Real Worried About Apple Lawsuits 264
sebFlyte writes "silicon.com is reporting that Real is very worried that Apple will sue it over its Harmony technology that 'breaks' iTunes' FairPlay DRM to allow its music to play on the iPod. They acknowledged in an SEC filing that a lawsuit from Apple would potentially be very damaging to the company's bottom line, as it accepts that a court might not agree that the reverse-engineering is legal."
wow.... (Score:4, Funny)
(not to spite apple, but to support reverse engineering of course!)
Re:wow.... (Score:5, Informative)
Neither side is acting in particularly good faith on this issue.
BUT, before all of Slashdot flies off the handle on this "story", I think it's worth pointing out that this is an SEC filing, and it is every company's responsibility, in fact under the law, to state all possibilities that may negatively affect a business, however remote those possibilities may be. I don't think it's any secret to anybody that Apple could sue Real, and that there is at least a chance that Apple would win (because you just never know what can happen in the courts). Given that, Real must disclose this information to investors.
The news here seems to be that Real is "admitting" to something that seems to be common sense. But Real has to admit that they're at risk of a lawsuit, and that there's a chance that they would lose - to do otherwise would be fraud. It would be withholding information in order that people would continue buying their stock.
If you are not used to reading these SEC filings, even the healthiest of companies can seem to be in pretty dire straits once you get to the "risks" section. These are worst-case scenarios, presented basically to cover the company's ass from class action lawsuits and SEC investigations should the unthinkable happen. That doesn't mean anything listed as a risk will happen, or even has a good chance of happening. It's kind of the same as putting a warning label on a 9 volt battery that says "warning! eating this battery may cause injury!" I mean, duh. But they have to put that label on there or you just know that one idiot who eats that battery and gets sick is going to sue.
Re:wow.... (Score:2)
To be fair, if you are used to reading SEC filings you'd know that all risks are described using deliberately vague may or may not language referring to adverse effects, not unlike (to put thing in a
Re:wow.... (Score:2)
Re:wow....Wrong statement of law ... Asteroids (Score:5, Insightful)
Not quite. It is every company's responsibility to state all facts that a reasonable investor might consider important in deciding whether to invest.
The required level of disclosure is certainly something less than "all possibilities . . . however remote [they] may be." Under this type of standard, a company would have to disclose the possibility of an asteroid hitting the corporate headquarters, or the possibility of the CEO's having a heart attack and an infinite number of other "possibilities".
To be fair (and at the risk of stating the obvious), Real's disclosure is right on the money. Given the current state of the law and the spectre of even a threatened DMCA action, any new technology that requires reverse engineering (especially one that goes straight for Apple's market) makes its author vulnerable, and disclosure in this case is warranted.
Re:wow.... (Score:2)
Reverse-engineering (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2)
For Real's actions to be legal under the DMCA, don't they need Library of Congress permission or something like that?
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:3, Informative)
It's about the reverse engineering exception under the DMCA. This concerns why it was done (interoperability) not how it was done.
DMCA 1201 (f) [harvard.edu] (1) provides:
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:3, Informative)
The section only says that theyhave to have legally obtained a copy of the program that they are circumventing. That they will have done if they purchased an iPod for this purpose. I suspect they did.
This cited subsection of the DMCA provides for an individual person
Not just wrong, but laughable. The word "individual" is one you a
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2)
not true, read...
`(f) REVERSE ENGINEERING- (1) Notwithstanding the provisions of subsection (a)(1)(A), a person who has lawfully obtained the right to use a copy of a computer program may circumvent a technological measure that effectively controls access to a particular portion of that program for the sole purpose of identifying and analyzing those elements of the program that are necessary to achieve interoperability of an indep
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2)
But Real has not lawfully obtained the program Apple used for their DRM in the first place and Real certainly can't turn around and profit from their labor.
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2, Insightful)
I doubt it, since SAMBA, linux's NTFS support, countless device drivers and many other hacking efforts have involved reverse engineering software. Those projects still thrive, so either corporate lawyers are being nice (hah!), or it's completely legal.
