What Happened To Intervideo's Linux DVD Player? 253
A singular node from the Anonymous Coward Collective asks: "Several months ago when the storm first blew up about the cracked DVD code enabling Linux users to view DVDs on their chosen platform, Intervideo rode a wave of publicity drawing geeks worldwide to their site by announcing their upcoming 'legal' DVD player for Linux to be available in the second quarter 2000. June came and went and I contacted their sales people who informed me that it would be available at the end of July. It wasn't. I contacted their PR people and was told that it would be available at the end of August. No show. In the meantime, thousands of geeks have gone to their site to be entertained by the wonderful awards they have won for their Windows software. No mention of Linux. The press release has disappeared from their home page as well. Did this software really exist, or was it all just a pathetic publicity stunt? Does anyone out there know the answer?" I'd think quite a few uf us would like to know the answer to this one. What happened, Intervideo?
Could it be, "Vaporware"? (Score:3)
If thery were trying to forestall competition, like a certain company in Seattle, it would be called FUD.
Or maybe they decided all the geeks who wantd to watch DVD;s on the Linux boxes had DecSS, in which we would be to blame.
It doesn't matter anyhow, I'd rather watch a DVD on my TV, with a beer and a bong in my hand, usign a $129 DVD player, rather than mucking about in front of my 15 inch monitor.
Does anyone else find it amusing (Score:3)
Ask Slashdot, if we don't know, we'll make something up.
Steven
Are these the same people...? (Score:4)
I know that prior to the DeCSS case, part of the MPAA's attempt to spin everything their way was to claim that a Linux DVD player already existed, or was in the works, or something like that. Were they referring to Intervideo, another company, or was it a bald-faced lie?
What are we going to do about it? (Score:2)
Of course, maybe they just didn't have the skills to make the player, and are too embarrassed to admit it.
Nothing (Score:2)
Time to use that Money Machine! (Score:5)
Or ask for an interview! Get one of the high-ranking officials on the horn, and field some questions! If you call them up, and they say "A representative from Slashdot is on the phone", I doubt they'll blow you off. If they do, that adds fuel to our side of the argument. "They keep delaying the release, they pulled information from their pages, and they refused an interview." That would say a lot right there.
On the other hand, if they ACCEPT the interview, we'd get some answers as to what's going on.
I'm sorry, but posting this as an "Ask Slashdot" piece seems like a lazy way out. We'd get no answers to the question that can be held as proof - merely speculation as to what "Might have happened." (Unless an Interview Employee replies, but that's not very interactive/informative.)
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Legality (Score:5)
Please, consider calling such code "unlicensed" instead. The distinction is that all other DVD player software has a CSS license from DVD-CCA.
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The press release (Score:5)
Here's to vaporware (Score:2)
Until then, I'm more than happy with a dual-boot machine at home, with windows for games & stuff, and linux for development.
Disappearing press release? NOT! (Score:5)
Press Release *is* there! (Score:2)
http://www.intervideo.c om/news/28/InterVideoLinDVDFinal.htm [intervideo.com]
It's real, and it's nearly finished. (Score:5)
The version we saw running on a Dell Inspiron 5000 was nearly fully functional. It was feature complete, and they had just added the ability to use the mouse cursor to control the on-screen DVD extra cool things.
We should be getting a beta version soon to test with our laptops. In the meantime, the rest of you will just have to wait.
Aparrently, it will be a software only player. However, they are investigating a plugin type API to allow third parties to write drivers for hardware decoders.
Anyway... just wanted to say that it is DEFINITELY not vapourware... though I still want an open source player to come to fruit.
Economic Analysis (Score:2)
Look at how many OS/2 developers are really willing to create OS/2 games?
It's not the only one... (Score:4)
Maybe SOME day we will have a commercial product.
PowerDVD (Score:2)
CyberLink [cyberlink.com.tw] have also announced a Linux version of their DVD [gocyberlink.com] player.
There is no details about when it will be released or even if it has been completed. Only a few lines where they ask for developers to contact them for more information.
- Tiersten
DeCSS (Score:3)
here's what i was told... (Score:4)
so at least i got a reply, but that's not helping me with playing DVDs under Linux...
anyone have a simple, step-by-step procedure with software that works under 2.2.15, 2.2.16, or 2.2.17?
Check the archives (Score:2)
Looks like that's still the case.
Release the (Score:2)
This opinion property of Vapor Ware Inc. All Rights Reserved for nothing.
