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- Computer underground Digest Sun Jan 24, 1993 Volume 5 : Issue 06
- ISSN 1004-042X
-
- Editors: Jim Thomas and Gordon Meyer (TK0JUT2@NIU.BITNET)
- Archivist: Brendan Kehoe
- Shadow-Archivists: Dan Carosone / Paul Southworth
- Ralph Sims / Jyrki Kuoppala
- Coyp Editor: Etaion Shrdlu, Junior
-
- CONTENTS, #5.06 (Jan 24, 1993)
- File 1--Introduction to Second SPA & BSA Issue
- File 2--Re: Taking a Look at the SPA (CuD 4.63)
- File 3--Reaction to SPA statements in CuD 4.63
- File 4--SPA EDUCATES THE PUBLIC ON SOFTWARE COPYRIGHTS - NOT!
- File 5--A Comment on the SPA (Gray Areas Reprint)
- File 6--Nintendo News Release (Re: BSA APL Bust - Oct '92)
- File 7--The BSA, APL BBS, and Anti-Piracy Crackdowns
-
- Cu-Digest is a weekly electronic journal/newsletter. Subscriptions are
- available at no cost from tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu. The editors may be
- contacted by voice (815-753-6430), fax (815-753-6302) or U.S. mail at:
- Jim Thomas, Department of Sociology, NIU, DeKalb, IL 60115.
-
- Issues of CuD can also be found in the Usenet comp.society.cu-digest
- news group; on CompuServe in DL0 and DL4 of the IBMBBS SIG, DL1 of
- LAWSIG, and DL0 and DL12 of TELECOM; on GEnie in the PF*NPC RT
- libraries and in the VIRUS/SECURITY library; from America Online in
- the PC Telecom forum under "computing newsletters;" on the PC-EXEC BBS
- at (414) 789-4210; in Europe from the ComNet in Luxembourg BBS (++352)
- 466893; and using anonymous FTP on the Internet from ftp.eff.org
- (192.88.144.4) in /pub/cud, red.css.itd.umich.edu (141.211.182.91) in
- /cud, halcyon.com (192.135.191.2) in /pub/mirror/cud, and
- ftp.ee.mu.oz.au (128.250.77.2) in /pub/text/CuD.
- European readers can access the ftp site at: nic.funet.fi pub/doc/cud.
- Back issues also may be obtained from the mail server at
- mailserv@batpad.lgb.ca.us.
-
- COMPUTER UNDERGROUND DIGEST is an open forum dedicated to sharing
- information among computerists and to the presentation and debate of
- diverse views. CuD material may be reprinted for non-profit as long
- as the source is cited. Some authors do copyright their material, and
- they should be contacted for reprint permission. It is assumed that
- non-personal mail to the moderators may be reprinted unless otherwise
- specified. Readers are encouraged to submit reasoned articles
- relating to computer culture and communication. Articles are
- preferred to short responses. Please avoid quoting previous posts
- unless absolutely necessary.
-
- DISCLAIMER: The views represented herein do not necessarily represent
- the views of the moderators. Digest contributors assume all
- responsibility for ensuring that articles submitted do not
- violate copyright protections.
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Date: 22 Jan 92 02:41:33 CST
- From: Moderators <tk0jut2@mvs.cso.niu.edu>
- Subject: File 1--Introduction to Second SPA & BSA Issue
-
- The growing aggressiveness of organizations such as the SPA (Software
- Publisher's Association) and the BSA (Business Software Alliance) has
- raised questions about the limits of acceptable enforcement of
- software copying. The SPA is often criticized for its aggressive
- punitive actions against software piracy. CuD #4.63 began to take a
- look at what the SPA is and how it operates. Below are a few responses
- to that issue and an opinion on the SPA taken from a Gray Areas
- interview.
-
- CuD #5.08 (31 Jan.) will summarize a few conversations with SPA
- personnel who elaborate on a broad range of activities it provides for
- members. Although its Copyright Protection Program draws the most
- notoriety, it offers educational, marketing, and other services to
- both members and the public. Subsequent issues will critically
- examine both sides of the software "piracy" debate.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 08 Dec 92 14:35:36 -0600
- From: Neil W Rickert <rickert@CS.NIU.EDU>
- Subject: File 2--Re: Taking a Look at the SPA (CuD 4.63)
-
- In article <1992Dec06.234359.16097@chinacat.unicom.com>
- TK0JUT2%NIU.bitnet@UICVM.UIC.EDU writes:
-
- > Our goal is to encourage debate and
- >we welcome readers' thoughts on the subject (of the SPA).
