Own Your Own 128-Bit Integer 477
Byte Swapper writes "After all the fuss over the AACS trying to censor a certain 128-bit number that now has something over two million hits on Google, the folks at Freedom to Tinker would like to point out that you too can own your own integer. They've set up a script that will generate a random number, encrypt a copyrighted haiku with it, and then deed the number back to you. You won't get a copyright on the number or the haiku, but your number has become an illegal circumvention device under the DMCA, such that anyone subject to US law caught distributing it can be punished under the DMCA's anti-trafficking section, for which the DMCA's Safe Harbor provisions do not apply. So F9090211749D5BE341D8C5565663C088 is truly mine now, and you can pry it out of my cold, dead fingers!"
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not a number! (Score:3, Insightful)
I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed, or numbered.
My life is my own.
Which integer? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, it is a dead end (Score:5, Insightful)
At the same time, you cannot protect numbers. They do not belong to anybody.
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:4, Insightful)
What is a criminal? (Score:5, Insightful)
DRM is not about copyright infringement, it is about criminalizing not letting some one control how you use what you actually buy and pay for.
I am sick of hearing that not paying some media giant every time you hear some song, or watch some movie is piracy. I do not think it is, and I do not think there is naything wrong with sharing it for free.
What I think copyright piracy is, it to make counterfeit CD's DVD's etc and selling them for money.
I see nothing at all wrong with sharing software, movies, songs, books, etc as long as you are not representing them to be original or charging for them.
Is this the way the laws are today? , nope, cause we have corrupt politicos doing the bidding of the big media companies that finance their campaigns.
So if my conscience tells me some law is wrong, unfair, or unjust, oh well.
Bad laws need to be broken often enough to make them change.
Looks at the 09 f9 thing, people have just had enough silliness with this.
Cheers
Re:Why stop there (Score:4, Insightful)
If you had encrypted your haiku with any 128bit number then it would most probably be deemed that someone with a 128bit IP address was using your number by co-incidence. If however your 128-bit haiku encryption number appeared on a "how to decrypt encrypted haikus" website, then you would have a case however.
Re:Typical of liberals... (Score:3, Insightful)
No, it means breaking a criminal law.
That's a rather unusual definition of rights. A more typical definition of a right would be "a just claim or title, whether legal, prescriptive, or moral." (the first noun definition [reference.com].)
You are violating a legal property right.
Really, your entire argument seems to be based on inventing unusual definitions of words ("criminal", "right", "property") as if they were the normal, uncontroversial, widely accepted definitions, and then just claiming that your preferred conclusion flows naturally from your definitions. That's rather silly.
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand I think you'd be able to successfully sue any other winners who shared the jackpot with you for their share since they used the winning lottery numbers without your permission.
In fact I suspect, under DMCA, you could (legitimately) sue lottery players for winnings even if you didn't play, but merely if you had a previous claim on the numbers.
This doesn't seem to prove much of anything (Score:2, Insightful)
If /.ers were to create 100 million unique 128-bit keys per second, it would take 1.078x10^23 years (about 7.7 trillion times the age of the universe [bbc.co.uk]) to exhaust the 128-bit keyspace. This suggests that giving some kind of legal protection over every single key actually generated might not be harmful public policy. Sure, eventually many of those numbers would have ASCII/UNICODE/etc. meanings such as "free speech good" (128 bits in ASCII), but protection for a number as part of a copyright access control technology does not imply that the creator of the number has any rights over those who have re-created the same number by coincidence. The AACS key might exist out there as part of an audio encoding, image, or movie file. But the AACS has not been trying to stamp out the remote possibility of coincidental use of this number. The only use that they have gone after has been use of the number as a key that is part of a copyright access control technology.
If you don't like laws that protect copyright access control technologies, it is best to develop policy arguments against such laws. Gimicks like creating 128-bit numbers that others can "own" don't prove much of anything.
Re:Typical of liberals... (Score:3, Insightful)
But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not the number - it's the context of the number. Yes, I can use this number for my WEP key. I can print it on my T-shirt, print it on toilet paper and wipe my ass with it. I can do whatever you want with this number so long as I don't identify it as the decryption key for YOUR encrypted data.
Here's another example: A tennis racket. By itself, a tennis racket is made for whacking tennis balls. However, I could whack YOU with the racket, and suddenly its role changes from "sporting equipment" to "deadly weapon". But it's the same piece of equipment, and yes, a tennis racket is a plenty good enough weapon to kill somebody with.
It's not the racket itself that's deadly, it's the context for how its used or presented. There's a world of difference between "I'm going to whack the ball" and "I'm going to whack your balls"...
By publishing this number along with phrases like "decryption key for NNN", you've crossed the line from just some random number to establishing the context of the number as somehow important.
So please, please PLEASE get the point - having and/or publishing a number, any number, isn't illegal. Publishing that this number (instead of the billions/trillions of others like it) is the decryption key for $FOO is what's illegal.
Re:But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
Even so, I'll grant you that such logic might sell in court. That doesn't matter to me, I feel that one's free speech rights should only be limited by what actually harms others... not merely could be used to harm others. Anything can be abused.
--sabre86
Re:But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:4, Insightful)
>However, I could whack YOU with the racket, and suddenly its role changes from "sporting equipment" to "deadly weapon".
You don't charge mystery writers for murder just because they show in detail how to do so.
You don't charge news reporters with breaking-and-entering because they communicate to the public how breaking-and-entering was performed.
You don't censor history books because they outline how to commit acts of genocide.
Re:5D 09 7F B4 60 B8 FB BD D0 2B 6A A3 F2 F6 AB CA (Score:5, Insightful)
Your logic is flawed.
The fact that a member of a class has a certain property (ROT-13 being a DMCA approved encryption device) does not mean that all the members of that class have the same property. I am a member of the animals' group, I can use a computer therefore all animals can use a computer..... I don't think so.
Nobody said that ROT-14 would be considered an encryption device by the DMCA.
Your best chance to prove ROT-26 is a DMCA approved encryption method would be to read the legalese and find the definition of "encrpytion" in the text and hope it is not a very good definition. Something like "a function INTENDED to prevent observation by an untrusted party" would be enough, especially if they do not mention keys. In that case, it doesn't have to work successfully to be an "encryption device".
If that is the case, I propose the identity function as the new DRM standard.
C0 88 56 63 C5 56 41 D8 5B E3 74 9D 02 11 F9 09 to everyone, and remember, Intel CPUs are little endian!
Re:But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm not arguing that it SHOULD be illegal, only that it is. Don't confuse "legal" with "right". Lots of things are legal that are unethical, and lots of things are ethical but illegal. But let's spend our time discussing reality instead of some contrived misunderstanding, OK?
Re:But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
Of course I can't. What you say sounds reasonable in theory, but the letter of the law mentions no 'context' requirement.
Re:But context IS IMPORTANT!!! (Score:1, Insightful)