Three Los
Angeles men have been charged with copyright infringement under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) for selling
chipped consoles along with hard drives full of pirated games from their Melrose Avenue store. The store, ACME, is a
high-profile and fashionable one; perhaps prosecutors are hoping that this will help prevent other stores doing the
same thing. An individual was prosecuted for simply selling
modchips in 2003, but the message doesn’t seem to have gotten across.
This makes an
interesting international picture: in Australia, mod-chipping was declared legal after a long court battle, but in the UK
(where the sale of modchips is illegal) a Cambridge graduate was sentenced in July for selling modded Xboxes loaded with
games.
With the Xbox 360 more hack-proof
than the Xbox, it may take some time until we see equivalent modchips, but the first steps (decoding the DVD filesystem) have
already taken place—perhaps this case is merely a figurehead to scare potential 360 hackers away.
[via Xbox 360 Fanboy]
Xbox pirates charged for selling chipped consoles
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