Macrovision versus 321 studios update
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Posted on Thursday 20th of May, 2004 at 16:34 by SirQUK
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WebPr have emailed us to inform our readers about the latest between Macrovision and 321 Studios, concerning their ongoing court battle.
SANTA CLARA, Calif.– May 20, 2004
Macrovision Corporation (Nasdaq: MVSN), the world leader in content protection technologies, announced that it has won a preliminary injunction against the sale of widely-distributed DVD cloning products sold by 321 Studios (321) under the name "DVD X Copy". Judge Richard Owen of the Federal Court for the Southern District of New York issued the injunction on May 11, 2004 prohibiting 321 from selling various versions of its DVD copying software and their functional equivalents.
Unlike other lawsuits that have been brought against 321 Studios by content providers, whose primary weapon in the fight against piracy has been the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998 (“DMCA”), Macrovision's suit used two complementary approaches of attack by asserting both the DMCA and claims for patent infringement, which cover content protection technologies that are found on most of DVD players sold worldwide. "The vast majority of Hollywood DVDs are protected by software flags that trigger the patented anti-copy methods within DVD players," explained Macrovision’s attorney Robert Becker of Manatt, Phelps & Phillips. "When those flags are copied by DVD X Copy, the patented methods are triggered and performed without license from Macrovision. A patent infringement results. When the software flags are removed, the anti-copy mechanism is circumvented, resulting in a violation of the DMCA." Macrovision was granted a preliminary injunction barring 321 Studios from selling the various versions of its DVD copying software, including DVD X Copy Platinum, DVD X Copy Gold, DVD X Copy Xpress, and their functional equivalents. The Court issued the preliminary injunction after determining the software had violated federal law.
"Macrovision is committed to protecting copyrighted content from illegal piracy," said Macrovision’s CEO Bill Krepick. "Macrovision is uniquely situated by virtue of its patent position and worldwide copy protection ecosystem. Because copy protection is our core business, the conduct of those like 321 Studios that facilitate widespread copying is unacceptable."
About Macrovision:
Macrovision develops and markets digital rights management, copy protection, and electronic license management technologies for the video, music and software markets. Macrovision’s proven technology has been used on over 2.7 billion video DVDs, 250 million PC games CDs and 275 million music CDs.
Macrovision has its corporate headquarters in Santa Clara, California, with international offices in London, Frankfurt, Tel Aviv, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Taipei and Seoul. Macrovision can be found on the Internet at www.macrovision.com.
©Macrovision 2004. Macrovision is a registered trademark of Macrovision Corporation. All other product names and trademarks used are the registered property of their respective companies.
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