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2)
If you approach the potential case of Real getting sued by Apple about Rhapsody, it's the same concept: reverse engineering software (vs hardware) for purposes of interopability.
Not if Apple has an intelligent lawyer it's not. It's about Real selling music to people and including software attached to that music that (without informing them) violates a licensing agreement they have with Apple and makes use of Apple's servers (without authorization) to technologically enforce the terms of Real's license
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:3, Informative)
Filtration, Comparison that happens when someone claims that reverse engineering violates copyright.
The process is basically as follows:
For a copyright violation someone must have copied to code, so the source code is the only thing that relates to reverse-engineering and copyright.
First of all all trivial bits of the code are ignored
The two code bases are then checked for common areas of code.
Then the code in the common areas that is their due to necessisity is re
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:2)
Yes, it sounds ridiculous. Don't blame me, blame the courts.
Re:Reverse-engineering (Score:5, Interesting)
No. Reverse-engineering is legal. But not as legal as it once was, since the DMCA bans the circumvention of copyright protection devices, except for interoperability purposes.
Has a precedent been set in the software world that would apply to this?
Yes and no. There is a good amount of legal precedent from before, e.g. Vault Corp. v. Quaid Software Ltd, which held that reverse-engineering was legal, even though there was an EULA prohibiting it. This was even for a copyright-protection circumvention device. (a program which would copy copy-protected floppies)
But that ruling is from before the DMCA, and probably isn't as relevant anymore.
The thing is, the DMCA is rather new, so there isn't a lot of precedent defining exactly what qualifies as 'interoperability purposes'. Nor is the idea of a 'copyright protection device' very well defined yet. Which is why there are lots of eager lawsuits trying to strech this to cover everything.
I think Real could probably make a good argument that it's for interoperability purposes. But since it's not well-defined, they're right to be cautious.
In Europe, things are somewhat clearer. Council directive 91/250/EEC, article 6 also allows reverse-engineering for interoperability purposes, and defines those purposes somewhat better than US law.
It's worth mentioning that stopping reverse-engineering through copyright law is only possible if the subject material is copyrightable to begin with. And people tend to overestimate how much of a program is copyrightable. For instance, an API is either not in itself copyrightable (Computer Associates v. Altai) or, duplicating it is allowed through fair-use (Sega v. Accolade).
IANAL.
Marketing Speak (Score:5, Funny)
-Peter
Why the DMCA sucks so badly (Score:5, Interesting)
as it accepts that a court might not agree that the reverse-engineering is legal.
Real makes a competing product. They want to be able to interoperate with the songs sold on iTunes. This should be an open and shut case. I cringe to think what sort of legal wrangling will go on.
I know that Real is no great champion, but we should support them if there is a possibility it will help to preserve what little bit of fair use we still have left.
Re:Why the DMCA sucks so badly (Score:2)
Real *can* interoperate with iPods and iTunes.
Apple isn't preventing interoperation - you're still welcome to publish music as MP3s, and iPods will work fine with them.
Don't want to do that? Tough shit - it's your choice to publish using DRM, and Apple has no obligation to support you.
Don't they see the hypocricy of complaining that somebody else's DRM is preventing you from applying your own DRM?
Re:Why the DMCA sucks so badly (Score:2)
As you said, its not like an iPod can't play non-DRM'd audio (other than wma and ogg vorbis).
Re:Why the DMCA sucks so badly (Score:2)
Real makes a competing product. They want to be able to interoperate with the songs sold on iTunes. This should be an open and shut case.
First, Real announced this to the press in order to get free press because they are in danger of disappearing from the public consciousness. It is marketing. Next there is basically no doubt that the reverse engineering itself is legal, their statements to the contrary are FUD. Where they are on very shaky legal ground is by including technology hidden in music files
Re:Why the DMCA sucks so badly (Score:2)
Ah, that's the crux of the matter. They don't make a competing product.
