Kaleidescape Triumphant in Court Case, DVD Ripping Ruled Legal 213
Jim Buzbee writes "Ever wanted to rip all your DVDs to a big network server so that you could select and play them back to your TV? Up until now, manufacturers have been wary of building a device to allow this type of usage because they've been afraid a lawsuit. The DVD Copy Control Association had claimed this was contractually forbidden, but now
a judge says otherwise stating, 'nothing in the agreement prevents you from making copies of DVDs. Nothing requires that a DVD be present during playback.' Kaleidescape has finally won their long-standing lawsuit, a case we first talked about early in 2005."
Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Contract? What contract? I don't remember signing a contract. I put my $20 on the counter, the cashier put the DVD in a bag and said, "Have a nice day."
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Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Insightful)
People ARE stupid.
There are stories a plenty of food service or retail employees that come across gems of humans that lack common sense. Those stories are much more interesting than the 'holier than thou' patron that comes across a dweeb employee that is having a bad day.
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Insightful)
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No, because stupid people make babies.
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Here's hoping for a good set of Darwin awards this year.
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:4, Insightful)
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Try basing your perspective on a timescale longer than 2 generations!
It's only six or so generations since the Industrial Revolution. Natural selection has hardly had chance to respond to much of that.
Keeping Hawking alive isn't anything like "evolution has stopped being applied to humans".
The premise is laughably naive.
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Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Informative)
The contract that DVD player manufacturers enter with the DVDCCA. RTFA?
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Act polite and friendly to the clerks, and they will more often than not act polite and friendly towards you. This is especially true in stores that you might frequent often
Heck, Walmart even has a program they call "CHANT... Customers Have A Name Too", the logical expansion for mo
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Occasionally people complain about linux irc channels or mailing lists, saying that people didn't help them, told them to rtfm, or were rude. When you actually see the conversations they are talking about, it was 99% of the time them that were rude first.
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Informative)
Already changed the contract... (Score:5, Informative)
February 7th 2007 Announcement:
An updated version of the CSS Procedural Specifications is available now. A downloadable copy is available by completing the on-line inquiry form.
That is the document that they submitted to the court as part of the "contract". It is the first update to it since 2005. My guess is they realized they were going to lose and hence the update to the license.
Re:Not contractually forbidden... (Score:5, Insightful)
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If you don't know what you're talking about...at least try to RTFA.
This contract doesn't cover DVDs, this is the contract between the DVDCCA and Device Manufacturers.
On the contrary... (Score:5, Funny)
No, I want a butt-load of DVD jewel boxes occupying cabinet after cabinet in my living-room so they'll be convenient in the event I might want to watch one. This is much better than being stored in boxes in the basement, and streaming the content off a sever, also in the basement.
I have literally avoided buying DVDs in the past because I didn't want to increase the clutter of storage.
Sean
Re:On the contrary... (Score:5, Funny)
Well, this is slashdot. You would think accessing boxes or a server in the basement was as simple as rolling out of bed... <rimshot />
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I fullheartedly agree. I wouldn't be too interested in any stream coming out of a sever in the basement. Actually I would call a plumber immediately to have him plug the hole and stop the stream.
iTunes ripping? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:iTunes ripping? (Score:5, Insightful)
There are a few problems that would face Apple if they wanted to add that functionality:
1) DVD CCA is appealing the decision.
2) Apple would need to get a license for CSS, and DVD CCA will probably change the terms of the license to disallow such programs.
3) Apple risks pissing off the movie studios that offer video on iTunes stores. (AFAIK, only Disney so far.) People expect to be able to rip CDs, so that's OK. But if people aren't expecting to rip DVDs, why let them? It would cannibalise sales from iTunes Video Store.
4) The Kaleidoscope system maintained the copy protection, whereas iTunes would need to downscale and crop/letterbox the video in order to make the feature useful to smaller iPods - and in the process, re-protect it somehow.
Re:iTunes ripping? (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:iTunes ripping? (Score:4, Interesting)
WE then leave a unlabeled CD with them with copies of DVD shrink and DVD decryptor and the web address to buy anyDVD and Fair Use Wizard.
What the customer does on their own is not or problem, we simply sold them a video playback server.
They want to make it easy for joe-blow to rip his own dvd's into the system. it aint gonna happen. Sony already screws with everything and the best kaladiescope server made cant cope with it, you still haveto rip to a PC with special software to get past some of the protections.
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Actually, the key for Apple is to create a market where people have an incentive to put movies into iTunes in the first place. Once people put in movies they already own, they have a library and future purchases are more likely to be made onl
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The issue for DVD sales is much different than CD sales. Very rarely do people buy a DVD and then watch it 100 times. Even with one of these devices, I would expect that most people would watch a movie less than a total of 10 times.
