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DMCA Means You Can't Delete Files On Your PC? 511

DragonHawk writes "According to Wired, John Stottlemire found a way to print duplicate coupons from Coupons.com by deleting some files and registry entires on his PC. Now he's being sued for a DMCA violation. He says, 'All I did was erase files or registry keys.' Says a lawyer: '[The DMCA] may cover this. I think it does give companies a lot of leverage and a lot of power.' So now the copyright cartels are saying that not only can we not copy things on our computers, but we can't delete things on our computers? Time to buy stock in Seagate."
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DMCA Means You Can't Delete Files On Your PC?

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  • Wow (Score:4, Insightful)

    by devilradish ( 637660 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:43PM (#20300409)
    yet another abuse of the DMCA and its way too much power to copyright holders that the general public won't notice or care about. It's enough to make me want to stop being an obssessive nerd.
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:44PM (#20300417)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by whoever57 ( 658626 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:56PM (#20300519) Journal

      Isn't there some fraud possibility? If the coupons have a limit (2 per person) that you agree to by checking a box or whatever?
      If there is, I can't find it on their site. It looks like they try to use technical measures only. In any case, how is this a DMCA violation? At best it is a contract or license violation.
      • by arth1 ( 260657 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @01:34AM (#20301433) Homepage Journal
        It doesn't have to be there. It's not a contractual obligation you agree to -- it's copyrights, which are legal whether you agree to them or not. If I say you can make a maximum of N copies of something I've written, that's my prerogative as copyright holder.
        There's diddley squat you can do about it -- if you make more copies, and it's not for fair use, library preservation or any other purpose specifically exempted by law, you can not legally make more copies than what I permit. Your agreement is not required.
        • by 1u3hr ( 530656 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @04:10AM (#20302177)
          If I say you can make a maximum of N copies of something I've written, that's my prerogative as copyright holder.

          Copyright is designed to protect artistic and scholarly works. Not coupons. A few generic phrases used in millions of similar forms would not be protected by copyright. Possibly if there was some elaborate artwork included in the background that might be copyright. But damages would be difficult to assess, if any.

          I think it's an abuse of process. If he's guilty of anything, it's fraud, and they should try to make that stick instead of using a law that was never designed to apply in this situation.

      • by kripkenstein ( 913150 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @04:56AM (#20302317) Homepage
        According to the DMCA [wikisource.org],

        No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.
        The coupon is the copyrighted work; the software that only allows it to be printed once is the technological measure; the circumvention is tricking the software so that it prints multiple copies. Perhaps we should trust the lawyers quoted in TFA, it seems like this might indeed be a DMCA violation.

        God, what an awful law.
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by cp.tar ( 871488 )

          So, basically, deleting cookies (which some people have done automatically when they close their browser window) is circumventing a technological measure.

          What's next? Next thing you know, no more cleaning the /tmp on reboot; I bet something could be circumvented that way.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        Sec. 1201. Circumvention of copyright protection systems

        * (a) Violations Regarding Circumvention of Technological Measures.
        o (1)
        + (A) No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title.
        --DMCA

        That's why it's illegal, because he's
        • by mhall119 ( 1035984 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @09:07AM (#20304021) Homepage Journal
          I think the complaint is that the act of deleting files on your own computer should not be considered an act of circumvention. It borders on making it illegal to uninstall software. I can see the next round of spyware/adware claiming that anti-malware software violates the DMCA.

          Now, this idiot went and posted a program to do all this on the internet, and so he'll probably get nailed with distributing a circumvention mechanism, which is completely different than you personally deleting files, so the article is still pure troll.
    • by sumdumass ( 711423 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:59PM (#20300537) Journal
      It appears that you have to install software that only allows you to print so many coupons. This guy developed software that erases the tracking thing that limits you and allows you to take more then they gave you.

