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hey_moe
October 1st, 2008, 03:07
LOS ANGELES - <!-- RealNetworks (http://www.sim-outhouse.com/topic/economy-business-finance/realnetworks-incorporated-ORCRP012939.topic)' software enables DVDs to be copied onto up to five computers and does not alter the discs' encryption technology meant to prevent wide-scale piracy.

-->Hollywood (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/us/california/los-angeles-county/los-angeles/hollywood-%28los-angeles-california%29-PLGEO100100102384000.topic)'s six major movie studios on Tuesday sued RealNetworks Inc. to prevent it from distributing DVD copying software that they said would allow consumers to "rent, rip and return" movies or even copy friends' DVD collections outright.

The studios stand to lose key revenue from the sale of DVDs, estimated by Adams Media Research at $15 billion in the U.S. this year, if consumers stop buying DVDs and instead copy rental discs from outlets like Netflix (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/netflix-inc.-ORCRP010656.topic) and Blockbuster.

The suit, filed in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/us/california/los-angeles-county/los-angeles-PLGEO100100102380000.topic), alleges RealNetworks' RealDVD program, which launched Tuesday, illegally bypasses the copyright protection built into DVDs.

"The incentive for the consumer is obvious and all but overwhelming," the studios said in a request for a temporary restraining order. "'Why,' he or she may ask, 'should I pay $18.50 to purchase a DVD when I can rent it for $3.25 and make a permanent copy?'"
<!-- google ads --><!-- END google ads -->
<!-- END rail -->For $30, consumers can buy RealDVD and use it to copy DVDs to computers or portable hard drives, though the program prevents them from transferring the files to other users. The maker calls RealDVD "100 percent legal" on its Web site.

"This is not a product that enables Internet piracy," said Bob Kimball, general counsel for RealNetworks.

Real has said the software enables DVDs to be copied onto up to five computers — with the purchase of up to four extra program licenses for $20 each — and does not alter the discs' encryption technology meant to prevent wide-scale piracy.

The software locks the copy to the hard drive where it is copied and to the program it was copied with, Kimball said, and he asserted that copying one's personal collection of DVDs amounts to "fair use" allowed by law.

Kimball said the company discourages using the program to rip rental DVDs, but he acknowledged there's nothing to prevent consumers from doing that.

"We are very open to coming up with solutions to that problem that will require industry participation," he said.

The studios had asked the company not to launch the product last week.

The studios argued that the federal Digital Millennium Copyright Act makes it illegal to circumvent technology that prevents copying without the express permission of the copyright holders.

In a motion for a restraining order, the studios argued that a ruling by a California (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/us/california-PLGEO100100100000000.topic) state court last year in favor of a company that sells entertainment centers that allow DVD copying is irrelevant to their case.

The plaintiffs in the suit against RealNetworks include Viacom Inc. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/viacom-inc.-ORCRP016274.topic)'s Paramount Pictures, Sony Corp. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/sony-corp.-ORCRP014162.topic)'s Sony Pictures, News Corp. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/news-corp.-ORCRP010796.topic)'s Twentieth Century Fox, General Electric Co. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/general-electric-company-ORCRP006396.topic)'s Universal, The Walt Disney Co. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/media/walt-disney-co.-ORCRP017360.topic)'s Disney studio, and Time Warner Inc. (http://www.dailypress.com/topic/economy-business-finance/time-warner-inc.-ORCRP015301.topic)'s Warner Bros. SOURCE: DAILY PRESS

cheezyflier
October 1st, 2008, 05:37
I'M SOOOO tired of hearing rich people whine that someone is taking money out of their pockets. hollywood, the record industry, wall street, washington, etc.

Cazzie
October 1st, 2008, 05:46
It's the entertainment industry all over again! It's high time we fleece the fleecers!

Caz

demorier
October 1st, 2008, 22:46
So that's why Tom Cruise's career REALLY went south.

Willy
October 1st, 2008, 23:00
A Tom Cruise movie would be a total waste of a blank DVD.

jbtate
October 2nd, 2008, 00:04
Hopefully someone other than Dove Shampoo made money off of the FOX rerun of "Terminator: The Sarah Connor Chronicles" that I watched on Hulu.
I did, after all, pay my monthly Suddenlink bill for the programing that I missed.
A simple fact is that work, imagination, art and application should be rewarded with equitable and available transcendent compensation; toward necessary and benevolently desired transcendence.
And if one might out -- talent Tom Cruise in his circumstanse, people might pay to watch you work.
The truly "rich" aren't the people you read about in the supermarket checkout lines.
Though Of and of ...
jbtate

MCDesigns
October 2nd, 2008, 05:22
It's the entertainment industry all over again! It's high time we fleece the fleecers!

Caz

I really don't understand this comment. The entertainment industry is there to entertain and they succeed for the most part with me. I don't find products over priced and there is a good variety for me to choose from, so for me the value is there. If anything, the insane salaries paid to some top billed actors is more to blame than the industry.

I don't deny any business the right to make money, After all, that is why they are in business. If I produced a movie (no matter how rich I was) and distributed it to make money (like releasing an FS addon) I to would do everything in my power to try and keep it from being copied or re-distributed illegally.

As for the RealDVD software saying that the copy can only be used on the PC it is used on, sorry, I don't see the need for it in the first place. If you purchase the DVD, why would you need to copy it onto your PC in the first place? If you rent it, you shouldn't be copying it at all. I can kinda see the need to make a copy for future use, should the original get scratched or something, but that application can and will be used for illegal purposes no matter how you justify it for personal use.

You want to be mad at someone, then get mad at those that abuse content since they are the ones that cause you inconvenience, not the companies that produce content and try to protect their investment..