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Major Hollywood studios filed on Tuesday a lawsuit in a Los Angeles court against RealNetworks, accusing the Internet media software maker of distributing a product that could be used to copy DVDs and store the contents on computers. (File Photo) Photo Gallery>>> |
LOS ANGELES, Sept. 30 (Xinhua) -- Major Hollywood
studios filed on Tuesday a lawsuit in a Los Angeles court against RealNetworks,
accusing the Internet media software maker of distributing a product that could
be used to copy DVDs and store the contents on computers.
The software, called RealDVD, was introduced by
RealNetworks earlier this month. The company, which also produces the popular
on-line media player RealPlayer, said RealDVD could allow users to easily store
movies in their computers, without cracking a DVD's protective encryption.
The lawsuit filed by the Motion Picture Association
of America (MPAA), which represents major studios including Disney, Paramount
and Sony Pictures, claims that the software violates the Digital Millennium
Copyright Act and "illegally circumvents" copyright protections built into DVDs.
MPAA requested the court to issue a restraining order
preventing RealNetworks from selling the software and demanded unspecified
damages.
MPAA's move followed reports that Seattle-based
RealNetworks planned to file its own lawsuit against the studios, seeking a
clarification that its DVD-copying software complies with the law.
The movie industry's trade group earlier had
successfully blocked the distribution of similar technologies that crack
encryption codes in DVDs and could be used to make copies of movies.
"RealNetworks' RealDVD should be called StealDVD,"
MPAA's General Counsel Greg Goeckner said in a statement.
However, RealNetworks argued in a statement that its
technology only allows users to store and play their own movies on their own
computers, and "does not enable users to distribute copies of their DVDs."
But MPAA said the RealNetworks software would enable
"massive theft" of creative content that would have direct, negative impact on
the delivery of movies, television shows and other
entertainment.