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Feds Expand Security Researchers' Ability To Hack Without Going To Jail

Tuesday October 30, 2018. 04:30 AM , from Slashdot
An anonymous reader quotes a report from Motherboard: Friday, the Librarian of Congress and U.S. Copyright Office renewed several key exemptions (and added a few new ones) to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. This go round, they've extended some essential exemptions ensuring that computer security researchers won't be treated like nefarious criminals for their contributions to society. As part of an effort to keep the DMCA timely, Congress included a so-called 'safety valve' dubbed the Section 1201 triennial review process that, every three years, mandates that activists and concerned citizens beg the Copyright Office and the Librarian of Congress to craft explicit exemptions from the law to ensure routine behavior won't be criminalized.

The exemptions still have some caveats. Specifically, the Copyright Office ruling only applies to 'use exemptions,' not 'tools exemptions' -- meaning security researchers still can't release things like pen-testing tools that bypass DRM, or even publish technical papers exploring how to bypass bootloaders or other Trusted Platform Modules to test the security of the systems behind them. But other modest changes to the rules were incredibly helpful, notes Blake Reid, Associate Clinical Professor at Colorado Law. Specifically, the new exemption removes a 'device limitation' from previous exemptions that potentially limited researchers to investigating software only on 'consumer' devices; hindering their ability to investigate security vulnerabilities in things like the cryptographic hardware used in banking applications, networking equipment, and industrial control systems. The new exemption also modified the 'controlled environment limitation' from the previous exemption, which was often read to imply that researchers had to conduct their work in a formal laboratory, potentially hindering research into things like integrated building systems like internet-connected HVAC systems.

Read more of this story at Slashdot.
rss.slashdot.org/~r/Slashdot/slashdot/~3/VX-lHA5O0Is/feds-expand-security-researchers-ability-to-hac...
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