FC: Will this column land me in federal prison under the DMCA?

From: Declan McCullagh (declanat_private)
Date: Thu Jan 02 2003 - 10:52:18 PST

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    http://news.com.com/2010-1028-978636.html
    
        Perspective: Will this land me in jail?
        By Declan McCullagh
        December 23, 2002, 4:00 AM PT
    
        WASHINGTON--It's not every day that I fret about committing a string
        of federal felonies that could land me in prison until sometime in
        2008.
    
        But right now I'm wondering about whether the Digital Millennium
        Copyright Act (DMCA) means that I might get an all-expenses-paid
        vacation to Club Fed.
    
        It turns out that software company executives like the ones at
        ElcomSoft, whom a federal jury acquitted on Dec. 17 on charges of
        violating the DMCA, aren't the only people who might want to have a
        defense lawyer on retainer. Journalists might be affected too.
    
        Our story starts with the Transportation Security Administration (TSA)
        Web site, which has an area called "Security and Law Enforcement"
        featuring four password-protected Microsoft Word documents. No
        password is necessary to download those encrypted documents, but a
        password is required to open and read them.
    
        According to the brief descriptions on the TSA Web site, the four
        files cover airport security procedures, the relationship between
        federal and local police, and a "liability information sheet." A note
        on the site says this "information is restricted to airport management
        and local law enforcement." (Who knows? Maybe the
        sure-to-be-convincing reasoning behind banning those deadly nail
        clippers will be revealed.)
    
        Anyway, a confidential source recently gave me what I believe is the
        correct secret password to the documents.
    
        But here's the catch, and it's a pretty silly one: If I type the
        password into Microsoft Word or even tell you what it is, I could be
        liable for civil and criminal penalties under the DMCA. Section 1201
        of the law contains two prohibitions: First, "no person shall
        circumvent a technological measure" that controls access to
        copyrighted information, and second, no one may publish information
        such as a password that's designed to circumvent "a technological
        measure that effectively controls access" to a copyrighted document.
    
        [...]
    
    
    
    
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