      I would say yes there is fraud going on here. When using this program you are intentionally misrepresenting yourself to the suppliers of the coupons after already agreeing to their terms for receiving them. The DMCA part comes in because he wrote a program that allows you to defraud the providers by bypassing their technology that allows them to control access to the coupons. Not because deleting things are illegal. You could delete the stuff and not use the program to get coupons again and never run into this DMCA problem.

      Note, this isn't an endorsement of the DMCA. It just isn't the problem in how the story represents it.
      • by drmerope ( 771119 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:35PM (#20300801)

        Sorry, but an anti-circumvention argument is a stretch.

        No person shall circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title. The prohibition contained in the preceding sentence shall take effect at the end of the 2-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this chapter. -- USC Title 17, Section 1201(a)(1)(A)

        Now, is a technological measure that can be defeated by merely deleting files or removing registry keys "effective"?

        I think not. The real gem is why companies would prefer to use the DMCA: fraud is a civil matter requiring them to pursue the case on their own dime. Conversely, the DMCA allows for criminal prosecution. Whether or not the government is likely to play ball, the threat of such action improves the likelihood of "fear-for-your-life" settlement from the defendant.

        • by fractoid ( 1076465 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @12:28AM (#20301099) Homepage
          You mean that copy protection crackable by magic markers [slashdot.org] is 'effective'? I think they mean 'effectively' in the sense of 'in effect', not 'with good performance'.
        • by arth1 ( 260657 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @01:39AM (#20301463) Homepage Journal
          The law was phrased badly. "Effectively" here means "in effect", not "to the fullest effect".
          If a plastic ribbon saying "STOP - POLICE LINE - DO NOT ENTER" in effect causes people to turn away, it's "effectively" stopping people, even if it's not "effective" in the sense of actually stopping someone.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          by suv4x4 ( 956391 )
          Sorry, but an anti-circumvention argument is a stretch. Now, is a technological measure that can be defeated by merely deleting files or removing registry keys "effective"?

          Imagine you sit on a platform. That's legal. I have scissors, of the paper kind, not with sharp edges. That's legal. I've placed the scissors around the rope that holds the platform, I'm trying to measure something. That's legal.

          Now an accidental twitch, I close the scissors and cut the rope. You tell, how could possibly an involuntary tw
        • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

          by MooUK ( 905450 )
          Unfortunately, the laws which are relevant specify what "effective" means. A reasonably accurate paraphrasing would be that an effective measure is one that exists. Not one that works, one that exists.

          The technological equivalent of turning a piece of paper the other way round so you have to read it upside down would count as being effective as long as I said it was. It's completely and utterly idiotic, but that's what the laws tend to state in most relevant countries, including the US and the UK.
      • by someone1234 ( 830754 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:39PM (#20300839)
        There was no key (no lock).
        Mere files and registry entries don't represent an effective encryption algorithm.
        So he didn't bypass any 'security measures'.

        What else comes next?
        They write passwords plaintext in dont_read_me.txt ???
        • by dgatwood ( 11270 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @12:03AM (#20300967) Homepage Journal

          More than that, a coupon is not copyrightable. You can say that a duplicate copy of a coupon is not to be accepted by stores, and you can refuse to honor it if a store ignores that rule, but you can't prevent people from making a million copies, as it would not qualify as a creative work by any stretch of the imagination, IMHO. You can only really prevent people from using them by specifying an "originals only" policy on the face of the coupon.

          In this case, the company can be accused of gross negligence, which pretty much gets this guy off the hook because of contributory negligence, I suspect. All the company needed to do was make their software send a unique identifier---maybe hash the computer's hard drive ID, the CPU ID, hard drive size, other things unlikely to change---to the server and keep track of it on the server side. That's very basic, trivial security to implement, and the fact that they did not do this means that not only could somebody fool it this way, but also could simply reinstall windows and get the same effect. Yeah, that's like killing a fly with a hand grenade or even a nuclear warhead, but the point is that they didn't really try at all to prevent you from getting more than one coupon.

