Post Tagged with: "sony rootkit"

CIPPIC Files Formal Objection to the Sony Settlement

The Canadian Internet Policy and Public Interest Clinic has filed a formal objection to Sony's Canadian rootkit class action settlement. The objection received the support of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, which challenged Sony's description of the events leading up to the U.S. settlement.  EFF has posted the relevant documents including: […]

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September 18, 2006 Comments are Disabled News

Sony’s Rootkit Settlement Leaves Canadian Consumers Unsettled

My weekly Law Bytes column (Toronto Star version, homepage version) picks up on last week's post examining the mounting concerns over the Sony rootkit class action settlement in Canada.  The column touches on many of the same themes – less compensation, no security review, and no injunctive relief.  I conclude […]

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September 18, 2006 Comments are Disabled Columns

Sony Rootkit Settlement Leaves Canadian Consumers Unsettled

Appeared in the Toronto Star on September 18, 2006 as Rootkit Settlement Gives Canadians Short Shrift The Sony rootkit controversy generated enormous public attention last year after it was disclosed that the company inserted faulty copy-protection software onto dozens of CDs, rendering hundreds of thousands of personal computers vulnerable to […]

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September 18, 2006 Comments are Disabled Columns Archive

The Missing Sony Exhibit

The Canadian Sony rootkit class action settlement heads to court next week amid mounting questions about the deal.  The EFF calls attention to a number of missing provisions, including no security reviews and no ongoing obligations to provide uninstallers for the rootkit.  There is also a financial hit in Canada, with Canadian consumers receiving roughly ten percent less than U.S. consumers due to currency differences.

By far the biggest difference, however, is that the U.S. agreement is subject to injunctive relief linked to actions brought by several U.S. agencies and attorneys general.  The Canadian agreement, by contrast does not include such relief.  The justification for this difference is contained in Exhibit C, the only key settlement document that Sony has not provided to the public

I have now obtained a copy of Exhibit C, which is an affidavit from Christine J. Prudham, Vice President, Legal and Business Affairs of Sony BMG Canada (Prudham is the same person who appeared today at the Copyright Board discussing how Sony BMG Canada released just 16 new Canadian records last year).  The affidavit seeks to explain why Sony BMG Canada believes it is appropriate to grant Canadian consumers fewer rights than their U.S. counterparts.  While there is the suggestion that Canadians would benefit indirectly from a U.S. injunction, the heart of the argument revolves around a series of copyright-related arguments that are utterly without merit.

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September 13, 2006 10 comments News

EFF on the Sony Settlement

There is a storm brewing regarding the Sony rootkit settlement in Canada.  EFF places the spotlight on several shortcomings along with the mysterious missing Exhibit C.

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September 13, 2006 Comments are Disabled News