This
story appeared on Network World Fusion at
http://www.nwfusion.com/columnists/2000/0131bradner.html
'Net
Insider:
Ignorance is bliss
By Scott Bradner
Network
World, 01/31/00
The
U.S. court system is beginning to enforce one of the more controversial
provisions of the recent copyright protection legislation. It is far from clear
whether the organizations that pushed for the inclusion of this provision
ultimately will be badly hurt by its enforcement.
The Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, signed into law by President Clinton on Oct. 28,
1998, (available at http://thomas.loc.gov) prohibits "any technology,
product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that . . . is primarily
designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing protection afforded by a
technological measure that effectively protects a right of a copyright
owner."
Two weeks ago, two U.S. judges - one in New York and one
in California - ruled within a day of each other that Web sites posting copies
of the DeCSS software, designed to circumvent the copy protection of DVDs,
violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.
Material on DVDs is
encrypted to prevent unauthorized copying. The encryption that was chosen is
not that good, and most observers felt it was only a matter of time before
someone would figure out how to break it. In fact, the encryption is so poor
that many legal scholars believe that the DVD people were trying to set up a
"low curb protection" - i.e., that the encryption was only there to
force a user to take an explicit action to circumvent it, not to give actual
protection. This might make it easier to prosecute violators. (There might even
be an argument that DeCSS did not violate the act because the act refers to
"effectively protecting" the rights of a copyright holder and the DVD
encryption could be said not to do that.)
But if this prohibition is
carried to its logical extreme, the act will outlaw the software that
cryptographic researchers use to figure out if encryption algorithms are any
good. Without this kind of testing, copyright holders might just pick an
encryption algorithm that is even weaker than the current DVD one to try to
protect even more valuable content. You not knowing that your protection is
weak will not prevent others from finding out.
Note also that the act
only covers the U.S. - the DeCSS program was written outside of the U.S., so it
is not directly subject to U.S. law. The U.S. courts may be able to prevent
U.S.-based Web sites from knowingly making DeCSS available, but there will
always be plenty of non-U.S. sites where it will remain available. And DeCSS
will get posted periodically to newsgroups that will automatically distribute
it to millions of U.S. Internet users.
Any U.S.-based prohibition is
likely to be largely ineffectual and will not affect the piracy factories where
most of the illicit copies are made. Might it be that the copyright industry is
just trying to add yet another small legal curb that can be pointed to when the
industry takes some teenager to court over an extra copy of "Austin
Powers"?
Disclaimer: The headline of this column and Harvard
University do not belong on the same page, so the above must be my own opinion.
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