead horses? Just see any mention of the following:

    1. Linux
    2. Microsoft
    3. RIAA/MPAA
    4. Patents

  42. Bill Gates didn't reverse engineer anything by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    did he??

    Except DOS 4.0 and a few other misc. things.

  43. I've seen him by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Its a he, dude.

    I don't care if his name is daisy fem-girl.

    YOU'RE A MAN, BABY!

  44. This reminds me of drugs trials by panurge · · Score: 3, Insightful
    In the 1970s. Some unfortunate hippy got arrested with a couple of grams of cannabis and the police decided to make an example of this one. So the prosecutor went on and on about the end of civilisation, stoned maniacs raping chickens and biting the heads off sheep, anything that would conceal from the press and the public that some unfortunate middle class kid was being made a scapegoat. Then the judge would hand down some remarks about the need to stop this sort of thing, set an example, and send the hippy to prison for ten years or so, while a few of the police continued to collect the weekly brown envelopes from the dealers.

    And we all know how successful it was, don't we. Drugs were stamped out completely. The CIA and the Marines eliminated all drugs from Asia and South America, and the State of Florida obtained its entire GSP from tourism and orange juice.It was just as successful as Prohibition.

    Yes, I know this is a rant. I'm pissed off because moronic Norwegian prosecutors are sending, as usual, the wrong message to the kids. Adults are stupid, technically crass, and misuse their power. And they suck up to the people with lots of cash.
    Just the message to send the next generation.

    --
    Panurge has posted for the last time. Thanks for the positive moderations.
  45. (n/t) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Slashdotted!

    THANK YOU VERY MUCH!

    Slashdotted!

  46. Re:MOD PARENT UP!!! HILARIOUS!!!! by magister707 · · Score: 0

    in soviet russia, all OUR base are belong to YOU.

  47. DCMA3 is coming. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In combination with new "faith based" initiatives, the Bush administration announced an executive ammendment to the DCMA, called DCMA3:

    "Before receiving your daily bowl of warm gruel from the local church of your choosing, you must think positive thoughts about corporate greed and intellectual restrictions, and reject all thoughts of individuality, creativity and freedom, as they are an anathema to the State and an impediment to the one true way for the Religious States of America to reach the Final Solution".

  48. Puzzling... by moebius_4d · · Score: 2

    How can Jon be in trouble in a country that has a Crown Prince Haakon?

    (Boo, sorry, couldn't resist.)

  49. Re:In Soviet Russia by wheany · · Score: 1

    ...or a numbered list

  50. Look US-americans, your president by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looking at a foreign newspaper you can now actually see your former president receive a Nobel Price.

    Your own newspapers and many european ones, hardly cover this topic. Yes, this is what they call freedom in the free western world...

    http://www.aftenposten.no/english/bildeserier/ar ti cle.jhtml?articleID=454004

    Have fun dudez

  51. Re:How it happened .. (almost) [Addendum] by Error27 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    >>So, you heard about Jon Johansen, the Creator of DeCSS?

    I was on the livid list immediately after the Declan article came out. It was obvious to everyone at the time that the article was horribly wrong. And yet that is the version that most people heard... BTW. If you haven't read the article then you are too ignorant on the topic to even be talking about decss.

    >>So, DeCSS was a clear break of GPL!

    Jon said pretty clearly that he got the code from MoRE. As for breaking the GPL, give me a break. A lot of adults don't understand the GPL so I can't fault a 15 year old kid for being confused about it.

    People were asking him to release the code and he referred them to an adult because he was afraid of getting arrested. I can't fault a kid for doing that either.

    Basically everyone is blaming Jon as a result of that stupid article. He got arrested because of the article. He gets cut down on slashdot for not writing the code that the article said he wrote. I say blame Declan don't blame Jon.

