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| Date: Fri, 9 Aug 2002 23:16:19 -0700 (PDT) |
| From: Effector List <alerts@action.eff.org> |
| To: xxxxxxxx@xxxxx.xxx |
| Subject: EFFector 15.24: EFF Submits Comments to FCC, Johansen Trial |
| Schedule Update |
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| EFFector Vol. 15, No. 24 August 9, 2002 ren@eff.org |
| |
| A Publication of the Electronic Frontier Foundation ISSN 1062-9424 |
| |
| |
| In the 224th Issue of EFFector: |
| |
| * EFF Submits Letter to FCC Chairman Regarding BPDG Proposal |
| * Update on Intel Corp. v. Hamidi |
| * DeCSS Author Johansen's Trial Rescheduled |
| * Bunnie Presents Paper on XBox Reverse Engineering |
| * Thanks to DefCon! |
| * EFF Booth at LinuxWorld |
| * Deep Links: Baen Books' Releases Reader-Friendly E-Books |
| * Deep Links: Janis Ian on P2P |
| * Deep Links: Hometown Paper Discusses Rep. Coble's Support of |
| Berman P2P Hacking Bill |
| * Administrivia |
| |
| |
| For more information on EFF activities & alerts: http://www.eff.org/ |
| |
| To join EFF or make an additional donation: |
| http://www.eff.org/support/ |
| |
| EFF is a member-supported nonprofit. |
| Please sign up as a member today! |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * EFF Submits Letter to FCC Chairman Regarding BPDG Proposal |
| |
| The Honorable Michael K. Powell Chairman Federal Communications |
| Commission 445 12th Street, S.W. Suite 8C453 Washington, DC 20554 |
| |
| |
| BY FACSIMILE, ELECTRONIC MAIL, AND POSTAL MAIL |
| |
| Dear Chairman Powell: |
| |
| I am writing to you today in regards to the digital television |
| Broadcast Flag; specifically, I write in response to Sen. Hollings' |
| and Representatives Dingell and Tauzin's letters of July 19, which |
| urged you to mandate the Broadcast Flag proposal outlined in the |
| final report of the Broadcast Protection Discussion Group. |
| |
| The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is a donor-supported |
| non-profit organization that works to uphold civil liberties |
| interests in technology policy and law. EFF has played a critical |
| role in safeguarding crucial freedoms related to computers, the |
| Internet and consumer electronics devices, defeating the restriction |
| on strong cryptography exports; securing the legal principle that |
| Internet wiretaps must only proceed in conjunction with a warrant; |
| and defending academics, researchers and commercial interests |
| against DMCA-related prosecution. |
| |
| EFF was an active participant in the Broadcast Protection Discussion |
| Group. We attended the group's meetings and conference calls and |
| participated in the group's policy and technical mailing-lists. EFF |
| also maintains a web-site that was and is the only public source of |
| information on the Broadcast Flag negotiations and proposal. The |
| site can be found at http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org. EFF devoted |
| thousands of staff-hours to publicizing the existence and nature of |
| the BPDG to the public, to civil liberties and consumer-advocacy |
| groups, and to entrepreneurial companies and software authors whose |
| products were threatened by the proceedings. |
| |
| When you and I met at Esther Dyson's PC Forum last March, we spoke |
| briefly about the civil liberties interests that would be undermined |
| by the Broadcast Protection Discussion Group's mandate. The BPDG |
| proposal will have grave consequences for innovation, free |
| expression, competition and consumer interests. Worst of all, it |
| will add unnecessary complexity and expense to the DTV transition, |
| compromising DTV adoption itself. |
| |
| As you are aware, technologists have traditionally manufactured |
| those devices they believed would be successful in the market, often |
| in spite of the misgivings of rights-holders. From the piano roll to |
| the PVR, technologists have enjoyed the freedom to ship whatever |
| products they believe the public will pay for; what's more, |
| innovation has always thrived best where there were the fewest |
| regulatory hurdles. NTSC tuners and devices are governed by precious |
| few regulations, and consequently we see a rich field of products |
| that interact with them, from the VCR Plus to tuner-cards for PCs to |
| the PVR. The Broadcast Flag proposal would limit technologists to |
| shipping those products that met with the approval of MPAA member |
| companies. No entrepreneur or software author will know, a priori, |
| whether his innovative DTV product will be legal in the market until |
| he has gone to the expense of building it and taking it around to |
| the Hollywood studios for review. |
| |
| Consumers and industry alike have benefitted greatly from the "Open |
| Source" or "Free Software" movement, in which technologies are |