Apple has an end-to-end DRM-encumbered digital music system. iTMS to iPod, via iTunes, a PC and an Internet. They spent $x to do this and it's going onto year 4 in a couple months.
Real has half a digital music system. They wish they had a whole one because they think they can make some money if they did, so they're attempting to use half of Apple's system to make it seem like they have a whole system, w
If Real is so worried... (Score:2, Flamebait)
Can't they find another way to make money?
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:3, Insightful)
"Can't they find another way to make money?"
Same could be said for Apple. Can't they make money from the iPo
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Argument to support premise:
The argument you gave has to do with Real selling songs and making money. It says nothing about their customers. Unless Real (or you) can show that they've been petitioned by lots of people pleading with them to
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Of course Real is being opportunistic and trying to tap in on the money from a large market. That's how one runs a buissness.
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
You're essentially saying that anyone who makes a consumable product for a non-consumable device that they themselves do not make is a wannabe. Real wants its products to be available on a certain device (iPod). The same way that a record store wants to sell CDs that work on a regular CD player. Is the record store being a wannabe by not selling their own CD players?
Are you incapable of admitting that Apple is wrong and Real is right?
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:3, Insightful)
What law has Real broken? The DRM has been reverse engineered expressly for interoperability. There is no law being broken here. And the DRM wasn't even reverse engineered to break a copyright at all! In fact, it was reverse engineered for the purposes of CREATING DRM, not breaking it. (or at least, the appearance of it.)
"That's irrelevant to the news story at hand which is only about Real basing their business model
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:3, Insightful)
Other music players are crap compared to the iPod"
Are they? Depends on your criteria. Other music players variously cost less, have support for more formats, have a better battery life, and so on.
"other music stores are crap compared to the iTMS"
Again, depends on your criteria. Allofmp3
Re:sell songs, and and have them work with the iPo (Score:2)
Apple has the right to break Real's way of doing it, and Real has the right to make their songs play on the iPod. The question of whether Real should have done it another way when it comes to customer choice, fair use, open source ethics, etc. etc. is beside the point. Apple should not be suing them, and hopefully won't.
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Can't they find another way to make money?"
That's like telling someone wanting to make an Office suite compatible with MS Office to find another way to make money instead of reverse engineering the
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
Well that was the point of DRM.
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
See also Playfair, Hymn etc.
Re:If Real is so worried... (Score:2)
No, it's not what I actually mean. Again, the method used for breaking the DRM is irrelevant.
You've got it bass ackwards: what Real did was make it so that songs purchased from Real can be played on the iPod. This has nothing to do with the RealPlayer.
But even if you got it right, it's still illegal be
Re:They do make money another way... (Score:2)
doesn't mean much (Score:2)
So don't make much of this disclosure. Any non-zero risk will be listed.
-russ
Real (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Real (Score:2)
Don't get too worked up (Score:2)
Re:Don't get too worked up (Score:2)
It was explained in Cryptonomicon, so you'd think the nerds would get it, but apparently not.
No no no, it was *sarcastic* (Score:2)
Re:No no no, it was *sarcastic* (Score:3, Funny)
We're worried (Score:2, Insightful)
What? This is a page out of the SCO play-book? Rambus play-book?
"Hello, Bernie Ebbers? You busy? We'd like some ideas on how to run our business."
Just a thought (Score:2)
Frankly I'm surprised gtkpod can't do this with ogg yet.
and Apple should be worried about the Beatles (Score:3, Insightful)
Breaking 20 year old contracts [out-law.com] binding you not to get involved in music won't be good for the bottom line either
but hey lawsuits is what America likes doing !, the legal industry is the biggest cash contributers in the world to American politics [opensecrets.org] so nothing is going to change until everyone is either dead or in court
see you in court or hell !
Re:and Apple should be worried about the Beatles (Score:2)
Well, I'm confused.. (Score:2)
I play non-DRM'ed mp3s on my iPod mini all the time. What am I missing?
