Close, but not quite.. IIRC, the law still prohibits "group" viewing, which is a gathering of over 12 people.. That law applies to commercially available DVDs, VHS, as well as recordings of shows.
It also seems to me that the new law would only prohibit *selling* of devices that don't obey the new flag.. Meaning, you could build your own device, just not market it. And I'd imagine that at some point we'll see some kind of inline device that would attach to your cable before your tv/tv card/box that strips out the broadcast flag, but maybe that's just wishful thinking. I'd also like to note that while the article in the SF Guardian has some merit, the EFF tends to go off the deepend a bit.. They have a great cause, and I applaud them for upholding it, but they go overboard far too often, which lends them less credibility in political circles than is their due. -=Aaron On Thu, 3 Mar 2005, Allan Stirling wrote: > Matt Grommes wrote: > > Yes, thank you. The willingness people have to just cave to anything the > > media industry says is very disheartening. We need to have some common > > sense about these things and not just allow industry to dictate the > > features and uses we're "allowed" to have. > > Following this to absurdity, if what you are stating is legal, only one > person in the US would have to subscribe to each of the available > channels. They could then share out all the programs with their friends, > who could share out to their friends. > > I really wouldn't want to have that person's cable bill. > > Cheers, > > Allan. > _______________________________________________ > mythtv-users mailing list > mythtv-users@mythtv.org > http://mythtv.org/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/mythtv-users >
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