RealNetworks has appealed the recent court ruling that blocked it from selling its RealDVD copying software.
The company never got to sell one unit of the software before they were taken to court by the media industry, with full backing by the Hollywood studios. Real was served with an injunction in August, banning sales of the software and of an upcoming set-top that incorporates the technology.
U.S. District Court Judge Marilyn Hall Patel ruled at the time that RealDVD circumvents the CSS copyright protection of the discs, thus violating the DMCA.
At the same time, Patel rejected the “Fair Use” argument the company was making, despite Real’s claim that they were simply giving customers the chance to exercise their right to make backup copies of movies they own.
The appeal trial is set to start November 9th and should garner big media attention.
Result for: media attention
Following a number of complaints at the revelation that Sony imposed a block on Intel’s Virtualization Technology (VT) in some VAIO models - which is present in the Core 2 Duo chip that ships with affected VAIO notebooks - Sony has promised The Register that it will make an effort to clarify the policy more clearly on its websites.
Customers were unhappy to learn about the limitation in the VAIO BIOS after buying a model which Sony recommends for the upcoming Windows 7, because it blocks Windows 7’s XP-mode. It is a feature that has received considerable media attention and put some minds at ease about going with Windows 7, so it isn’t inconceivable that customers who saw Sony advertise VAIO notebooks for Windows 7 assumed they could use this feature, even if they didn’t know the VT technology is included in the CPU.
If they did know, then they most likely would have been unaware that Sony has disabled it since its advertisements fail to declare the fact. “I’ll take the action to be clearer on our site that VT will not be enabled,” Senior manager for product marketing Xavier Lauwaert promised The Register.
He said the Vaio Z series would be “top of the list” for getting VT support in the US but said he could not comment on getting the BIOS of Sony VAIO’s in Europe working with VT.
Result for: media attention
Although Tele2, Denmark’s largest ISP, was recently forced to block all access to the notorious torrent site The Pirate Bay, it seems once again the admin team over at TPB are having the last laugh.
The access block, from a technical standpoint, is very elementary and the admins even created a site to help Danish file sharers break the block and access the site. A new blog post seems to prove that their method is working and that all the IFPI has done has given more publicity to the already hugely popular site.
“…the number of visits from Denmark has increased by 12% thanks to IFPI,” reads the post. “Our site http://thejesperbay.org is growing more because of the media attention than people actually coming to learn how to bypass the filter - our guess is that alot of the users on the site now run OpenDNS instead of the censoring DNS at Tele2.dk.”
“We also started tracking some stats before and after the block. There’s no noticable difference between the number of users from Tele2.dk before and after,” the post added.
The Jesper Bay site simply teaches those how to use OpenDNS which will connect them to a global DNS instead of the ISP’s DNS server, breaking the access block.







