On 20 Jun 2001, at 15:16, David Honig wrote:
do a cryptographic authentication procedure with the drive. Code to do this is covered under "circumvention device" in the DMCA according to the 2600-MPAA case.
Not if you have lawfully paid for the content.
have you filed an amicus curiae brief explaining this? If so, how come the case isn't over yet, with the 2600 people victorious.
If you don't do this authentication, the drives I have worked with will just spit out zeros instead of the real data.
If a cartridge doesn't have (C) SEGA in it, it won't play... ergo, (C) SEGA is not protected.
GAME OVER.
Cheers, dh
I'm not certain the judges will see things that way. The fact that you need something like DeCSS to view DVDs ON A LINUX BOX might not prove decisive to a judge who might consider the possibility that you could view them some other way, say, with a DVD player. Alternatively, Linus Torvalds could sell his soul and say that source for linux DVD players will NOT be open. I'm not justifying this kind of logic, mind you, just saying that I think it's quite likely that that's the way the ruling is likely to come out. George