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Fight DRM While There's Still Time

ageor writes "It seems (not only) to me that DRM is about far more than intellectual property. It's also about monopoly and freedom of choice. It's one of those cases where we, the consumers, must decide against accepting the new industry's rules, which care only about control and making money. The whole matter is very well put in DRM, Vista and your rights, where you can follow the subject as deeply as you like through the numerous relevant links."

39 of 424 comments (clear)

  1. Change from the Top Down by P(0)(!P(k)+P(k+1)) · · Score: 3, Insightful

    “Fight DRM,” like “fight breast cancer” or “stamp out racism,” are noble sentiments; such sentiments, I believe, share one thing in common: they suffer from a false sense of sovereignty; and are more autistic than realistic.

    In the case of DRM,* the worthiest undertaking may be to climb the corporate ladder; and effect change from the top down.

    _____________
    * Or in the case of cancer: medical school, etc.

    1. Re:Change from the Top Down by caitriona81 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      In the case of DRM, theres one very strong way to fight it - with your wallet. Use alternatives where possible. Spread the word about products that contain oppressive DRM. Encourage others to do the same.

    2. Re:Change from the Top Down by P(0)(!P(k)+P(k+1)) · · Score: 3, Insightful

      . . . [H]ow do you stamp out racism without going to the grass roots anyway?

      The Bolsheviki tried the top-down approach, actually; it involved weeding the gene-pool of potential racists. (That they accidently liquidated the industrious and free-thinking is by the by.)

    3. Re:Change from the Top Down by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Right, and in the case of racism, there's a very stong way to fight it: don't be racist. And has that worked? Go ask your local redneck.

      I would say that the approach in question has worked at least as well as any other that does not itself involve actions which are themselves worse than racism.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    4. Re:Change from the Top Down by Aladrin · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yeah, kill all the rednecks!

      Er, make it illegal to be a redneck!

      Er, boycott redneck products!

      Wait, what was your argument again? I think you forgot the references to Nazis and Hitler. Throw in some other completely unrelated emotion-jerking things, too.

      The way to fight DRM is not just to 'not use it', it's to show all your friends how cool it is NOT to be DRM-infested. See what I can do?
      *drags music files to a blank CD on the desktop and the CD burns*
      Neat, huh?
      *drags video to an portable video player and it auto-resamples it, then shows that same video can be shown on the TV in the living room without any extra work*
      Neat, huh?

      When they realize they can't do half the neat stuff with their DRM-infested files, they'll consider that each and every time they make a purchase in the future. Until then, you cannot make the common consumer care.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    5. Re:Change from the Top Down by Deskpoet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In the case of DRM, the worthiest undertaking may be to climb the corporate ladder; and effect change from the top down.

      Corporations are the *originators* of these policies; they do so to PROTECT SHAREHOLDER INTEREST. As long there is value in artificial scarcity, DRM and its ilk (yes, copyrights, patents and every other government-sponsored legalistic chokehold on information) will thrive--and necessarily exist. If anyone "on the inside" sought to change these policies, they would be rightly seen as acting outside of their shareholder mandate and would be FIRED. (You could argue that such individuals could make convincing arguments that there is MORE shareholder value to be had by being open with information, but *any* initiative that appears as though it might impinge on future profits would quickly die a flaming death.)

      How this comment was modded up is beyond me.....

      --
      "The more corrupt the state, the more numerous the laws."--Tacitus, The Histories
  2. It is simple by someone1234 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Don't buy stuff with DRM. I can do it, i did it so far. But i doubt more than 20% of people who yap against DRM will stay away from it.

    --
    Patents Drive Free Software as Hurricanes Drive Construction Industry
  3. Fight it how? by cjackson0 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The article goes into arguments we've all read, and probably made before. The main point missing from this relatively well organized and civil rant is what to do about it. It's always easier to point out he problems than the answers.

    1. Re:Fight it how? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The main point missing from this relatively well organized and civil rant is what to do about it. It's always easier to point out he problems than the answers.

      That's the problem with pretty much the entire anti-DRM movement. It has no credibility because it only points out problems and not solutions.

      I have a pretty unpopular opinion here on Slashdot - I am broadly supportive of DRM. Fortunately I also have great karma and don't care much about losing it, so I don't mind arguing the case for DRM here. One of the things that bugs me about Slashdots DRM coverage is it's full of people pointing out problems, and never solutions.

      The basic problem DRM tries to solve is really simple - we want professionals to produce high quality 'creative works' despite us having technology that can replicate such an item for zero cost. The free market really can't cope with that at all, because it makes "supply" in the economic sense infinite therefore price becomes zero, implying that something has no value. That's clearly rubbish, and quality creative works definitely have value to millions of people.

      Nobody really knows how to design an economic system that works in the case of zero-cost-copies though so for now, we'll have to make do with what we've got - the free market - and bodge/hack things together until it works. These hacks will always be suboptimal and have lots of problems, hacks always do, but it's the only option right now. Typically this is done by preventing zero-cost copies, which allows the market to set a price, meaning the people who made the creative work get paid.

