DeCSS Creator Cleared on Appeal
Norwegian court upholds ruling for writer of code that cracks DVD copy protection.
Joris Evers, IDG News Service
An Oslo Court of Appeals has upheld a lower court's ruling clearing Jon Lech Johansen of charges related to his development and distribution of DeCSS, a software tool that can be used to crack copy protection on DVDs.
Johansen, also known as DVD Jon, was acquitted in January by the Oslo City Court. Okokrim, the Norwegian National Authority for Investigation and Prosecution of Economic and Environmental Crime, decided in March to appeal the verdict.
Okokrim had called for 20-year-old Johansen to be given a 90-day suspended jail term.
Important Precedent?
"The appeals court went through all the arguments on both sides and concluded that the city court's ruling was correct," said Halvor Manshaus, a senior associate at Advokatfirmaet Schjodt AS, who represented Johansen.
In its ruling, the appellate court states that although DeCSS can be used to make illegal copies this was not Johansen's intent, and in addition, he has not made copies in violation of intellectual property regulations, Manshaus said.
"The ruling draws up a line of demarcation between the interests of owners and distributors of intellectual property on the one side, and consumers on the other," Manshaus said. "This ruling will be an important precedent in the application of existing intellectual property regulations on digital media."
Cracking the Code
Johansen was accused of helping users get around the content scrambling system (CSS) on DVDs. He created a program called DeCSS and in 1999 made that available online. Norwegian police raided Johansen's home in January 2000 after the Motion Picture Association of America filed a complaint.
Okokrim has the option of appealing to the Norwegian Supreme Court.
With HP wireless printers, you could have printed this from any room in the house. Live wirelessly. Print wirelessly.
PCW's Mobile Life Guide
8 Useful Mobile Tools
Related Consumer Advice Articles
- Overclock Your Body With Geek Cuisine Can caffeinated chips and drinks stuffed with more herbs than you'd find in an Asian pharmacy really make you more productive? We slurped and chewed our way through lots of so-called energy food to find out.
- Give Web Users What They Really Want Most people go online with a goal in mind. Learn to capitalize on their habits.
- LinkedIn: The Network Effect Revisited You've signed up for LinkedIn, because everyone says it's the primary business social network. But to whom should you connect? According to a few power users, there are a few common approaches, most of which are different than what you'd do on Facebook.
- Is That Keyboard Toxic? Nanotechnology promises countless benefits, but at what risk?
- Comcast's Cap May Mean Less Snooping on Your Net Browsing The cable provider's new cap should increase privacy, since the company won't sniff traffic.
- CDW Security Center Is your data protected? Visit the CDW Security Center Learn where you may be vulnerable and how to address those risks.
- Asus Laptop Showcase Ultra-fashionable thin and light notebooks with SmartLogon Face Recognition. Find out more...
- HP Ink Center Bring improved color and brilliance to your printed material. Visit the Resource Center for more info...