Idea for slashdot(OT) (Score:2)
I have seen other discussion sites do this so it is not original. I think slashdot needs an option to mail the replies to a posted comment to your email address. I know I'm not the only person that sometimes forgets to recheck answers to questions asked ect. This should be so simple to implement and there could be a limit of email alerts/day or whatever. Well?...
Re:maybe just my ignorance... (Score:3)
New (RPC-2) DVD-ROM drives have "hardware" region code support (meaning the drive does it-- not just the software). Some of these drives can be "patched" with a modified firmware upgrade. Some can't.
Sigma Designs is doing better... (Score:4)
New Business Plan (Score:2)
So everybody rush and click through their pages....oh yeah and post the link to their web page more often on Slashdot.!
Hmm (Score:4)
a) There is a fairly small market of people who want to watch a DVD sitting at their computer.
b) Even fewer of these people use Linux
c) Even fewer of THESE people are unwilling to dual boot.
d) Even fewer of THESE people are willing to pay for software to replace the software that runs under Windows that came with their comptuer and/or DVD drive.
e) Set top DVD players are very cheap these days.
Besides E, this is the same problem most Linux software faces. The sad truth is most Win32 software works perfectly fine for 99% of the people who use it. It's hard to justify wasting the time and money to cater to a *very* small market.
Re:maybe just my ignorance... (Score:2)
Re:Time to use that Money Machine! (Score:2)
Intervideo and ask them directly?
Or ask for an interview! Get one of the high-ranking officials on the horn, and field some questions! If you call them up, and they say "A representative from Slashdot is
on the phone", I doubt they'll blow you off. If they do, that adds fuel to our side of the argument. "They keep delaying the release, they pulled information from their
pages, and they refused an interview." That would say a lot right there.
It's not a sure thing. Plus how do you know that they *didn't* try to get one?
I'm sorry, but posting this as an "Ask Slashdot" piece seems like a lazy way out. We'd get no answers to the question that can be held as proof - merely speculation as
to what "Might have happened." (Unless an Interview Employee replies, but that's not very interactive/informative.)
I don't think it's that bad of an idea given lack of genuine information.
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:3)
It still boggles my mind that writing one's own instructions for a device (DVD player) and sharing them with the world can be called "illegal" in the first place.
There was no instance of "trade secrets" being compromised, if there were and insider of one of the licensed vendors or the consortium would have been on trial instead of Eric aka Emmanuel and 2600 magazine.
There was no instance of copyright infringement, DeCSS is origonal work not a copy.
Calling DeCSS "illegal" is nonsense, just as saying that a "licensed" program is "legal".
If the MPAA can find a pirated and cracked copy of it's own software then they have a point, but until then they are just blowing crap (along with that Amish* judge that they rented).
*no offense to any Amish folk reading or hearing about this post
Visit DC2600 [dc2600.com]
Irony? (Score:4)
The irony is there isn't a sigmadesigns.com and InterVideo is still trying to roll out their LICENSED, LEGAL Linux-based DVD player, meanwhile anyone with the mind to can use DeCSS to do it now. One would think the MPAA would have a vested interest in speeding the production of a Linux based DVD player just to quell this argument.
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
Would you really want to put your child through that kind of torment? Having a name like "static byte csstab1[256]" "The Other Kids(tm) would have a field day making fun of your child, and all because you had to come up with an idiotic way of distributing the source code. Find a smarter way of doing it.
(It's inefficient anyway - it's not feasible to have the entire source code as your kid's name, and "selected parts" would be useless.)
I'm REALLY hoping this is a troll. If it's not, here's hoping your child is strong enough to remain sane because his parents decided to name him something like "lfsr0 = ((im[4] >8)&0xff] >16)&0xff]>24)&0xff];"
You might as well call the kid "Prince".
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Interviews (Score:2)
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Re:DeCSS (Score:4)
What would happen if we were to name our child using selected parts of the DeCSS source code?
If enough geek parents do that, eventually the process of marrage will yield a SUPER DeCSS strain that is resistant to all known legal tactics.
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
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Re: Slashdot (Score:2)
-- Give him Head? Be a Beacon?
Re:What are we going to do about it? (Score:2)
It's only a breach of contract or false advertising if you already paid for the player and are now not getting it. From what I can see, Intervideo didn't take anyone's money for this- there were no "order now and be the first on your block to have one" type deals. All they did was send out a press release.
Now I think it sucks that they didn't actually release a player, but they didn't do anything illegal. It's just dissapointing.
