By
Anne Broache
Tuesday, May 23 2006 10:38 AM
URL:
http://www.zdnetasia.com/news/software/0,39044164,39361307,00.htm
A U.S. federal judge on Monday gave final approval to a settlement in a class
action suit against Sony BMG Music Entertainment over anticopying software the
company had embedded in some music CDs.
The agreement (click for PDF) covers anyone who bought, received or used CDs
containing what was revealed to be flawed digital
rights management (DRM) software after Aug. 1, 2003. Those customers can
file a claim and receive certain benefits, such as a nonprotected replacement
CD, free downloads of music from that CD and additional cash payments.
The court action picked up last fall when security researchers discovered
vulnerabilities posed by two pieces of software, First4Internet's XCP and
SunnComm's MediaMax, which are automatically installed on a user's computer upon
loading certain Sony BMG music CDs. The software's presence was masked by a "rootkit"
that can make the PC more vulnerable to viruses and other hacker attacks. The
software also allegedly transmitted information about the listener's computer
use back to Sony BMG.
At least 15 different lawsuits were filed by class action lawyers against the
record label, and the New York cases were eventually consolidated into one
proceeding. The parties reached
a preliminary settlement with Sony BMG in December, leaving it up to a judge
in a U.S. District Court in New York to make it official.
Sony BMG had already begun taking steps to remedy the situation. It yanked
the affected discs off the shelves, suspended production of CDs containing the
technology and issued a recall
of the 4.7 million XCP CDs, offering MP3 downloads in return.
Under the terms of the final settlement, Sony BMG definitively agreed to
continue halting manufacture or distribution of CDs containing the two programs.
(It stopped using XCP on its products in November 2005 and ceased using MediaMax
about a month later, according to court filings.)
For the duration of the settlement, which lasts until the end of 2007, the
company is expected to take a number of steps before putting any new copy
protection software on its wares. These steps would include submitting the
software for review by an independent security expert and including a brief,
written description of the copy protection tool on any CD that contains it.
Sony BMG told CNET News.com on Monday that it was "pleased" that the
settlement in this case had secured the court's final approval.
Electronic Frontier Foundation Legal Director Cindy Cohn, whose organization
participated in the settlement negotiation process on behalf of the plaintiffs,
urged anyone in possession of the offending CDs to stake their claims against
Sony. Doing so, she predicted, may send a message to Sony BMG and other music
labels to "think twice before wrapping songs in DRM."
Sony BMG still faces a separate lawsuit "over materially the same subject
matter" from the Texas attorney general, as well as inquiries from the Federal
Trade Commission and other state attorneys general, according to the text of the
settlement. That document indicated that the company would pursue similar
settlements in those cases, too.