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FC: Cyberpatrol suit takes GNU twist -- Mattel's victory not one
From: Declan McCullagh <declan () well com>
Date: Tue, 28 Mar 2000 10:00:49 -0500
I've put up the first few lines of the cphack utility which explicitly
releases it under the GPL at:
http://www.politechbot.com/cyberpatrol/cphack-gpl.txt
**********
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,35226,00.html
Mattel Suit Takes GNU Twist
by Declan McCullagh (declan () wired com)
3:00 a.m. Mar. 28, 2000 PST
BOSTON -- Mattel's claim of victory Monday in a lawsuit over its
Cyberpatrol filtering software may be premature.
The toy giant said during a court hearing here that it had acquired
intellectual property rights to a program that reveals Cyberpatrol's
secret list of off-limits websites and settled the case. Mattel said
it planned to use its new copyright in court to ban Internet copying
of the "cphack" utility.
But cphack's authors released it under the GNU General Public License,
which appears to permit unlimited distribution of the original cphack
program, even if Mattel now owns the copyright.
"Once you do that you can't revoke it," said Bennett Haselton of
Peacefire, a group opposed to filtering software that temporarily put
up its own cphack mirror site.
The Free Software Foundation's GPL agreement says that "the recipient
automatically receives a license from the original licensor to copy,
distribute or modify the program."
Translation: A copyright holder can't change his mind.
"GPL is software that cannot be revoked," said Eben Moglen, a law
professor at Columbia University and FSF general counsel. "Anyone
downstream who possesses a copy of the software may redistribute it.
"It's a very amusing case," Moglen said. "If people are going to
respond to free software they don't like by trying to wipe it out,
they're in for some real trouble."
A spokeswoman for Mattel reached late Monday said she didn't know what
the effect of the GPL would be.
But she said cphack authors Eddy Jansson and Matthew Skala had signed
a contract with Mattel and if there was any deception, "they'd be in
big trouble."
[...]
*********
http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,35216,00.html
Mattel Stays on the Offensive
by Declan McCullagh (declan () wired com)
2:45 p.m. Mar. 27, 2000 PST
BOSTON -- Upping the stakes in a battle over a utility that reveals
Cyberpatrol's list of off-limits websites, Mattel threatened mirror
sites with contempt charges during a court hearing Monday afternoon.
Mattel, which sells Cyberpatrol, said the toy giant had acquired the
copyright to "cphack" from the two cryptoanalysts who published it on
their website earlier this month in a settlement agreement signed on
March 24.
Citing a March 16 Slashdot thread that said "it's time to mirror!",
Mattel attorney Irwin Schwartz advised against anyone thinking of
distributing cphack from now on.
[...]
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