Re:Well, I'm confused.. (Score:5, Informative)
According to Real, the ability to play a different form of DRM'd files on the iPod while still keeping it DRM'd.
Non-DRM'd mp3s, as you point out, will just play fine.
Re:Well, I'm confused.. (Score:2)
I see. That makes sense.
I can also see why Apple would object (takes business away from ITMS), but it could be construed as unfairly stifling competition as well.
These days... (Score:2)
If it comes to a lawsuit... (Score:3, Interesting)
On the other hand, Apple may be afraid to test these waters because if they lose, every hacker and cracker on the planet will get free reign to develop their own reverse engineering project...
mandatory disclosure (Score:2)
don't be too alarmed about this.
sum.zero
The purpose of the DMCA... (Score:2, Redundant)
I realize that Apple's business model is to get people to buy iPods and use iTunes. But is the purpose of government really to protect business models?
Re:The purpose of the DMCA... (Score:2)
If Real circumvented measures taken to protect copyrighted content, then they are probably violating the DMCA. If what they were circumventing wasn't really there for protecting copyright in the first place but to prevent interoperability, then Real might not be guilty.
Re:The purpose of the DMCA... (Score:2)
Because, in order to get the iPod to play Real's DRM'd stuff, they had to circumvent Apple's DRM, figure out how it works, and then make their stuff work on Apple.
So you break a lock (metaphorically) so you can install your own lock I think is the gist of the possible argument.
Re:The purpose of the DMCA... (Score:2)
Re:The purpose of the DMCA... (Score:2)
Truthfully, I don't think the DMCA cares why you circumvented it --- it merely outlaws the act of doing it.
I suspect there will need to be more court precedents before we really know.
Cheers.
Concerns You WON'T Find in Real's 10Q... (Score:4, Funny)
- Crow T. Trollbot
Plan: (Score:2, Funny)
2. ???
3. Profit!(?)
unbreakable AND irreparable... (Score:2)
Would this imply that, even if I lose my housekey, I'm not allowed to pick the lock? And, would it further suggest that, when I bought the lock, part of what I paid for was the vendor's assurance that they'd sue any crook who picked it? Seems like that'd be a lock in name only. Guess I could post a sign saying, "Warning: Premises protected by First Circuit Court of Appeals"...
Oh boohoo (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't think Real was whining about the DMCA then.
Taunting Apple? (Score:2)
It doesn't sound very bright. They're trying to sneak in their product as a competitor's clone, they feel there might be trouble and carry on anyways?
What happened to relying on their own technology and competing at that level? Maybe LICENSING apple's technology? I really wonder if this unnecessary risk taking is part of Real's corporate culture.
Re:Taunting Apple? (Score:2)
This is *Apple* we're talking about. Do you really think that if they handed out licenses we wouldn't have seen official iPod-compatible shops (well apart from iTMS) by now?
Which begs the question (Score:2)
They acknowledged in an SEC filing that a lawsuit from Apple would potentially be very damaging to the companies bottom line, as it accepts that a court might not agree that the reverse-engineering is legal.
That statement alone's damaging IMHO, as now when they continue pushing this technology, Apple can come back in a year (when it might actually be turning some form of profit for them) and sue saying "You clearly understood that this was wrong over a year ago, and yet yo
Easy solution: Countersuit! (Score:2)
Ta-da!
Pardon me. (Score:2)
Apple vs Real (Score:3, Insightful)
On one hand, Real is making it easy and accessible to its customers to break Apple's proprietary codec. Apple spent time and money to make the files only play on their players, and Real is trying to use the files without permission. Oh, and I'm still pissed about that who bloated Real Player thing
On the other hand, what Apple is doing is very akin to something that M$FT would do. They have a virtual monopoly on music players and online music downloads (to avoid starting an obvious argument, I will stress that I know what Apple has is not an actual monopoly, but imo it basically is. There are alternatives, but many people do not know this.) What Apple is doing is unfairly using this monopoly to sustain the monopoly, something MSFT is notorious for. If I buy a song from iTunes, I should be able to use it on any player. This is a basic sentiment of slashdot - freely using what is yours. Your dollar spent on that song should give you a license to use it however you want to, not a license to go out and buy a 300 dollar iPod just to listen to it.
