Lawsuit filed over DVD jukebox technology

A Hollywood-backed technology group is suing a high-end home theater system company, contending that its home DVD jukebox technology is illegal, ZDNet reported.

The DVD Copy Control Association, the group that owns the copy-protection technology contained on DVDs, said a company called Kaleidescape is offering products that illegally make copies of DVDs. The company, which has won several recent consumer electronics awards, said it has worked closely with the DVD CCA for more than a year, and will fight the suit.

Kaleidescape creates expensive consumer electronics networks that upload the full contents of as many as 500 DVDs to a home server, and allow the owner to browse through the movies without later using the DVDs themselves. That’s exactly what the copy-protection technology on DVDs, called Content Scramble System (CSS) was meant to prevent, the Hollywood-backed group said.

Bill Coats, a DVD CCA attorney, said in a statement that the intent of the contract and CSS are to prevent copying of copyrighted materials such as DVD motion pictures. While Kaleidescape obtained a license to use CSS, he added, the company has built a system to do precisely what the license and CSS are designed to prevent: The wholesale copying of protected DVDs.

The DVD technology group has stepped up its efforts in recent months to control hardware that it believes isn’t abiding by the rules of DVD copy protection, suing several chip companies. The Kaleidescape lawsuit in particular could help put legal boundaries around the burgeoning home theater market.

The company’s main product is a high-capacity home movie server that can store hundreds of movies at a time, allowing access from different places in a networked home to as many as seven films at once. A basic system, storing 160 movies, sold for about $27,000 earlier in the year.

Technology companies including Microsoft have envisioned doing much the same thing with computers such as a Windows Media Center PC. Movies recorded from television or downloaded from a video-on-demand service can be played throughout a networked home using a Media Center Extender.

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