Appeals Court Says That Just Buying A Smart Card Reader Doesn't Mean You Pirated DirecTV Signals
from the well-that's-good dept
While we often talk about the extortion-like tactics of the RIAA in going after file sharers, people sometimes forget that it was DirecTV that really pioneered this practice on the corporate level. Well before the RIAA started suing music fans, DirecTV sued a company that had been selling a device that would let people hack smart cards, and as part of the suit, DirecTV ended up with the company's customer list. They then set out to sue most of the folks on that list, without any evidence that those customers actually used the equipment to make smart cards for unauthorized access to DirecTV signals. The lawsuits snagged innocent folks who had plenty of legitimate reasons for wanting to program smart cards -- but DirecTV found the process so profitable that it pushed its "anti-piracy" team to do many questionable things in trying to convince people to settle -- even if they were completely innocent. Eventually, the company was accused of extortion and was told to stop threatening people if it didn't have any evidence.However, there were still some people who were found guilty of unauthorized access, even though DirecTV's only evidence was that they had purchased these smart card devices. Reader jedipunk lets us know that an Appeals Court has now tossed out one such decision, noting that simply possessing the device is not evidence of unauthorized access. The court notes that the defendants can still be found guilty if there's proof that they were accessing DirecTV signals with unauthorized equipment -- but simply possessing the smart card hacking device is not illegal and is not proof that they were doing anything illegal with it. Slowly, but surely, it appears that judges are picking up the details on some of these tech cases.
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Filed Under: cable cards, extortion, smart cards
Companies: directv
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Direct TV
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Didn't they...
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There are plenty of...
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DirecTV = Corporate IP-Theft ? ? ?
About two months after the switch away from DirecTV, my company authorised the purchase of card-readers for security. It took quite a long time to find a company that still sold these - so we skipped on that idea.
The end result: At the time, DirecTV took new tech to use in their devices then issued lawsuits to legit consumers of that new tech and then killed it for everyone else to use except themselves... which sounds much like Corporate IP-THEFT, does it not?
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Re: There are plenty of...
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Re: DirecTV = Corporate IP-Theft ? ? ?
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I tend to think...
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SCR30 USB
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Directv sued me and government did nothing
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Re: Re: card reader
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