I think Apple will win this fight and Real was foolish to get into it. Reminds me of MP3.com's downfall.
Re:Apple vs Real (Score:3, Informative)
What Apple is doing is unfairly using this monopoly to sustain the monopoly, something MSFT is notorious for. If I buy a song from iTunes, I should be able to use it on any player. This is a basic sentiment of slashdot - freely using what is yours. Your dollar spent on that song should give you a license to use it however you want to, not a license to go out and buy a 300 dollar iPod just to listen to it.
First I don't buy your argument that Apple has a monopoly (virtual or otherwise) on digital music pla
Re:Apple vs Real (Score:3, Informative)
You've got it backwards. Real wants to make files from their own store play on Apple's player, by converting them to Apple style DRM files (instead of unrestricted MP3s, which is what they'd do if they really cared about their customers.. but I digress).
Also, don't forget that ju
OK, except... (Score:2)
Making that equivalent with your typical MSFT strategy for sewing up a market is way out in left field.
You can use your iTunes anywhere you want. Burn, re-rip. Thinking that Apple is going to do this for you is unreasonable.
Apple needs to enforce the DRM so that it maintains its consistent potection of the holder's requirements.
Real's claim to want interop really really really badly is hardly a reas
Breaking News: Apple Sues Real (Score:2)
Rinse, lather, and repeat (Score:2, Troll)
Apple built a product (iTunes + iPod) that a lot of consumers love (marketshare speaks much louder than OGG support, open-ness, etc.), and Real wants a piece of that because very few are using their service. Why is it that we think just because it
You've got to be kidding (Score:5, Insightful)
So then you must agree that it's good for Microsoft to use closed file formats for Office and that Lexmark should be able to sue competitors for refilling their ink cartridges. Also, cracking the DVD encrpytion scheme to make a Linux DVD player must be wrong too.
"If I create a product that is easier to use, looks good, and appeals to more consumers than everyone else's product, why should I have to share? I mean, if in the mean time I was running around telling the music companies that they could only use my service or could get some sort of incentive to not allow other services (i.e., the allegations behind much of the Wintel monopoly) that'd be one thing, but it appears that nothing of that sort happened."
Apple shouldn't be required to share, but if someone reverse engineers their product to make something that is compatible, do you really believe Apple should have legal grounds to sue?
Re:You've got to be kidding (Score:2)
Well, I don't think it's "good" for MS to close Office formats, because I personally like choice, but if that's what they want to do, let them. As a very minor MS shareholder (less than 100 shares), I must say it is good for business, since their
The funny thing about this (Score:3, Interesting)
So at least in the short term, this should positively impact Apple's business by improving iPod sales.
Long term, though, it reduces vendor lock-in. If you ultimately have lots of Real tracks on your old iPod, and they're compatible with both iPods and some other player (or at the very least, you can re-download the tracks in the appropriate format without buying them all over again), you're just as likely to buy that other player as a new iPod.
So if Real is violating the DMCA (Score:2)
Clippy Rides Again (Score:3, Funny)
Analysis of DMCA and Real's Harmony (Score:3, Informative)
*****
As mentioned above, Real has claimed that, with their Harmony software, downloads from the Real music store will now be usable by the iPod. Real accomplished this by reverse-engineering FairPlay, so that Real can now create a level of DRM that is indistinguishable from FairPlay by the iPod. Until a few days ago, only music purchased from iTMS could have any form of DRM on it and be playable on the iPod. With the creation of Harmony, the iPod will no longer be able to lock out Real's DRM'd music, creating (something resembling) a true competitor to iTMS in the form of Real's store.
Realizing this, Apple has quickly and angrily accused Real of using the "tactics and ethics of a hacker" in creating Harmony.
