mill4023
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Feb 16, 2005
- Messages
- 3,844
Note that that is the only court decision that has ever found that... and note how carefully proponents of access are very careful to avoid opening the door to have that case looked at again by the courts. The reason is that that case would almost surely be overturned, if the courts were given a chance. I do encourage folks to research the Fair Use issue. The more you research, the more you realize that that corruption of the law has not be supported by any previous nor subsequent court decisions.
Also note that that even legitimate Fair Use is not a defense for breaking copy protection. If something is copy protected, then copies are not permitted, no matter what. Even newspapers and television news services would have to get unprotected copies, or to make second-generation copies (point a video camera at a television while playing back the original) - they would not be allowed to break the copy protection, even though it is easy to do.
Yes, the DMCA prohibits circumventing copy protection.
The DMCA also says that nothing within it can restrict Fair Use.
I assume you are an attorney with experience in copyright law and fair use cases in particular, correct?
If you aren't, I find it laughable that you think you know the law and can predict exactly what would happen if an old case was revisited. There is no corruption of the law. The law itself came long after the doctrine of fair use was in place through precedence of court decisions. And even now that "fair use" is part of actual copyright law, it's so vaguely written, that you can't possibly make a logical argument that you know exactly what it means. It was clearly written with the intent of leaving the interpretation up to the courts.
If you read the actual text of the law, you can see that it leaves open a wide variety of possible interpretations. It basically comes down to a judge (or panel of judges) deciding what the word "fair" means. Neither your interpretation or mine is relevant.