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Is there a better solution available?
the charge of writing software that could be used to pirate software was added later and it\'s still not sure whether it will be pressed.
For a technically skilled person, I think one of the best ways to do that is to contribute to the next generation of P2P software with strong security features. So far, software development is still legal...
So, as long as you don\'t enter the US they can\'t touch you? Can the RIAA still sue you?
nteresting, I don\'t think alot of countries have these sort of restrictions. I guess that\'s why Debian has a non-US branch. Keep all the \"illegal\" stuff over there. Up here (Canada), We don\'t have to worry about US legal code, the DMCA or the RIAA. Yes, we can LEGALLY share music. But thats a different argument.
The distinction is between you using an \"authorized\" decryption device, vs an unauthorized one. As a matter of common sense, the distinction between plopping a DVD into computer and starting up Cyberlink vs. running DVD Decrypter is quite obvious. One is authorized, the other isn\'t. Now, the distinction between Cyberlink and something like Mplayer or Xine isn\'t quite as obvious (in a Joe Sixpack sitting on the jury kind of way), but Hollywood\'s lawyer will inform them that those too are unauthorized. And Joe Sixpack may squirm a little bit (if he\'s paying attention) and wonder why this \"authorization\" is do darn important when you just want to watch your own DVD on your own computer. But I\'m digressing...