home *** CD-ROM | disk | FTP | other *** search
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Mon, 24 Jun 91 23:58:37 EDT
- From: Jerry Leichter <@mp.cs.niu.edu:leichter@LRW.COM>
- Subject: Bill Vajk, Len Rose, Gene Spafford
-
- ********************************************************************
- *** CuD #3.24: File 2 of 8: Vill Vajk, Len Rose, Gene Spafford ***
- ********************************************************************
-
- In CuD 3.22, Bill Vajk writes an (overly long, repetitive) note in
- response to an earlier note of Gene Spafford's. I don't want to go
- into the details of everything he has to say; I'll make one comment on
- fact, and another a general observation.
-
- On fact: Vajk tries to attack the claim that Rose violated a trade
- secret or copyright of AT&T's by saying that AT&T claims both trade
- secret and copyright protection on the Unix source code, and they are
- incompatible because copyright protection requires deposit of a copy
- of the code with the Library of Congress, where the copy is available
- freely to the public.
-
- This is dead wrong. First of all, deposit is required within 3 months
- of PUBLICATION; however, even unpublished material can be protected by
- copyright, and AT&T can reasonably claim that they never published the
- source code.
-
- Second, there are exceptions to the requirements for deposit which
- will usually cover software. In any case, as a matter of law, even if
- the copyright owner disregards the deposit requirement, the copyright
- remains enforceable (though the owner may be subject to fines or other
- penalties.)
-
- Third, even where deposit is required - as when one wishes to register
- the copyright, a necessary first step in defending it in court - the
- Copyright Office has recognized the issue of trade secrecy, and does
- not require the entire program to be deposited. There are a couple of
- choices - e.g., you can deposit the entire first and last 10 pages of
- source code, or the first and last 25 pages with no more than half of
- the text blacked out, etc. (Note: This is taken from a Notice of
- Proposed Rulemaking issued in 1986, as quoted in a 1990 book.
- Apparently it is the policy that is being followed, although it has
- yet to be made completely official.)
-
- Finally, while it is true that copyright infringement as such is not a
- criminal matter, the copyright law does provide criminal penalties for
- fraudulent copyright notices and false representation. Also, going
- beyond copyrights as such, once a property right exists, it can be
- stolen. Depending on the circumstances, the theft may or may not be a
- criminal matter. If you leave your car at my service station for some
- repair work and I start using it and refuse to return it, you can sue
- me civilly for conversion; I am probably also guilty of auto theft.
- Civil and criminal law are not necessarily mutually exclusive.
-
- On philosophy: Vajk is right in commenting that some of the pain
- people are feeling is from seeing the law applied to "nice middle
- class white kids" in a way it is usually applied to poor black ones.
- The fact of the matter is that, for the most part, the law leaves the
- nice white middle class alone. Its instincts and modes of operation
- are developed for a much rougher atmosphere, where a kid being
- rousted, whether for good reasons or bad, is quite likely to be armed,
- or at least potentially dangerous. Sure, a cracker - or a whitecolor
- criminal - is unlikely to attack the police who've arrested him; but
- policy says that those under arrest will be handcuffed, because it's
- safer (for the police) that way, and their safety outweighs the
- arrestee's dignity.
-
- Presumption of innocence or no, the gut feeling that police,
- prosecuters, and probably most defense attornies have is that those
- arrested are probably guilty, if not of the particular offense
- charged, then of SOME offense. Guilt and innocence are of much less
- importance than making sure the legal rules are followed - and those
- legal rules can and do play rough. Innocent or guilty, you DON'T want
- to be caught up in the criminal justice system.
-
- Vajk is incensed that police officers are "learning on the job" how to
- deal with computers. In "To Engineer is Human", a wonderful book,
- Henry Petrofsky points out that engineering never learns much from
- successes, only from failures. The law acts the same way. It's not
- only police officers and prosecutors and judges who are "learning on
- the job"; it's the entire legal system. Much of the law is based on
- precedent; before a precedent is established, there IS no settled law
- in a particular area. Even law that is based on statute doesn't come
- out of nowhere: Laws are usually drafted in response to perceived
- problems. Only rarely are they anticipatory, and then they often turn
- out to be wrong.
-
- What we are seeing right now is the legal system learning what the
- right way to deal with "computer crimes" is. It tried ignoring them;
- that eventually proved unsatisfactory. Now it is reacting, and as is
- to be expected, it is doing so by pushing as hard as it can. The
- eventual boundaries of the law will be determined by the sum of the
- various pushes - by overzealous prosecuters, by defense attornies, by
- citizens enraged by computer crimes and citizens enraged by government
- over-reaction. One way or the other, the Steve Jackson case will
- establish some of the boundaries of search and seizure of computers.
- Had the Neidorf case gone through a full trial, it might well have
- established something about First Amendment protections for electronic
- publication. As it is, it made the prosecuters look stupid and AT&T
- look like liars. The next time around, a prosecuter will think twice
- about putting his reputation on the line based on some unverifiable
- AT&T claims. That, too, is part of the education of the legal system.
-
- The courts deliberately avoid deciding issues until they are forced to
- by actual cases. (There are some minor exceptions to this rule.) In
- practice, this means that if you want to challenge, say, an abortion
- law in court, you have to violate it - and be prepared to go to jail
- (as many challengers did) if your challenge fails. This method has
- worked reasonably well over hundreds of years, but it has the
- unfortunate property that while the boundaries of the law are being
- paved, some people will end up in the wrong place at the wrong time
- and will end up being squashed by an on-coming steamroller. The
- steamroller may have to roll back later, but that doesn't do the
- flattened fellow much good.
-
- So ... don't look at the current problems as a sign that the legal
- system is incapable of dealing with computer and communication
- technology. That's not at all what is going on. Within a couple of
- years we'll be on pretty firm ground on these issues. The important
- things to do now are (a) help provide pressure to push the law in the
- right directions before it "sets"; (b) help support the relatively few
- casualties of the process. I applaud EFF's efforts to do (a) (even if
- I don't always agree with the particular positions they may choose to
- take). As far as I can see, EFF isn't deliberately doing (b), though
- that will be a side-effect of some of their other actions; but in
- general (b) is more effectively done by concerned individuals in any
- case.
-
- ********************************************************************
- >> END OF THIS FILE <<
- ***************************************************************************
-
-