Apple's statement should be summarily ignored. They are using ad hominem attacks with terms that carry misleading connotations. It could be argued that Real "cracked" the FairPlay DRM, but even that is misleading. The right to reverse-engineer is protected by law, and as such what Real did is legal.
Or rather, would have been definitively legal several years ago, before the passage of the DMCA. In fact, "Apple said it is investigating the implications of Real's software strategy under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act" (news.com article [com.com]).
Now that statement by Apple is worth investigating. What does the DMCA say as to Real's reverse-engineering of FairPlay?
The sections that pertain to this case are Sec. 1201 (a)(1)(A), Sec. 1201 (a)(2)(A), and Sec. 1201 (f)(1). These sections are somewhat long and legal, but I will quote only what is necessary and break the verbage down into "normal english." Their relevant parts are, respectively
and
and
The first excerpt says that if there is some "technological measure that effectively controls access to a work", it is now illegal to circumvent that measure. To borrow from the Fair Use example above, if someone purchased a music compact disc that had some technological measure on it that kept them from copying it to their hard drive as mp3s, it would now be illegal for them to circumvent that technological measure.
The second excerpt says that you cannot create or distribute tools or software that allows circumvention of technological anti-copying measures. To continue the Fair Use example, it is illegal for someone else to create a method to turn a protected purchased disc into mp3s, or to give that method to others.
The third excerpt
So what, its just an SEC filing (Score:2, Insightful)
To put it into perspective, their "worry" about being sued by Apple is one paragraph in 15 pages of disclosures, including entries like "Our mobile products will not be successful if consumers do not use mobile devices to access digital media." and "Any development delays or cost overruns may affect our operating results."
Ethics of a hacker (Score:2)
They may be using the term "hacker" in the sense that the mainstream press has been using it -- not the actual definition of a hacker. Maybe they just don't know better.
That's one way to make it happe (Score:2)
That's certainly one way to make the lawsuit happen...
Its an Apple iPod, not a general purpose PC. (Score:2)
And given the prepondrance of Walkman work alikes, which cost Sony their monopoly after a certain number of years, they have evey right to do so.
Now Sony did not 'control' the content, they did not want to, back then they weren't yet a media company, but if they had been, they would have sued the pants off (and beyond) of anyone who'd infringed.
I
They're not very worried. (Score:3, Insightful)
The fact is that Real's move garnered them lots of press attention, and in light of that, they are now obliged to disclaim the possibility of a lawsuit in their filings.
It's probably not that they think Apple is going to sue them out of existence. It's that, if they DIDN'T disclose that, even a minor legal tussle with Apple could be the basis for a shareholders lawsuit.
Re:Rightfully So (Score:2)
Re:Rightfully So... Microsoft Too? (Score:2)
Hmmmmm.... car
Re:Rightfully So (Score:2)
Re:Rightfully So (Score:2)
Re:Rightfully So (Score:2)
Right, because Sony would never pull something like that. Now excuse me as I watch the new Spider Man 2 UMD disk I bought for my Sony PSP.
Re:They aren't "worried" (Score:2)
Re:Does anyone know... (Score:2)
Re:Apple is isolating itself... (Score:3, Insightful)
If you consider any form of DRM to be oppressive, then there isn't much difference between FairPlay and anything else. If you
Re:Apple is isolating itself... (Score:2, Informative)
I just don't understand why everyone rally's behind Apple with their iPod and the fact that people are forced to use iTune's. I like Apple's product line, but it will be a cold day in hell before I buy an iPod.
There is no forcing anyone to use iTunes. You don't have to wait for hell to freeze over to learn about the product, however. The restriction is on music purchased from iTunes, not on must loaded on to the iPod. Don't like the DRM on iTunes? Don't buy the music - copy it over from CD or another so
Re:Reverse Engineering (Score:2)
And, based upon Nintendo's fairly successful lawsuit against Atari/Tengen et. al. over this exact same issue (vendor hardware locks used to only allow "authorized software" to run), I think the courts would agree that Real is in the wrong.