-
- Let me illustrate the problem by describing how the SPA would expect
- you to go about purchasing a spread sheet program.
-
- Assumption: You need a spread sheet. You are unsure whether to
- purchase Excel, Lotus 1-2-3, Quattro-Pro, or SuperCalc 5. Assume they
- each cost approx $300 dollars at typical retail stores.
-
- Case I: You represent a financial business. The $300 cost of the
- package is trivial compared to the value it has for the members of
- your staff.
-
- Procedure: You call each of the companies. They provide you a copy
- of their software for evaluation. You may share this copy with
- several members of your staff, provided you agree to delete all copies
- in one month at the end of the evaluation period.
-
- At the end of the evaluation period you negotiate a site license with
- the company selling the preferred version of the software. This will
- allow you to obtain the software for substantial discount.
-
- Net cost: $100 per copy.
-
-
- Case II: You are the treasurer of a small not-for-profit organization.
- You would like the software to aid you in preparing monthly reports.
- But it will take you many years to recoup benefits equal to the retail
- price of a package.
-
- Procedure: You visit the nearest software retail store. You purchase
- a shrink-wrapped copy of each of the packages, and after deciding
- which one you want, you throw away the other three.
-
- Net cost: $1200 per copy.
-
- +++++++++++
-
- I put it to you that if there is a question of ethics involved, it is
- the SPA whose practices are unethical. They attempt to prevent
- libraries from having borrowable copies of software. They insist on
- shrink wrapping, with no right of return if the product is unsuitable.
- They charge outrageous prices. In book publishing, the retail price
- of a popular book is not much more than the cost of printing, storing,
- packaging and distributing, with a small markup for profit; with
- software publishing the profit margins are far higher. They use these
- high profits to pay for lobbying so that they can persuade government
- agencies to support them as they charge unrealistic prices for their
- software. And they try to prevent the development of a free market by
- filing "look and feel" and patent lawsuits against their potential
- competitors.
-
- If you happen to find a problem with their product (a software bug),
- and report it to them, their first reaction is to not believe there is
- such a bug, and to suggest that how could a mere professor of computer
- science know the difference between a bug and a user error. If you
- spend enough hours of work to fully document the bug they will
- eventually accept your report, but they will not offer you a
- replacement of your current software with a bug free one, unless you
- are willing to pay the full upgrade price to the next version. [This
- paragraph based on personal experience with reporting bugs to software
- vendors, including Microsoft.]
-
- ------------------------------
-
- From: bei@DOGFACE.AUSTIN.TX.US(Bob Izenberg)
- Subject: File 3--Reaction to SPA statements in CuD 4.63
- Date: Thu, 10 Dec 1992 15:35:20 -0600 (CST)
-
- Issue 4.63 of Computer underground Digest included the Software
- Publisher's Association manifesto. I've read it, and it shows a very
- narrow awareness of the state of software licensing. The SPA asks
- (and answers) the question, "Is it Okay to copy my colleague's
- software?" by saying,
-
- No, it's not okay to copy your colleague's software. Software is
- protected by federal copyright law, which says that you can't make
- such additional copies without the permission of the copyright holder.
-
- Permission has been explicitly given with a number of software
- products. Some of the compiler products contain license agreements
- that specify terms of use: The software may be used "like a book."
- One person at a time can read the book, or use the software.
- Recently, I've seen more packages that allow the purchaser a
- "travelling license." Either the software comes with permission to
- copy the software for use at home (or, presumably, at work if you
- bought it for home use,) or an inexpensive second copy can be
- purchased for use on a second machine.
-
- The above "experiments" in licensing procedures show that the "one
- program, one copy" philosophy has some viable competitors out there in
- the world. What the SPA should be saying is, conform to the license
- agreement that came with your software.
-
- The SPA goes on to say that
-
- By protecting the investment of computer software companies in
- software development, the copyright law serves the cause of promoting
- broad public availability of new, creative, and innovative products.
-
- What it promotes in practice are new, derivative, un-innovative
- knock-offs of popular programs, the profusion of which has been manna
- from heaven to look and feel lawyers everywhere. Not many developers
- that I know feel comfortable using the words "new" "creative" and
- "innovative" all in the same sentence. It's the language of
- promotion, not innovation. Read the words of industry commentators on
- the operating systems that we'll have for use in the next ten years.
