Hollywood titans argue that a DVD ripper by RealNetworks presents a huge threat to film studios' revenue and have taken the software company to federal court over the issue. RealNetworks argues that its DVD-copying software is legitimate. The federal judge presiding over the trial is the same one who ordered the shutdown of Napster in 2000.RealNetworks
was in federal court in San Francisco
on April 24, squaring off against Hollywood attorneys
over RealDVD, a $29.99 software application that allows DVDs to be copied onto
a users hard drive. Attorneys representing the major film studios argue that
allowing RealDVD to be sold unchecked will undermine the $20 billion DVD
market.
Lawyers for the studios argue that RealDVD violates the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act, which says that software that could be utilized for digital
piracy is illegal. RealNetworks, on the other hand, argues that its software
serves the legitimate purpose of letting users make a single copy of a DVD
that they already own.
According to the Associated Press, RealNetworks asserts that RealDVD leaves
DVDs' anti-piracy encryption untouched, separating it from other software
deliberately used for digital piracy.
The studios, however, remain unswayed by this argument.
"RealNetworks acted in bad faith by taking a license to build a DVD
player and instead built a copier that violates the circumvention rules of the
Digital Millennium Copyright Act by enabling consumers to copy DVDs
illegally," Greg Goeckner, lawyer for the MPAA,
told the Associated Press. "Our objective is to get the illegal choices
out of the marketplace and instead focus constructively with the technology
community on bringing in more innovative and flexible legal options for
consumers to enjoy movies."
An
eWEEK review of RealDVD found that the program contains some useful filtering
features that let users view films by genre, cast, director or rating, and contains
all the standard-issue DVD-playing features.
However, RealNetworks also "added an additional layer of DRM on top of
the CSS that it retains from the native DVD."
This means that movies are backed up onto the hard drive they are saved on,
preventing the film from being watched on multiple PCs. Limitations were
apparently made to the softwares portability to prevent it from suffering the
wrath of the movie industry.
The movie industry, though, decided to wrath anyway. In October, a U.S.
District judge ordered sales of RealDVD halted a few days after the softwares
release, saying that despite the MPAA-appealing
measures, it violated digital privacy laws.
A ruling in the current federal case is not expected immediately. According
to reports, the presiding judge is the same one who ordered Napster, the
once-immensely popular file-sharing service, to be shut down in 2000.
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