WEVA International
Wedding and Event Videographers Association International
Find a Videographer
About WEVA
Brides Guide
Join WEVA
Join WEVA
MPV Program
Association News
Industry News
WEVA Honorees
Forums
Member Services
Member Benefits
Member Links
Industry Resources
Request Information
Contact Us
 

Macrovision Files Lawsuit Over DVD Copying Products
June 21, 2005

Santa Clara, CA - acrovision Corporation announced that it has filed suit against Sima Products Corporation ("Sima") and Interburn Enterprises Inc. ("Interburn"). The lawsuit charges that Sima's "Video Enhancers," which are principally used to allow consumers to make unauthorized copies of copyrighted DVDs, infringe Macrovision's patented copy protection technology and also violate the Digital Millennium Copyright Act ("DMCA").

These products include, but are not limited to, products currently marketed under the names CT-1, CT-100, CT-2, CT-200, and SCC-2. The lawsuit further charges that Interburn products infringe Macrovision's intellectual property and the DMCA.

"Sima and Interburn infringe Macrovision's intellectual property by offering products that enable users to make unauthorized copies of copyrighted content by illegally removing our copy protection system," said Macrovision CEO Bill Krepick. "The Sima and Interburn products have very limited commercial uses other than to circumvent Macrovision's copy protection technology and are marketed by Sima and Interburn for use in copying DVD's, among other types of media. The Sima/Interburn lawsuit is based on a fundamental cornerstone of the American economic system - protection of intellectual capital."

The lawsuit was filed in the U.S. District Court in the Southern District of New York. Macrovision is asking the court to order an immediate halt to sales of Sima's "video enhancer" products and Interburn's CD/DVD copying products.
Sima and Interburn make and sell DVD-copying products capable of circumventing Macrovision's patented Analog Copy Protection ("ACP") process without license or authorization from Macrovision. As such, these infringing products allow users to make new unlicensed DVD disc copies by stripping Macrovision's patented ACP technology.

The suit charges that Sima and Interburn therefore violate both Macrovision's patents and the DMCA, which prohibits circumvention of copy protection mechanisms. The DMCA specifically recognizes Macrovision technology as a broadly adopted copy protection system that cannot legally be bypassed.

For more information go to:
Macrovision

# # #

For a listing of all the Industry News Stories...
Click Here



5 most current stories:
06-13-2016Vitec Videocom Partners with Global Finance Group to Offer New Financing Opportunities for Small Businesses and Freelancers
10-28-2015Discover New Industry Developments @WEVAnews on Twitter
08-07-2015Register for Alex Buono's New 32-City Tour - Discount for WEVA Members
06-05-2015Skype for Web (Beta) Opens to Everyone in US and UK
05-28-2015Google Introduces Free Unlimited Storage for Photos and 1080p Video

Search:
 

Copyright © WEVA International. All rights reserved.
5020 Clark Road #345, Sarasota, FL 34233
General Information: e-mail [email protected] Problem using this website: e-mail [email protected]