          At worst, this person is in breach of the user agreement of the software, and thus could probably get some civil liability, maybe criminal if they stole a huge amount of money with these coupons... but probably just a civil suit for the coupon value plus penalties for violating the user agreement... assuming the company even has a record of all of the violations. Otherwise, it's probably just whatever damages they can squeeze out of this person for violating the user agreement....

          IANALBIPOOSD.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by rtb61 ( 674572 )
        How about if you install the cracking software prior to installing the coupon software. Surely under the DMCA you are implementing a security system to ensure the security and full usability of your computer so that the company that supplies the coupon software is committing a criminal act under the DMCA by trying to break your security system ;).
  • Lousy excuse (Score:5, Insightful)

    by wannabgeek ( 323414 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:45PM (#20300431) Journal
    DMCA should not cover someone deleting their files or registry keys. But his excuse that "All I did was erase files or registry keys." sounds like a false pretense. He did it for the purpose of printing duplicate coupons, and that is fraud.
    • Re:Lousy excuse (Score:5, Insightful)

      by NormalVisual ( 565491 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:59PM (#20300541)
      Then he should be charged with fraud, not copyright infringement through some twisted interpretation of an already twisted law.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by couchslug ( 175151 )
      It doesn't cover fiction either.

      Write all instructions as part of fictional stories, never describe anything as a how-to, and where appropriate, tell people the details of a process but not in a manner encouraging them to do it.
      One may buy all sorts of books on murder, both fiction and non-fiction. They are not considered tutorials. :)
    • But his excuse that "All I did was erase files or registry keys." sounds like a false pretense.

      Yeah, why don't we try this with encryption?

      "Hey, *I* didn't encrypt my data. I just performed a reversible transformation on it. It's not *my* fault if you're a fuckin' slowpoke at factoring semiprimes."

      (Yay! I got it right this time!)
  • Bureaucrat Ferris: "You honest men are such a problem and such a headache. But we knew you'd slip sooner or later . . . [and break one of our regulations] . . . this is just what we wanted."
    Rearden: "You seem to be pleased about it."
    Bureaucrat Ferris: "Don't I have good reason to be?"
    Rearden: "But, after all, I did break one of your laws."
    Bureaucrat Ferris: "Well, what do you think they're there for?" Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed? We want them broken. You'd better get it strai
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      by Danse ( 1026 )

      Bureaucrat Ferris: "Well, what do you think they're there for?" Did you really think that we want those laws to be observed? We want them broken. You'd better get it straight that it's not a bunch of boy scouts you're up against . . . We're after power and we mean it. You fellows were pikers, but we know the real trick, and you'd better get wise to it. There's no way to rule innocent men. The only power any government has is the power to crack down on criminals. Well, when there aren't enough criminals, one makes them."

      There goes the villain, monologuing again. That's when you gotta make your escape!

    • by TubeSteak ( 669689 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @02:15AM (#20301665) Journal

      This is like open container laws, speed limits, and marijuana bans - useful when the State needs to enforce _something_, and pretty much ubiquitous, so they're guaranteed to have it over pretty much everyone.
      You're really going to use open container laws and speed limits as examples of why "the State" is just trying to find things to enforce? I bet you really hate mandatory seat belt laws too.

      Open container laws are a public safety matter. You don't want drivers to be drinking in the car and the same goes for their passengers.

      Highway speed limits were originally set at 55 mph as a fuel conservation measure. Later they were raised to 65, but not higher because of public safety concerns.

      Federal highway funds were linked with both of those issues to gaurantee that States would enact those two laws.

      Neither of those examples really backs up the point you're trying to make (because they're arguably about public safety), nor do they have anything to do with the topic at hand... the DMCA.

      Quoting from Ayn Rand doth not automatically make a post insightful. Especially when you follow it up with a poorly supported argument.
      • Open container laws are a public safety matter. You don't want drivers to be drinking in the car and the same goes for their passengers.

