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This site is dedicated to raising awareness in regards to DVD playing on personal computers and the CSS protection scheme. |
----- Forwarded message from Rick Moenback to OpenDVD.org----- Date: Wed, 29 Dec 1999 12:50:34 -0800 From: Rick Moen To: bray@globe.com Subject: What DeCSS is and isn't X-Mailer: Mutt 1.0i Dear Hiawatha: After coming back from the DVD DCC hearing in San Jose (which was interesting, and the judge will issue his decision this afternoon), I came across your _Globe_ piece, "Web sites sued for DVD piracy". There are a few things you ought to know, for further coverage: You wrote: "At issue is the question of whether Web site operators can help distribute a piece of software that can defeat the security system built into millions of DVDs, thus enabling people to make illegal copies." Um, no. DeCSS isn't _relevant_ to copying. Period. I will explain. You can copy a movie (or other) DVD on Linux as follows: Install the UDF filesystem driver (a beta). Connect your DVD player to your machine's SCSI port. Insert DVD disc. Mount the filesystem. Do an "ls" (directory command). You will now see a directory of extremely, obscenely large (many gigs' worth) files, one or more of which are encrypted MPEGs. Those MPEGs are the movie(s). Copy the DVDs filesystem (or even just the individual MPEG files, actually). Burn a new one onto recordable DVD media, using a read-write player. Congratulations, your copy is 100% as usable as the original. By the way, you've just spent something like $50 on raw media cost, plus the cost of your read-write player, your expertise and trouble, and a fearsome amount of your time. Realising this, you feel properly sheepish, because you could have bought that second copy of _The Matrix_ in a nice jewel box with liner notes for much less time, trouble, and money. With better quality control, and a warranty. So, what's DeCSS about? It's for _viewing_, not copying. It lets you read an encrypted MPEG, from either a legit DVD or a bootleg one you made at ridiculous expense, on the operating system of your choice, on the continent of your choice. The DVD consortium is applying pressure because it has (already) lost control over where and on what machines you read your legitimately- bought DVD discs on. DeCSS allows users on Linux, FreeBSD, BeOS, and many other operating systems gain access to the DVD movies they paid for, an ability they never had before October 1999. It also means the DVD trade associations can no longer prevent such users from playing a European DVD in Boston, or a US-made DVD in Japan. The industry tries to prevent exactly such usage. One might argue that the industry had a right to prevent all of those uses. I wouldn't contest that -- but just would point out that the entertainment industry chose an incompetently designed and implemented method to enforce its will, an algorithm that was broken with very little effort. Indeed, if anyone might have good cause to sue in this picture, it's the MPAA: against the DVD Copy Control Association Inc., and whoever else concocted this technical travesty in the first place. And, more to the point, those issues have nothing at all -- zip, nada -- to do with "illegal copying" or "DVD piracy". I'd appreciate it if you'd so inform your readers. Thanks very much. -- Cheers, "I'd say it's latke-esque. Sort of like Rick Moen Kafka-esque, only less depressing." rick (at) linuxmafia.com -- Deirdre Saoirse ----- End forwarded message -----
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