Step away from the shift key, or we’ll DMCA you


Barely two days after Princeton grad student J. Alex Haldermann released a report on SunnComm’s CD copy-protection scheme, SunnComm is threatening to sue under the DMCA. SunnComm CEO Says Princeton Report Critical of its MediaMax CD Copy Management Technology Contains Erroneous Assumptions and Conclusions

SunnComm believes that Halderman has violated the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) by disclosing unpublished MediaMax management files placed on a user’s computer after user approval is granted. Once the file is found and deleted according to the instructions given in the Princeton grad student’s report, the MediaMax copy management system can be bypassed resulting in the copyright protected music being converted or misappropriated for potentially unauthorized and/or illegal use. SunnComm intends to refer this possible felony to authorities having jurisdiction over these matters because: 1. The author admits that he disabled the driver in order to make an unprotected copy of the disc’s contents, and 2. SunnComm believes that the author’s report was “disseminated in a manner which facilitates infringement” in violation of the DMCA or other applicable law.

EFF senior staff attorney Fred von Lohmann reacts: “What more proof do you need that the DMCA is chilling legitimate research? In America today, scientists shouldn’t have to fear legal action for publishing the truth. Based on the apparent weakness of its technology, perhaps SunnComm should be hiring more Princeton computer scientists, instead of threatening to sue them.”
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Andrew Raff @andrewraff