The trial of a Norwegian teen accused of developing a utility that enables people to illegally copy DVD movies opened in Oslo yesterday. Jon Johansen has pleaded not guilty to charges that carry a maximum sentence of up to two years in jail or huge fines and compensation for his role in creating and distributing the "DVD cracking" DeCSS utility.
Johansen created DeCSS in 1999, when he was only 15, in an effort to develop an open source software player which would allow people to play their lawfully purchased DVDs on computers running the Linux operating system. Prosecutors argue that the utility's prime purpose is to crack protection codes and facilitate the piracy of DVD movies.
An estimated 5,000 copies of DeCSS were downloaded from the Net in the week after its release in 1999, prompting Hollywood studios (through the Motion Picture Ass. of America) to file a complaint against Johansen which eventually led up to this week's trial. Hollywood also launched legal actions against US Web sites (such as hacker magazine 2600) that provided links to copies of DeCSS.
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News source: The Reg
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