- "Where are the applications?" they ask, the new VisiCalc or Dbase
- III? On the way, perhaps, but I think it safe to say that the SPA
- will have a small or nonexistent role in their development. The
- statement above, that ripping off products impedes future development,
- needs more evidence before I can believe it. Lotus 1-2-3, certainly
- one of the more illegally copied programs around, hasn't withered on
- the vine. It's evolved, expanded to new platforms, and in general not
- suffered the fate that the SPA claims awaits victims of software
- piracy. Yes, this is a very big example, but if the software was a
- piece of junk, all the piracy raids in the world would only add a year
- or more to the closing of the coffin lid.
-
- The onanistic Q&A continues with this howler:
-
- That makes sense, but what do I get out of purchasing my own software?
-
- When you purchase authorized copies of software programs, you receive
- user guides and tutorials, quick reference cards, the opportunity to
- purchase upgrades, and technical support from the software publishers.
- For most software programs, you can read about user benefits in the
- registration brochure or upgrade flyer in the product box.
-
- What you get, more often than not, are promotional discounts for
- CompuServe, which is a sneaky way of adding the cost of a CIS
- subscription for the life of the product to the product's cost. You
- get ads for magazines, books, add-on products from third-party
- vendors, et cetera. While these may or may not have value to the
- purchaser of the product, they are not benefits. They are sales
- brochures for other companies. Technical support is an uneven
- offering, and who's to say that in ten years all tech support will not
- be reached by dialing a 900 number? Even upgrades are not what they
- once were. More than a few companies will accept a competitor's
- product as qualification for an upgrade. Most of the benefits of
- doing the right thing are either exaggerated in their value or
- underestimated in the cost to the consumer.
-
- A good rule to remember is that there must be one authorized copy of a
- software product for every computer upon which it is run.
-
- No problem here... Just don't forget to get a definition of what "authorized"
- means for that product.
-
- These companies devote large portions of their earnings to the
- creation of new software products and they deserve a fair return on
- their investment.
-
- No, they deserve to be evaluated on the merit of their products. (I
- don't expect to hear that the SPA believes differently, but I could be
- wrong.)
-
- Also, suggest that your management consider conducting a software
- audit.
-
- Oh, yes, let's have more of these! (sarcasm) Something that sends
- people scurrying to every Mac and PC snooping for unlicensed software,
- at hours that won't interfere with the normal work of the business...
- No one who'd have to foot the bill for one of these would propose it
- unless they *already knew* that there was a problem, and that the
- funds to get legal would be there. Ah, the stories that I could
- tell... to the SPA's 800 number, for a cut of the money in bringing
- these big-time software desperadoes to justice.
-
- THE LAW
-
- Software is automatically protected by federal copyright law from the
- moment of its creation.
-
- No, it's protected by copyright when the copyright symbol is affixed
- to the work. This protection does not last forever, either. (A
- lawyer will no doubt know how long copyrights stay in effect.)
-
- This fact, however, does not make it legal to violate the rights of
- the copyright owner.
-
- You can be a copyright holder, but not a copyright owner. Did you buy
- some-thing when you put the copyright symbol on your work?
-
- Software development involves a team effort that blends the creative
- talents of writers, programmers and graphic artists.
-
- It may, or it may not. There are more than a few one or two person
- shops out there that don't bring big production budgets to their
- efforts.
-
- Piracy diminishes the value of a program and further, deprives the
- developers of fair compensation.
-
- Playing Devil's Advocate for a moment, it can pay off for some
- developers in some ways. Piracy can be like pollination... It gets
- your software seen by people who likely would never have bought it.
- You may curse the lost revenue, but I know a developer or two that
- turn a blind eye to bug reports from unauthorized users. Who's to say
- that somebody may buy a copy of something that he saw as pirated way
- back when? I know that I have. It's not all as black and white as
- the SPA makes it out to be.
-
- Newer and better software can be developed only if the software
- development team receives a fair price for its efforts.
-
- If only the cause and effect chain were as firmly established here as
- the SPA suggests that it is. Revenue == better software, instead of
- revenue == that new Porsche.