You would think that a "backup copy" would fall under fair use - the same as having
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2)I don't have any knowledge on the former, but the latter is also addressed in TFA
3)Jobs will piss himself off. Uhuh. Guess who is on Disney's board as largest individual stockholder. I'll give you two guesses. People expect to be able to use things that they purchase in a way that is most co
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2) I know that the article said DVDCCA would have trouble pulling themselves together, but it seems that, in fact, they already have. (See other posts about an updated publication.) They could even just refuse to license Apple
DVD Shrink is legal to use, fwiw (Score:5, Informative)
What you can't do is rip for someone else, or help anyone to rip. The distribution of DVDdecrypter is illegal (per the DMCA), but it's okay to write the software, posess the software, and use the software to decrypt for personal reasons. That's the fucked-up catch - you can do anything you want, but you can't help anybody else do it.
I know that this is hard to understand, but I figured I'd post it anyway.
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Oh, and DVD Shrink is perfectly capable of decrypting CSS on its own. Have you ever actually used DVD Shrink?
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So it is legal to use DVD Shrink, etc. It is just not legal to distribute it or (probably) tell anyone it exists.
Re:DVD Shrink is legal to use, fwiw (Score:4, Informative)
But you're still wrong, and I suspect that the cause is that you didn't read carefully. To wit:
So no, no one can unauthorizedly decrypt an encrypted DVD, since that constitutes circumvention, and no one can make or traffic in devices, including software, which can do it.
What you were citing was not 1201(a), which has to do with circumvention, but 1201(b), which has to do with copyright protection. The reason that 1201(b) lacks a parallel to 1201(a)(1)(A) is because it doesn't need one. Breaking a copyright protection mechanism is copyright infringement, and is already covered pretty adequately elsewhere in the law.
Furthermore, that last bit about "OTHER RIGHTS, ETC., NOT AFFECTED" indicates that previous fair use law remains in force, allowing the legal owner of a copy to make an additional copy for backup purposes, so long as the original remains in their possession.
Well, two caveats. First, fair use doesn't always permit the owner of a copy to make a backup. It only permits that if, under all the circumstances, it would be fair. Fair use is a case-by-case issue, and you cannot make accurate blanket statements as to what is and isn't fair. It is entirely possible that while Alice might be able to make such copies pursuant to fair use, Bob might not be able to, due to their differing circumstances, even if each is the owner of the copies from which the use is made.
Second, so what? Fair use is a defense to copyright infringement. It is not a defense to circumvention. If you unauthorizedly decrypt a DVD, even if it is a fair use, you still circumvented and can be sued for that. This is the downside to 'other defenses not affected' -- they weren't enlarged to handle the new situation.
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I could have sworn I used DVD shrink to rip a DVD directly last week...no decrypter needed.
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How would this hurt iTunes sales? If I already own a movie on DVD, I'm not about to buy it again so I can stream it from my server to my living room. I'll bet there are more than a few others who share that sentiment. If they can't rip th
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Apple has movies from Disney (and its subsidiaries), Paramount, MGM. and Lions Gate
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Misleading Title (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:Misleading Title (Score:5, Informative)
Yup, it's a dupe, but my/CowboyNeal's version had a non-misleading summary.
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Re:Misleading Title (Score:4, Funny)
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And if you've ever had a story accepted, you know that the 'editors' frequently change titles and summaries...
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Forget it unless you live in Santa Clara, CA (Score:5, Informative)
For a group of people so obsessed with IP law, most of you /.-ers have no idea how the American legal system works: Trial court cases are not precedent for future cases. Only published appellate cases constitute precedent, and then only in their own jurisdiction.
IAALBNYL (I Am A Lawyer But Not Your Lawyer). This is not legal advice. Do not rely on it as such. This is merely a layman's discussion of general issues. YMMV.
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I guess that's me, then.
and knowing that its the silicon valley, probably a quarter of slash is also here, too.
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This is also a trial court case. It sets no precedent, period.
Re:Forget it unless you live in Santa Clara, CA (Score:5, Insightful)
That is why you who are lawyers need to speak up and explain it to us.
Like many
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Points:
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That's the example that came to mind right away. I could name some more if I thought about it for a minute.
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For your client's sake, I hope y
How many disclaimers do you generally need? (Score:2)
Assuming for argument that you know this for certain, this is exactly why I included the disclaimer (YMMV and IIALBNYL) - telling /.-ers that I am not, in fact, their lawyer. I purposely limited my input to a single issue, precedent. Of course I would analyze the entire case were I retained by a client. But I was not, so I chimed in on the precedent issue only, since
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We agree more than disagree (Score:2)
"Ever wanted to rip all your DVDs to a big network server so that you could select and play them back to your TV?"
The implication from the submission is that now everyone can go run DVD jukebox servers with impunity. So in a sense, you preclusion point argues in my favor; that is, if, as you argue, only
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That said, and reasonably assuming your info is exact and correct, ISTM that "precedent" must have been stretched a bit, since I've occasionally heard of some local judge relying on a previous local decision to guide his own actions in a similar case, *as if* he had no other c
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Can I borrow some tinfoil?
Like they don't put RFID in tinfoil (Score:2)
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Little bit confused (Score:2)
suggests that it applies only to them. Or have I missed (or missread) something?