| distributed in a form that encourages end-user modification. From |
| server-software like the web-wide success-story apache, to operating |
| systems like GNU/Linux, to consumer applications like the Mozilla |
| browser, Free Software is a powerful force for innovation, consumer |
| benefit and commercial activity. The BPDG proposal implicitly bans |
| Free Software DTV applications -- such as the DScaler de-interlacer |
| and the GNU Radio software-defined radio program -- as these |
| applications are built to be modified by end-users, something that |
| is banned under the BPDG proposal. The tamper-resistance component |
| of the BPDG's "Robustness Requirements" will create and entire class |
| of illegal software applications, abridging the traditional First |
| Amendment freedom enjoyed by software authors who create expressive |
| speech in code form under one of several Free Software/Open Source |
| licenses. |
| |
| The BPDG nominally set out to create an objective standard, a bright |
| line that technologists could hew to in order to avoid liability |
| when deploying their products. However, the end product of the BPDG |
| was a "standard" that contained no objective criteria for legal |
| technology; rather, the standard required that new technologies be |
| approved by MPAA member companies. Not uncoincidentally, the only |
| technologies that were approved by the MPAA -- and hence the only |
| legal technologies -- were those produced by the 4C and 5C |
| consortia, a group of technology companies that acted as the MPAA's |
| allies throughout the BPDG process. This is an harbinger of the sort |
| of regime that the BPDG standard will usher in: technology companies |
| will be able to shut their competitors out of the marketplace by |
| allying themselves with Hollywood, brokering deals to allow certain |
| technologies and outlaw others. |
| |
| The marketplace is a proven mechanism for rapidly and efficiently |
| producing products that increase the value and desirability of new |
| technologies, such as DTV. A BPDG mandate would subvert the market |
| for DTV innovation. Competing companies with lower-cost DTV |
| technology alternatives would be restrained from bringing these to |
| market if they failed to assuage the MPAA's concerns about |
| unauthorized redistribution. Furthermore, the universe of |
| unauthorized-but-lawful uses for DTV programming will be shrunk down |
| to the much smaller space of explicitly authorized uses. The ability |
| of the public to make unauthorized-but-lawful uses of television |
| programming has been an historical force for increasing the value of |
| broadcast programming, from the VCR to the PVR. |
| |
| Ironically, the inevitable damage that a Broadcast Flag mandate |
| would do to innovation, competition and consumer interests can only |
| slow down DTV adoption, by driving up the cost of DTV devices while |
| reducing the number of desirable features that an open market would |
| create. If the public is offered less functionality for more money, |
| they will not flock to DTV. |
| |
| The most disheartening thing about the Broadcast Flag is that there |
| is neither a strong case that the Broadcast Flag is a necessary tool |
| for protecting copyright, nor that the Broadcast Flag would be |
| effective in that role. The existing practice of Internet |
| infringement of broadcast programming -- analog captures from |
| devices that satisfy the requirements of the BPDG proposal -- would |
| not be stopped by the presence of a Broadcast Flag. |
| Higher-resolution DTV signals will likewise present no challenge to |
| determined infringers, who can capture full-quality analog signal |
| from DTV devices and then re-digitize them, suffering only a single |
| generation's worth of loss-of-quality before the programming enters |
| the Internet. |
| |
| Meanwhile, the underlying rubric for a Broadcast Flag -- that |
| infringement will undermine Hollywood's business to the point that |
| movies will no longer be available to the public, reducing the value |
| of DTV -- is no more than superstition. No credible study or |
| analysis, undertaken by a neutral party, has ever been presented to |
| Congress, the FCC, the CPTWG or the BPDG supporting this notion. The |
| public is being asked to sacrifice its rights in copyright; industry |
| is being asked to place its right to innovation in the hands of |
| entertainers; the US government is being asked to mandate |
| extraordinary, unprecedented regulation of the $600 billion |
| technology sector -- all on the uncorroborated opinions of a few |
| studio executives. |
| |
| EFF welcomes the FCC's oversight of the Broadcast Flag issue. The |
| BPDG proceedings took place behind a shroud of secrecy, in a |