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Vaporware.. or MPAA puppet? (Score:2)
Re:If the MPAA is a monopoly we all win! (Score:2)
But if they're a non-profit organization, why are they raising such a big stink over "licensed" players (i.e. ones that they have received extra $$$ for)?
=================================
"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
DeCSS has been out for months, it works, it does not use any origonal code so it is not a copyright violation. No insider contributed to it's development so there is no trade secret issue.
The judge and MPAA can say a dog has 5 legs all they want, but the dog still has only 4, DeCSS is not a violation of any law.
If you buy into the "license" making it legal then perhaps automobile companies can start licensing maps for use with their vehicles. If someone is caught in an Explorer with an "unlicensed" instruction device (the origonal work map) then Ford can bring criminal charges against the map maker. Sound pretty? Not to me and that is EXACTLY what the MPAA was arguing in federal court.
If that is the world you want, then by all means, wait for these bozo's to finish their vaporware. However, NOBODY is going to dictate to me what instructions to send to my own property.
It is amazing that a cursor functionality is holding them up for months, sounds like BS to me.
Visit DC2600 [dc2600.com]
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
THE PRESS RELEASE IS STILL THERE! (Score:5)
Geez, check these things out for yourselves. (it is only 2 clicks off the front page!)
yeah its a real good "player" (Score:2)
Re:Irony? (Score:2)
Life is a disease, sexually transmitted and fatal.
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
I agree, I can't find anything illegal in DeCSS, but companies can't play the lawyer game, especially if their focus isn't even really related to DVD decoding.
I'm a member of the EFF... I have my own DeCSS mirror [procyon.com], but that doesn't mean I should completely drop commercial implementations. OSS is about choice and freedom. Don't fall into the GNU mindset that it has to be free or it's unacceptable. Can't we all just get along? Sheesh...
Remember, when playing the lawyer game, it's not about who is right or wrong... it's who has the most money.
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
Get a clue. DeCSS is not a DVD player, it is just a tool to decrypt the MPEG2 video stream. You need an MPEG2-player to watch the movie..
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Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
And which selected part of the over 2,500 words [copyleft.net] would you like to name your little one?
--
What about Linux 2.4? (Score:3)
Perhaps they are just ironing the bugs out before they release it? One of the criticisms levelled commercial software is that it is all too often rushed to market without proper testing. Maybe these people aren't like that.
After all, this is the reason Linux 2.4 is still awaiting full release, even though it was promised for April. I don't hear Linus Torvalds being accused of having hidden agendas (not that I'm doing that, I just think people are being a bit unfair here.)
Ask Intervideo (Score:2)
Please excues my fox pass, here are the HOWTOs (Score:3)
Here is the full HOWTO for Linux:
http://helo.org/dvd/howto/DVD-Playing-HOWTO
and for FreeBSD:
http://www.opendvd.org/fbsddvd.php3
Thank you all for correcting my memory loss during my fit of babbling.
Visit DC2600 [dc2600.com]
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:5)
The judge and MPAA can say a dog has 5 legs all they want, but the dog still has only 4, DeCSS is not a violation of any law.
The MPAA can say the sky is orange and we can all ignore them. But when the old folks in the robes say something, even stupid things, it matters. In America we have a long and complicated process to review legal rulings so that no one judge or even one court can decide something by themselves. But a judges job description basically say, "given these laws and this constitution and these case facts, decide what's legal and what's not." If we don't agree with that ruling, we have options like writing/calling/stalking our congrespeople. And after that, civil disobedience is in the arsenal if you have the guts. But ignoring a ruling and deciding something is legal because you believe it won't fly.
-B
Re:Are these the same people...? (Score:5)
http://www.sigmadesigns.com/d ownload_ns2000_linux.htm [sigmadesigns.com].
The FAQ is at http://www.sigmadesigns.com/faq_linux.htm [sigmadesigns.com].
However, this driver only works for the NetStream 2000 card, not their popular Hollywood Plus card (which is very similar to the Creative Labs DXR3). Also, it is pretty much a command-line thing at the moment, but I'm sure somebody could make nice graphical wrappers for it.
The important bits are closed source, because of the CSS issue, but they include sample code for interfacing with the MPEG2 driver and some other useful things.
Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
Is it PCFriendly? (Score:2)
DVD player, LAME style? (Score:3)
I'm not into the type of programming required for this but the way LAME morphed from being a patch to being a full fledged independent program was pretty interesting to say the least.