-
- The SPA has established a special toll free number for reports of
- copyright violations: 1-800-388-7478. The SPA has filed many lawsuits
- against individuals and companies engaged in the unauthorized
- duplication of PC software and will continue to do so when it becomes
- aware of situations that warrant such action.
-
- Yes, speaking of fair return on investment... What is the SPA's cut
- of these lawsuits?
-
- If you are an individual user, don't break the law.
-
- If you are a software publisher, don't push cruddy software, don't
- price it too high, don't include shoddy, misleading or no
- documentation, don't scrimp on help for your customers in using the
- product, don't go out of business in a year, don't sell your product
- to a software conglomerate that will raise the price into the
- stratosphere or take it in directions incompatible with current
- releases, et cetera.
-
- When a few people steal software, everyone loses.
-
- No, business writes it off as a loss. Everyone else rolls over and
- goes back to sleep. :-) About that rap song, well, anybody's a bigger
- rap fan than I am, but that's crap, not rap.
-
- Female: Yeh. And what are you doing in our computer?
-
- It's an SPA virus... and don't think that somebody hasn't thought of
- it:
-
- Unlicensed software detected... erasing partition table, root
- directory area... Re-formatting your hard drive. You will see some
- SPA messages during this process. Consult your vendor documentation
- to re-install your licensed software.
-
- Tetris and the others,
- They're all going to fail.
-
- No, they're all going to be ported to X-windows, with the source
- publicly available. :-)
-
- Lastly, the CuD moderator(s) describe the end of the rap video:
-
- And, fourth period be damned, they play another game (on presumably is
- a pirated game on the school computer).
-
- Nope, it's a pirated computer... A pre-Apple lawsuit Franklin Ace.
- ;-) I really dislike trade protectionism. As a co-worker's button
- says, "Keep your lawyers off of my computer!" It's turned an
- automobile manufacturer or two into immobile sloths that only twitch
- every now and then to ask for more tariffs on imported cars. Who's to
- be the software industry's Lee Iacocca? I don't know... What's the
- SPA president's name?
-
- Bob
-
- P.S. The biggest repository of pirated software that I've run across
- was kept on company computers near a hallway covered with SPA posters.
- Yeah, guys, you really reach 'em. Pity I can't remember the names of
- individuals or the name of the company in question... Not until
- 2/21/95, anyway.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 13 Dec 92 22:18:19 CST
- From: Lance Rose <elrose@well.sf.ca.us>
- Subject: File 4--SPA EDUCATES THE PUBLIC ON SOFTWARE COPYRIGHTS - NOT!
-
- ((MODERATORS' NOTE: The following article is reprinted from Lance
- Rose's Legally Online" column in BOARDWATCH Magazine (Nov., '92: pp
- 51-52). A one-year (monthly) subscription to BOARDWATCH can be
- obtained for $36 at: Boardwatch Magazine; 7586 West Jewell Ave., Suite
- 200, Lakewood, CO 80232)).
-
- SPA EDUCATES PUBLIC ON SOFTWARE COPYRIGHTS -- NOT!
- By Lance Rose
-
- Like many others I know who have some familiarity with computer law,
- I've always figured that about half of what the Software Publisher's
- Association (SPA) says about copyright law is true. The rest is
- mystificationist propaganda designed to make corporate software users
- run scared from the slightest thought of ever making a software copy
- without paying someone for it.
-
- For instance, the SPA insists to this day that shrinkwrap licenses are
- airtight and enforceable. At the same time, every other court decision
- I've seen so far on the subject has refused to enforce such licenses!
- The SPA is not quite wrong on this subject yet, since shrinkwrap
- license validity must be decided on a state by state basis; some state
- court might agree with the SPA position somewhere along the line. The
- issue could be left arguably open for a hundred years, with shrinkwrap
- licenses getting cut down right and left by courts of different
- states, and the SPA hanging on to its enforceability rhetoric in the
- slim hope that out of 50 states, it will get lucky somewhere.
- Plausible arguability.
-
- Until now, though, I never caught the SPA in a flat-out falsehood.
-
- A recent issue of the SPA newsletter distributed to its members
- contains an article titled "Protect Your Copyrights, Register Software"
- and subtitled "Register software or lose your rights." Within, it
- contains several statements along the same lines, culminating in: "if
- you don't register your software with the Copyright Office within 3
- months, after first first publication, you cannot recover statutory
- damages or attorneys fees." (This is a very important matter in
- coyright, especially attorneys fees--if a successful copyright owner
- cannot collect attorneys fees from the infringer, he could end up with
- very little money after paying off his own lawyer).
