I don't know if anyone else has noticed, but here we are halfway to another 20 pages, and the adoucette show seems to be hitting its stride. Do we really, really need to get to page 40?
No I'm not wrong:
CONCLUSION
The DMCA does not create a new property right for copyright owners. Nor, for that matter, does it divest the public of the property rights that the Copyright Act has long granted to the public.
wtf are you talking about?
new property rights?
Most video tapes come with a copy protection signal embedded on the tape. One popular product in this arena is made by Macrovision. According to Macrovision, "The technology is applied to over 550 million videocassettes annually and is used by every MPAA movie studio on some or all of their videocassette releases. Over 220 commercial duplication facilities around the world are equipped to supply Macrovision videocassette copy protection to rights owners." Also, "The study found that over 30% of VCR households admit to having unauthorized copies, and that the total annual revenue loss due to copying is estimated at $370,000,000 annually." So, it's a pretty big problem.
the era of vhs
css is a logical extension of old tech to new media
No I'm not wrong.
cali will slide into the sea while adoucette ripples
Seeing as how you've altered your post...
Just to get a better definition of CSS, which is copy protection.
Yes you are, because my interpretation is inline with Patels interpretation per Real Networks v MPAA, which in turn considered Chamberlain and still came to the conclusion that it did - that circumventing CSS to copy a DVD generates an offense under the DMCA.
You can make as an exact copy of an analog source as the equipment allows, which if you are using good equipment, from a human perspective, would be identical to the original.
No!
It has been well established in every relevant case linked to AND in the last 3 or 4 decisions made by the Librarian of Congress that CSS is access control, not copy control.
It limits a users ability to copy because it limits a users access.
Already posted, if you had bothered clicking on any of the links that have been spoonfed to you.Please cite the case law for this preposterous conclusion.
Which was considered in Real Networks v MPAA, which if you had bothered to read supports my assertion.Split hairs much?
Besides, this issue was addressed in Chamberlain...
So that someone can make a copy. Patel said that supporting users to exercise their fair use rights (if it was accepted that making a back up of a DVD was fair use) was not a defense in the eyes of the law.Yes, but Real Networks issue wasn't about someone making copies but about making something that breaks CSS.
It precisely does, because this is precisely what Real Networks argued their software did and lost in spite of it.As far as "circumventing CSS to copy a DVD generates an offense under the DMCA", is not quite true. As the court said it only creates "new grounds for Liability", but, the DMCA doesn't apply if you aren't making or trafficking in a device that infringes (as in Real Nets case) or what you are doing by circumvention isn't infringing, as in the case of making Fair Use backups or shifting formats.
So that someone can make a copy. Patel said that supporting users to exercise their fair use rights (if it was accepted that making a back up of a DVD was fair use) was not a defense in the eyes of the law.
It precisely does, because this is precisely what Real Networks argued their software did and lost in spite of it.
Already posted, if you had bothered clicking on any of the links that have been spoonfed to you.
Which, aside from a breif diversion questioning whether or not making a backup actually constitutes fair use, is what I have argued.So no, Patel's ruling applies to Real for "making and trafficing, and NOT to consumers for their fair use.
Oh come on Trippy.
I don't just point to a court case and say FIND IT, I post the relevant sections that pertain to the issue.
You can do the same and that isn't being "spoon fed"
What is the specific language in what court case that supposedly supports your position?
Failure to post said language indicates it doesn't actually exist.
No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide, or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof, that–
(A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing a
technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title;
(B) has only limited commercially significant purpose or use other than to circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title; or
(c) is marketed by that person or another acting in concert with that person with that person’s knowledge for use in circumventing a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.
“The court appreciates Real’s argument that a consumer has a right to make a backup copy of a DVD for their own personal use,” she wrote. “While it may well be fair use for an individual consumer to store a backup copy of a personally-owned DVD on that individual’s computer, a federal law has nonetheless made it illegal to manufacture or traffic in a device or tool that permits a consumer to make such copies.”
So no, Patel's ruling applies to Real for "making and trafficing, and NOT to consumers for their fair use.
As far as this being logical way to deal with it, as the Court said:Trippy said:CSS is access control, not copy control.
I even went as far as asking you if you thought it was legal to buy something that it was illegal to sell, which sent you on your little "But millions of people are using it and not getting arrested" tirade.