jhonny writes "Sony announced a new DRM technology called OpenMG X. Basically it keeps track on how many times you played/viewed (or tried to copy) your product and sends these statistics to the copyright holder."
Let me save you the trouble...
by
LordYUK
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· Score: 0, Flamebait
I play cracked versions of downloaded games like GTA 3 on a modded PS2 while listening to burned music copied to CD using a Sony VAIO on an AIWA stereo I bought off of some guys truck.
And I wipe my arse with ultra charmin, not that cheap 1 ply stuff.
Sony, you can suck it.
-- This is my sig. Its pathetic.
Re:wrong thinking here
by
shaldannon
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· Score: 0, Flamebait
heh....I got a dual P/// 750....you wanna write the code, I'd be glad to run it....'sides seti and d.net are lame now anyway
Sayanora, Playstation!
by
superdan2k
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· Score: 2, Flamebait
It seems like no one, not even Sony, learned the lessons of the DIVX player -- no one wants to be spied on in their own home, making use of products that they own.
I don't know if I'll be keeping my Playstation 2 (with LAN adapter) or even buying a PS3 now. If I do, I'll certainly be tweaking the firewall a bit, because, frankly, it's none of Sony's business how I make use of my hardware.
If we were to compare consumer electronics to automobiles, it would be illegal for me to swap out the fuel injector chip in my car, to install a better air filter, or put a different brand of tires on it when the old ones needed replacing. Hell, it would require me to buy a whole new car when the tires went bald. Of course, laws like this might not be bad -- we'd get all those kids and their "race-ready" Civics and Tiburons off the fucking street. (I, for one, cringe at the sound of a 4-cylinder with a modified exhaust system. And those "carrying handle" spoilers ruining a perfectly nice-looking Mitsubishi Eclipse are just a fucking eyesore.)
Anyway, the point being, if Sony thinks they can ram this down people's throats, they're in for a rude shock. It's bad enough that a game costs $50 -- even a year after it's been released, but now they're demanding to know how often you play it? Gimme a break.
The social effect of this, I think is going to turn the neighborhood computer geek into the equivelent of the neighborhood car mechanic, circa 1930 -- the stuff's going to get so complicated that Joe Average isn't going to be able to make the modifications he wants, so he'll go to the neighborhood expert...and in exchange for some work, the expert gets some extra cash, food, beer, sex, or whatever.
You know what, Sony? Bring that shit on. There's a hot lesbian couple down the block that I'd love to get between. Heh.
-- As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Re:HERE is a good use for a firewall.
by
ncc74656
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· Score: 0, Flamebait
No bother, just put the code where the free world can read it, but satisfying the American governments need to protect its citizens from themselves and go on laughing up our sleeves about how the Bush administration loves to suck corporate cock.
Given that the DMCA got passed into law on Bill Clinton's watch (and it's also worth mentioning that the regulatory climate that made the financial implosions Enron, Global Crossing et al. possible developed on his watch), I would submit that it is Clinton and his cronies who tended to go down on every fatcat who came along. Then again, if you were an American and not some smug, smarmy European with an inferiority complex, you would've known this already.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
I play cracked versions of downloaded games like GTA 3 on a modded PS2 while listening to burned music copied to CD using a Sony VAIO on an AIWA stereo I bought off of some guys truck.
And I wipe my arse with ultra charmin, not that cheap 1 ply stuff.
Sony, you can suck it.
This is my sig. Its pathetic.
heh....I got a dual P/// 750....you wanna write the code, I'd be glad to run it....'sides seti and d.net are lame now anyway
What is your Slash Rating?
It seems like no one, not even Sony, learned the lessons of the DIVX player -- no one wants to be spied on in their own home, making use of products that they own.
I don't know if I'll be keeping my Playstation 2 (with LAN adapter) or even buying a PS3 now. If I do, I'll certainly be tweaking the firewall a bit, because, frankly, it's none of Sony's business how I make use of my hardware.
If we were to compare consumer electronics to automobiles, it would be illegal for me to swap out the fuel injector chip in my car, to install a better air filter, or put a different brand of tires on it when the old ones needed replacing. Hell, it would require me to buy a whole new car when the tires went bald. Of course, laws like this might not be bad -- we'd get all those kids and their "race-ready" Civics and Tiburons off the fucking street. (I, for one, cringe at the sound of a 4-cylinder with a modified exhaust system. And those "carrying handle" spoilers ruining a perfectly nice-looking Mitsubishi Eclipse are just a fucking eyesore.)
Anyway, the point being, if Sony thinks they can ram this down people's throats, they're in for a rude shock. It's bad enough that a game costs $50 -- even a year after it's been released, but now they're demanding to know how often you play it? Gimme a break.
The social effect of this, I think is going to turn the neighborhood computer geek into the equivelent of the neighborhood car mechanic, circa 1930 -- the stuff's going to get so complicated that Joe Average isn't going to be able to make the modifications he wants, so he'll go to the neighborhood expert...and in exchange for some work, the expert gets some extra cash, food, beer, sex, or whatever.
You know what, Sony? Bring that shit on. There's a hot lesbian couple down the block that I'd love to get between. Heh.
blog |
Why does crap like this get modded up?
As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
Given that the DMCA got passed into law on Bill Clinton's watch (and it's also worth mentioning that the regulatory climate that made the financial implosions Enron, Global Crossing et al. possible developed on his watch), I would submit that it is Clinton and his cronies who tended to go down on every fatcat who came along. Then again, if you were an American and not some smug, smarmy European with an inferiority complex, you would've known this already.
20 January 2017: the End of an Error.