-
- Now, let's look at the actual section of the Copyright Act in
- question, Section 412(b):
-
- "no award of statutory damages or of attorney's fees...shall be made
- for...any infringement of copyright commenced after first publication
- of the work and before the effective date of its registration, unless
- such registration is made within three months after the first
- publication of the work."
-
- In other words, after you circulate your software to the public, you
- can receive statutory damages and attorney's fees in a case enforcing
- your software copyright as long as you registered your software with
- the copyright office before the infringement started. With one added,
- short-term bonus: if you register your software within 3 months after
- you first circulate it to the public, then you can receive statutory
- damages and attorney's fees for any infringements within that same 3
- month period, whether or not they came before the registration.
-
- Under the statute, for example, you might wait 9 years after first
- publication of our software before you bother to register. That
- registration will give you the right to claim statutory damages and
- attorney's fees for any infringements occuring afterwards, but not for
- any infringements that may have occured in the initial 9 year period
- before you registered.
-
- Compare this with the SPA quotes. According to the SPA, if you don't
- register within 90 days after publishing the software, you have
- entirely lost your ability to claim statutory damages and attorneys
- fees when you enforce your copyright. If you wait 9 years to register,
- you can't claim such amounts for infringements any time, either before
- or after your registration.
-
- So the SPA totally misread the statute. The only question is whether
- it was through calculation or mental dullness, both of which SPA has
- exhibited in the past. Actually, there is a third choice--sloppy
- statute reading. But then you have to ask why they would shock their
- members with a headline about the dire consequences of copyright
- non-registration without taking the time to read the statute and
- figure out how it really works.
-
- Calculation is not out of the question, though. The effect of the
- misinformation would be to scare software owners into rushing to
- register their copyrights. This is not a bad thing, and it also serves
- the SPA's enforcement objectives. SPA likes to threaten corporate
- infringers of their members' products with copyright registrations in
- hand. But why deceptively scare corporations into registering with
- false information, when the correct information, properly presented,
- would have the same effect? What is the relationship between SPA and
- its members, anyway?
-
- This has been a public service announcement. Don't take candy or
- copyright law from the SPA.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 22 Jan 92 11:01:59 CST
- From: barlow@well.sf.ca.us
- Subject: File 5--A Comment on the SPA (Gray Areas Reprint)
-
- ((MODERATORS' COMMENT: The following is extracted from an interview of
- John Perry Barlow by Netta Gilboa from the November, 1992, issue of
- GRAY AREAS. GRAY AREAS focuses on cutting edge cultural issues. The
- editors can be contacted at grayarea@well.sf.ca.us))
-
- GA: SOFTWARE PIRACY IS RAMPANT IN THE U.S. AND WE'VE IDENTIFIED
- SEVERAL TYPES OF PIRACY RANGING FROM FRIENDS WHO TRADE DISKS TO PIRATE
- BULLETIN BOARDS TO BUSINESSES WHO LITERALLY FORCE THEIR EMPLOYEES TO
- USE PIRATED SOFTWARE IN ORDER FOR THE CORPORATION TO AVOID BUYING
- MULTIPLE COPIES. DO YOU APPROVE OF THE SOFTWARE PIRACY ASSOCIATION'S
- APPROACH TO STOPPING PIRACY?
-
- JB: No, it's boneheaded. It is just plain stupid and, look, I think
- that software piracy is pretty complex. I mean there are cases as in
- the Next world where you've got such a limited market that a certain
- amount of software piracy can completely destroy a product. But
- generally speaking, that's the exact opposite effect of what software
- piracy has. I think you can make a pretty persuasive case that the
- reason that Lotus, for example, continues to exercise an iron standard
- among spreadsheets, is that it is also the most pirated software in
- the world. Once something becomes a pirate classic, then it is out
- there being distributed and distributed and distributed and gets
- itself fixed in the public mind and, you know, becomes a valuable
- item. So that often the best thing that can happen to you is to have
- your software pirated from an economic standpoint. The SPA just
- doesn't get it. They really don't. I mean people who pirate software
- sooner or later buy it. There is an incredible amount of software
- piracy going on and yet one of the most robust portions of the
- American economy is software. You know there is reason for that. It
- is kind of like the home video tape thing. When video cassettes first
- became popular in Japan there was a full court press on the part of
- the movie companies and the traditional manufacturers of media to stop
- them from hitting these shores. They arrived in America quite a bit
- after they'd been developed because of legal efforts to stop them from
- coming, because it was the conviction of everybody involved that
- having this medium that could be so easily reproduced out there would
- be the death of movies. Well, now more than half of all the revenue
- that film companies derive is from videos and in fact they don't even
- put movies in theatrical houses except to advertise the video.
