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Re: [dvd-discuss] Sen. Hatch supports remote destruction
- To: dvd-discuss(at)eon.law.harvard.edu
- Subject: Re: [dvd-discuss] Sen. Hatch supports remote destruction
- From: Lars Gaarden <larsg(at)eurorights.org>
- Date: Fri, 20 Jun 2003 12:55:03 +0200
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- References: <[email protected]> <3EF1FA78.29752.1345AD@localhost>
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[email protected] wrote:
> On 20 Jun 2003 at 1:49, Lars Gaarden wrote:
>>
>>The tool, not the knowledge.
>
> No... the knowledge where the tool was - the links were banned too.
Point. And the knowledge of the inner workings of the tool too, for
the few people out there that can grok x86 binary code.
>>Still, unless I'm missing something, no court has still determined
>>whether plain english is an illegal circumvention device or if the
>>First trumps the DMCA in this case.
>
> Plain English? This was discussed a few years ago but even an English
> description can be parsed and source code made from it. So we ban English
> parsers that create object code
Nope. The parser couldn't be banned if it was a general structured
english parser. However, the plain english description becomes a
circumvention tool once someone writes a parser and someone combines
the two.
>>With nontechnical judges, I think we really need a case concerning
>>plain english to make the judge understand the issues.
>
> I think you need a technical judge to understand the issues. Otherwise his
> ruling comes down to "I don'tunderstandthecasesoI'mdoingnothing"
Let's be realistic. How many of those do you know?
--
LarsG