 George "geohot" Hotz, circa 2007 (Source: ISEF on FlickrGeorg)
Sony plans to put the DMCA amendments and its foes legal budgets to the test
About a
week and a half ago, George "geohot" Hotz and the team of firmware
hackers dubbed fail0verflow (Hector Cantero, Sven Peter, "Bushing,"
"Segher," and other anonymous members) released the root keys for the Sony PS3 via
a smart phone hack. Those keys allow virtually any app to be run on the
PS3, a critical step to re-enabling the Linux support that Sony
abandoned.
Needless to say Sony was less than enthused. Claiming the release would
promote piracy; Sony yesterday filed a restraining order [blog]
against geohot and the members of fail0verflow citing Digital Millennium
Copyright Act, the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act violations and copyright
violations.
Today they followed up that up with a full copyright infringement lawsuit [Scribd]. The suit was filed in San
Francisco District Court.
Sony claims that geohot, in circumvent its copy protections. It says that
the geohot and the other named defendants:
- Violated section §1201 of the Digital
Millennium Copyright Act, which forbids bypassing access control measures;
- Violated section §1030 the
federal Computer Fraud and Abuse Act, which forbids accessing computers
without authorization;
- Contributed to copyright
infringement in violation of section §501 of the Copyright Act
- Violated trespass, "common
law misappropriation", breach of contract, "tortious
interference with contractual relations" as per Penal Code §502 of
the California Comprehensive Computer Data Access and Fraud Act (commonly
referred to as the California Computer Crime Law)
We're not
lawyers, but as Jay-Z says we "know a little bit". But all of
these charges seem pretty tenuous.
The DMCA accusation is weakened by the Library of Congress's recent addition the DMCA, stating that in the
cell phone arena it is permissible to:
Computer programs that enable wireless telephone handsets to
execute software applications, where circumvention is accomplished for the sole
purpose of enabling interoperability of such applications, when they have been
lawfully obtained, with computer programs on the telephone handset.
If it is
permissible for cell phone apps, it seems unclear why it wouldn't be similarly
permissible for gaming consoles.
Similarly, the Computer Fraud accusation seems tenuous, given that geohot and
others reportedly owned legally purchased PS3s and thus should be authorized to
access them.
Lastly, the California Computer Crime Law violations seem somewhat hard to
prove, given that Sony will have to establish their business was being
significantly harmed via the distribution of the root keys.
Still Sony is a company with a lot of money and power so geohot, et al better
retain top notch legal aid and better find someone(s) (quickly) to bankroll
that legal campaign. Of course, given all of his clashes with Apple,
we're guessing Mr. Hotz has a pretty good lawyer on retainer.
"Google fired a shot heard 'round the world, and now a second American company has answered the call to defend the rights of the Chinese people." -- Rep. Christopher H. Smith (R-N.J.)
|
Most Popular ArticlesHigh School Student Creates Storage Device that Can Charge in 20 Seconds May 20, 2013, 6:51 AM Apples Tries to Use Decade-Old Patents to Ban Samsung Galaxy S IV May 22, 2013, 3:00 PM NASA Awards $125,000 Grant for 3D Printed Food on Long-Term Space Travels May 21, 2013, 1:32 PM Microsoft Announces Voice-Controlled "Xbox One" May 21, 2013, 12:55 AM Cure For Baldness Could Be on Store Shelves within Two Years May 22, 2013, 8:29 AM
|