-
- GA: EXACTLY.
-
- JB: So this is another one of these cases where having this very fluid
- easily reproducible, easily pirated version of intellectual property
- has redounded to the benefit of the intellectual property creator. I
- think that software piracy is a complex issue and I think that right
- now what protects a lot of software from piracy is the fact that
- people want to have the manual. As those manuals become more and more
- an on-line kind of thing and software becomes easier and easier to
- use, that kind of protection goes away. So you have to think about
- other ways and other incentives that people have for buying software
- and not simply pirating it. And I think that what you are probably
- going to see is if people are going to want it, they are going to want
- to have the latest version of it which is not going to be easily
- pirated.
-
- GA: INDIVIDUALS THAT WE TALKED TO SEEM TOTALLY UNCONCERNED ABOUT THE
- SPA, ESPECIALLY WHEN THEY ARE UNDER 18. WHAT CAN BE DONE TO EDUCATE
- THIS MARKET?
-
- JB: Well, the first thing the SPA can quit being is so stupid. I
- think that the real unfortunate effect in the way in which the SPA
- approaches this is that it breeds the kind of general disrespect for
- the interest of the people they are protecting.
-
- GA: AGREED.
-
- JB: It is kind of like drug laws. You have these draconian drug laws
- on the drugs that are least likely to cause damage and mayhem like
- psychedelics and marijuana. But they are all being couched as if you
- take this stuff the world will end and your life will become a living
- hell. The really dangerous drugs are the ones that are legal. But this
- totally false message gets conveyed by the drug laws. Kids take
- marijuana and say wait a second, this isn't going to kill me. This
- isn't going to ruin my life. This must all be bullshit. Well, the fact
- is that there's probably a pretty good reason for having a law against
- cocaine. But if you concluded that it is all bullshit then you are not
- going to pay any attention to the social strictures against cocaine.
- Right. So it is the same thing with the SPA and the way in which it
- is trying to enforce software copyright. It breeds a general
- disrespect for the whole idea that people should get paid for the work
- that they do with their minds and that's unfortunate.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 93 14:18:46 PST
- From: metal@PNET01.CTS.COM(Conal G.)
- Subject: File 6--Nintendo News Release (Re: BSA APL Bust - Oct '92)
-
- NEWS RELEASE
- FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
-
- CONTACT:
-
- Lynn Hvalsoe\Nintendo of America, Inc.
- 206/861-2096
-
- James Bikoff/Arter & Hadden
- 202/775-7100
-
- NINTENDO JOINS IN SEIZURE AGAINST ILLEGAL BULLETIN BOARD SOFTWARE
-
- REDMOND, WA--As part of a continuing and aggressive effort to
- halt counterfeiting of video games and business software, Nintendo of
- America Inc. and six major software manufactures filed an action
- against distributors of a computer "bulletin board" network system
- giving software acess to users.
-
- Illegal software was seized by authorities from APL, an electronic
- bulletin board computer system (BBS) headquartered in Baltimore, MD.
-
- "Counterfeiting and illegal use of video games and business
- software has grown immensely over the past few years. We have and
- will continue to prosecute those who've become part of the underground
- counterfeiting network", said Lynn Hvalsoe, Nintendo's General Counsel.
-
- The legal action outlines that illegal software wass accessed
- through operators who provide personal computer users a code to enter
- the system via telephone and modem. Illegal bulletin boards have
- become a popular trend, with an estimated 5,000 systems in the United
- States. Illegal bulletin boards also have been found in Europe and
- Asia.
-
- This case represents the first time video game and business
- software companies have joined together to fight software pirating.
- The business software companies, represented in this case through the
- Business Software Association (BSA), include Aldus, Autodesk, Lotus
- Development, Microsoft, Novel and WordPerfect. All companies,
- including Nintendo, are individual plaintiffs in the legal action.