Perhaps this would be a way to develop and open source DVD player for Linux - while legal battles are happening, people still code. When it all blows over you'll either still have the patch that lets you play DVDs, or (hopefully) be able to turn the patch into an independent program.
anchors and associations (Score:2)
Guys were harrassed, guys got scared and project was sent to the bin.
But there are legal DVD players for Linux now...
Maybe the process of getting threatened happened in an early stage, if it did, it never stopped.
Keep using DeCSS, etc (Score:2)
Well, there IS an alternative that also gives onea viceral pleasure by tweaking the nose of the MPAA...download and keep using DeCSS/dvd-munitions.
They are STILL widely and easily available.
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
--
Saw it at CEBIT (Score:2)
At that time it was very flaky, and I guessed it didn't have any CSS decoding built-in - the disc they were demoing was a promo-disc of some sort that I assumed didn't have any encryption.
I tried to play with it a little, but the sales guy shooed me away, saying something like "very new software! Pre-alpha quality!".
Press Release is still there .. (Score:2)
http://www.intervideo.c om/news/28/InterVideoLinDVDFinal.htm [intervideo.com]
And it is accessible form the 'Press Releases' link on their front page. Please make sure of these things before posting...
Not the first vaporware (Score:2)
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:2)
But DeCSS is as harmless as it gets. There is absolutely 0 threat that a bunch of letters and numbers on somebody's hard drive is going to harm anybody in any way.
Actually it's sort of scary when you step back and think about information itself (without regard to the process by which it was obtained) being branded legal or illegal. "This is information that you are allowed to have. This is information that you are not allowed to have."
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
As someone else said, "the crack must be especially strong today."
Re:Time to use that Money Machine! (Score:3)
"Sorry, the number you have dialed is unavailable. We are currently being Slashdotted. Please hang up and try again in an hour"
Call it "competitive". (Score:2)
Better yet, call it "competitive". That brings one of OUR issues - violation of antitrust law - back to people's attention.
Fraud on the court (Score:2)
Re:It's real, and it's nearly finished. (Score:2)
though I still want an open source player to come to fruit
Try xmovie [linuxave.net]. It is really nice, it is Open Source, and it comes with DeCSS integrated. Beware, however, that it is really a pain to compile (and there is nothing remotely resembling documentation).
Re: (Score:2)
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
.sig >>"Good...Bad...I'm the guy with the gun" -Ash
Your
Re:Sigma Designs is doing better... (Score:2)
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
1) The first good short movie quote I thought of.
2) A statement about the seperation of power and morality in the modern world.
-B
PCFriendly is a "PC" of crap (Score:2)
Someone should reverse-engineer that and come up with a working alternative - that would have a market.
Preferring set-top boxes (Score:2)
Re: Slashdot (Score:2)
Re:PCFriendly is a "PC" of crap (Score:2)
Yes, on my 1280x1024 screen, it does have a blank area around it, but it certainly doesn't target 640x480.
As I understand it, a lot of the problems with the Matrix DVD were more to do with the DVD hardware and software drivers. Apparently The Matrix used a lot features in the DVD spec that the [earlier] hardware, etc, didn't support properly: hardly PCFriendly's fault. PCFriendly isn't a DVD Player as such, it uses the underlying software drivers. Ever notice how it uses IE, with movie the embedded within that? You better not hope that it detects the Microsoft navigator instead of the OEM one!
I also think that it might require newer versions of IE. The only real issue that I have with those events was that I have to wait several minutes after joining before the movie starts player. But that's Creative's fault, not PCFriendly's... my drive can only be sychronised by chapter, not time. Before attempting to reverse engineer the product to improve experience, make sure that you have the latest stuff that it uses, including the drivers from your hardware manufacturer, and a reasonably current version of IE.
Anyway, I was refering to the product that will replace PCFriendly.
Finally, if you're really bothered by PCFriendly, why not contact their support? Gosh! I had a problem to do with PCFriendly alterting the auto-play on my machine. I posted a question to microsoft.public.win2000.general. One of the PCFriendly support people answered very quickly, and with a correct answer. Impressive!
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
No, DeCSS is a Windoze program which served as the basis for cssauth, which is a component of a DVD player. Saying DeCSS is a DVD player is like saying that a steering wheel is a car.
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Re:Fraud on the court (Score:2)
If the MPAA used as an argument that there is a Linux compatiable DVD player, therefore the compatibility defense argument of must fail. Then, if the lawyer knew this was not true, it would be fraud on the court.
