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Sony's legal issues
Mark Rasch, 2005-11-14

Last month I wrote about a dispute between the Federal Trade Commission and a spyware distributor where the FTC alleged that an End User License Agreement, which essentially told downloaders that they were downloading spyware, was a false and deceptive trade practice. Two events cause me to revisit this issue. First, the FTC has gone after another spyware distributor, and second, Sony Corporation has caused the surreptitious installation of a rootkit-type program to enforce its digital rights management on its music CDs, claiming authority to do so under an End User License Agreement.

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Sony's legal issues 2005-11-14
fatman (2 replies)
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-15
Mark D. Rasch (2 replies)
Re: Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-17
Anonymous
Re: Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-17
Yvan Boily
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-22
R Simard
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-15
Anonymous (2 replies)
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Anonymous
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-17
Anonymous
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-15
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Anonymous
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
norgan
Here's how you get the CD to play... 2005-11-16
Gordon Fecyk
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
dreq
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Alexey Vesnin
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
ChiRaven
May be illegal in UK 2005-11-16
Anonymous
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Steve (1 replies)
Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-11-19
Mark Rasch (1 replies)
Re: Re: Sony's legal issues 2005-12-01
Anonymous
Sony's legal issues - EULA and DELL 2005-11-16
Anonymous (1 replies)
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-16
Steve
But what are the consumer's remedies? 2005-11-17
HavaCuppaJoe (2 replies)
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-21
Anonymous
You Missed Something Big! 2005-11-22
Anonymous
Validity of the EULA 2005-11-22
Stephan Schulz
Sony's legal issues 2005-11-22
JCD
What recourse does a buyer have? 2005-11-22
Jaywalk (1 replies)
My problem is that there appears to be no fair way out of this once you've bought one of these things. Suppose you go to your local music store and buy a Sony disc to listen to at work. Until you get the shrink wrap off and load it into your computer, there's no way to tell that the EULA forbids using this at work. But if you refuse the EULA, you can't take the disc back to most music stores if it has been opened. The purchase at the store assumes you have bought music to listen to, but the other shoe doesn't drop until after it's too late to disagree.

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Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/369/32712#32712
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