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Hollywood targets DVD-copying upstart

Daniel Fleshbourne   on 20 December 2002 - 19:10 · 5 comments & 217 views

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The movie industry is training its legal guns on a new target: a small start-up that lets people make copies of their DVDs. On Thursday, seven major movie studios filed a countersuit in federal court in San Francisco, claiming that 321 Studios is violating the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by selling its DVD Copy Plus and DVD-Xcopy programs. The studios filed the claim in response to 321 Studios, which in April took the unusual step of asking a federal court to declare its copying products legitimate because they would allow people to make personal copies of DVDs they already own--a process the company claimed is allowed under a doctrine known as fair use. 321's president said at the time that he asked for the legal opinion after reading press accounts in which the studios threatened the company

The studios did not follow through on those threats until Thursday, a few weeks after 321 Studios released DVD-Xcopy, which allows people to make an exact duplicate of a DVD. Copy Plus, which went on sale last year, results in lower-quality copies. In the complaint, the studios said that 321 representatives "market and sell this illegal software and exhort and encourage the copying of (the studios' encryption-protected) copyrighted motion pictures that are embodied on DVDs." The studios claimed 321's actions caused them "grave and irreparable harm."

The studios are seeking an injunction prohibiting 321 from selling or manufacturing its DVD-copying products and are asking the court to order the company to turn over to the studios "all computer disks, computer drives and other physical objects embodying all, or any part," of DVD Copy Plus and DVD-Xcopy so they can be destroyed.

View: The full story
News source: c|net


Microsoft denies infringing any patent, while Chicago-based Judge Zagel said he was still trying to, "determine how the browser and operating system work together in identifying and locating an executable application.".

Internet Explorer commands a 95 per cent share of the browser market, research published this week suggests

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#1 Fotix on 20 Dec 2002 - 19:14
There was an act passed in 1992 that enabled fair use copying of pretty much anything. The DMCA runs contrary to it. Here comes the legal conundrum. Oh well, time to go see Lord of the Rings II and give the MPAA more money to sue and take rights away...
#2 jonMEGA on 20 Dec 2002 - 21:12
Hey they (321 studios) are based from St. Louis, MO where I'm from.
#3 Dashel on 20 Dec 2002 - 21:22
This will be an interesting decision because either way they will probably have to invalidate one of the prior rulings to one extent or another. Hehe, so am I. Go Blues!
#4 havyn on 20 Dec 2002 - 22:40
i still don't understand how MPAA is suing a software company. the company develops and sells software, it doesn't provide movies for free, and it doesn't harm MPAA in any way. i'm surprised the courts even bother to rule on this garbage.
#5 killzone on 21 Dec 2002 - 00:19
Theyre a bit late. I got all of thier software as do Im sure alot of people

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