Re:Fraud on the court (Score:2)
Why not?
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Re:DVD licensing terms (Score:2)
It is possible to run a closed-source program on Linux!
This is certainly what any commercial offering expected will be: closed.
Even the RIAA might not mind open-sourced drivers for the types of sealed hardware they are interested in selling in the future, I hope this has taught them that even closed-source software drivers provide almost no protection whatsoever.
If the software is just like a remote control, and the image is decoded by hardware and goes straight from the player to the display card (not through system memory) then open-source gives them many advantages: a kool-looking ui with no work on their part, new navigation ideas, and quite possibly people will tell them about holes in their hardware security and suggest ways to fix them.
Re:Irony? (Score:2)
No. There is no license agreement for DVDs. You are free to do anything you wish with them, as long as it isn't something prohibited by copyright law.
But remember that in USA, copyright law changed in 1998. Starting next month, nobody is allowed to watch a DVD in USA, unless they have "authorization" from the copyright holder.
---
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
There's another problem that you left out: the existing 2.2-based Linux distributions are unable to read a DVD's filesystem correctly. You either have to use 2.4, or patch and recompile your 2.2 kernel.
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CSS and open source kernel (Score:2)
Re:DVD licensing terms (Score:2)
Of course, but it does not help you if the whole infrastructure is open. To make a DVD player safe in the MPAA sense it may not be enough to provide only a closed-source DVD player but also closed-source video drivers that turn on Macrovision on the graphic card's TV-out and will not allow the user to turn it off while a DVD is played. And if the graphic card does not support macrovision, the DVD player must refuse the play the DVD. Or the X Windows system allows to capture the video output. It may be neccessary to turn this off to play a DVD "safely".
Re:Legality (Score:2)
CSS, which is the only technology affected by DeCSS, is not patented. It is a licensed trade secret, but reverse engineering is a legal way to produce a product which contains the trade secret technology and can be distributed without the license. Now if the DVDCCA had patented CSS, then they would have legal grounds to prevent such products as DeCSS. On the other hand, if CSS was patented then all of the technical details would be exposed before the world, and it would have been a lot easier to write DeCSS in the first place.
The DVDCCA is trying to have their cake and eat it too - not really surprising, a lot of technology companies make similar efforts. It is disappointing to see the U.S. legal system in agreement with them, though, since this case is really about legal reverse engineering. The MPAA's "right" to make a profit should be laughed out of court when it is brought up.
A Much More Interesting Question... (Score:2)
Presumably, the "illegal" DeCSS code has a clear interface. I.e.: well- defined API. Entry points & return values. Whatever. (I haven't looked at it.)
Now let's suppose that open source writers started cranking out friendly, GUI-based DVD apps, complete except for the DeCSS code--expecting "users" to link the "GUI code" with DeCSS modules/libraries the "users" are assumed to have obtained elsewhere. Say, for example, from Usenet? (Where it's now posted all over hell and back :-).)
Would the "GUI-based app" writers be liable for anything?
I suspect not. But IANAL. Nor a judge.
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:2)
*no offense to any Amish folk reading or hearing about this post ;-)
I am stunned as I sit here reading slashdot in the warm glow of my kerosene powered laptop deep in the fertile Pennsylvania farmlands cultivated by my ancestors. If you didn't mean it to be offensive, why add the 'Amish' modifier? What would have been wrong with, "along with that judge that they rented"?
No shoo-fly pie [globalgourmet.com] for thee.
Real Questions About the Vaporware (Score:2)
Does it allow for fair use of DVD content?
Does it ignore region coding?
Does it allow you to skip trailers and ads
If the answer to any of these is no, this isn't the DVD player that we want.
I found the Intervideo Linux Page. (Score:2)
What about Fluorescent Discs? (Score:2)
I'm kinda surprised we don't already hear more about this technology .... perhaps it's vapourware as well, but it seems to me that if and when it finally gets out the door that it will quite possibly put an end to DVDs in general.
As I don't know much about the subject that's all I really have to say, but anyone who wants to take a look at this technology and possibly make a better call as to its validity, the company is Constellation 3D [c-3d.net].
Cheers!
Re:It's not the only one... (Score:2)
like ia64 is their 64bit arch.
--
Re:What are you talking about? (Score:3)
-- Ghandi
But when a long train of abuses and usurpations, pursuing invariably the same Object evinces a design to reduce them under absolute Despotism, it is their right, it is their duty, to throw off such Government
-- US Declaration of Independance.
