Back in 2004, the DVD Copy Control Association (DVD CCA) filed a lawsuit against Kaleidescape, claiming the company's media server violated the license for their Content Scramble System (CSS). Since then, the two sides have battled it out with the latest round going to Kaleidescape. According to report by EETimes, a superior court judge has ruled against the DVD CCA, stating that the licensing contract and specifications were poorly worded and that the CSS spec "is a product of a committee of lawyers."
The decision marks a rare, though small victory for a Silicon Valley startup facing the interests of a group of large movie studios and consumer and computer companies. The ruling also could open the door for other systems makers who want to design personal video libraries that store DVD movies on hard drives.

Judge Leslie C. Nichols ruled against the DVD Copy Control Association (DVD CCA) in a civil suit that asked the court to force startup Kaleidescape to change its design or stop selling its server that stores hundreds of DVD movies on a hard drive array. Nichols said the basis for his decision was his ruling that an entire section of the DVD CCA's spec for the Content Scramble System (CSS) was not technically included as part of the license agreement.
I wouldn't be surprised if the DVD CCA appealed the judge's decision. However, in the mean time, it may open other doors in regards to DVD ripping and fair use. If you'd like to read more, the entire article can be found here.