-
- The action is part of Nintendo's large anti-counterfeiting
- campaign much of which is aimed at illegal video games being
- manufactured, sold and shipped from Taiwan, Hong Kong, and other
- countries.
-
- "Counterfeiting is a very serious crime and Nintendo is working
- hard to let violators know they will be pursued and charges will be
- brought against them," added Hvalsoe. Hvalsoe pointed to success
- this year in the signing of Federal legislation (S893) which elevates
- copyright infringement, such as that engaged in by bulletin board
- operators, to a felony with penalties of up to $250,000/and up to five
- years in prison.
-
- Nintendo of America Inc. is based in Redmond, Washington and is a
- wholly owned subsidiary of Nintendo Co. Ltd., Japan, the worlds largest
- manufacturer and marketer of video games.
-
- -=-=-=-=-
- Submitted by Metalhead of Rockin' Alliance
- Phile 1/2
-
- UUCP: {hplabs!hp-sdd ucsd nosc}!crash!pnet01!metal
- ARPA: crash!pnet01!metal@nosc.mil
-
- (I received this in the mail about 5 days after I received the
- News Release)
- ++++++++++++++++++
-
- ARTER & HADDEN
- 1801 K Street, N.W., Suite 400K
- Washington, D.C. 20006-1301
- 202/775-7100
- Facsimile 202/857-0172
- Telex 6502156242-MCI
-
- CLARIFICATION
-
- The News Release you received from Nintendo of America was
- provided for INFORMATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY. No response is required.
- You were selected to receive this News Release, because you are a
- person who is interested in or involved with bulletin boards. The
- fact that you received this News Release does not mean that you or the
- BBS you operate are under investigation. Moreover, Nintendo of
- America has not singled out for investigation users of PCBoard
- software. The single civil lawsuit that was the subject of the News
- Release was filed against the APL BBS, which was located in Baltimore,
- MD. This BBS was strictly a pirate board, and the system operator
- actively encouraged users to upload and download large amounts of
- copyrighted software. CLARK DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC. WAS NOT
- INVOLVED IN THIS LAWSUIT AND DID NOT SEE THE NEWS RELEASE IN ADVANCE
- OF ITS DISTRIBUTION. We recognize that there are many legitimate
- bulletin boards and many honest system operators who support the
- ethical use of software. Unless you have questions about action taken
- against the APL BBS, however, please do not call Clark Devolopment,
- Nintendo of America or Nintendo of America's attorneys.
-
- Please pass this message on to anyone you know who received the
- News Release. You are encouraged to post this message on your BBS.
-
-
- -=-=-=-=-
- Submitted by Metalhead of Rockin' Alliance
- Phile 2/2
-
- ------------------------------
-
- Date: 23 Jan 93 13:22:55 PST
- From: Jim Thomas <cudigest@mindvox.phantom.com>
- Subject: File 7--The BSA, APL BBS, and Anti-Piracy Crackdowns
-
- Since the press release submitted above, the Business Software
- Alliance (BSA) case against APL has been settled (in November, '92).
- The APL BBS, also known as "The Great American Exchange" in Baltimore,
- Maryland, was raided on 1 October. According to BSA spokespersons and
- court documents, the estimated value of the software seized was worth
- over $100,000. A BSA press release indicates that the organization is
- currently reviewing APL's records for possible additional legal action
- against system users who may have illegally uploaded or downloaded
- copyright programs. It should be noted that the raid occured prior to
- the enactment of PL 102-561, signed into law on October 28, 1992,
- which criminalizes a low threshold of software duplication and
- dissemination.
-
- According to Arter and Hadden, a Washington, D.C. law firm
- representing BSA and Nintendo of America, the case was resolved with a
- court order that issued a permanent injunction against the defendant
- from resuming operations, and the equipment on which the board ran was
- seized and will be turned over to BSA as part of the settlement.
- Although the $25,000 estimate of the value of the equipment seems
- over-estimated, the list of seized property indicates a substantial
- loss. Seized property included two HST modems, nearly a dozen cases of
- floppy disks, several boxes of data tapes, hard drives, a scanner, two
- tower CPUs, a fax machine, and other equipment.
-
- The case was brought as a federal civil action (MJG 92-2757) in the
- U.S. District Court of Maryland. The investigation was conducted by
- Software Security International on behalf of the BSA. According to a
- BSA press release, the three Federal Marshalls participating in the
- raid were Ricardo Guzman, Dave Hinman, and Kurt Vogan.
