[free-sklyarov] Reuters piece
Alexander Moskalyuk
prostoalex at hotbox.ru
Fri Jul 20 19:27:19 PDT 2001
Supporters Rally Behind Arrested Russian Hacker
By Elinor Mills Abreu
LOS ANGELES (Reuters)
The arrest this week of a 26-year-old Russian software
programmer accused of violating U.S. copyright law has
sparked protests and pledges of support from a wide
range of free speech advocates, defense lawyers and
consumer groups.
Dmitry Sklyarov, who was arrested on Monday in Las
Vegas after a major hacker convention there, is the
first person to be prosecuted under the controversial
1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act (news - web
sites), federal law enforcement officials said.
Adobe Systems Inc. (NasdaqNM:ADBE - news) alleged that
a program Sklyarov wrote violates that law, which bans
the creation or distribution of any technology that
circumvents copyright protections.
``Free Dmitry'' rallies are scheduled for Monday in
San Jose, Boston, Denver, Chicago, Seattle, Portland,
Reno and Moscow, according to the Electronic Frontier
Foundation, a San Francisco-based advocacy group
focused on free speech issues on the Internet.
EFF representatives are scheduled to meet on Monday
with Adobe executives in an attempt to broker a
resolution in the case, a lawyer for the group said on
Friday.
``Because of the meeting with Adobe we are not
supporting the protests because we would like to go in
there and talk to them in good faith about their
policies,'' said Lee Tien, a senior staff attorney for
the advocacy group.
``We want to explore all the options we can for Adobe
and the EFF in an effort to free Mr. Sklyarov and at
the same time address public policy issues raised'' by
the new copyright law, Tien said.
The EFF, which was founded by Grateful Dead lyricist
John Perry Barlow and Mitchell Kapor, the founder of
the software company Lotus, argues that the new U.S.
copyright law, which took effect in 2000, is flawed
because it outlaws technologies instead of conduct.
The group plans to offer legal aid to Sklyarov, who
was detained without bail and will be transferred to a
federal detention center in San Jose.
In an interview with a local Las Vegas television
station, Sklyarov denied doing anything wrong and
accused Adobe of bullying him.
``I wrote the program to demonstrate security flaws,
not to violate copyright law,'' he told station KTNV
on Wednesday. ''It's not illegal in Russia.''
Sklyarov's program allows people who purchase books in
digital form, known as ebooks, to get around
protections in Adobe's eBook Reader designed to
prevent copies from being made.
In addition to organizing rallies, Sklyarov's
supporters have created a Web site calling for a
boycott of Adobe products(http://www.boycottadobe.com)
that features photos of Sklyarov and his wife and two
children in Moscow.
An Adobe lawyer did not return calls seeking comment
on Friday.
Sklyarov's employer, Moscow-based ElcomSoft Co., began
selling his program a month ago but pulled it off the
market after Adobe complained, executives said.
Sklyarov's was arrested in Las Vegas just before he
was scheduled to return to Moscow, officials said. He
had given a presentation at the DefCon hacker
convention on his program the day before he was
arrested.
Best regards,
Alexander Moskalyuk
http://www.moskalyuk.com/
ICQ 44065387
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