FC: Russian hacker's arrest sparks online protests not seen in years

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Jul 19 2001 - 05:56:08 PDT

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    http://www.wired.com/news/politics/0,1283,45342,00.html
    
       Hacker Arrest Stirs Protest
       By Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
       2:00 a.m. July 19, 2001 PDT
       
       WASHINGTON -- When the FBI arrested a Russian programmer this week on
       charges of criminal copyright violations, the government unwittingly
       ignited a powder keg of outrage.
       
       Web pages immediately sprouted to demand the release of Dmitry
       Sklyarov, who was visiting the United States to describe his work at
       the Defcon hacker convention in Las Vegas. Newly minted activists set
       up a mailing list, launched a defense fund, and trashed Adobe Systems
       for urging the U.S. government to arrest Sklyarov on charges of
       circumventing its copy protection methods. [...]
       
       This high-visibility prosecution under the Digital Millennium
       Copyright Act seems to have focused the kind of anger not seen since
       the days of the 1996 Communications Decency Act or the Secret Service
       raid of Steve Jackson Games -- two defining moments in the development
       of civil liberties online.
       
       From the federal government's point of view, it's merely enforcing a
       law enacted by Congress in October 1998 that punishes anyone who
       distributes "any technology, product, service, device, component or
       part" that, like Sklyarov's software, bypasses copy-protection
       mechanisms. Sklyarov is facing a five-year prison term and a fine of
       $500,000.
       
       Matthew Parrella, a federal prosecutor in Las Vegas, said a judge on
       Monday decided to hold Sklyarov without bail until his hearing in
       California some time in the next two weeks. "The court deemed him a
       risk of non-appearance, which is not uncommon with white collar
       criminals," Parrella said. [...]
       
       Yet from a programmer's perspective, Sklyarov was simply following the
       venerable hacker tradition of exposing weaknesses in a security system
       -- in this case the often-flawed security of e-books -- in a smart,
       clever way. He received even higher points for documenting his
       research and presenting his work at Defcon last weekend on behalf
       of ElcomSoft. [...]
    
    
    
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