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View Full Version : DeCSS loses free speech shield in California Supreme Court


View Full Version : DeCSS loses free speech shield in California Supreme Court


wessman
August 25th, 2003, 02:14 PM
DVD-copying code loses free speech shield
By John Borland, Staff Writer, CNET News.com
August 25, 2003, 1:36 PM PT
http://news.com.com/2100-1028-5067665.html

The California Supreme Court ruled Monday that a Web publisher could be barred from posting DVD-copying code online without infringing on his free speech rights.

The state's high court overturned an earlier decision that said blocking Web publishers from posting the controversial piece of software called DeCSS, which can be used to help decrypt and copy DVDs, would violate their First Amendment rights. An industry technology coalition called the DVD Copy Control Association (DVD CCA) had sued dozens of people in California courts, contending that posting the software online violated its trade secrets rights.

Monday's state Supreme Court decision did leave room for another legal about-face, asking a lower court to revisit the question of whether any industry trade secret rights actually were violated.

But judges said that for now, property rights outranked free speech rights in this case, because DVD copy-protection technology was never meant to be public. Nor did the DeCSS code itself contribute significantly to a debate over whether DVDs should be encrypted at all, the judges said.

"Disclosure of this highly technical information adds nothing to the public debate over the use of encryption software or the DVD industry’s efforts to limit unauthorized copying of movies on DVDs," the court wrote. "We do not see how any speech addressing a matter of public concern is inextricably intertwined with and somehow necessitates disclosure of DVD CCA's trade secrets."

The long-running case, originally filed in 1999, has been a closely watched test of how much freedom individuals have to distribute software online that runs against corporate or other powerful interests or even violates a law.

The defendant in the case, software developer Andrew Bunner, was one of hundreds of people to post a piece of software called DeCSS online in 1999. The software, created by Norwegian teenager Jon Johansen partly to allow DVDs to be played on a computer with a Linux operating system, could more broadly be used in the process of decrypting and copying DVDs.

The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) sued many of the Web sites that posted Johansen's code, arguing that under the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), it was illegal to create or distribute. A New York federal court agreed and barred 2600 Magazine publisher Eric Corley from posting it on his Web site or even linking to other sites that carried the code.

In California state court, the DVD CCA, which holds intellectual property rights to the copy-protection technology on DVDs, separately sued Bunner and dozens of others, saying they had violated the group's trade secret rights.

Bunner's case is the only one still pending. Most of the defendants did not appeal the trial court's initial preliminary injunction that bars them from publishing the code. One other defendant, Texas resident Matthew Pavlovich, won exemption from the case after the state Supreme Court ruled that he couldn't be sued in California.

The DVD CCA welcomed the ruling as an unambiguous victory.

"The DVD CCA is gratified the California Supreme Court has re-affirmed that trade secrets are protected from theft and illegal publication under California law," Weil, Gotshal and Manges attorney Robert Sugarman, who represents the industry coalition, said in a statement. "The Court's decision confirms that the First Amendment is not a shield to allow thieves to distribute stolen intellectual property."


Not a complete loss
Although the ruling is a loss for Bunner, the programmer's attorneys welcomed parts of the decision, saying it actually opened up promising new avenues for their client.

The ruling did say software code like DeCSS should be afforded some strong First Amendment protection, even if trade secrets rights trumped free speech shields in this particular case. However, the court cautioned that its decision was based on a very narrow reading of the earlier decisions, including the assumption that the original trial court had ruled correctly that the release of DeCSS had violated the industry coalition's trade secrets.

The court ordered the case to be sent back to the appeals court level, where judges would review the trade secrets issue more closely. Bunner's attorneys said they expected to show the appeals court that information such as DeCSS that was widely dispersed on the Net could not qualify for trade secret protection.

"We are pleased that the court has found that a strong level of First Amendment scrutiny applies in trade secrets cases," said Gwen Hinze, an Electronic Frontier Foundation attorney who has worked on the case. "We don't think that there is a trade secret here."