        Oh please. Open container laws have nothing to do with public safety.

        You don't want the drivers to be drinking? That's what DUI laws are for.

        You don't want the passengers drinking? Why? WTF does that have to do with public safety?

        I am absolutely against driving under the influence, but open container laws are all about giving the police an excuse to search a vehicle

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Lonewolf666 ( 259450 )
        You're really going to use open container laws and speed limits as examples of why "the State" is just trying to find things to enforce? I bet you really hate mandatory seat belt laws too.
        Yes. Not using the seatbelt only endangers myself. As an adult, I insist on deciding for myself what risks I take.
        Unfortunately, many politicians seem to think otherwise. I disagree with that and the result is that I'm not voting for the big parties anymore (SPD and CDU in Germany, increasingly similar to US Democrats and
  • It isn't against the DCMA simply to delete something. Had he only deleted registry entries, no one would know or care.

    However, this was merely one step in copying coupons and intentionally violating the terms of the site. I'm not sure the DCMA applies to coupons, and the DCMA can be over-reaching, but I don't really have much sympathy for this guy. If you're trying to make a case against the DCMA, this seems like a poor example to choose. Surely there are better ones?
    • by arminw ( 717974 )
      .....Had he only deleted registry entries, no one would know or care.....

      If you have a Mac, you save anything to be printed to file as a PDF document. After that you can do whatever, print it as often as wanted, e-mail it etc. Is that illegal now? Will some enterprising lawyer sue Apple for making that possible?
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by QuantumG ( 50515 )
        If the license on the work says that you can only print it once and you print it twice then, yes, it is copyright infringement.

        If you then go telling the world that you did this then, yeah, expect the copyright holder to use the power the law has given him.

        I don't know why you're trying to make an incredulous argument.. copyright is by nature nonsensical.

        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          If the license on the work says that you can only print it once and you print it twice then, yes, it is copyright infringement.

          Since when is a coupon copyrightable?

      • by Sigma 7 ( 266129 )

        If you have a Mac, you save anything to be printed to file as a PDF document.

        I know this is offtopic, but Windows supports "print-to-file", which causes Windows to write a file that can later be manually copied over to a parallel-port printer (by using "copy /b file.prn lpt1" in the command prompt). Does anyone know the procedure for doing this to USB printers?

        This is just in case I find I need to print out something when not currently connected to my printer. It could be a drawing I made, or some exercise training program that is permitted to be printed (explicitly, or forced by

        • Here is a solution which is guaranteed to work: print to a PDF via PDF Creator.
        • by MLease ( 652529 )
          I don't know specifically about USB printers, but I use PrimoPDF [primopdf.com] to do my printing on my laptop, when I don't happen to have access to a physical printer. It works very nicely for me.

          -Mike
      • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

        by wvmarle ( 1070040 )

        The major difference is in the serial numbers. The method you describe equals photocopying, this was in TFA also mentioned as being an issue for coupons.com's business.

        However with the software trick, the user would be able to download completely new coupons with new, unique serial numbers - and this would supposedly be untraceable. He is really giving instructions to circumvent a copy protection mechanism, and it has been argued on /. before (sorry too lazy to dig for links) that a trick as simple as ROT1

    • However, this was merely one step in copying coupons and intentionally violating the terms of the site.
      If you would like to find the contract that limits the number of coupons to be printed by the consumer, then I could agree with you. But I can't find it and I suspect that the reason the company is trying to use the DMCA is that it (the supposed terms) does not exist.
      • It is part of the agreement of the site. The terms of the site limit the coupons, and he circumvented that.
        • It is part of the agreement of the site. The terms of the site limit the coupons
          Have you got a URL for that assertion?
    • Yeah, and copyright? Of Coupons? Really? There isn't any encryption, circumvention (other than printing more than two coupons... and that's not a copyright protection) or whatnot... and yet they're claiming copyright? At least that's what I got from TFA.

