[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [dvd-discuss] Bunner wins DeCSS trade secret appeal
- To: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Subject: Re: [dvd-discuss] Bunner wins DeCSS trade secret appeal
- From: Noah silva <nsilva(at)atari-source.com>
- Date: Mon, 5 Nov 2001 12:54:20 -0500 (EST)
- In-Reply-To: <OFF196581A.FF8C7A7B-ON88256AFB.005F731C@aero.org>
- Reply-To: dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
- Sender: owner-dvd-discuss(at)cyber.law.harvard.edu
If you publish something, it doesn't qualify for trade secret status
then. If you copyright something, you've just published it - anybody can
walk into the copyright office and read it. You can't apply for trade
secret protection on a book, etc., and it doesn't make sense to apply for
trade secret on software itself.
-- noah silva
On Mon, 5 Nov 2001, Michael A Rolenz wrote:
> Jeme's right. The time or difficulty that it takes is really irrelevant-it
>
> is a slippery slope. Reverse engineeering is allowed by law. Also, what
> would be the point of reverse engineering if the onlything that was
> allowed to be reverse engineered was trivial. (OH...boy they used bubble
> sort....let me use something better)(BTW - the court can seal records to
> protect
> trade secrets)
>
> But there is a more subtle point here. What is the
> trade secret? Is how the code works the trade secret? The
> DVDCCA would like to claim that it is. Microsoft for example would
> like to claim that ALL of windows is a trade secret yet I'd bet
> money that when I find a file, it's not doing anything other than
> sting matching the directory table. WRT to software much of what seems be
> getting put before the courts is the claim that the code itself is the
> trade secret.
>
>
>
>
> Jeme A Brelin <jeme@brelin.net>
> Sent by: owner-dvd-discuss@eon.law.harvard.edu
> 11/04/01 05:31 PM
> Please respond to dvd-discuss
>
>
> To: Openlaw DMCA Forum <dvd-discuss@eon.law.harvard.edu>
> cc:
> Subject: Re: [dvd-discuss] Bunner wins DeCSS trade secret appeal
>
>
>
> On 5 Nov 2001, David Wagner wrote:
> > I don't know. If you start from the assumption that
> > reverse-engineering object card is hugely difficult, it's not clear
> > that the legal reasoning is unreasonable.
>
> I absolutely disagree. The court shouldn't concern itself with the degree
> of difficulty or the speed with which someone accomplished a supposedly
> difficult task. This is an impediment to the gifted or skilled.
>
> > And it seems to me that the difficulty of reverse-engineering is a
> > factual matter that can be measured by specific tests: for instance,
> > testimony that it took only five or ten hours to reverse-engineer the
> > cryptographic mechanisms in Netscape Navigator 1.2, or X hours to
> > reverse-engineer CSS from publicly available DVD players.
>
> The systems and technologies (state of the art) available at the time of
> the release of Netscape 1.2 (mid 1995) versus the state of the art in 1999
> when CSS was reverse-engineered.
>
> I don't see anything wrong with a person reverse-engineering something
> that is described as incredibly difficult in a very short time and
> claiming in court, "I can show it was reverse engineered, but it is a
> newly developed process that I maintain as a trade secret."
>
> Actually, how do such things pan out in court? If someone has a secret
> process for doing something and it becomes the subject in a court case,
> how does one show the process to the court without revealing the secret to
> the competitor?
>
> J.
> --
> -----------------
> Jeme A Brelin
> jeme@brelin.net
> -----------------
> [cc] counter-copyright
> http://www.openlaw.org
>
>
>
>
>