September 7, 2024

Discovery vs. Creation

Last week I had yet another DMCA debate, this time at the Chicago International Intellectual Property Conference. Afterward, I had an interesting conversation with Kathy Strandburg of DePaul Law School, about the different mindsets of DMCA supporters and opponents.

DMCA supporters seem to think of security technology as reflecting the decisions of its creators, while opponents (including me) think of technological progress in terms of discovery.

Two examples may help illustrate this distinction. First, consider the inclusion of a spell checker in Microsoft Word. This is a decision that Microsoft made. There is no law of nature saying that word processors must include spell checkers, but Microsoft evaluated the pros and cons and then decided to do it that way.

Second, consider Einstein’s statement that E equals MC-squared. Einstein didn’t decide that E should equal MC-squared, he discovered it. E had always been equal to MC-squared, and it would continue to do so regardless of what Einstein said or did. He didn’t create that fact; he was simply the first one to figure out that it was true.

I tend to think of computer security as a process of discovery. If I figure out that a certain system is insecure, that is a discovery. I didn’t make the system insecure; it was always insecure and all I did was to point out that fact. Nothing I did could make such a system secure, just as nothing Einstein did could have made E equal MC-cubed.

DMCA supporters sometimes seem to think of computer security as being the result of a collective decision by experts. It is as if we all, by simply acting as though a system were secure, could make it really be secure. If you think this way, then deciding to make a widely deployed technology insecure would indeed be a stupid and wasteful decision, and it might sensibly be banned. But if you think this way, then in my view you don’t really understand computer security.

When you’re making a film, or writing a song, or drafting a statute, or negotiating a contract, you’re making decisions. It might be natural for people who make films, songs, statutes, or contracts to try to apply their understanding of their own fields to the world of technology. They can decide that such an approach makes sense; but ultimately they will discover that it does not.

Miller on DMCA and DVD Reviews

Ernest Miller at LawMeme explains why there is so little fair use in DVD reviews.

Adobe Files DMCA Challenge

Adobe has filed a federal lawsuit seeking a declaratory judgment that its Acrobat product does not violate the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions. (Here’s Adobe’s press release. I don’t have a link to the court papers yet.)

Here is the story, as far as I can tell at this point:
Any TrueType-compatible font can be labeled with bits saying whether permission is granted to embed the font into documents. Adobe Acrobat apparently does not always obey the bits’ commands. Adobe says they have good reasons for this, and that in any case Acrobat’s use of fonts does not infringe any copyright. The other party (International Typeface Corporation, or ITC) says that Acrobat is a DMCA-violating circumvention device.

It’s way to early to speculate about the merits of Adobe’s case. But there is some karmic justice in the fact that Adobe, which kicked off the Sklyarov/Elcomsoft DMCA mess, now finds itself on the other end of a DMCA threat.

Apple Uses DMCA Threat Against Competing Product

Declan McCullagh at news.com reports on Apple’s use of a DMCA threat to force a useful product off the market.

Apple’s iDVD application allows the user to burn DVDs – but only on Apple-brand drives. A DVD drive vendor called Other World Computing shipped its drives with a “DVD Enabler” program that modified iDVD so that it could burn DVDs on any FireWire-connected drive.

Apple was displeased, so it used various threats, including one based on the DMCA, to convince Other World to back down and yank DVD Enabler from the market. According to the story, the main reason for Other World’s quick backdown was a general desire to stay on Apple’s good side. But clearly Apple thought the DMCA threat would have some impact, or they wouldn’t have made it.

Apple’s use of the DMCA here has nothing to do with preventing copyright infringement, since Apple-brand drives can make infringing copies just as easily as other brands can. The real motive is to weaken competition in the market for Mac-compatible DVD drives.

Response to Declan's DMCA Piece

Declan McCullagh misses the boat at least twice in his August 19th
column concerning the potential impact on computer science research of
the Digital Millennium Copyright Act [“Debunking DMCA myths,” c|net
News.Com, http://news.com.com/2010-12-950229.html].

First, the DMCA has two arms: one that prohibits devices that circumvent
copy protection, and one that prohibits acts of circumvention. The
research conducted by Professor Felten and his colleagues took place
prior to the time when the “acts of circumvention” provisions became
effective in October 2000. Thus, these provisions did not apply to that
research. However, there is little doubt in the legal community that
this research, and similar research, would be illegal under the “acts of
circumvention” provisions. Declan fails to recognize this arm of the
DMCA in his column.

Second, the chilling effect of the DMCA cannot be described by the
probability of conviction alone. One must also consider the magnitude
of the exposure if convicted. Because the “acts of circumvention”
provisions of the DMCA were not in effect at the time of the Felten
research, the probability of an adverse judgment was indeed small.
However, a group of highly respected legal consultants told Felten’s
employer that the cost of an adverse judgment could be truly enormous.
The combination of these two factors had a very substantial chilling
effect. (It is also the case that two individuals were likely to lose
their jobs if the paper was published. This illustrates the human
dimension of the chilling effect.)

Other issues, on which we shall not elaborate, include the
anti-dissemination provisions of the DMCA, and the civil (in addition to
criminal) provisions.

It is disruptive to the progress of research when scientists must first
consult with attorneys to determine if previously legitimate research
might be in violation of the DMCA. We are happy to agree with Declan
that “The DMCA is … an egregious law … and should be unceremoniously
tossed out by the courts.”

Edward W. Felten
Princeton University

Edward D. Lazowska
University of Washington; Co-chair, Computing Research Association
Government Affairs Committee

Barbara Simons
Co-chair, ACM US Public Policy Committee