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New Yorkers Get a Taste of Digital Restrictions

InfoMinister writes "From SiliconValley.com, another peek into the future of Digital Rights Manglement. A software conflict at the set-top invoked copy restrictions on all unscrambled digital TV programming delivered to Cablevision's 3 million subscribers in metropolitan New York."

2 of 269 comments (clear)

  1. Equal access rights by Bozovision · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Perhaps the time has come for some sort of legal recognition of common access rights for some technologies...

    - You don't have a conversation quota that you can't exceed.
    - You aren't blocked from using the roads - there is open access to everyone.

    That's because these are commons.

    Perhaps, at some penetration point, there needs to be recognition that a technology forms a cultural commons and should be open to all without barriers.

    In the same way that monopolies are regulated as a special case, perhaps it would be sensible to have a body of law governing the use of commons.
    I would think it would need to:
    - Guarantee access
    - Prevent enclosure
    - Promote innovation
    - Provide for the designation of new commons

    Lawrence Lessig are you reading this?

    (Bozo's big thought for the day. Now back to work...)

  2. Re:Not DRM... its a bug.. by JWW · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I thought that was the interesting part.

    The most discriminating customers, who had spent the most money on their home entertainment equipment were the only ones affected.

    This is where this is going to be a big problem. How the hell are they going to convince anyone to buy "the new digital" stuff when people see stories like this and start hearing anecdotal evidence from people that this did affect.

    The abuse of the consumer is reaching unhearlded heights in this country, I think in this battle the consumer will speak with a closed pocketbook.

    Just this week my cable company called to try to get me to switch to digital cable, the upside was a few more channels, the downside $30 more a month! I'm sorry but I want more value for my dollar than that. The same goes for digital TV's, sure they're cool, but not $2000 cool. That's where the industry is going wrong. We're not buying enough of this new stuff, so they will be trying to mandate. That is where the true battle will be.