| looking-glass "public process" where only those participants the |
| organizers wanted to hear from were made privy to its existence, |
| where the co-chairs invented rules and processes on the fly to suit |
| the needs of the entertainment interests and the technology |
| companies that had privately secured a promise of a legal monopoly |
| for their products, where the press was banned. |
| |
| The FCC has an admirable tradition of seeking and weighing public |
| opinion in its proceedings. As the FCC considers the Broadcast Flag, |
| EFF hopes that it will start anew, setting aside the findings of the |
| BPDG in light of the concerns raised by Microsoft, Philips, Sharp, |
| Thomson, and Zenith, as well as non-profit organizations including |
| EFF, Consumers Union, Consumer Federation of America, the Free |
| Software Foundation, Public Knowledge, digitalconsumer.org, the |
| Center for Democracy in Technology, and the Computer and |
| Communications Industry Association. |
| |
| Thank you for attention in this matter. Please let me know if we can |
| be of any further assistance to you. |
| |
| Sincerely yours, |
| |
| Cory Doctorow for the Electronic Frontier Foundation |
| |
| |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| EFF's BPDG Blog: |
| http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org |
| |
| An overview of our concerns with the broadcast flag: |
| http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org/archives/one-page.pdf |
| |
| Letter from Sen. Hollings: |
| http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org/archives/000155.html |
| |
| Letter from Rep. Tauzin: |
| http://bpdg.blogs.eff.org/archives/000156.html |
| |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * Update on Intel Corp. v. Hamidi |
| |
| Intel Corp. v. Hamidi is now on appeal to the California Supreme |
| Court. EFF filed an amicus brief in support of Ken Hamidi on Aug. 6, |
| 2002. The facts are simple: Over about two years, Hamidi on six |
| occasions sent e-mail critical of Intel's employment practices to |
| between 8,000 and 35,000 Intel employees. Intel demanded that Hamidi |
| stop, but he refused. Intel obtained an injunction barring Hamidi |
| from e-mailing Intel employees at their Intel e-mail addresses, |
| based on the common-law tort of "trespass to chattels." ("Chattel" |
| is a legal term that refers to personal property, as opposed to |
| property in land.) |
| |
| EFF's amicus brief argues three main points. |
| |
| (1) Intel did not qualify for relief under "trespass to chattels" |
| because Intel's e-mail servers were not themselves harmed by |
| Hamidi's e-mails. If Intel was harmed, it was because the content of |
| Hamidi's e-mails affected Intel employees, not because sending the |
| e-mails affected the functioning of Intel's servers. |
| |
| (2) By focusing on unwanted "contact" with the chattel and ignoring |
| the harm requirement, the court of appeal turned "trespass to |
| chattels" into a doctrine that threatens common Internet activity |
| like search engines and linking. For example, if a website posted a |
| "no trespassing" sign, any "contact" by a search engine could be |
| considered a trespass even if it caused no harm. |
| |
| (3) The court of appeal wrongly held that the injunction did not |
| infringe Hamidi's freedom of speech. The First Amendment limits |
| private parties' legal remedies in many areas of law, such as libel, |
| out of concern that private parties will use the law to suppress |
| criticism. The same principle should apply here, where Intel's |
| claims of harm stem from the meaning of Hamidi's speech. |
| |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| The Intel v. Hamidi Archive: |
| |
| http://www.eff.org/Cases/Intel_v_Hamidi/ |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * DeCSS Author Johansen's Trial Rescheduled |
| |
| The trial of Norwegian teen Jon Johansen, who created the |
| controversial DeCSS software, has been pushed back again. It is now |
| scheduled to be heard on December 9, 2002, in Oslo, Norway. In the |
| fall of 1999, Johansen and his team reverse-engineered the content |
| scrambling system (CSS) software used to encrypt DVDs in an effort |
| to build a DVD player for the Linux operating system. In January of |
| 2002, the Norwegian Economic Crime Unit (OKOKRIM) charged Johansen |
| with a violation of Norwegian Criminal Code Section 145.2, which |
| outlaws breaking into a third-party's property in order to steal |
| data that one is not entitled to. This prosecution marks the first |
| time the law will be used to prosecute a person for accessing his |
| own property (his own DVD). Johansen faces two years in prison if |
| convicted. The prosecution is based on a formal complaint filed by |
| the Motion Picture Association. |
| |
