On Thu, 2003-10-09 at 23:54, Richard M. Smith wrote: > http://news.com.com/2100-1025_3-5089168.html?tag=nefd_top > > Student faces suit over key to CD locks
[snip] > In his paper, published on the Princeton Web site on Monday, the student > explained that the SunnComm technique relies on installing antipiracy > software directly from the protected CD itself. However, this can be > prevented by stopping Microsoft Windows' "auto-run" feature. That can be > done simply by pushing the Shift key as the CD loads. Do not news.com.com, theregister.co.uk, full-disclosure, Richard M. Smith, me and everyone simply by citing these articles violate the DMCA? Actually, I don't have to read the student's paper anymore to learn how to "circumvent" SunnComm's audio CD protection - reading some news report about the issue suffices. So, everybody telling others how this protection can be "circumvented" could theoretically be sued under US law. Europe seemed to be safe against these perversions, but Germany has recently adopted a DMCA-like law. In fact, every member of the EU will have to adopt the European Union Copyright Directive [1]. However, these things were not invented in Brussel, it is solely the adoption of the WIPO Copyright Treaty from December 1996 [2,3]. regards nicola [1] http://wiki.ael.be/index.php/EUCD-Status [2] http://www.eurorights.org/eudmca/index.html [3] http://www.wipo.int/treaties/ip/wct/index.html _______________________________________________ Full-Disclosure - We believe in it. Charter: http://lists.netsys.com/full-disclosure-charter.html
