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#16 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#17 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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I've been poking around in the DMCA, and my sense of the matter is that the Act is not aimed at the individual reader who strips the DRM for purposes of reading a book he has paid for. I'm pretty sure that if you are competent enough to put together your own DRM stripping program, and use it entirely for your own personal use on your own computer or reader, you will not be liable for either criminal or civil penalties. And having said that, I also think that if someone gives you or even sells you a program to strip the DRM, you still won't have a problem, although the person who gives or sells it to you could, particularly if it's a sale. This interpretation is reinforced for me by the following statement in a Wikipedia article on the DMCA: The arrest of Russian programmer Dmitry Sklyarov in 2001, for alleged infringement of the DMCA, was a highly publicized example of the law's use to prevent or penalize development of anti-DRM measures.[12] While working for Elcomsoft in Russia, he developed The Advanced eBook Processor, a software application allowing users to strip usage restriction information from restricted e-books, an activity legal in both Russia and the United States.[13] Paradoxically, under the DMCA, it is not legal in the United States to provide such a tool. The problem with the DMCA, from our perspective as consumers, is that it makes us think that we can't do things that we really can, in no small part because we don't really know our rights, but we do know what the costs of defending those rights are. If I run across a DRM stripping program that works on a mac, I won't have any concerns about using it to make any book I buy readable on my 505. As far as I can tell, there's nothing (yet) to legally prevent you from doing whatever you want to make your own ebook readable on your own computer. |
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#18 |
Grand Sorcerer
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#19 |
Wizard
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#20 |
Holy S**T!!!
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It is a crime under the DMCA which states:
"No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title." Since stripping DRM is circumventing the DRM, it is definitely covered under the DMCA. No question about it. Does that mean that anyone is going to actually prosecute an individual who strips DRM from a digital book for their own use? Highly unlikely. |
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#21 |
Grand Sorcerer
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It is a bit of a gray law. But to say removing DRM is "definitely not a crime" under the DMCA is a bit suspect. Considering the whole point OF the DMCA is specifically to criminalize creating or using tools to circumvent DRM.
BOb |
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#22 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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Here's the provision of the DMCA which says what constitutes a crime under the law: ‘‘§1204. Criminal offenses and penalties ‘‘(a) IN GENERAL.—Any person who violates section 1201 or 1202 willfully and for purposes of commercial advantage or private financial gain— ‘‘(1) shall be fined not more than $500,000 or imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or both, for the first offense; and ‘‘(2) shall be fined not more than $1,000,000 or imprisoned for not more than 10 years, or both, for any subsequent offense. Now, unless you've got some other provision of the DMCA under which someone can be convicted of a crime, it's not a crime. What I think you are doing, and what most everyone seems to be doing, is confusing civil lawsuits with criminal prosecutions. So, the question is, if you strip your DRM for personal use, can you be sued? Assuming, of course, that anyone ever finds out about that. The answer to that question is sure, you can be sued, but it appears to me that you would win the lawsuit. I'm not quite as certain about that as I am about the crime part, because the crime part is a slam dunk, while the part about being successfully sued is based on my reading of the entire statue and trying to figure out what is covered and what is not. I'm a tax lawyer, not a copyright lawyer, but in reading the entire statue, it appears to me that it very carefully avoids addressing private users, even for civil lawsuits, if they are acting within the boundaries of "fair use," which of course includes reading your own book, bought & paid for. I don't expect anyone who isn't a lawyer to understand how to read this statue and come to the conclusion I have, and I will gladly defer to an intellectual property lawyer who says I am wrong on this point, but my conclusion is based on the way that the exclusions in the law are phrased. Rather than try to educate everyone in how to read like a lawyer, I will refer to something that is analogous to what I mean, and which most everyone here, being readers, will understand: What we have here is an instance of the dog in the night: Gregory (Scotland Yard detective): "Is there any other point to which you would wish to draw my attention?" Holmes: "To the curious incident of the dog in the night-time." Gregory: "The dog did nothing in the night-time." Holmes: "That was the curious incident." In other words, it is what is omitted in the exclusions that tells me that private stripping of DRM is not forbidden by the DMCA. But of