| The trial had originally been scheduled to take place in June of |
| 2002 but was rescheduled when the court could not find any qualified |
| judges to hear Johansen's case. Now the case is scheduled to be |
| heard by a three-judge panel. Help Jon in his battle against |
| Hollywood movie studios, donate to his legal defense fund at: |
| |
| http://www.eff.org/support/jonfund.html |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| The DeCSS/Johansen Archive: |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/DeCSS_prosecutions/Johansen_DeCSS_case/ |
| |
| Digital Rights Management Archive: |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/DRM/ |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * Bunnie Presents Paper on XBox Reverse Engineering |
| |
| Paper Explains Flaw in Videogame Security System |
| |
| Researcher Escapes Chilling Effect of Digital Copyright Law |
| |
| Electronic Frontier Foundation Media Advisory |
| |
| For Immediate Release: Thursday, August 9, 2002 |
| |
| San Francisco - The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) is pleased |
| to announce that former MIT doctoral student Andrew "Bunnie" Huang |
| will present a paper explaining a security flaw in the Microsoft |
| Xbox (TM) videogame system. |
| |
| Huang will present his paper, "Keeping Secrets in Hardware: the |
| Microsoft X-BOX Case Study," at 5:25 p.m. PDT on August 13, 2002, at |
| the 2002 Workshop on Cryptographic Hardware and Embedded Systems |
| (CHES 2002) in Redwood City, California (Aug. 13-15, 2002). |
| |
| The Xbox security system is intended to allow people to play only |
| videogames authorized by Microsoft. Huang's paper "shows how a |
| person could defeat that system with a small hardware investment," |
| said MIT Professor Hal Abelson, one of Huang's advisors. "More |
| importantly, the paper relates the security vulnerability to a |
| general design flaw shared by other high-profile security systems |
| such as the government's Clipper Chip and the movie industry's |
| Contents Scrambling System (CSS) for DVD players." |
| |
| Huang contacted EFF in March after his advisors told him that his |
| preliminary findings raised potentially significant legal questions. |
| With the help of Boston College law professor Joe Liu, EFF worked |
| with Huang, Abelson, and MIT administrators to analyze the legal |
| issues and draft letters notifying Microsoft of Huang's research |
| findings and intended publication, one of the steps encouraged by |
| Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). |
| |
| Microsoft told Huang and Abelson that while it might prefer that the |
| paper not be published, it would be inappropriate to ask MIT to |
| withhold the paper. |
| |
| "Microsoft deserves praise for making no attempt to control |
| publication," said Abelson. "Their response shows that they value |
| academic freedom, and that they appreciate the critical role of |
| unfettered research and publication in advancing technology." |
| |
| Other companies have reacted otherwise, using the DMCA to threaten |
| researchers. The Recording Industry Association of America last year |
| warned Princeton Professor Edward Felten after his research team |
| exposed weaknesses in digital music security technologies. Last |
| month, Hewlett Packard (HP) threatened research collective SnoSoft |
| over exposing a security vulnerability in HP's Tru64 Unix operating |
| system. Soon after, HP clarified that it would not use the DMCA to |
| stifle research or impede the flow of information that would improve |
| computer security. |
| |
| Huang said that while he is glad he can openly present his paper, |
| "The DMCA clearly had a chilling effect on my work. I was afraid to |
| submit my research for peer review until after the EFF's efforts to |
| clear potential legal restraints." |
| |
| "Researchers should be analyzing security, not worrying about |
| getting sued," said EFF Senior Staff Attorney Lee Tien. |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| For this release: |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/20020808_eff_bunnie_pr.html |
| |
| For Huang's paper: |
| ftp://publications.ai.mit.edu/ai-publications/2002/AIM-2002-008.pdf |
| |
| For the CHES program: http://islab.oregonstate.edu/ches/program.html |
| |
| EFF "Unintended Consequences: Three Years Under the DMCA" report: |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/20020503_dmca_consequences.pdf |
| |
| RIAA sues Professor Edward Felten over SDMI: |
| http://www.eff.org/Legal/Cases/Felten_v_RIAA/ |
| |
| An article about Hewlett-Packard's threatening SnoSoft: |
| http://www.wired.com/news/technology/0,1282,54297,00.html |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * EFF Thanks Defcon |
| |
| EFF thanks The Dark Tangent and other organizers of the DEF CON X |
