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[PSUs]| Thursday 6th October 2005 |
An Australian court has confirmed that 'chipping' consoles did not breach the country's copyright laws, reports Reuters.
The ruling is the latest twist in a long running battle between the Japanese electronics giant and an Australian businessman, who had modded consoles for customers in order for them to play cheaper overseas versions of PlayStation games.
The charge that Eddy Stevens faced was that by bypassing encrypted access codes he was infringing copyright protections. In the US, for example, the Digital Millennium Copyright act made it illegal to circumvent anti-piracy measures built into commercial products.
But Australia has viewed things differently and the case turned on the definition of 'technological protection measures'.
According to the news agency, the court criticized
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'[The Court] accepted Justice Sackville's construction of a "technological protection measure" as a device which denies access to a copyright work or which limits capacity to make copies of a work and thereby prevents or inhibits the undertaking of acts which would infringe copyright. The Court upheld the finding by Justice Sackville and the Full Court majority that computer programs are not reproduced in a material form in RAM and copies of cinematograph films are not made in RAM when games are played.'
You can read a pdf of the court ruling online at www.hcourt.gov.au/
Sony has long fought a battle against an unofficial 'grey' market for its powerful PlayStation console, which has helped spread 'chipped' versions.
Indeed, such is the widespread nature of the problem that at the end of 2004 Sony even traced large numbers of modded Playstations back to a Chinese prison.
Following a five-year investigation, Sony found that the productive prisoners were part of a criminal network turning around up to 50,000 modded PS2s a week. The company said that it discovered that 10 distributors were involved in the operation to sell on the machines.
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