Dave lost a case when they didn't show that defendant prossessed the necesarry equipment to intercept the signal. Perhaps that's the one your referring to with not proving ownership of a dish. ? That case was appealed and the defendant ended up settling after Dave made a motion to bring in 5 potential expert witnesses to testify plus supplying a CD- ROM to the defendant. It sounded like they had possibly had more evidence of sales of devices to the defendant on top of the unlooper they initially went after him for.
The defendant who was able to demonstrate that he bought devices for security doors did well. If you really can demonstrate you bought these code subcriptions for another purpose othen than the one they allege go for it. I don't know what other purpose there may be. But this is why the onus really shifts to the defendant to prove what he bought it for versus the Plaintiff proving it. They already allege what they say you bought the subscription for.
On the case where Dave lost on the mere possession on appeal it applies to 2512(1)(b). DN is alleging violation of 2511(1)(a) not 2512(1)(b)
They probably purposely stay away from citing that violation where the defendant won and remains in effect as the interpretation since there is no appeal from that decision. None of it reflects on the DMCA and the other violation they allege. It appears that Dave ruling loss is a non issue in the current cases although a lawyer would need to confirm that.
GS2