Finland Court OKs DVD Copying When Copy Protection Is 'Ineffective'

HELSINKI, Finland — In a unanimous decision, Helsinki District Court has ruled that the Content Scrambling System (CSS) used to protect DVD movies from being copied is “ineffective" because it can be defeated. This is the first European court decision to interpret new Finnish copyright law amendments that ban the circumvention of “effective technological measures."

After the copyright law amendments were accepted in late 2005, a group of Finnish computer hobbyists and activists opened a website where they posted information on how to circumvent CSS, then appeared in a police station and reported themselves for copyright law violation. Most of them thought that the police would not investigate the case, or it would not be prosecuted. The case went to Helsinki District Court.

The court decision said that CSS no longer achieves its protection objective. Two expert witnesses told the court that a Norwegian hacker defeated CSS protection in DVDs in 1999, and end-users have been able to easily get similar circumventing software from the Internet. Some operating systems come with this kind of software pre-installed. The court concluded that “CSS protection can no longer be held ‘effective’ as defined in law” and all charges were dismissed.

The EU copyright directive defines a technological measure as being effective "where the use of a protected work or other subject-matter is controlled by the rights-holders through application of an access control or protection process, such as encryption, scrambling or other transformation of the work or other subject-matter or a copy control mechanism, which achieves the protection objective."

In the U.S., Evil Angel Productions doesn't copy-protect its DVDs for the same reason: The copy-protection systems can be defeated.

"We don't bother with copy protection because systems get broken within a month," Evil Angel Public Relations Representative Karen Stagliano told XBIZ. "[Copy protection] would stop the people who make the one-offs, but it doesn't stop the people who are making literally hundreds, using a DVD as a master to replicate a lot of product. When a replicator asks us if we want to license MacroVision or something, we just shrug our shoulders and say 'What's the point?' I wish that it worked, but there are people who make a hobby out of breaking these things."

"We tend to go the route of cease-and-desist [to protect our content]. Last year we spent a lot of money on lawsuits against large-scale duplicators and people who were knowledgably distributing those illegal DVDs," Stagliano said. "We've settled one or two cases, but we still have cases pending in the U.S., Canada and Germany."

Copyright © 2024 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More News

Opinion: Why Device-Based Age Verification is the Key to Protecting Minors Online

Across the United States, state legislators on both sides of the aisle have attempted to tackle the crucial goal of preventing minors from accessing adult content.

Age Verification: FSC's Mike Stabile Reports from the Front Lines

Two years into the religiously-inspired crusade to ban free access to adult material in the U.S. through carefully drafted "age verification" legislation, the constant onslaught of state-by-state proposals and laws — many of them copied from each other — can be hard to follow.

Judge Acquits Backpage Defendants of Most Charges Before 2nd Retrial

A federal judge acquitted former co-owner of Backpage.com Michael Lacey and two co-defendants on most of the counts remaining from the protracted trial launched against the website operators by the Justice Department in 2018.

Georgia Gov. Brian Kemp Signs Age Verification Bill Into Law

Republican Gov. Brian Kemp this week signed into law a bill that includes provisions requiring age verification for viewing adult content in Georgia, mirroring legislation being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

Aylo Asks Judge to Trim Sweeping GDP-Related Lawsuit

Aylo asked a California federal judge during a hearing on Monday to drop trafficking claims from a sweeping lawsuit brought by a former GirlsDoPorn model.

California Republicans, Democrats Team Up to Advance Age Verification for Porn

Both Republicans and Democrats in the California Assembly’s Privacy and Consumer Protection Committee voted last week to move forward a version of the age verification bills being sponsored around the country by anti-porn religious conservative activists.

Washington Post Spotlights ECP VP Solomon Friedman's Appearance at XBIZ LA

The Washington Post published this weekend a lengthy feature about Pornhub and Aylo, focusing on Ethical Capital Partners’ VP of Compliance Solomon Friedman’s keynote address and other appearances at XBIZ Los Angeles in January.

'Sex Workers Deserve Protections': Congressional Candidate Joe Cohn Reaches Out to Adult Community

Veteran civil rights attorney Joe Cohn, who is currently running in a New Jersey Democratic primary for a seat in the U.S. House of Representatives, says he is reaching out to the adult community to champion an inclusive approach to civil liberties that encompasses all sex workers and adult businesses.

Seoul Authorities Force Cancellation of Adult Expo for 'Distorting Perceptions of Sex'

After Seoul authorities repeatedly prevented 2024 KXF The Fashion from finding a suitable venue, event organizers have canceled the popular Korean adult industry expo, which was scheduled for this week.

FSC to Hold Discussion on Adult Industry Rights With Congressional Candidate Joe Cohn

Free Speech Coalition will hold a virtual discussion with congressional candidate Joe Cohn, whom the organization calls a strong advocate for adult industry rights.

Show More