MPAA Chief Technology Counsel Dan Robbins, said in a statement, "Responsible corporate citizens honor the contracts they sign. There is no leniency for irresponsible companies that seek to circumvent the system and operate outside of the law". The lawsuits are the latest in an MPAA campaign aimed at hardware makers after seeing some success in stopping the spread of DVD Copying Software developed by 321 studios. The MPAA uses an in-house lab to disassemble DVD hardware and other products, to check if they comply with Hollywood requirements. The difference between these lawsuits and earlier lawsuits focused on DVD copying software is these cases don’t rest on copyright law but on the contracts used to control DVD technology itself.
In order for a chipmaker to gain rights to unscramble the digital protection put on commercial DVDs, it must agree to the contract terms which would be approved by the big studios. An MPAA spokesman said they have found devices with unprotected outputs that included components from Sigma and MediaTek. The contract require DVD makers to ensure that any output plugs are protected enough to prevent high quality DVD copies being made.
Source:
News.com
Written by: James Delahunty @ 24 Aug 2004 1:13