      And still, if I do it myself, knowing a little more about computers than say the average coupons.com visitor, am I guilty of copyright violations because I delete something out of my registry? Say I do it and never use the program to print more than two
      • by arth1 ( 260657 )

        Yeah, and copyright? Of Coupons? Really? There isn't any encryption, circumvention (other than printing more than two coupons... and that's not a copyright protection) or whatnot... and yet they're claiming copyright?

        Yes, they do, and they have all the rights on their side too. If I give you rights to make exactly two copies of a picture that I hold the copyrights to, and you make three, you have broken my copyrights, and I can take you to court. That's what copyright protection under law means. (In exch

        • Cutting parts of a contract out is not the same as deleting the registry key of a program... Sorry... it's MY PC... I will delete whatever the hell I want out of it... and it's not a violation of the DMCA. If it is, you'd best not use that uninstall program like Cleansweep or the Microsoft developed "reg-clean" because it might delete something you aren't allowed to. When you agreed to the EULA, I'm sure there is a clause that says about reverse-engineering and all that boilerplate, but deleting a registr
          • by arth1 ( 260657 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @01:03AM (#20301299) Homepage Journal

            Cutting parts of a contract out is not the same as deleting the registry key of a program... Sorry... it's MY PC... I will delete whatever the hell I want out of it... and it's not a violation of the DMCA. If it is, you'd best not use that uninstall program like Cleansweep or the Microsoft developed "reg-clean" because it might delete something you aren't allowed to.

            It appears that you missed the whole part about intent.

            Yes, you can delete whatever you like on your computer, but if you delete it with the intent of and for the purpose of breaking the law, you break the law. You can delete the same parts for other intents and purposes, but once it's in order to break the law, you can't use your ownership as a successful defense. I have a feeling that metaphors and similes from the tangible world are lost on you, but I'll try again with another example: You're allowed to throw away (delete) the battery from your smoke detector and empty the fire extinguisher, but if the reason you did so was to burn down the house and cash out on the insurance, that action in itself becomes illegal (even if you never got around to burning down the house). Or how about another computer example: If you delete all your tax files from your computer because you suspect you'll get audited, you're also breaking the law.
            If the intent is malicious, the action is malicious, no matter whether the same action can also be done legally.

            In this case, the intent was crystal clear. The user deleted the very specific parts that would prevent the user from printing out more copies than the copyright holder allowed, and nothing else. Please explain how this could possibly not be with bad intent.

            The DMCA probably also comes into play because it would be hard to identify just which parts to delete without unauthorised reverse engineering.
    • by Anonymous Coward
      If you're trying to make a case against the DCMA, this seems like a poor example to choose. Surely there are better ones?

      No, this is an excellent case to show why the DMCA is flawed. It rewards companies for using pathetic security measures. The policy rationale for the DMCA is that content providers will be unwilling to create or sell digital stuff without some type of legal protection because digital technology allows for such easy reproduction. Therefore, to create an incentive, the law allows creator
    • DMCA. D-M-C-A. Digital Millennium Copyright Act. Honestly, the four letter are right there in the title of the web page.
      • I'm dyslexic and tired, but thanks for correcting me regardless. I'm also pedantic, and prefer to get it right.
    • by dosboot ( 973832 )
      Circumvention itself is a crime under the DMCA. Not just using it to actually infringe. This particular case involved actual infringement but won't it define a precedent that deletion = circumvention?
  • by liftphreaker ( 972707 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:47PM (#20300449)
    From TFA, the guy was busted for "posting code and instructions that allow shoppers to circumvent copy protection on downloadable, printable coupons". Not exactly busted for simply "deleting some files" eh?
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by dwarfsoft ( 461760 )
      I hope they don't sue me for telling you all that you could Install Sandboxie (or a similar Sandbox program), install the software, print your coupons, rinse, repeat. Oh, Sandboxing programs is against DMCA? Do I not have rights over my PC anymore?

