DMCA Exemptions Don't Matter
sbma44 followed up to the recent news that
jailbreaking iPhones is now legal with an article about DMCA exemptions. He says
"The American Prospect has an article up that argues that focus on specific DMCA exemptions is silly, the practical upshot is about zero, and the underlying law remains as rotten as ever."
I had the same reaction myself. These kinds of laws just need to die.
“Common sense is not so common.” — Voltaire
...unless you should travel to the Hidden Temple, wherein lies the Brass Monkey, which might be guarded by horrible creatures in the Pit of Trial!
"If you see a man on a horse, he is likely an enemy. Kill the man and eat the horse."
O my goodness... Just when you think something good happens...
FTFA:
"...the exemption now specifically applies only to CSS, the technology used to encrypt DVD contents. There's no mention of AACS, the equivalent technology for Blu-ray discs, or of HDCP, the DRM system most likely to make installing your next TV a nightmarish ordeal"
The CSS portion of that is a HUGE positive. I would imagine that Blu-Ray and HDCP are too new to be considered for this kind of exemption...but knowing that I'm legally allowed to circumvent CSS is extremely noteworthy.
The CSS change and the "unlock phone for any network" change are both huge. WTF is the title talking about, that the exemptions don't matter? People have been wanting just those two for years.
Living With a Nerd
The 5th Circuit ruled the other day that "circumvention" isn't a "crime" *if you're doing it in order to exercise rights you already have -- like watching a movie you bought, or sharing a clip of it with your students as Fair Use...
or doing a Downfall parody, presumably.
Even *more* to the point; this means that jailbreaking your iPhone isn't "a crime"... but it does *not* mean Apple's forced to support you now, when they would have cut you off before.
Any developer who wants to work on jailbreaks and do so publicly, with presentations and writing, can do so without fear of prosecution. Companies can also now get involved without fear of supporting something illegal. If Mozilla wanted to release a Firefox for the the jailbroken iPhone, they now can.
What do they say a phone is? any thing that can be used as one? any thing with a phone jack? / slot for a modem?
How far does jail breaking go? How about using a PAYED FOR COPY OS X on any pc?
Now that it's legal, it's no where near as much fun...
I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
DMCA exempts you!!!!!
(frost piss)
If the majority of Americans ignore a law, then that law is wrong.
--- We need more Ron Paul!
The problem with DMCA rulemaking is that it's made by bureaucrats, not elected representatives, and the small concessions that we got recently may be taken back at any time
- seanmichelson@yahoo.com
What do they say a phone is? any thing that can be used as one? any thing with a phone jack? / slot for a modem?
How far does jail breaking go? How about using a PAYED FOR COPY OS X on any pc?
Don't you have to delete "Don't Steal Mac OS X.kext" to install Mac OS X on a non-Mac? That seems to imply that Apple is asking you to pause for a moment to think about what you are doing, but ultimately lets you make the decision you want to make. That doesn't seem to be an unreasonable stance to me.
The law is clear. The text is something along the lines of 'mobile cellular phone'. Also, jailbreaking is specifically in the context of cellphones, involving making said devices interoperable. It has nothing to do with PCs, and jailbreaking has nothing to do with violating the OS X EULA.
Did they *really*? Wow; I didn't actually expect Apple to be that cool, anymore.
People are buying OSX and putting it on there systems.
I don't like the screen in the imac and the mini is too small. The mac pro is about $1000+ over priced. Now Is mac os x $1000?? why not make it $200? Why not have a $1200 - $1500 tower?
whats next apple saying that the price of app store is part of the cost of the system and puting a don't bypass the app store file on the iphone that you need to get rid of to jailbreak it.
Somebody is not clear on the meaning of the terms "legally" and "violate."
Edith Keeler Must Die
The article is right. "Exemptions" are missing the point.
Emend the law so that if what you're doing isn't otherwise illegal (e.g., you're copying something in a way that qualifies as "fair use", or you're making it "interoperable" in the sense of the law), then the anti-circumvention provisions don't apply. Period. This is the way it should have been in the first place. The current set up is as if it's illegal to break the locks to get into your own car.
On the other hand, if what you are doing is illegal, then the penalties will be higher if you're circumventing a technical protection measure in order to do it. I have no problem with that.
Then copyright holders can go after potential infringers and leave it up to the courts to decide whether the action was infringing or not, and the rest of us who just want to USE our LEGALLY PURCHASED stuff can get on with it.
With the exemption that apply to the CSS, will it be possible now to include it legally in a Linux distribution ?
Does this court decision allow Linux distros to include out-of-the-box support for DVD playback on their Live/installation CD's now? That would be very sweet if it did.
I don't think people who have jailbroken their iphone really care if it is legal or not. They just want the functionality that apple won't give them till the next pay-for-OS upgrade or next iphone model. Legality? Who gives a shit?
Not trying to be a smartass with the "citation needed" here, but actually want it. Does anyone have any recent (less than 10 years old) statements from movie or music publishers where they've asserted that they sell licenses rather than copies of the movies? All I know of is the Blizzard case (but that's games, not movies).
As others have mentioned, the movie people are advertising with "own it now," and it would be pretty funny (in a Daily Show kind of way) to catch their left hand (sales dept) and right hand (legal dept) blatantly contradicting each other.
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
mod parent up
*the recent news that unlocking cell phones is now legal
Apple has the strangest definition of "steal" I've seen in a long time (if I *paid* for my copy of OS X, I'm not stealing it). A more appropriate name would be "Stop Refusing To Obey Us.kext"
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
Not ineffective, NO EFFECT. You can still *copy* a DVD. CSS only concerns with *playback* decryption.
Therefore CSS doesn't protect the work from being copied.
And, unlike that password protected ZIP file, the result is INTENDED to be viewed by you.
Seriously - if I buy an iphone, how does copyright come into play? I don't copy anything.
Do you have ESP?
You still don't get it. You 'paid' to 'license' OS X, not buy it. You do not own it.
You don't get to go to the rental car place at the airport, rent a car, then use it for whatever you want because 'you paid for it'.
You don't have to 'rent a car', you can go buy one and do whatever. Likewise, you don't have to rent OS X, you can not use it.
Persistent Volume manager for Kubernetes - https://github.com/dwimsey/openshift-pvmanager
Thanks for the clarification, Steve.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.