Comments on: Digg in tough spot with DMCA debacle
Social news site responded to readers and defied a cease-and-desist letter pertaining to a cracked HD DVD encryption key.![]()
Social news site responded to readers and defied a cease-and-desist letter pertaining to a cracked HD DVD encryption key.![]()
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
November 24, 2009 4:00 AM PST
Add headlines from CNET News to your homepage or feedreader.
More feeds available in our RSS feed index.
Related quotes
/P
Full story at: http://allsux.com
http://www.realtime-websecurity.com/articles_and_analysis/2007/05/the_digg_meltdown_censorship_a.html
for more on that line of thought.
PS: Since when did that small a string of numbers become copyrighted, anyway?
/P
The numbers cannot be copyrighted; however, the machine code they translate into can be copyrighted. That is the way the decryption key looks like in hex display in a computer memory bank. You just enter those codes into a debugger or assembly language program and it gets converted into machine code or into assembly language code.
Copyright violations on community driven sites has become the norm. Users love to get censored or free information and the site owners thrive on circulating such information. This is no surprise.
Popularity of a site as of today, is based on numbers, no longer on quality. No wonder even sites like BBC and presidential candidates are forced to go to YouTube.
Eventually 2600 magazine published the crack, and then got hit with a lawsuit to remove it and remove all links to it and 2600 had displayed a text file with URLs to places on the Internet that the code could be found, using a loophole around the law as users could copy and paste those URLs in their web browsers.
I think the 2600 case will be used as a reference for the HD-DVD case, because both had the decryption code posted on the Internet.
The DMCA is unfair because there is no "fair use" clause that allows a person or organization to use copyrighted material for paradoy, education, or non-profit use like the old copyright act had in it. Our founding fathers must be turning over in their graves if they knew just how the MPAA has taken away the rights and freedoms of the US citizens with the DMCA and the government working with the MPAA and RIAA to take away rights and freedoms from the citizens.
The Genie was let out of the bottle, but now it cannot be put back into the bottle.
Haven't the MPAA and RIAA learned yet that for every DRM system they invent that takes away rights and freedoms that someone somewhere will find a way to break it?
The alternative is to offer DRM-less media at lower prices, so there is less need to pirate it in the first place. Prices are high in the first place because they added on the R&D costs of creating the DRM technology.
For the 131 people that bought HD-DVD players, you may want to stop buying disks for it and buy a Blue-Ray player.
BTW - The DMCA and anybody that uses it is no different than the KGB.