While the DeCSS cases still set an important precedent, the DVD-copying issue has moved on. Other software that allows DVD copying is widely and freely available online, and retail packages are even sold in stores such as CompUSA.

The leading producer of that retail software, a company called 321 Studios, also has been sued by the MPAA. A decision is expected in that case soon.

Outside attorneys who are looking at the case say the ruling should make the broader software industry breathe a quiet sigh of relief.

The previous appeals court ruling, which had said Bunner could not be blocked from posting the code online due to First Amendment protections, threatened to undermine ordinary software companies' ability to protect their own intellectual property, some attorneys said. Under the previous ruling, a disgruntled employee might be able to post a company's proprietary code online and claim free speech rights, for example.

Monday's Supreme Court ruling will let companies protect their legitimate trade secrets from online distribution while still holding out the possibility that DeCSS might ultimately be deemed too widely distributed to qualify for that protection, some attorneys said.

"The reversal on those narrow grounds is important and helpful to the software industry in order to protect its trade secrets," said Jonathan Band, an intellectual property attorney with Morrison & Foerester. "The earlier decision could have been a problem for software companies."


Related News:

New DVD-copying tools to hit shelves August 22, 2003
http://news.com.com/2100-1025-5067448.html

Arguments made in DVD-cracking case May 29, 2003
http://news.com.com/2100-1025-1011326.html

Supreme Court enters DVD-copying case January 2, 2003
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-978985.html

Court blocks state DVD-cracking suit November 25, 2002
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-975285.html

Ban on DVD-cracking code upheld November 28, 2001
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-276353.html

Coalition sues to block distribution of DVD "cracking" tool December 29, 1999
http://news.com.com/2100-1023-234968.html

Get this story's "Big Picture"
http://news.com.com/2104-1028-5067665.html

Copyright ©1995-2003 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.

Ne007
August 25th, 2003, 02:30 PM
This means that we all need to go out and download this shit right now and spread the word! Right?

tMoD
August 25th, 2003, 03:12 PM
DeCSS should fall within fair use as it allows for something analogous to format-shifting (or whatever the hell it's called). Using software to make your DVD playable on Linux-run computer is somewhat similar to creating an MP3 version of a CD-audio track, something which was ruled a form of fair use. If someone uses the software for some other illegal purpose, that is their individual responsibility- this is similar to the ruling in the Grokster case, where it was determined that the creators of software that can be used for both legal and illegal purposes cannot be held liable for any illegal uses by individual users.

Theinfamousone
August 26th, 2003, 09:46 AM
Could you clarify how exactly posting the encryption algorithms for DVDs can be used legally?

There is nothing anyone can do to stop DVD ripping at this point, but I still feel bad for the people that got their butts sued off by the MPAA just for linking to a site with the DeCSS.

tMoD
August 26th, 2003, 11:06 AM
According to the article, the software was created "partly to allow DVDs to be played on a computer with a Linux operating system." I think of this as somewhat analagous to format-shifting (or whatever the hell it's called), such as making an MP3 or cassette version of a CD. You are using the software to play the media on something you otherwise couldn't (such as an MP3 player or tape player, in this case a computer with a Linux OS).

Azathoth
August 27th, 2003, 08:25 PM
Jon Johanson did originally create the DeCSS to get his DVDs to work on his linux box:
EFF.com archived news story (http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/DeCSS_prosecutions/Johansen_DeCSS_case/20020110_eff_pr.html)
Here's another link to a current EFF story pertaining to the current court case this one states that Jon Johanson was aquitted but is scheduled for a retrial.
http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/DVDCCA_case/20030825_eff_bunner_pr.php
My opinion if Jon Johanson wins this out than so will Brunner (unfortuantely they will prolly keep appealing, Is there a certain number of appeals you can make?). Another related opinion these people (xxAA) are trying to make being smart enough to work out a solution to a stupid problem they created a crime! A problem that if they were smart enough to have solved first they would have made a bundle (ergo their jealous :p)

tMoD
August 27th, 2003, 09:10 PM
Thank you for backing me up on that, Azathoth.