      Seriously, governments/lawyers/whomever should be shot for pushing through such retarded laws. Society is crumbling as we introduce counter-productive legislation that destroys peoples rights to their property.
    • by ben there... ( 946946 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:13PM (#20300647) Journal

      From TFA, the guy was busted for "posting code and instructions that allow shoppers to circumvent copy protection on downloadable, printable coupons". Not exactly busted for simply "deleting some files" eh?
      Ahh, the great art of coupon design. Next thing you know they'll all be sharing them and viewing them on their iPods.

    • by pembo13 ( 770295 )
      So your view is that this should illegal? How many years should he get?
    • Re: (Score:2, Interesting)

      by mosch ( 204 )
      It's comments like yours that make me realize that there is no hope for freedom in America.

      I used to have hope, but lately I've realized that a vast majority of Americans don't care about freedom at all. Not for themselves, and not for the workers in the Chinese factories that make their toys.

      Freedom is dead. Thank you for the sad reminder.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Alsee ( 515537 )
      You're right, he's not running afoul of the DMCA just for deleting some files.
      (1) He's running afoul of the DMCA for deleting some files; and
      (2) also running afoul of the DMCA for telling other people how to delete some files; and
      (3) also running afoul of the DMCA writing/distributing software that could be used to delete some files.

      The argument here is that the act of deleting a file is criminal under the DMCA, AND that telling people how to delete a file is criminal under the DMCA, AND that distributing s
  • by thouth ( 815259 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @10:51PM (#20300479)
    If I remove DRM from a file on my computer such as a MP3 I'm also breaching the DMCA, this isn't very different. Can we have less knee jerk reactions from slashdot over anything that remotely looks like we can complain about the DMCA? Articles like this just make us look bad and uninformed.
    • If I remove DRM from a file on my computer such as a MP3 I'm also breaching the DMCA, this isn't very different. Can we have less knee jerk reactions from slashdot over anything that remotely looks like we can complain about the DMCA? Articles like this just make us look bad and uninformed.

      Firstly, I hate coupons, almost as much as I hate rebates. The bother and effort required to get the coupons, clip them, and deal with people with them is insane. This being said, at one point in my history I hit the online supermarket website to print off milk coupons. As I use alot of milk, and milk was always on sale in one way or another, it was worth it. I was the only one who used the web coupon, and eventually added a better version of the bar code in Photoshop for a speedy checkout. No coupon

  • IANAL so YMMV

    That said, the mere erasure of files, etc is likely not illegal by itself.

    However . . .

    The manipulation of computer info to cheat the system is also mere manipulation of numbers, etc. This is not banning or regulating the use of arithmetic or mathematics. These are merely means to an end. It is a strawman argument.

    Which brings us to a much more valuable question

    Was the cheating of the system an honest and ethical act? or was the original coupon a crime of such a nature that stealing from crimi

  • Devil's Advocate (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:02PM (#20300563)
    Now I'm not a fan of the DMCA, but this seems like another case of computer geeks missing the forest for the trees. However you end up circumventing the DCMA, it's going to come down to a set of simple, technical, legal steps. Similarly, a gun is fired using a set of simple, technical, legal steps. Whether these steps constitute a legal or illegal actions depends on situation and intent. If I shoot somebody, frankly it doesn't matter how legal it is for me to retract my index finger half an inch. And, as the law is written, if you're circumventing the DCMA, it really doesn't matter how legal it is to delete a file on your computer.
    • by ShaunC ( 203807 ) * on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @12:46AM (#20301197)

      Similarly, a gun is fired using a set of simple, technical, legal steps.
      No. Gun laws, however restrictive they may be in the United States, are generally sane compared to the DMCA!

