Do You Have the Right to Make a Backup Copy of Your DVDs?

Written by Eric Olsen
Published October 29, 2002

Robert Moore says yes, the DMCA says no:

    Moore's wares enable the copying of discs even if they are scrambled to prevent duplication, as are most movies sold on DVD. This sort of product, officials at the Motion Picture Assn. of America say, blatantly violates a 1998 federal law against picking the electronic locks on copyrighted works.

    Moore disagrees, saying the public has the right to make backup copies of the DVDs it buys. His company, 321 Studios of Chesterfield, Mo., has asked a federal judge to rule that its DVD Copy Plus product does not violate copyright law. As an alternative, the company asked the judge to declare unconstitutional the anti-circumvention provision of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

    The case is one of several high-stakes battles in courts and in Washington that pit consumer rights against copyrights.

    These fights center on new technologies such as online file-sharing networks, digital television broadcasts and personal video recorders that enable people to make — and in some cases, distribute — high-quality digital copies of music, movies and other creative works.

    Film studios, record companies and publishers say digital piracy poses an unprecedented threat to their businesses. Electronics manufacturers, technology companies and civil libertarians argue that the protections demanded by copyright owners would roll back consumer rights and stifle innovation.

    In fact, these groups say, Congress already has given the copyright owners too much control. They argue that the technical provisions of the law squash the historical so-called fair-use rights people have to make personal copies of the media they buy.

    "If you circumvent [electronic locks] to get access to content that you may have a perfect, fair-use right to get, you are still subject to criminal penalties," said Gary S. Klein, vice president for government and legal affairs at the Consumer Electronics Assn.

    ....He slapped together the manual with software freely available on the Internet, then started selling the package from the new Web site for just under $20.

    Since then, he has sold 100,000 copies of DVD Copy Plus, offering increasingly polished and expensive versions over time. He also has moved the business from his home in House Springs, Mo., to offices in Chesterfield and hired about two dozen employees.

    MPAA spokeswoman Marta Grutka said there's a clear line between a legal and an illegal product. If it circumvents the scrambling technology on a DVD, "then the developer of the software or device is exposing themselves to criminal prosecution" under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

    To Moore and his attorneys, that's the wrong question. They argue that consumers use DVD Copy Plus to make backup copies of the movies they buy, protecting their investment in the delicate plastic discs. This kind of personal copying is exactly the kind of fair use that other provisions of federal copyright law allows, they say.

Career media professional Eric Olsen is honored to be the founder and publisher of Blogcritics.org, which, quite frankly, rules - as do his wife and four children.
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Do You Have the Right to Make a Backup Copy of Your DVDs?
Published: October 29, 2002
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Section: Video
Filed Under: Video: News
Writer: Eric Olsen
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#1 — October 30, 2002 @ 05:01AM — Steve Rhodes [URL]


People should have the right to make backups of their own DVDs. They are fragile and can scratch or break.

And they go out of print. I have the Criterion versions of Silence of the Lambs and Robocop and the 2 disc version of Fight Club which are all no longer available.

#2 — July 12, 2006 @ 07:45AM — david morgan [URL]

i love buying the good movies but letting my 15 year old son have them in his room and just left on the floor after watching them is sad. scratched up movies is horrible,but making a back up for him will protect my collection.when my son wants to watch a dvd i send him to the computer with head phones and it is all good for all families! simply said if i can,t make a back up dvd for him i will wait for the movie to come to movie channel for him to watch it for cheaper

#3 — November 6, 2006 @ 13:07PM — Cuban_Papi

Its a sad world when you are given the tools to do something and then are told that we can never use the tool. Eve and Adam didn't even listen, when told that they could not eat from the tree of knowledge. Why give us the knowledge if we are not allowed to use it? I could understand if I was making copies to sell to people, or renting dvd's to copy and not buying the actual movie. All I want to do is make copies of the movies that I own so the originals are not damaged,and become nothing more than a useless coaster. I have bought several dvd's over the years since its inception; some of which are no longer available, and would love to be able to make up backup copies of them. Looks like "Big Brother and the Thought Police" have struck again!
Antonio

#4 — November 11, 2006 @ 21:49PM — Chris

I copy all DVDs I buy because I have the right to protect my investment. I use DVDFab Decrypter and DVD Shrink. These are free and available for download on the internet.

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