David Collier-Brown
2000-Apr-25 12:36 UTC
OFF TOPIC: Inquiry from a reporter re reverse engineering
You wrote:> I am writing a news article about the rulings in the cphack and DVD cases > and how they could impact reverse engineering in the United States. > It appears that new interpretations of fair use provisions in copyright law > could force reverse engineering offshore.[We can discuss this in detail in private email, which you may quote freely, but here's an overview for the Samba community, which isn't necessarily publishable --dave (905) 415-2849, davecb@canada.sun.com] If the "interoperability" defense is not a protection for U.S. citizens, then it is not a protection for a citizen of another country who does business with the United States: the US is perfectly free to arrest the foreign citizen if he or she ever visits the 'States, take legal action against imports from the foreign company, or even ask the foreign government to arrest and extradite the foreign citizen to the United States for trial. This, you understand, is a new and invidious form of non-tarriff barrier. To give you a concrete example, I'm a Canadian who writes books about computer protocols. If I were to write a book about undocumented features of the protocol, as a colleague has done[1], and the authors of the protocol objected[2], they could act against my publisher, close the border to me personally, by threat of arrest, and attempt to convince the Canadian government the breach of copyright was both punishable in Canada[3] and sufficiently serious to warrant extradition. This is an immediate risk in Sweden, where the government seems very willing to arrest on the basis of U.S. government representations, even though the offense alleged is not a crime in that country. In Canada, we have a tradition of cooperating with the U.S. in criminal matters, but not perhaps to the extent of arresting someone for a non-crime... However, it does mean that I, and my publisher, would not be able to write about undocumented protocols without written permission from the authors, and would not be able to use my Canadian citizenship as a protection. --dave (speaking as a private person) c-b -- 1. Luke Leighton's "DCE/RPC over SMB", published by MacMillan 2. They haven't to date: Microsoft is really nice about this, actually. 3. It isn't this year: stay tuned for further developments. -- David Collier-Brown, | Always do right. This will gratify some people 185 Ellerslie Ave., | and astonish the rest. -- Mark Twain Willowdale, Ontario | //www.oreilly.com/catalog/samba/author.html Work: (905) 415-2849 Home: (416) 223-8968 Email: davecb@canada.sun.com
Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton
2000-Apr-26 06:11 UTC
OFF TOPIC: Inquiry from a reporter re reverse engineering
dave, we do not want samba to be upheld in a test case as "a shining example of a good project that is being Done Wrong by Various Laws". the consequences of this will be that various blind eyes will suddenly be forced to be opened, and be forced to investigate possibilities in what are currently grey areas, even though we have been following very specific guidelines, to stay on the white side. i couldn't care less if some OTHER project was used as a test case in a court of law, which would probably require that the project be suspended and withdrawn from distribution WORLDWIDE, pending investigation. just not this one. thanks. luke p.s why did you send this to samba@samba.org, tell me that was a mistake, please. On Tue, 25 Apr 2000, David Collier-Brown wrote:> You wrote: > > I am writing a news article about the rulings in the cphack and DVD cases > > and how they could impact reverse engineering in the United States. > > It appears that new interpretations of fair use provisions in copyright law > > could force reverse engineering offshore.
David Collier-Brown
2000-Apr-26 12:10 UTC
OFF TOPIC: Inquiry from a reporter re reverse engineering
Luke Kenneth Casson Leighton <lkcl@samba.org> asked: | p.s why did you send this to samba@samba.org, tell me that was a | mistake, please. No, it was to catch problems like the one you raised. --dave -- David Collier-Brown, | Always do right. This will gratify some people 185 Ellerslie Ave., | and astonish the rest. -- Mark Twain Willowdale, Ontario | //www.oreilly.com/catalog/samba/author.html Work: (905) 415-2849 Home: (416) 223-8968 Email: davecb@canada.sun.com