If he is still saying "not enough," it is because he does not feel that he should be expected to be grateful for the halting, and inadequate attempts of his society to catch up with the basic rights he ought to have inherited automatically ... by virtue of his membership in the human family and his American birthright.
-- Martin Luther King
Those who are unwilling to fight for their freedom don't deserve it.
-- Malcom X
Re: Slashdot (Score:2)
LinuxOne. I would suppose they quietly shut their doors and laid off their two employees after getting a mountain of negative press.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
You do need the DVD ioctls, but those have been in the last few 2.2 kernels.
Can't block copy a DVD and play it. (Score:2)
If you can read the drive, you can make a copy. You don't even need to be able to read the filesystem on the disk. You can read the disk as raw data and make an image.
Commercial pressed DVD discs store CSS keys in an area that is already burned with zeroes in DVD-ROM media. You may be able to copy the files, but you won't be able to copy the key.
<O
( \
XGNOME vs. KDE: the game! [8m.com]
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:2)
If you don't like the way that the rules are being written and enforced, get involved in politics. That's where the rules are set. Don't think that registering a vote every few years is the limit of acceptable participation. (well, actually, I'd consider it the lower limit of acceptable participation).
Nothing would scare politicians like 10K angry geeks getting involved in the upcoming election. With DECSS, Napster, Microsoft et. al. all on the cusp, I'd say it's about time.
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:2)
But DeCSS is as harmless as it gets. There is absolutely 0 threat that a bunch of letters and numbers on somebody's hard drive is going to harm anybody in any way.
Or so a logical being would conclude. But CSS was created as method of content control... a phrase which has a far great reach than mere copyright infringement. Part of CSS is determining who can watch what movie and where. Helps keep prices high in some regions, while affordable enough to be proitable in others. Also, (and this is where the MPAA has a beef with DeCSS) in order to manufacture a DVD player or develop one, you need to purchase a license and the CSS algorithm. This allows certain electronics manufacturers to arrange a kind of consortium. If a company wants to develop and manufacture a DVD player with the consumer in mind, they simply aren't sold a license or has it revoked. I'm sure there are certain clauses in the contract that say things like "you may not make a DVD player that can play movies for other regions or output the decoded information in any other format than copy-protected analog, etc, etc"
You can see for yourself that DeCSS and the precedent that it would have set without being fought would have been quite harmful, from a corporate persepective at least.
As always, much of this is pure speculation, and I enjoy being proven wrong if truth accompanies the counterargument. Have a good day.
Re:"It" has BEEN finished for months (Score:2)
Ya, actually it will. Not in princable, but in pratice yes. There really isn't anything the courts police of FBI can do about it, people HAVE DeCSS, they have napster, Gnutella, and all the others. It doesn't matter what this or that judge say. it's not going to change anything, in pratice at least.
-Jon
Re:A Much More Interesting Question... (Score:2)
If I remember the descriptions of the rulings, the resultant applications can't have any obvious hooks which directly support the infringing piece of software.
This was in response to a bunch of people trying to leave a "hole" in open-source mailers like mutt/pine/elm (don't remember exactly which), where somebody could snarf a PGP toolkit/executable from a non-US web site & just plop it into the installation & everything would be integrated. The courts basically said they weren't going to allow that obvious attempt to get around the encryption restrictions.
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
The people who use it, or the people who want to use it?
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Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
Could've been worse. If it had been boys, I was going to name them "Jacob and Esau".
--
Re:Fraud on the court (Score:2)
I'm not sure either. That type of space-shifting (converting from DVD to 8mm) was allowed as "fair use" last time I heard.
numb
Re:DeCSS (Score:2)
//rdj
*pat. pending
Re:Legality (Score:2)
Re:Legality EXACTLY (Score:2)
But there is one thing, even beyond First Amendment rights and fair use that scares me. I'm not a legal historian or anything, but it always seemed to me that laws were about restricting *behavior*. If I sign an NDA, and then disclose some secret info, it is not the *information* that is illegal, it is the *act* of disclosing it. Or if somebody tells me a password and they weren't allowed to, it is *their* *action* that will get them in trouble. Now with the DeCSS judgement, I can imagine a trend in which the *information* itself is branded legal or illegal. This is something entirely new. As far as I know, *information* has never been given a legal state unto itself - it was always some action that was made illegal. It's scary to think that simply holding some information in your head would make you a criminal, but on worse days I can imagine that possibly happening.