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A U.C. Berkeley law clinic founded by one of my grad. school professors is defending a man accused of sharing information on how to defeat the print-limiting technology used by Coupons.com.

he Electronic Frontier Foundation and Samuelson Law, Technology & Public Policy Clinic at UC Berkeley are coming to the rescue of a California man sued for posting code and instructions that allow shoppers to circumvent copy protection on downloadable, printable coupons.

The coupons, for General Foods, Colgate, Disney and others, are distributed by California-based Coupons Inc. through ad banners, e-mail and its website -- coupons.com. To access them, consumers must install Coupons Inc.'s proprietary software. The software assigns each user's computer a unique identifier, which the company uses to track and control the consumer's coupon-printing practices, usually limiting each user to two coupons per product. Each printed coupon has its own unique serial code.

The site is suing John Stottlemire in federal court, accusing the Fremont man of creating and giving away a program that erases the unique identifier, allowing consumers to repeatedly download and print as many copies of a particular coupon as they want.

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About this Entry

This page contains a single entry by katherine published on March 27, 2008 8:51 AM.

All mixed up, and are you people on CRACK? was the previous entry in this blog.

When parental rights clash with common sense is the next entry in this blog.

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