2600 withdraws DeCSS appeal

The hacker magazine 2600 will withdraw it's appeal to the Supreme Court since they see the chances of them winning the right to post the DeCSS code were rather slim. They see they have made their point and cannot take the case any farther.

2600 was sued by eight motion picture studios in December 1999 for publishing the source code of the DeCSS software and linking to other sites providing DeCSS downloads.



DeCSS is a tool developed by Norwegian Jon Johansen for viewing DVD movies with unofficial players. DeCSS has enabled computer users to view their DVD movies on alternative platforms, such as Linux, on which licensed, commercial DVD software is not available. On the other hand DeCSS also allowed users to decrypt and copy the content of DVD-Video discs on their computer hard drives for further processing.

DeCSS did not, actually, break the DVD encryption. Rather it relied on using a decryption key from a well known DVD-player software. The DVD license dictates that this key should always be encrypted. However in this case, it was not. The key has since been labeled "untrusted" and most DVD movies cannot be viewed with the old DeCSS.

More on the topic:
The Register
2600 announcement


Written by: Jari Ketola @ 4 Jul 2002 22:54
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  • 2 comments
  • Pio2001

    What's this fuss about this obsolete program ? Everybody uses DeCSSPlus, now !

    Pio2001

    7.7.2002 13:23 #1

  • dRD

    Problem being the fact that now they (MPAA) will go after other sites that distribute similiar tools like SmartRipper, which is actually the one that everybody uses nowadays (or other vStrip/vobdec+ based tools). And check the right-hand nav bar's "top 3 software" on our site :-)

    Petteri Pyyny
    Webmaster
    http://AfterDawn.com/

    7.7.2002 14:05 #2

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