Rethinking the DMCA

By Charles Cooper
http://news.com.com/Rethinking+the+DMCA/2010-1030_3-5659364.html

Story last modified Fri Apr 08 04:00:00 PDT 2005



Time and again since its 1998 passage, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act
has proved to be one of the worst-ever pieces of technology legislation.

By now, nearly every sentient being in Silicon Valley must wonder why
Congress couldn't have done a better job thinking through the implications
of its handicraft before voting the DMCA into law. The act has been
responsible for needless litigation and even transmogrified into something
of a gag on free expression. More about that in a moment.

I suppose it's a pipe dream to have hoped for a dramatically better outcome.
Washington knows who butters its bread, and the power of corporate interest
decides the day on Capitol Hill when big stakes are involved. Big stakes and
big bucks.

So it was that Congress bowed to the copyright industry's demands and
created a marvelously one-sided document. By making it illegal to circumvent
technology used by the copyright industries to protect digital content,
legislators took care of a key constituency. But they also created an
invitation to trouble.

With no clear boundaries and very little legal precedent, the predictable
result has been a messy conflict between the public and the moneyed
interests. And that's where we are now with the specter of the DMCA, like
Marley's Ghost, rising up to chill the spirit of free inquiry when it comes
to encryption and computer security research.

Some of the more memorable dustups over the years:

The specter of the DMCA, like Marley's Ghost, rises up to chill the spirit
of free inquiry.
� 2001: Princeton University professor Edward Felten received a letter from
the Recording Industry Association of America pressuring him not to publish
a paper outlining the weaknesses in the industry's technologies for
protecting digital music. (The industry later backed down.)

� 2002: Adobe assisted U.S. authorities suing Moscow-based ElcomSoft for
creating a program that exploited flaws in Adobe's e-book format. A trial
ended in acquittal when jurors concluded ElcomSoft didn't mean to violate
the law, even though they agreed the company's product was illegal.

� 2002: Hewlett-Packard sent legal notices to Secure Network Operations
after flaw researchers published details of a vulnerability in HP's Tru64
operating system. HP subsequently backed down, but the point was made: Step
out of line, and we'll throw the book at you.

� 2003: In an extreme example of the application of the DMCA, an
Illinois-based manufacturer of garage-door openers claimed that a rival's
replacement product violated copyright law. A federal court later dismissed
the lawsuit.

I don't know if this was in many people's minds at the time of the law's
passage, but the DMCA also gave software publishers a handy legal club to
brandish whenever they believed their intellectual property was being put at
risk.

It's no longer just a question of publishing flaw details against a
publisher's wishes. It's risking a jail sentence.
Late last year a researcher in the United Kingdom ignited Sybase's ire after
discovering vulnerabilities in the company's software. Security company
Next-Generation Security Software was ready to publish the findings. But
then Sybase's lawyers let it be known they would consider that to be a
breach of Sybase's software license agreement. Publishing plans got put on
hold until this week, when the two sides finally sorted things out.

CEO John Chen told me it never came down to Sybase using the DMCA as a legal
cudgel. "Look, my product is better because of them," he said. Chen claims
Sybase simply wanted more time to first inform its clients there was a
patch. "I wanted to let them get up to speed, and then if you want to
publish, I'll endorse that," he said. Sybase finally reversed course and
decided this week not to sue.

Fair enough. But how long before Sybase or some other company again finds
itself in a similar spot but this time can't--or won't--work out a
compromise? The fact is that it's open season on vulnerability researchers,
and the DMCA is the legal equivalent of a barrel of buckshot.

The disconnect is that these folks are getting nailed for doing their job.
It's no longer just a question of publishing flaw details against a
publisher's wishes. It's risking a jail sentence.

So far the courts have ruled for the defense in the DMCA-related arguments
brought before them. But winning strings eventually get snapped. Sometime
soon, code researchers may need to decide whether they are ready to martyr
themselves for the cause of free speech.


Copyright �1995-2005 CNET Networks, Inc. All rights reserved.




You are a subscribed member of the infowarrior list. Visit
www.infowarrior.org for list information or to unsubscribe. This message
may be redistributed freely in its entirety. Any and all copyrights
appearing in list messages are maintained by their respective owners.

Reply via email to