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Information wants to be free.
But is a movie information? Is it data or a work of art?
With the advent of DVD recorders came the arrival of DVD decrypters. I found this shirt online as the situation was becoming nationally known.
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From August 4th 2000: "Copyleft sued over DVD code: LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - A T-shirt with the DVD encryption source code printed on its back has elicited the ire of the MPAA. The organization has added the shirt's creator, Copyleft, to the list of defendants in its lawsuit centering on the propagation of the DeCSS computer code, which cracks the encoding of DVDs. A small, New Jersey-based company, Copyleft specializes in items of interest to the "open source" sector of the technology community, who favors openly available coding for software so other programmers can improve upon or adapt it. Copyleft donates $4 for every DeCSS shirt sold to the Electronic Freedom Foundation, which is providing legal defense for Eric Corley (aka Emmanuel Goldstein) in the same lawsuit in which Copyleft now finds itself embroiled. Corley is being sued for publishing a link to the information that Copyleft printed on the controversial shirt" (Billboard, 2000).
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I bought the shirt, which then promptly became illegal. The code for decrypting the copy protection on DVDs is printed on the back of the shirt. The shirt also came with the text of the code in text file format.
Copyleft as a concept is a thing described here: COPYLEFT.
Copyleft the concept is separate from the Copyleft organization that created this T-shirt.
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The issue with the T-shirt is also well-described in a CNN article.
Also, RGTOnline has a good article.
As of 2013, the DeCSS source code and several clones can be readily obtained on the Internet.
Copyleft, which was to be found at www.copyleft.net, is defunct.
The DVD CCA is at www.dvdcca.org.
A great resource for these issues is the Electronic Freedom Foundation (EFF). The EFF is at www.eff.org.
Also, these issues are frequently written about at one of the 'Net's best blogs: BOING BOING.
Information wants to be free.
- chris tower - 1305.30 - 10:25
First time I took my shirt out of the box since I bought. Not sure what I'm going to do with it now. Downsizing after more than 20 years of accumulation. Since it's technically illegal, I just have to wear it just once. I'm just that kind of guy. :-)
ReplyDeleteI wear mine -- forest green -- regularly. But it makes me sad that I can't now get a new one.
ReplyDelete