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European DRM News

burgburgburg writes "Two new fronts opening in the battles over digital rights management. First: news.com is reporting how French authorities are investigating EMI France and music retailer Fnac over anticopying technology included on CDs that allegedly renders them unplayable on some systems. The investigation began after the Bureau of Competition's antifraud unit (DDCCRF) received complaints from a consumer group known as UFC-Que Choisir. Second: BusinessWeek reports that the EC is investigating Microsoft to make sure that they don't illegally dominate the field of digital rights management. Regulators have told Microsoft and its partner Time Warner that they are looking into their plan to acquire the company ContentGuard, which makes DRM software because of concerns that it will create or strengthen Microsoft dominance of the field."

6 of 143 comments (clear)

  1. DRM by danknight · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they ever perfect DRM people will just make an analog copy and take the one time (small) quality hit. I'm not even going to talk about bit-for-bit copys that the real pirates use. It's really just a way to lock in the consumer.

    --
    wanted: one clever sig,apply within
  2. I agree with Phillips... by Glock27 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Any CD that's copy protected shouldn't be called a CD. Simple enough...

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    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  3. If we chose not to buy it.... by Anonymous+Luddite · · Score: 5, Insightful

    this wouldn't be around for very long. I doubt that's how it will work out, though. :-(

    ..."Contraband" by Velvet Revolver, a band newly formed by ex-members of Guns N' Roses and the former frontman of the Stone Temple Pilots, became a best seller in June despite heavy copy protection and a warning on the packaging.

    (above excerpt from the USA today article.)

  4. We need balance back in the system by speedfreak_5 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How about this?

    Set the copyright system back to the default 14+14 years. If the record companies decide to use DRM on their stuff, make it illegal for them to apply for the 2nd 14 years. That way people can make backups of their stuff unhindered by sh*tty copy protection, and they get to make a little more money.

    -=OR=-

    Let them keep their Life+70 terms and DRM. In turn file sharing must be legalized and royalty-free sampling and public performance made legal for everyone who buys a CD.

    --
    Why yes I am paranoid! Thanks for asking!
  5. Re:Well.... by SpecBear · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The "one lock" method has been used repeatedly by the content industry. Think Macrovision and CSS. It has the disadvantage you stated (crack one, crack 'em all) but has the advantage of providing consistency and influence over people who make content players.

    If there are six big content providers each with their own system, and one of their DRM systems screws up on one the players, the manufacturer of the player will say "The DRM is screwy and we don't support it. Bitch at the content provider." If there are six big providers who all use the same system, and it doesn't work on one player, then the player is broken and it will be "fixed" to work with the DRM.

    Remember, DRM isn't about stopping piracy. It's about controlling how the everyday user consumes content and allowing the content providers to build a revenue structure as they see fit without having to worry about users circumventing it through things like (time|space|format) shifting.

  6. Re:Kudos to Europe by Blue+Stone · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Stand up to industry bigwigs?

    In case you've forgotten, we have the EUCD over here just as you have the DMCA overe there - the effective privatisation of copyright law (Corps now write their own rules - trying to circumvent those rules brings in the law).

    Our governments are just as 0wnz0red by media corporations as America's, I'm afraid.

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    Corporation, n. An ingenious device for obtaining individual profit without individual responsibility. - Ambrose Bierce