smb@research.att.com writes:
Suppose that you run a pay TV service that you genuinely attempt to protect -- that is, you use DES or stronger. Am I *entitled* to watch for free because I happen to be smart enough and/or rich enough to crack DES?
I had a long e-argument with a strange young man in Canada over this point, and of course it's familiar to anyone who knows anything about satellite TV issues. My own feeling is that if somebody's going to blast radiation through my property and through my very body, then to say I have no rightit is illegal for me to interpret the radiation is absurd. It's like making it illegal to look at a newspaper shoved in front of your face by a vendor unless you pay for it. My understanding is that US law was originally written according to this philosophy, but that things changed when the cable indu$stry started to realize that they'd have to either spend money to make their signals difficult to receive and view, or else spend money buying dinners for Congressmen to legislate the problem out of existance.
Can I legally or ethically give away or sell recovered keys?
This is a somewhat different question, methinks, and maybe there's a difference between "give away" and "sell". | GOOD TIME FOR MOVIE - GOING ||| Mike McNally <m5@tivoli.com> | | TAKE TWA TO CAIRO. ||| Tivoli Systems, Austin, TX: | | (actual fortune cookie) ||| "Like A Little Bit of Semi-Heaven" |