A US company selling software called DVD X Copy which bypasses copyright protection mechanisms on DVDs has complied with a Californian court order to rid the software of its 鈥渞ipper鈥.
Since the court ruled the software illegal seven days ago, 321 Studios of St Louis, Missouri changed DVD X Copy on its web site to a sanitised 鈥渞ipper-free鈥 version which cannot copy a copy-protected DVD.
When the new sanitised version is asked to copy a protected DVD it gives a 鈥淐SS Error Message鈥.
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Copies of DVDs can be made by defeating the digital Content Scrambling System (CSS) encryption, which is supposed to protect DVDs from digital copying.
The case clarifies ambiguities in the US Digital Millenium Copyright Act which although stating that any 鈥渄evice鈥 designed to 鈥渃ircumvent鈥 a copy-protection mechanism is illegal 鈥 also includes a get-out clause for 鈥渇air use鈥. 321 Studios had hoped this clause would include making back-up copies of DVDs for personal use.
Software which defeats CSS to copy DVDs, so-called 鈥榬ippers鈥 are freely available on the internet. One such program called DVD43 is very small, less than 600 KB, and can be downloaded on to a PC from a variety of sites in a few seconds.
DVD43 automatically removes CSS when a DVD is inserted in a PC so the DVD appears to the computer as a DVD without copy-protection. DVD X Copy 鈥 and other legal ripper-free software 鈥 can then copy a protected DVD.
Injunction order
But Ted Shapiro of the General Counsel for the Motion Picture Association in Brussels says: 鈥淲e are concerned about ripper software available for free on the internet. Despite the lack of profit motive, the damage should not be underestimated.鈥
321 Studios has pointed out the options to users. When the CSS error message appears on DVD X Copy, the user is directed to 321鈥檚 website, which explains: 鈥渋f you reside in a country where you have a lawful source of DVD ripper software, you may be able to download, install and use it鈥.
鈥淲e fully comply with the injunction order鈥, Rob Semaan, 321鈥檚 chief executive told New 杏吧原创. 鈥淭he judge鈥檚 ruling does not affect whether individuals may use our products, or any other means, to back up DVDs. The ruling concerned only how we sell our products. 鈥業t is the technology itself at issue, not the uses to which the copyrighted material may be put鈥, the Judge explained.鈥
The issue of free ripper software will now be raised in the European Parliament when it debates the Copyright Enforcement Directive in the ten days.