FreakinWeasel
August 29th, 2003, 05:20 PM
* California Supreme Court Upholds Free Speech in DVD Case

Sets High Standard for Publishing DVD Decoding Information

San Francisco - On August 25 the California Supreme Court ruled that
publication of information regarding the decoding of DVDs merits a
strong
level of protection as free speech and sent a key case back to a lower
court for a decision on whether a court can prevent Andrew Bunner from
publishing this information, whether on the Internet, on a T-shirt, or
elsewhere.

In the case, DVD Copy Control Association (DVD-CCA) v. Bunner,
California
resident Andrew Bunner was one of thousands of people worldwide who
republished DVD-decryption software called DeCSS. DVD-CCA, the company
that
licenses the use of the DVD encryption code, convinced a trial court to
issue an order barring publication of DeCSS pending a final decision in
the
case, claiming that DeCSS contained its trade secrets. The Court of
Appeal
ruled that the ban on publication was unconstitutional. The Supreme
Court
required the Court of Appeal to reexamine the evidence.

"The appeals court can now examine the movie industry's fiction that
DeCSS
is still a secret and that a publication ban is necessary to keep the
information secret," said Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) Legal
Director Cindy Cohn. "DeCSS is obviously not a trade secret since it's
available on thousands of websites, T-shirts, neckties, and other media
worldwide." EFF serves as co-counsel on the case.

In issuing its ruling, the California Supreme Court found that
publication
of the DeCSS code is an activity that requires the court to apply
strong
First Amendment principles. DVD-CCA had claimed originally that the
courts
need not consider any First Amendment issues.

"We are heartened that the court acknowledged that trade secret
injunctions
must be subject to a high level of First Amendment scrutiny," said
David
Greene, Executive Director of the First Amendment Project who argued
the
case on behalf of Bunner. "We are confident that, having looked at the
facts, the Court of Appeal will remove the restriction on Bunner's
right to
republish publicly available information.

DVD-CCA is a consortium of the major motion picture studios and major
consumer electronics manufacturers that licenses DVD encryption
technology.
DVD-CCA originally filed suit in December 1999, three months after the
DeCSS code became available on the Internet.

DVD-CCA obtained the preliminary anti-publication order shortly
thereafter.
DVD-CCA named hundreds of people in the lawsuit, including those who
printed DeCSS on T-shirts. DVD-CCA contends that those who republish
DeCSS
improperly disclose its trade secrets, despite the fact that those
people
didn't create the DeCSS software which is widely available on the
Internet.

DVD-CCA doesn't claim that Bunner created DeCSS or stole any trade
secrets.
Instead, DVD-CCA is attempting to stretch trade secret law to include
Bunner, a member of the public who had no inside information or
contractual
arrangement with DVD-CCA, but who instead found the program on a public
website and decided to republish it.

Bunner is a defendant in one of several lawsuits the entertainment
industry
has launched since the publication of DeCSS to mixed results.

Another branch of the case, DVD-CCA v. Pavlovich, ended this spring
when
the U.S. Supreme Court decided not to rule in favor of DVD-CCA after
the
California Supreme Court decided that it was improper to force Matthew
Pavlovich, another alleged republisher of DeCSS, to come to California
to
defend the trade secret claim.

In other DeCSS-related litigation, the original publisher of the
program,
Norwegian teenager Jon Johansen, was acquitted of all criminal charges.
The
Norwegian government has appealed that decision, and the case is
currently
scheduled for re-trial in December 2003.

In another case, a coalition of movie studios prevented further
publication
of DeCSS by 2600 Magazine using the federal anti-circumvention
provisions
of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

Links:
California Supreme Court decision in DVD-CCA v. Bunner
<http://www.eff.org/IP/Video/DVDCCA_case/20030825_bunner_decision.php>