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              | Date: 2000-02-12 
 
 DVDs, Linux & analoges Mobbing-.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.- -.-. --.-
 
 In den DVD-Prozessen - die [analogen]
 Film/medien/konzerne gegen den Erfindungsreichtum der
 [digitalen] Conditio Humana   - schleppt sich alles so dahin.
 Einschüchterungsbriefe der  MPAA an deutsche Online-
 Magazine, die einen Link auf *Berichte" über den
 Kopierschutz legen und Provider aus AT - die Antwort kann
 nur sein:
 
 Dass auf den Linux Demo Days am 17. Februar nicht nur in
 Linz DVDs unter Linux laufen werden
 
 http://service.quintessenz.at/linux/
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 The fascinating developments in the DVD DeCSS affair have
 been reported from several angles. However, two points of
 view seem to have emerged to the exclusion of other
 important realities. One side claims the other are hackers,
 bent on pirating copyright DVD material and misappropriating
 trade secrets in order to do so. The other side claims that
 reverse engineering is a legitimate expression of free speech,
 and that in any case, a disk can be pirated simply by doing a
 bit-for-bit clone, without the need for decryption.
 
 It is quite clear, I think, that the motivation of those who have
 reverse-engineered the inner workings of the content
 scrambling system was that darn human curiosity which
 marks us as a species. And the Internet has made it pretty
 darn near impossible to pop the genie back into the bottle.
 So why are the plaintiffs bothering?. At best they would
 appear to create a bunch of martyrs, and at worst they will
 lose control of a valuable trade secret. [...]
 
 What DeCSS lets the consortium do is determine who will
 make players, and on what terms, and who will provide
 content. If you can neither encrypt or decrypt the bit stream,
 you are locked out of both markets. If you purchase a license
 to use the technology, then the consortium has a way of
 controlling your actions. Want to sell a player that doesn't
 honour region codes?. Hmm, maybe we'll revoke your
 license. Or maybe yes, of course, but you gotta charge three
 grand for it. Want to produce content - well, you need a
 license to produce the encrypted bitstream that will go on a
 disk, or you'll have to deal with someone who does. This is a
 handy way of exercising future control, is it not?. After all,
 you might be allowed to produce content only playable in
 region 1, thus controlling your distribution, or perhaps
 competitors of the consortium members might find
 unexpected 'capacity problems' in getting their product onto
 DVD.
 
 But without DeCSS, this control vanishes and a great many
 ricebowls are broken. The consortium always knew that
 someone would break into the system. They probably
 planned exactly what they'd do, ahead of time. [...]
 
 
 More
 http://linuxtoday.com/stories/16556.html
 
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 relayed by
 Kristian Koehntopp via debate@fitug.de
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 edited by
 published on: 2000-02-12
 comments to office@quintessenz.at
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