| convention for their generous donation of exhibition space at DEF |
| CON (http://www.defcon.org/). DEF CON is an "underground" computer |
| security conference held each summer in Las Vegas. |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| Defcon Website: |
| http://www.defcon.com/ |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| * EFF Booth at LinuxWorld |
| |
| Come visit EFF at booth #488 at Linuxworld next week. We'll be |
| passing out information, good cheer, and a slew of new stickers. |
| |
| When: August 13 - 15 |
| 10a - 5p |
| |
| Where: Booth #5 |
| Moscone Center |
| 747 Howard Street |
| San Francisco, CA 94103 |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| LinuxWorld Conference Website: |
| http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/ |
| |
| Floor Map and EFF Booth: |
| http://www.linuxworldexpo.com/linuxworldexpo/v31/floorplan/floorplan |
| .cvn?b=97& exbID=50 |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Deep Links |
| |
| Deep Links is a new department in the EFFector featuring noteworthy |
| news-items, victories and threats from around the Internet. |
| |
| |
| * Baen Books expands fair-use-friendly e-book program |
| |
| Baen Books will bind a CD-ROM into the October 2002 hardcover |
| edition of *War of Honor,* the latest volume in David Weber's epic |
| Honor Harrington space-opera. The CD will contain at least 22 |
| complete novels, all in open formats like html and RTF, with the |
| fair-use-friendly admonishment "This disk and its contents may be |
| copied and shared but NOT sold." Included on the disk are the entire |
| Honor Harrington series to date, as well as other titles from the |
| Baen line, including Keith Laumer's *Retief!* and Larry Niven and |
| Jerry Pournelle's *Fallen Angels*. |
| |
| Baen has been a banner-carrier for fair-use in electronic |
| publishing, shipping text and html files that can be played on a |
| multitude of devices. Other publishers have chosen to publish their |
| material in copy-controlled formats that make it impossible to |
| legally loan or resell the titles you purchase, are locked to a |
| specific device, can't play on every operating system, and |
| occasionally lock out assistive technology like the screen-readers |
| employed by the blind. |
| |
| Dmitry Skylarov, a Russian scientist, was arrested in July 2001, for |
| demonstrating how end-users could defeat the copy-prevention |
| employed by Adobe's e-book technology. Adobe asked the FBI to arrest |
| Skylarov for violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), |
| which makes it a crime to describe techniques for circumventing |
| copy-prevention technology. Though Skylarov was later released, his |
| employer, ElcomSoft, is still facing charges in the USA, and the |
| Russian government has issued an advisory warning Russian scientists |
| to steer clear of American technical conferences until the DMCA is |
| repealed. |
| |
| Here is Baen's statement on the CD release: |
| |
| You are about to start playing with a CD-ROM that has fairly |
| extraordinary content. As of this writing it includes twenty-two |
| UNENCRYPTED novels in several formats, the ten Honor Harrington |
| Novels, 3 Honor Harrington Anthologies and 9 novels by friends of |
| Honor, and by the time of distribution it may well contain more. |
| (More than twenty novels for free, and with no stupid codes to work |
| around. Think of that.) The reason for the plethora of formats is to |
| try to please the people who want to read the novels on their Palm |
| Pilots or other text-specialized palm-sized devices. |
| |
| Links: |
| |
| Baen Books's page for *War of Honor*: |
| http://www.baen.com/orientation.htm |
| |
| Slashdot discussion of *War of Honor* release: |
| http://slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/08/03/2314232&mode=flat&tid= |
| 149 |
| |
| EFF documents on Dmitry Skylarov and ElcomSoft: |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Elcomsoft/ |
| |
| EFF documents on the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA): |
| http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/ |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| * Singer/Songwriter Janis Ian on P2P Lucid article on the benefits of |
| peer-to-peer networks form an artists' perspective. |
| http://www.janisian.com/article-internet_debacle.html |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| * Hometown Paper Discusses Rep. Coble's Support of Berman P2P Hacking |
| Bill Column on how a good Representative can make a bad call. |
| http://www.news-record.com/news/columnists/staff/cone04.htm |
| |
| - end - |
| |
| |
| -------------------------------------------------------------------- |
| |
| Administrivia |
| |
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