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How exactly did the butcher baker and the candlestick maker end up in a tub together?
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RTFA... (Score:5, Informative)
In other words, the case was about whether or not a single, specific contract was breached (which is fairly common type of case in civil courts) - it is not some sweeping endorsement of DVD ripping, as the headline would have you believe. The ruling merely states that the contract Kaleidescape signed with the DVD CCA doesn't preclude ripping DVDs, aka a question of contract law, not copyright law.
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Good news... (Score:2)
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Seriously, I would love to work for Slashdot. He apparently hates his job, considering the mediocre work he does.
Re: Good news... (Score:2)
Shooting fish in a barrel was never that easy. Must be the seven digit UID.
Try again, boy - your Dad paid for three shots, so ask him to please re-cock that shiny air-rifle for ya' and this time remember to close only one eye.
In other news... (Score:2)
This is why I predict the format wars moot (Score:2)
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or Linux MCE. I have the media server up. I am still building the PC on an E6700 Core 2 Dueo chip as funds come in. Memory and a hot video card are next.
Answer to your question ... (Score:2)
Uh, yes, actually. Not that it's particularly difficult to do anymore.
The only hurdle left now is the legacy of Jack Valenti.
What about DVD X Copy (Score:2)
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Won't stand long (Score:2)
However, this is probably just a small step along the way. Where we are going is clearly if it digitial it is going to be redistributed across the planet. This means that for someone to go to the expense of making a DVD and puttin
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Get your as$ correct first.
The ruling only states that IF i have bought a DVD (first or second sale), i can watch the contents of it WITHOUT needing the DVD in the same place where i watch.
Meaning i can rip DS9 , and watch it on my iBook in a flight between LAX and NYC. I don;t need the DVD to be present in-flight.
What the ruling does NOT mean is distributing it delibrately to others to induce them to watch without having
If DVD ripping is legal then.. (Score:2)
My thinking is that this is obstructing a legal activity (i.e. making legal backups of DVDs) and must therefore be illegal in itself.
Oh the Irony!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
This actually makes me want to go and buy DVD's
RIAA/MPAA can call off the dogs (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Reasonable but... (Score:4, Insightful)
Why not? I'm not trying to troll -- I honestly would like to know what your philosophy is. Why would a limited number of copies be OK but an unlimited not?
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After all - that's not an unlimited copyright. I mean
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It fits with the spirit of software, and the spirit of how media was sold in the first place.
For example, you bought a 16mm copy of a film. It's designed to be played in a projector. As film is fragile, it would not be unreasonable to have a backup of the film and use the backup as the original is intended, one machine at a given time.
If you intend to u
Re:Reasonable but... (Score:5, Informative)
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So does RAID5 count as 1 backup or 1 and 1/n backups? Copyright law is silly because it's still concerned with physical copies 50 years after digital computers effectively made copies free.
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No it's about licensing terms (Score:5, Interesting)
It's the fact that they are running officially licensed code from the CSS cartel to uncrypt the DVD prior of putting them on the server, and the CSS cartel sued them pretending that their license should be interpreted as "using the code to make DVD server isn't allowed". The whole suit was whether or not Kaleidoscope could be forbidden to do this based on the licensing term.
Result : No, they can't be stopped, because at the time of signing the licensing terme weren't clear enough to forbid the server.
This has nothing to do with DVD John's work. His work is his own code made to circumvent the CSS encryption (using the fact that the algorithm itself is piss-poor and only marginally better than a rot13). He is not using code from the CSS cartel and thus the interpretation of that code's license doesn't apply.
- Because it's a code done to grant users' access to content that they have legally bought, because it provides a solution in situation which lacks a viable option (like enables DVD playing on Linux and other systems, even if software is only produced for Windows & Mac) and because it's doesn't contain original code from the CSS cartel (no way. It doesn't to the same thing as the official code. DVD Jon's code brute-forces the decryption key using flaws in the CSS implementation), it is legal in most juridiction.
- In the USA, because of the DMCA and the fact that DVD Jon's code is used to circumvent the CSS encryption it is illegal, even if it the only solution for legally owned material on Linux and even if the CSS encryption is to flawed to be considered as an efficient encryption. Only some exception to the DMCA may be invoked (using DVD Jon's code to decrypt DVDs for school or using it once DVDs are deprecated)
The situation is different for HD-DVD and BlueRay Discs with the recent work of Muslix64. On that case, there's no problem with the code it self, its just a re-implementation of a publicly described algorithme (AACS decryption). The whole trick is to provide the actual keys needed to decrypt the data on websites or P2P networks. The code itself isn't illegal. The key sharing is what can be contested by the AACS makers.
Re:DVD Decrypter (Score:5, Funny)
Slashdot should have 2 conversations for every article. One for people who RTFA, one for those who don't. I'd have to sort through less garbage when reading Slashdot.
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in short they're not breaking ANY rules!!! Like everybody says, this could be a huge win for companies like Apple... if they allowed you to backup your DVDs into iTunes with CSS + your iTunes account they shouldn't have any problem.
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