DMCA Means You Can't Delete Files On Your PC?
DragonHawk writes "According to Wired, John Stottlemire found a way to print duplicate coupons from Coupons.com by deleting some files and registry entires on his PC. Now he's being sued for a DMCA violation. He says, 'All I did was erase files or registry keys.' Says a lawyer: '[The DMCA] may cover this. I think it does give companies a lot of leverage and a lot of power.' So now the copyright cartels are saying that not only can we not copy things on our computers, but we can't delete things on our computers? Time to buy stock in Seagate."
I wonder if this makes checkpointing in VMware a DMCA circumvention measure as well?
-jeff
Just run the OS in a VMware instance. Print, or whatever, your stuff, revert to earlier snapshot. Simple, easy, reliable. Or one can use the same nonpersistent disk as one uses for browsing the web with Windows and IE.
Will "they" go after the vmware people next?
"Consistency is contrary to nature, contrary to life. The only completely consistent people are the dead." A. Huxley
Meh. It will get deleted anyway. You should have put DMCA in your sig.
Of Code And Men