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Thread: Federal Judge says you can break DRM if you don't intend to infringe copyright.

  1. Federal Judge says you can break DRM if you don't intend to infringe copyright.

    SOURCE: BoingBoing

    Quote Originally Posted by Cory Doctorow
    Here's some remarkable news: a judge in a New Orleans-based 5th Circuit Appeals Court has ruled that the Digital Millennium Copyright Act's ban on breaking DRM only applies if you break DRM in order to violate copyright law. This is a complete reversal of earlier rulings across the country (and completely opposite to the approach that the US Trade Representative has demanded from America's trading partners). In the traditional view, DRM is absolutely protected, so that no one is allowed to break it except the DRM maker. In other words, a film-maker isn't allowed to take the BluRay DRM off her own movie, a video game programmer can't take the iPad DRM off her own game, and an audiobook author can't take the DRM off his own Audible book.

    So this ruling is pretty interesting news, as it constitutes a circuit split with pretty much the rest of the nation's courts, which is often a precursor to a Supreme Court challenge. What's more, the defendants here are General Electric, not hackers in black t-shirts or sketchy offshore Xbox-modchip vendors (theoretically the law shouldn't care if the defendant is a hobo or a billionaire, but in practice, billionaires usually get better precedents, and not just because they can afford better lawyers).

    It's up to the plaintiff, MGE, to appeal to the Supremes, but even if they don't, it's only a matter of time until there are new cases in the Fifth Circuit (or other circuits that follow its lead) that lead to highest court handing down some new law on this. Let's hope they see the sense of Judge Garza: "Merely bypassing a technological protection that restricts a user from viewing or using a work is insufficient to trigger the (Digital Millennium Copyright Act's) anti-circumvention provision."
    It may be old news dated 7/25/10 but it's good nonetheless. Restrictive DRM (SecuROM can go to Hell) might one day get a well deserved stake through the heart. It's time for PC games, DVDs, etc. to stop being "defective by design".

    When I put in a DVD, I'm sick of being forced to sit through 5-10 minutes of unskippable ads and copyright warnings before I can watch the movie. After I pay $15-30 for a DVD, let the movie studios pay for their advertising- and just put the copyright warning on the box.

    Discuss.

  2. Good news, hopefully.
    Also, get a cheapo DVD player so you can skip that shit and disable Macrovision and region locks.

  3. i like how the article (hello Corey Doctorow!) uses the "her" pronoun, and you kind of think 'why are they picking on that poor girl'?
    Quote Originally Posted by Razor Ramon View Post
    I don't even the rage I mean )#@($@IU_+FJ$(U#()IRFK)_#
    Quote Originally Posted by Some Stupid Japanese Name View Post
    I'm sure whatever Yeller wrote is fascinating!

  4. Wow, good news on the DRM front. I'd forgotten what it sounded like!

  5. Jailbreak your iPhone? Green light on that as well. And that's not all- you can break DRM on DVDs for use of short excerpts in mashups. Cell phones may be JB to use with any carrier.

  6. Jailbeaking =/= SIM unlocking
    Are both exempt from the DMCA?

  7. #7
    So is it legal for me to rip Netflix DVDs now?

  8. Pretty sure that still counts as copyright infringement.

  9. #9
    That's stupid.

  10. SecuROM's motto is "get maximum control". Maximum control is too much control if it means hijacking the computer to inconvenience its user by "Blacklisting" some applications.
    Now that the judge has spoken: Don't pirate, just BUY AND CRACK. Then back up your "doctored" version and use SecuBeGone.

    A one-time online activation may not be too bad, but some OAs are not truly one-time: they will "phone home" every 10 days to make sure you haven't changed your computer. Potentially an issue if your HDD crashes or something. Lose your net connection right before the next check-in? Tough. Your game is then hijacked to not run until then.

    What sucks worse is the persistent online connection requirement in some games (UbiSoft's recent PC stuff). I'll just go 360 for any UbiSoft titles from now on.
    All this DRM shit doesn't stop piracy. The people who would pirate it and wouldn't have bought it anyway just have to wait a little longer. Some honest gamers get turned off.

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