course, it is in the interests of Big Publishing that everyone assume that you can never, ever, under any circumstance, not even to save a drowning baby, strip their precious DRM from the book they graciously let you read on the ereader that you have to buy from them. So they are happy to let you continue to think that to strip the DRM on a book you have bought is a crime under all circumstances. It ain't. Do NOT conclude from this, however, that you can take your newly stripped ebook and upload it to the forum, freely, and without desiring commercial advantage or financial gain. You can't do that legally, but the reason is not the DMCA, at least not on your end. It's the general copyright law. I am not going to take the time to check the copyright statutes about criminal penalties, so you can take your chances on going to prison, but I know you can be sued, and you will lose. Last edited by Harmon; 03-19-2009 at 10:08 PM. Reason: But, you may ask, what about uploading? |
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#23 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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That's what has happened with the DMCA. It starts off with this Draconian statement, then it turns out that you won't actually go to jail unless you are trying to make some bucks off the process, because that turns out to be the crime. |
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#24 |
eBook Enthusiast
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But, with respect Harmon, if you remove DRM to avoid having to re-purchase a book for a different type of device, then you are doing so for reasons of "private financial gain", and hence you are committing an offence under the DMCA.
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#25 | |
King of the Bongo Drums
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![]() Secondly, when you unpack the phrase "commercial advantage or private financial gain" it should be clear that what Congress was trying to do is criminalize the act of unDRMing a file and then trying to profit off of it in some fashion. If Congress had wanted to adopt your meaning, all they had to do was use the words "commercial or private financial advantage." Arguably, that would stretch to the meaning you suggest. But instead, they used "commercial advantage or private financial gain." The first phrase is aimed at business or business-like activity. The second is aimed at non-business activity. The first does not require any gain - there's a crime even if the activity has a loss, or is not intended to make money per se, but to somehow secure a better position visavis your competitors. The second does require gain. There's a crime even if there's not a business, as long as there is a gain. As long as you are acting as a private person - that is, not in the context of a commercial activity - and are not attempting to profit by the stripping, you can strip DRM of books you own all you want, as far as the DMCA criminal provisions are concerned. In fact, it appears to me that you can do it as a favor for your friends as well. Depending on what you do & how you do it, you might run afoul of other copyright law, but not of the DMCA. On the civil side of the DMCA, you could be sued, but I think you'd win, because the mere stripping of DRM is not enough. The plaintiff has to prove injury resulting from your stripping. As long as the stripping is within the context of "fair use," I don't see how a court could find any "injury." Removing DRM in order to read a book that you own is not in any way an injury to anyone. The more I read this statute, the clearer this becomes. The other provisions of the law are aimed at setting up exceptions for activities that might otherwise fall under the concept of "commercial advantage" or where there might arguably be an injury under normal copyright law. The most interesting part is where the statute sets up a procedure for what regulators call a "safe harbor" by the Librarian of Congress. This appears to me to give the Librarian the ability to codify a good deal of copyright law. I must confess that if you accept that DRM is a good thing - which I don't - then the DMCA is a pretty reasonable piece of legislation. The place where it falls down is in failing to state explicitly that it is not aimed at the private user stripping DRM for strictly personal purposes. |
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#26 |
Connoisseur
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#27 |
Wizard
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Thank You Harmon for a very interesting insight.
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#28 | |
eBook Enthusiast
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#29 |
Wizard
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#30 |
Guru
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Make that 3! I bought the Kindle with every intention of shopping anywhere I want and to use all purchases in both my Sony & kindle. I was doing that when I had only the Sony. I've not bought a book from the Sony store since January 2007, which is after initial month of owning it. I bought only Lit files for a long time and then I started buying Mobi files when I wanted a book and could not find it in Lit format. So I learned about PID & mobideDRM, all without yet owning a Mobi device. I would NOT shop at the Amazon store, no matter how good the prices are if I could not liberate my book. I've returned just 2 ebook purchases to Amazon and that's because they turned out to be Topaz and bought them at a higher cost at BooksonBoard.
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