Supreme Court allows wider DVR use

From CNET News.com: The Supreme Court on Monday delivered a blow to the television networks when it declined to hear a case about a digital video recorder technology, opening the gate for wider use of DVR systems.

The case began in 2006 when Cablevision Systems, the New York-area cable operator, announced plans for what is called a network DVR system. With it, a customer would use a remote control to digitally record a program like "60 Minutes" but instead of storing the show in the customer's at-home DVR box, the technology would store the show on a faraway Cablevision server.

The technology would let Cablevision convert set-top boxes into boxes with DVR capabilities without requiring an installation or new equipment.

"It opens up the possibility of offering a DVR experience to all of our digital cable customers," Tom Rutledge, Cablevision's chief operating officer, said in a statement. Programmers including Turner Broadcasting System's Cartoon Network, CNN and television networks sued Cablevision, saying the system violated copyright law. In March 2007, a lower court agreed, ruling that Cablevision "would be engaging in unauthorized reproductions and transmissions of plaintiffs' copyrighted programs."

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