-
- The BSA, founded in 1988, is a coalitionion of eight high-revenue
- software companies: 1) Apple Computer 2) Autodesk 3) Central Point
- Software 4) Lotus Development 5) Microsoft 6) Novell 7) Symantec, and
- 8) Word Perfect. These eight companies have about 71 percent of the
- world's packaged software market, according to BSA officials.
-
- A BSA spokesperson explained that the organization prefers to think of
- itself as a coalition rather than a professional association. Like the
- Software Publishers Association, the group aims to eradicate software
- piracy but, also like the SPA, engages in other activities that
- include education about copyright law, working with legislators and
- law enforcement on policy and legislative issues to toughen especially
- international anti-piracy laws, and working with customs agents to
- alert them to the problems of identifying software purchased overseas
- and imported back into the U.S. Although the BSA focuses primarily on
- international piracy, it has recently turned its attention to domestic
- concerns. According to a press release, the APL case was its first
- legal action in the U.S.
-
- According to BSA spokesperson Diane Smiroldo, the BSA represents its
- eight members in their fight against piracy in more than 30 countries.
- Although most of these companies are also members of the SPA, the SPA
- does not represent them in their anti-piracy efforts. The SPA
- represented the eight companies in the U.S. until July 1992, but since
- JULY, the eight decided that they wanted the BSA to represent them for
- efficiency's sake, because they head up the anti-piracy in other parts
- of the world. According to Ms. Spiroldo:
-
- "It's important to emphasize that we don't just sue. We're
- not a 'litigation-only' organization. We launch education
- programs, we work with the local software associations in the
- different countries to get support for enforcement and strong
- copyright regulations."
-
- The BSA estimates that world-wide piracy losses run between $10-$12
- billion annually. They also estimate that the piracy rate for PC
- packaged software runs between 40-50 percent. Ms. Smiroldo adds:
-
- We see that particularly in countries like Asia and Latin
- American where there are some store fronts, vendors, where you
- can just walk up in Honk Kong, and there'll be a list of
- software available, and they'll download it and copy it on the
- number of disks needed, and you can buy it for about $10 or
- $15....We work closely with customs agents to recognize
- counterfeit and illegally copied products.
-
- A few excerpts from BSA press releases and other documents illustrate
- the organization's goals:
-
- The Business Software Alliance (BSA), citing a persistent link
- to the spread of computer viruses, today ((24 November, 1992))
- announced the launch of a new worldwide enforcement effort to
- crack down on electronic bulletin board systems (BBS) that are
- distributing illegal softare. Relying on specially-trained
- teams of lawyers and private investigators, and in cooperation
- with police, BSA announced today one of the first results of
- the new campaign--a sweep by the Berlin police of illegal BBS
- operators throughout that city, closing down and seizing
- equipment at 13 BBS operations that have been distributing
- illegal software copies throughout Germany. The operators of
- the bulletin boards now face criminal prosecution, with a
- maximum prison sentence of 5 years.
-
- ++++
-
- In Berlin the police force raided thirteen illegal electronic
- BBS operations on October 28 and seized approximately 25
- computers containing illegal software programs on over six
- gigabytes of storage capacity....The police acted after an
- investigation by the BSA found initial evidence of substantial
- illegal distribution throughout the country by the BBS
- involved. BSA then provided this evidence to the police and
- public prosecutor's office in Berlin, requested that they take
- action to close the offending operations, and provided ongoing
- investigative and legal assistance to further this
- effort...."We are determined to take vigorous actions to close
- down illegal bulletin board operators," said BSA European
- Counsel Bradford Smith. "We have witnessed during the last
- year the rapid proliferation of illegal bulletin boards
- throughout Europe, and believe that there is a persistent
- pattern linking these operators, not only with the
- distribution of illegal software, but also with the spread of
- computer viruses. We now possess information pointing to
- illegal distribution by over 100 other BBS operators in
- Europe, and we will continue to bring more cases in additional
- countries."
-
- The BSA also announced a crackdown on Belgian BBSes. CuD will
- expand on BSA activities in future issues in an attempt to
- bring the debate over software piracy into a public forum.
-
- ------------------------------
-
- End of Computer Underground Digest #5.06
- ************************************
-