      I can purchase a gun; say, a Glock 19. I can purchase ammunition to fire from that gun, say, Winchester 115 grain 9mm Luger JHPs. The thing is, I can also make my own ammunition for that gun. I can buy the raw materials and load my own cartridges and create my own ~115 grain 9mm JHP bullets. And if I happen to do that, Winchester (or Federal, or anyone else who sells 9mm JHP cartridges) can't do a damned thing about it. Because there's nothing special or innovative about putting X amount of Y ingredient into Z container, and the Courts have recognized this.

      (Re)loading is a common activity here in the US-and-A, and although they do stand to lose some money, none of the well-known ammunition manufacturers would dare challenge the right of the individual gun owner to load his own. Most gun owners are going to buy new manufactured ammo. Those of us who dare load our own are of no consequence to the ammo pushers, just as those of us who block ads are of no consequence to the "Firefox lets people block my ads" camp.

      The DMCA is an entirely different beast, especially in cases like this. Here, it's as if BATF is raiding your home and saying "sorry, you can't throw away those bullets you made, even though you crafted them legally... They might be defective!" I can't delete files from my own PC? The fuck I can't, go to hell. If your method of "protecting" your assets is to determine whether or not I have a cookie set in my browser, you need to update your business model past 1999.

      Ladies and gentlemen, wake up. Have you read a news article today that referred to you as a "consumer," instead of as a "person," or an "individual," or a goddamn "human being?" Companies are continuing to attempt to limit your ability to use your own personal computer. No matter what you want to use it for. "Intellectual property" is a parasite that's going to fuck all of us but the patent trolls. And when that day comes, I hope most of us own guns and know how to load our own cartridges...
  • What did he copy? As far as I understood, he 1) deleted files that allowed him to 2) produce coupons that were *different* from any other coupons (for the SW itself guarantees that they are unique). He did not copy anything whatsoever by 1) or 2).

    You can argue that printing funny money with serial numbers different from that of any note in circulation is still a crime, even if you didn't copy the money exactly - and you are right. But he did not print funny money, he printed genuine real money on the one an
  • Actually, Western Digital is significantly more undervalued as a stock than Seagate right now. Not a knock on Seagate; just pointing it out as a value investor.
  • They are arguing that it is the intent here that matters. DMCA makes a lot of (otherwise legal) activities illegal if they are done with intent to violate copyright. IANAL
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by rossz ( 67331 )
      A lawyer friend explained to me that intent is everything, at least it used to be. Say you are in the store and pick up a candy bar, then continue shopping for the one item you went in to get. Upon discovering they were out of that item, you leave, completely forgetting about the candy bar in your hand. You aren't guilty of shoplifting because you did not intend to commit the crime. You spaced. Unfortunately, these days prosecutors don't give a shit about intent. They just want to increase their score
  • by Arceliar ( 895609 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:10PM (#20300619)
    Where exactly does circumvention of copy protection begin and end? If a person had deleted the data but not printed more coupons, would it still be circumventing copy protection?

    What if they had to format the filesystem?

    Or for that matter, what if he had bought a new computer? Can we now not buy things because it circumvents copyright, albeit inefficiently and in an extremely costly manner?

    And yes, I realize he actually got busted for posting instructions for circumvention, even providing software that does it, but they probably are charging him with the greatest charge they believe they can get a conviction for, or possibly planning to settle out of court, cause this does sound at least a little bit invasive even for the DMCA.

    In fact, lets take this a step further and make it more like what the guy did. I know I'll probably get troll flagged for this, but this is a matter of morals now.

    Anyone wanting free unlimited coupons from Coupons.Com can do so by buying a new computer for every set of coupons they create.

    There, I just told you how to circumvent it. Thereby violating the DMCA, for all of slashdot (that reads this far down) to see. Don't like it? Then sue me.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )
      I think the best comparison would be directing people to just reinstall Windows to get unlimited free coupons. With a new computer they would have to pay for each and every new system. They don't have to make any payments for every new fresh Windows install, so resetting your system that way to get more coupons for yourself wouldn't end up costing more than just buying the products at normal prices. Of course, reinstalling Windows takes a while, but the process can be streamlined a bit once you know wh
      • by Barny ( 103770 )
        Or use a system "freeze" software, or run windows in a VM (like the nifty free one from microsoft).

