Category Archives: U.S. vs. ElcomSoft – Comprehensive Coverage

More of Dmitry Sklyarov’s December 9, 2002 Testimony

I’m hoping to get another installment up tonight…but it might not be till early morning.
The final argument is in San Jose at 8:00 am, so it’s most likely I’ll be posting well into the weekend on this thing. Hopefully the Jury will take its time deliberating on the evidence and not make any hasty decisions on Thursday afternoon. I’ll keep you posted.

“I still believe that it is absolutely legal,” he said.
“I’d like to rephrase the question. When you developed the program, you thought it was lawful. Correct?” Burton asked.
“Correct,” said Dmitry.
“And up until July 16, 2001, you thought it was lawful?” Burton asked.
“Correct,” said Dmitry.
“What were the reasons you thought it was lawful?” Burton asked.
“The initial idea was taken from the Internet. It had been around for years,” Dmitry said.
“Between the time you developed the program and July 16, 2001, did anyone ever tell you that the AEBPR was unlawful?” Burton asked.
“No.” Dmitry said.

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Elcomsoft Trial– Elaborations On Another’s Coverage

My comments on a fellow blogger’s coverage — Peter brought up some really good points and I just want to elaborate on them a bit from what I saw in the courtroom:

More on the Elcomsoft case….The testimony is over
and the two sides are wrangling with Judge Whyte
about the jury instructions.

Actually no, they came up to the bench to haggle about a specific line of questioning the prosecution was about to embark on about Reg Now’s parent company, Digital River, and its assets. It seemed as if the defense won on that one because when they came back, the prosecution had totally changed its tune, and only asked one little question about the parent company residing in the U.S. and then said “no further questions”.

Whyte did not allow Elcomsoft to introduce evidence
that its program allowed blind consumers to make
their Adobe ebooks readable by text-to-speech
software, or evidence on how any kind of
consumer actually used the program.

Note that the prosecution was also unable to come up with an example of a single infringing use!
Actually, Dmitry did testify about the uses for the blind, and the prosecution cross-examined on that point pretty clearly, by clarifying that the marketing materials and the splash screens that come up in the program don’t say “now you can view this text on your braille reader.” So the Judge may have felt that point had been made.

Arguments that Elcomsoft’s program is protected
by fair use, or that the relevant portions of the
DMCA violate the First Amendment, will have to
wait for an appeal.

Yeah the Judge threw out the First Amendment defense earlier this year. That totally sucks, but that was his call, so I imagine he would stand by it and not allow a line of defense to be presented that he said he wasn’t interested in.
That decision sure didn’t give me much hope for this case or this Judge. But now, after seeing the Judge in action, I have hope again. He wants the trial to focus on ElcomSoft’s intent: The company clearly did not mean to do anything illegal. When they were contacted about the problem, as soon as someone would clearly explain to them what the problem was, they acted accordingly.
Adobe’s language in its C and D letter was confusing — claiming that Elcomsoft had content on it’s site that infringed on Adobe’s copyrights (rather than ElcomSoft was distributing software on its site which could be used to infringe — big difference). The bungled letter only served to confuse those being accused (ElcomSoft, its ISP and Reg Now!).
A Reg Now employee testified yesterday that it was their fault, and not ElcomSoft’s, for not taking all of the versions from the website, as ElcomSoft had requested.

Even though the prosecutors dropped charges
against Dmitry Sklyarov in exchange for his
testimony, in the end they did not call him as a
witness, but used a taped deposition instead.
The defense called him as a witness, and
asked about his purposes in creating the program.

But the Fair Use stuff came up at little (but not much) in Dmitry’s questioning — but the Judge was quick to instruct the Jury that the testimony can only be used to judge Dmitry’s state of mind at the time, not whether or not he is correct about what he thinks will be illegal.

(The DMCA requires wilfulness.) Also see coverage
here and here.

Yes! And it is this willfullness issue that might get ElcomSoft off! If there was one thing that was clear from the testimony, and even from the Prosecution’s line of questioning with ElcomSoft President Alexander Katalov, it was that ElcomSoft never intended to do anything illegal. The company has a huge customer base in the Law Enforcement community and it would just be bad business.
That’s why these guys came all the way back here to try to clear their name. This lawsuit has heard their legitimate business. They were growing exponentially every year until last year, where there profits remained constant.
Okay back to typing up my notes from the trial…

Dmitry Sklyarov’s Testimony Continued

Here’s my next installment from the ElcomSoft trial. My next post will be tomorrow in the AM.

When we last left our story, our hero (Dmitry Sklyarov) is being questioned on the witness stand by ElcomSoft defense attorney Joseph Burton (perhaps the real hero), as a video excerpt of Dmitry’s July 2001 Def Con presentation is being presented to the Jury…
“One of the things you were trying to do was to demonstrate weaknesses?” said Burton.
“Yes,” replied Sklyarov. “Many companies say the Ebooks are copyproofed. But most of the ones I have seen are not secure and can be easily compromised. The program I developed demonstrates such security flaws.”
“We are trying to show that E-book distribution on Adobe’s Technology is insecure,” he said. “We are not trying to hurt publishers.”
“By ‘publishers’, who do you mean?” said Burton.
“I mean copyright holders,” Sklyarov said. “Companies that use those (security technologies) can lose money, and that’s not fair,” said Sklyarov. “The public has a right to know.”

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ElcomSoft Update: Court Adjourned Until Thursday

Court wrapped up early today. Both sides have presented all of their evidence and examined and cross-examined each other’s witnesses.
Tomorrow will be a day off to let the Judge finalize the Jury instructions (which the Judge explained could not be prepared properly until all of the evidence was heard) and to let both sides prepare for their final arguments, which will be taking place Thursday morning at 8:00 am.
I expect to be writing up yesterday and today’s events for the next 24 hours or so.
I’ll keep posting them here in 1,000 word incriments.
Here’s a little courtroom artwork to tide you over till the next one.
That’s the “Jury” on the left and “Reporter” (meaning the court reporter) on the right.
My First Impressions of the Trial

Sketch by Lisa Rein

My First Report From The ElcomSoft Trial

I had a really interesting day in court Monday observing the U.S. vs. ElcomSoft trial.
Dmitry Sklyarov was cross-examined by both sides and Vladimir Katalov had just taken the stand for a bit when it was time for court to adjourn.
I’ll be posting more this evening before heading over to the big EFF party tonight.
See you there!

All in all I’d say the Jury was probably just trying to keep up with the conversation more than anything else — which did get rather confusing from time to time in the context of all of the products, technologies and acronyms flying around.
Even I had to look at the big chart provided by the defense showing the two products being discussed side by side — the APDFPR (Adobe PDF Password Recovery program) and AEBPR (Adobe Ebook Password Recovery program) — every so often in order to keep it clear in my mind which one they were talking about as they switched back and forth. And I’ve been familiar with the case for over a year — so I can’t imagine what it would be like for a juror to try to stomach all of this stuff in a couple of sittings.
One thing about the jury though: they sure looked interested in what was going on. They were paying close attention and were taking everything very seriously — yet they were also quick to laugh when things were, well, just plain funny.

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