Sony BMG Rootkit Settlement Proposal Submitted To Court
Consumers who bought the rootkit-infected music would get free music downloads. A judge still has to approve the settlement before it's final; that decision is expected sometime in January.Lawyers working the class-action lawsuit against Sony BMG Music filed a proposed settlement with a federal court Wednesday that if approved, would force Sony to stop making copy-protected CDs, pay affected customers a small fee, and provide replacement discs and/or other albums.
Several class action suits were filed in New York and California during
November that claimed Sony's copy-protection technology, which had come
under fire earlier in the month, damaged buyers' computers. On Dec. 1, the
court consolidated about 10 pending class-action cases, and appointed two
law firms, Girard Gibbs & de Bartolomeo of California, and Kamber &
Associates of New York, to handle the combined suit.
According to the settlement papers filed with the U.S. District Court, Southern District of New York, "the parties engaged in virtual round-the-clock settlement negotiations" through most of December.
"The primary and overriding concern of the parties over the course of these lengthy, arms’-length negotiations was an effort to provide prompt relief to consumers affected by XCP and MediaMax software, in order to limit the risk that these consumers’ computers would be vulnerable to malicious software," the papers continued.
Among the provisions of the settlement, Sony BMG would be barred from using
XCP or MediaMax technologies to copy-protect its music CDs, will continue to
update the uninstall utilities for removing the XCP and MediaMax
copy-protection schemes, and will offer two different incentive programs to
buyers of XCP-protected discs so that they return copy-protected CDs.
Furthermore, until 2008, any copy protection scheme Sony BMG uses on its
audio CDs must meet a slew of criteria, including ones which require that it
get users' explicit permission before installing rights software, that
uninstallers for the copy protection be available, and that a third party
verify that the copy-protection technology doesn't present any security
risk.
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