Archived from groups: alt.video.ptv.tivo (
More info?)
>>The reason being, of course, that technically, the hack you are
>>requesting is theft of service.
>
>
> <Snip>
> I disagree, on the specific grounds that the recording of the
> show is legal, and the location of the replaying of the show is
> not tied to the specific unit that made the original recording.
> Just as recording a show on a VCR in the living room and then
> taking the tape into the bedroom for replaying it there is
> accepted as fair use... So would recording on the Tivo in the
> living room and then transferring the show into another unit in
> house for re-playing there.
>
> The Supreme Court smacked down the claim that people had to watch
> a show at the exact time is was broadcast, do you really think
> any company would attempt to mandate that a show had to be
> watched in a specific location inside your home? That because you
> recorded it in the living room, you must watch it in the living
> room?
This has absolutely nothing to do with the discussion. One, we are not
discussing the "legality" of the action at all, rather the
*acceptability* of the hack by the Tivo-hacking community. So all your
legal arguments and legal precedents are inapplicable. Two, I was not
in any way saying that playing his video elsewhere was illegal, or even
unacceptable (can we please define "unacceptable" to mean "unacceptable
to the tivo-hacking community" from now on?). What I *was* saying is
unacceptable is the use of networking, which is available in a bundle of
other features for a fee. Yes, right now that is the only way to watch
the movies on a different device, but it isn't the *watching* that makes
it illegal.
>
>
>>So hacking a Directivo to add networking is ok, but an SA Tivo with
>>Basic is not, and that isn't as arbitrary as it sounds.
>
>
> <snip>
>
>>However networking *is*
>>available for a fee, and technically you are attempting to avoid paying
>>that fee.
>
>
> No, the fee was not attached to networking.
> The 'Service' is the guide data and the software that does all
> the searching and manipulation and prioritization of that guide
> data.
>
> Plus, there is history. The service cost $X, and there was not
> any official networking option. Then, networking was added, and
> the cost of the service climbed $0. The networking feature added
> zero additional cost to the service package, therefore the
> networking feature is not in the category of 'Revenue Generator'
>
> So, therefore networking is demonstrably a 'free feature' and;
> because it is not part of the 'Fee Based Service Package'
> enabling it is not 'Theft Of Service'.
This makes no sense. Tivo has the option to add things to it's packages
, that doesn't make them *free*. Cox cable upped my cable speeds from
1.5 Mbps to 4 Mpbs for no additional fee. Does this mean I can stop
paying them and still get 2.5 Mbps for free? Obviously not.
> Need another example of this? Try Microsoft, when they just
> tossed Internet Explorer into all copies of Windows, without
> raising the retail price. There's a high profile federal court
> precedent that a feature that added no additional retail jump is
> therefore not an inseparable piece of the package.
Wow, is that off the subject! MS was slapped for IE, because browsers
were considered a competitive product and MS was using it's "monopoly"
on the OS to leverage an advantage to a different product. This in no
way applies to Tivo.
>>BTW, Art (and this is not a rhetorical question), would it not make
>>sense to just pay the $7 per month for the unit and have full functionality?
>>
>
>
> Immaterial. A cajoling style argument does not rely on precedent
> or logic or rational thought. It relies on manipulation of
> empathy and emotional feelings, which are notoriously illogical
> and irrational.
I was trying to say I didn't think Art was trying to do anything
heinous. But regardless of what you think, calling my post illogical
and irrational is ridiculous. You didn't even *attempt* my challenge,
if you disagree with me, where would *you* draw the line of acceptablity?
Randy S.