        All in all, the ways and means are not illegal, except when intent is shown. IANAL
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Stripe7 ( 571267 )
      What is the legality of Virtual machines, each VM instance can print coupons without deleting keys or files, then the entire VM instance can be wiped or reloaded. Is it going to be illegal to own VM software as it will be a DMCA circumvention tool now?
  • by blhack ( 921171 ) * on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:16PM (#20300683)
    I work at wired and right now some of our editors are putting together a story about an Arizona State University student being sued by Random House for covering his OWN PAPER with ink! Appearantly these jerks now think that their copyrights should extend to the very paper in your printer.
    "All i did was apply a little ink to some of my paper, is that a crime now too?" says some jackass. Clearly the book companies need a lesson on copyright violation. /just kidding //you insensative clod.
  • Is _THAT_ suddenly a DMCA violation as well?

    Then wouldn't it also be illegal to sell any tool that enables one to do such? Like Windows itself?

  • What if I got a coupon first using a virtual machine, then got a second one by using my actual host? What do they do then? Sure it seems like he did it deliberately, but what if I accidentally get a coupon from a guest OS, then the host OS thinking that I accidentally threw out the first coupon, but then use it? I can see that this kind of thing could happen on accident. I've never used coupons.com, and have no intention of going there and risk random crap getting installed on my computer.
  • While this is a Wired story, and I usually don't put much faith in the validity of anything technical they write, but this "coupons.com" sounds like your everyday malware to me. Quote TFA:

    The coupons are distributed by Mountain View, California-based Coupons Inc. through ad banners, e-mail and its website, coupons.com. To use them, consumers must install Coupons Inc.'s proprietary software. The software assigns each user's computer a unique identifier, which the company uses to track and control the consume

  • by GoldTeamRules ( 639624 ) on Monday August 20, 2007 @11:47PM (#20300897)
    Submitters should more accurately reflect the content of their stories rather than creating a misleading teaser that doesn't represent the core issue being debated here.
  • MS System Restore also deletes entries from your registry. Obviously, this violates the DMCA.
  • Oh, Please (Score:4, Insightful)

    by DynaSoar ( 714234 ) on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @12:14AM (#20301017) Journal
    "DMCA Means You Can't Delete Files On Your PC?"

    I expect to see that kind of amateur, fact evading, OMYGOD hair-on-fire hysteria from WIRED. I don't just not expect to see it on /., I expect to NOT see it on /.

    STOP IT. Use some sense and have a little editorial integrity, will you? If this is the result of lack of submissions, consider whether perhaps having fewer stories is not less damaging to your reputation than having this sort of asinine crap. I hope the reason this article was used was that you knew it'd result in a lot of sparks and smoke in the discussion, because the alternative is too depressing to contemplate. If it is, it's still not good enough.

    We really, really need the ability to mod parent articles.
    • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

      We really, really need the ability to mod parent articles.
      If we did that, anyone who is set to view +1 and up would just see an empty page.
  • I know most of us here generally use operating systems that do not require regular re-installation. However, in the Windows world, an annual (or more frequent) re-install is par for the course. If the DMCA requires that certain registry entries and files be kept, this would presumably make such re-installation illegal. Does anyone here on /. have a good method for identifying if protected files and/or registry entries exist on a machine? Does the DMCA basically mean that, in the event of virus or other malw
  • by WhiteWolf666 ( 145211 ) <[sherwin] [at] [amiran.us]> on Tuesday August 21, 2007 @08:54AM (#20303859) Homepage Journal
    What happens if you use a virtual OS session which resets to the same status each morning?

    This technology is monumentally stupid, and there's no way that he'll be "convicted", assuming he has the funding (EFF?) to go to court.

    Otherwise, he just has to settle to try and save his finances.

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