My eyes glazed over on this last page, so I don't know if it's been commented on.
I don't know of any court case where hardware chips, such as a mod chip, was declared illegal. There are court cases where circuit designs within the chip infringes patents, but the hardware itself is usually not. In the case of the Wii, it's doubly a problem.
Some of the Wii chips out there are based on controllers from Atmel and Microchip, readily available to any hobbyist (for now). I have a Wii and I also have some of the controllers in the same house. Under DMCA, it can be construed that I'm illegally installing the controllers into the Wii even though
I have not done so. But the real danger doesn't lie there, the real danger lies with how the case is handled. If you think carefully about it. If the raid captures the general purpose microcontrollers I mentioned and the judge allows the evidence into the case, that could conceivably pave the way for bigger problems in the future. eg asinine restrictions on controllers. What if Randy can't purchase his controllers because of some silly restriction placed on their purchase, even though his devices have
nothing to do with the mod chips? What if the manufacturers, so fearful of repercussions from the DMCA, discontinue whole lines of controllers and weaken entire markets because of their use in DMCA illegal mods (which was a protected right by the way)?
Yeah, I know I'm reaching but no one seems to
get it. I work in a storage facility where old records are kept. Most of the time, examining rat ---Cleveland steamer--- is more interesting than pulling up old laws from 1855. But once in a great while, a gem or two will fall out. Here's one. Back in the early 1980's or so, a motorcycle helmet law tried to make its way through the Legislature. Hundreds of people bitched and moaned and wrote letters to the Governor about the injustice and unfairness of the law. "People should have the right to choose whether they wear helmets or not," they wrote. "The law should not force people to make choices for them," they shouted. The law was vetoed. Around 1985 (IIRC), the law found it's way into the Legislature again. This time, it specified that helmets were a requirement only for children under 16 (IIRC). For those over 16, it was still a choice. Again the people howled, but not as loudly. Many people simply grumbled that it was reasonable that children should wear helmets,
as long as it wasn't a requirement for adults. So the law was passed.
That 1985'ish law did something though. About five years later, the original law of adults wearing helmets entered the legislation again. But something weird happened. The law passed. Yeah, there was a lot of howling. Sure there were people who refused. But by then the under 16 crowd are now 21, way past the legal voting age and many had children of their own. Parents, who saw their children wearing helmets, essentially encouraged the bill to pass through the legislation.
There are lots and lots of examples like that. Small laws that get passed (DMCA) which make way for other laws which make way for even bigger laws. Everyone is so hell bent on focusing on the DMCA (which someone should) that nobody is really focusing on the bigger picture. That the DMCA, combined with other laws, is going to to suppress people around the world in an unparalleled way. Look at how the DMCA affects other countries, such as Germany.
There is something seriously ---fouled up beyond all recognition--- up with this country when the voter turnout is barely 50% (by comparison, some countries are as high as 95%), that there isn't an uproar (not just bitching) over those damn diebold machines, that someone (
Debra Bowen) stands up and actually decertifies voting machines with practically
zero news coverage. What the ---fudgesicle--- were we thinking, impeaching Clinton over sex? We should've kicked Clinton's ass out over the DMCA. Instead this country just farted, rolled over, and replayed Clinton's "boxers or briefs" question in between episodes of Friends.
What we need is the people to get pissed off and we need to fight back. We need another Tiananmen Square to get peoples attention. Don't worry, with the iPod, you won't hear the tank drive up.
I think I'm done ranting now.

I don't feel any better though.
