Basically, if reverse engineering is banned, then a lot of the open source community is doomed to fail.


I'm 16 now, I was 15 when it happened... and the encryption code wasn't in fact written by me, but written by the German member. There seems to be a bit of confusion about that part.

I took a job in the U.S. because I wanted to work on products that would get into end users' hands. In Norway, most of the jobs are in server software, niche stuff.

All over the world copyright holders are trying to limit consumers' rights. We cannot have that.

Well, the biggest Norwegian newspaper regarded this as an arrest, since they hadn't told us that they were coming and they brought me in. So the biggest Norwegian newspaper looked upon that as an arrest.

So DeCSS didn't introduce anything new for pirating and had already been available.

Anyone with a little computer experience knows that anything can be copied bit by bit with the right equipment.

I still haven't heard anything from Apple about my hacks. There is a tool based on my work reverse-engineering Apple's FairPlay called jhymn that's been hosted on a U.S. server for over a year and nothing has happened.

Basically, if I have no intention of using a service then I won't bother reverse-engineering it.

Companies shouldn't use the law to prevent consumers from doing something legal.