  52. DeCSS and Apple's DVD player by davesag · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I just tried this...
    1. Insert DVD into Apple standard DVD drive
    2. Click on DVD icon in Finder
    3. Select "copy" from the edit menu
    4. Click in /Users/davesag/Movies/
    5. Select "paste" from the edit menu
    Lo and behold the whole DVD copies as a 1.7 gb disk image. I can then use the standard DVD player software to play this disk image.

    How is that done without DeCSS or some equivalent. It worked with 3 DVDs chosen at random from my collection.

    There are any number of apps that will convert that disk image to a quicktime or MPEG4 file. Why are they picking on Jon?

    --
    I used to have a better sig than this, but I got tired of it
    1. Re:DeCSS and Apple's DVD player by kubrick · · Score: 2

      The difference there is probably that Apple has a license for its decoder from the relevant industry body (is that the DVDCCA?), and paid a fair whack of change for the privilege.

      --
      deus does not exist but if he does
  53. Essential Norwegian by Joey7F · · Score: 2

    We are getting updates on the Jon trial but some of it is in Norwegian. Therefore here is a crash course in the viking language from a student (so Native vikings feel free to correct/add to):

    Jeg frykser av meg rump venting for billeten - I am freezing my ass off waiting for a ticket!

    Dra til helvete, Jack Valenti - fuck you, Jack Valenti

    Faen dette folk fra MPAA er Rasshølene - Damn these movie execs are assholes

    Slashdot har skriv om det allerede - Slashdot already posted this *keep this especially handy!

    Ha det bra (Have a good one),

    --Joey

    1. Re:Essential Norwegian by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry mac you are wrong here. let me correct ya.

      Jeg fryser av meg rompa mens jeg venter på biletten

      Faen disse folkene fra MPAA er noen rasshøl!

      Slashdot hat allerede skrevet om dette.

      The others are correct.

    2. Re:Essential Norwegian by daniboy · · Score: 1

      The last crash course sentence should in fact be:

      Slashdot har allerede skrevet om dette.

    3. Re:Essential Norwegian by kaxman · · Score: 1

      Boy that sounds a lot like Icelandic.

      --
      Everyone on slashdot has a journal.
  54. MOD PARENT DOWN! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    IF you are going to try to get your posted modded up, at LEAST post anonymously...

    Sheesh...

  55. Re:How it happened .. (almost) [Addendum] by TarPitt · · Score: 2, Insightful
    after all he has a very bad attitude.


    Oh come on! He is 15 years old! I bet there isn't a single /. poster who did not have a bad attitude at that age. Ditto with his comments about Linux and his use of the GPL. Has no-one here ever made an ill considered post?


    One of the nice things about a lack of maturity is that it is often outgrown. We should keep this in mind before branding this fellow a "liar".

    --
    If your children ever found out how lame you are, they'd murder you in your sleep
  56. nice insult by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    added to my repertoire.

  57. Merkac Dot - Slashdot summary and google links by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Merkac Dot - The Slashdot Summariser
    In the footsteps of alterslash comes another slashdot summariser - Hoping to ease your slashdot browsing.
    This is the story with all links pointing to the google cached versions. See Merkac Dot for the full summary

    Jon Johansen Trial Continues The Courts [G] | Posted by michael on Friday December 13, @10:53AM
    from the grinding-grinding dept.
    An anonymous reader writes "The Norwegian prosecution has been allowed to change the indictment [G] in their case against "DVD-Jon" Johansen. There is an English [G] language article on Friday's trial proceedings now available." VG.nett [G] is also covering the trial.

  58. A change in Norwegian criminal process by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Serious crimes are tried directly in the jury court and bypass the lower court altogether.
    You would have been correct a few years ago, but the law has been changed. Now, all crimes, even the "Orderud" tripple murder, was first tried in the low court, and then appealed to jury trial. The jury trial makes the final judgement on fact and guilt, meaning there is usually no appeal to the Supreme Court of anything but the severity of the sentence. (Formal mistakes and wrong applicaton of law are other reasons that may make it possible to appeal to the Supreme Court.)