09 F9: A Simple Way to Stand Up Against the Latest Assault on Digital Rights
By Annalee Newitz, AlterNet
Posted on May 22, 2007

I have a number, and therefore I am a free person. That's the message
more than a million protesters across the Internet have been
broadcasting throughout the month of May as they publish "09 F9 11 02
9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0," the 128-bit number familiarly
known as 09 F9. Why would so many people create MySpace accounts using
this number, devote a Wikipedia entry to it, post it thousands of
times on news-finding site Digg, share pictures of it on photo site
Flickr, and emblazon it on T-shirts?

They're doing it to protest kids being threatened with jail by
entertainment companies. They're doing it to protest bad art, bad
business, and bad uses of good technology. They're doing it because
they want to watch Spider-Man 3 on their Linux machines.

In case you don't know, 09 F9 is part of a key that unlocks the
encryption codes on HD-DVD and Blu-ray DVDs. Only a handful of DVD
players are authorized to play these discs, and if you don't own one
of them, you can't watch Spidey in high definition -- even if you
purchase the DVD lawfully and aren't doing any copying. For many in
the tech community, this encryption scheme, known as the Advanced
Access Content System (AACS), felt like a final slap in the face from
an entertainment industry whose recording branch sues kids for
downloading music and whose movie branch makes crappy sequels that you
can't even watch on your good Linux computer (you guessed it -- not
authorized).

When a person going by the screen name arnezami managed to uncover and
publish the AACS key in February, other people immediately began
reposting it. They did it because they're media consumers angry about
the AACS and they wanted Hollywood and the world to know that they
don't need no stinkin' authorized players. That's when the Motion
Picture Association of America and the AACS Licensing Administrator
(AACS LA) started sending out the cease and desist letters. Lawyers
for the AACS LA argued that the number could be used to circumvent
copy protection measures on DVDs and posting it was therefore a
violation of the anticircumvention clauses in the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act. They targeted blogs and social networks with cease and
desists, even sending notice to Google that the search engine should
stop returning results for people searching for the AACS key (as of
this writing, Google returns nearly 1.5 million pages containing it).

While some individuals complied with the AACS LA, in many cases
community sentiment was so overwhelming that it was impossible to
quell the tide of hexadecimal madness. Popular news site Digg tried to
take down articles containing the number, and for a while it appeased
the AACS LA. But Digg is a social network whose content is determined
by millions of people, and as soon as Digg staffers took down one
number, it would pop up in hundreds of other places. At last Digg's
founder, Kevin Rose, gave up and told the community that if Digg got
sued, it'd go down fighting. Many other sites, such as Wikipedia and
Wired.com, deliberately published the number in articles, daring the
AACS LA to sue them. Sites like MySpace and LiveJournal are also rife
with the number -- like Digg, these sites are made up entirely of user
content, and it would be practically impossible for administrators to
scrub the number out.

The AACS key protests have become so popular because they reach far
beyond the usual debates over copyright infringement. This isn't about
my right to copy movies -- it's about my right to play movies on
whatever machine I want to. The AACS scheme is the perfect planned
obsolescence generator. It will absolutely force people to upgrade
their existing DVD players because soon they won't be authorized to
play new DVDs. Even worse, the AACS scheme allows movie companies to
revoke authorized status for players. Already, the AACS LA has revoked
the authorized status of the WinDVD media player, so anybody who
invested in WinDVD will have to reinvest in a new player -- at least,
until that player's authorized status is revoked too.

The AACS, more than any other digital rights management scheme, has
revealed that the Hollywood studios have formed a cartel with
electronics manufacturers who will do anything to suck more money out
of the public. If you want to watch lawfully purchased movies, the
only sane thing to do is post the number. Stand up and be counted.

http://www.alternet.org/story/52242/



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