      As it happens, that's really hard. Computers copy information, that's what they do, and unfortunately people can't be trusted to just follow the rules of the system left to their own devices. Instead people do a cost:benefit analysis and think, well, it's not likely I'll be caught, so I'll go ahead and break the law. Who cares, everybody else does it anyway. So it has to be enforced at the technology level, otherwise we just screw ourselves over in the long run when content production just becomes economically unsupportable.

      I don't like the fact that FairPlay locks you into Apple, that Janus locks you into Windows Media, and that neither of them run on Linux. I really don't. But I also don't see a real alternative. An open DRM scheme has been proposed by Sun but never took off, because it's not enough to have a design - you must also have code, a commitment to repair it when breached, deals with the people who make the stuff in the first place etc.

      The alternatives to DRM that are suggested are usually pretty pathetic. "Make money off concerts" might work for (some) musicians but not for software developers, "make multiplayer games that enforce it server side" might work for (some) software developers but doesn't work for musicians, and nobody really thought about what happens when we perfect the ebook reader.

      As more and more moves into the digital realm this issue is just going to get bigger and bigger. It isn't going to go away just because it'd be convenient for Slashdotters, especially because for every poster here who really cares about the ability to write open source viewers there are at least 3 who just like getting free movies off BitTorrent.

      When somebody can give me a sound, scalable, generic and implementable economic design for goods that cost money to build the first time but are free to copy from then on, I might start to protest against DRM, because I'd actually have an answer to the question of "If not DRM then what?". Until then I'll continue to argue the case for it, use it despite the inconvenience and who knows, maybe even implement it in future.

    2. Re:Fight it how? by radtea · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The basic problem DRM tries to solve is really simple - we want professionals to produce high quality 'creative works' despite us having technology that can replicate such an item for zero cost. The free market really can't cope with that at all, because it makes "supply" in the economic sense infinite therefore price becomes zero, implying that something has no value. That's clearly rubbish, and quality creative works definitely have value to millions of people.

      This contains a couple of errors.

      1) The problem DRM tries to solve is the preservation of a particular business model that allows content packagerss and distributors to use their position in between artists and their audience to keep the largest slice of the creative-works pie for themselves. This model once served everyone well, because the marketing power of the packagers and distributors made it possible for creators to reach a much wider audience than they would have otherwise, and people got the opporuntity to buy creative works from artists they might not ever have heard of. On the other hand, there is no evidence at all that cheap copying has stemmed the flow of professional creative works. Show me one musician, one author, one director anywhere who has said, "I thought about making this album/book/movie but decided not to because it could be copied too easily." One suspects that the claim there would be no professional creative works without DRM is just made up.

      2) What is this "the" free market of which you speak, and how does it relate to the huge diversity of actual free markets in the real world, which vary in their legal and economic structure enormously? If we replace your incorrect usage with the correct usage, and say, "we want professionals to produce high quality 'creative works' despite us having technology that can replicate such an item for zero cost. A free market really can't cope with that at all..." it becomes clear that here too you are making stuff up. You are claiming that no possible free market whatsoever, out of the infinite possible market machines that we might invent, is capable of dealing with goods that are expensive to create and easy to copy (note that "cheap" isn't really the issue--stamping albums is cheap, downloading tunes is easy.) This is an incredibly strong claim, backed by...nothing.

      When somebody can give me a sound, scalable, generic and implementable economic design for goods that cost money to build the first time but are free to copy from then on, I might start to protest against DRM, because I'd actually have an answer to the question of "If not DRM then what?". Until then I'll continue to argue the case for it, use it despite the inconvenience and who knows, maybe even implement it in future.

      I guess I could just link to Baen Books here, or to any number of bands like the Barenaked Ladies who oppose DRM and have somehow managed to make an oodle of cash. If examples don't convince you, then you should think about the theoretical persepective that file sharing is nothing more than advertising for the work in question.

      While I'm on advertising, there is always the possibility of ad-supported art. Product placement ads have never been been huge, but that may be just because there were easier ways of doing it.

      The one thing we can be certain of is that DRM is nothing more than an attempt to save a obsolete business model, and history tells us it will be a failure. The only open question is: will it be an expensive failure, or a cheap one? It looks like it is going to be very expensive for studios and some publishers, and relatively cheap for everyone else.

      --
      Blasphemy is a human right. Blasphemophobia kills.
    3. Re:Fight it how? by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The basic problem DRM tries to solve is really simple - we want professionals to produce high quality 'creative works' despite us having technology that can replicate such an item for zero cost.

      Perhaps, but that's not the problem I'm interested in having solved, or that the public is interested in having solved. That problem is that we want as many creative works created and published as possible, and that we also want just as much for those works to be available to everyone who wants them, without restriction, and for the least cost possible, if any.

      I don't care if someone is a professional or not. And since there's no objective measure of quality in the field of creative works, we can only try to encourage quantity. (Though there is a rule of thumb that only a small, fixed fraction of all works are good, so the way to get more good works is to have more works overall, so it all works out anyway)

      So taking into consideration the actual problem, rather than what you'd like to distract us with, DRM is simply unacceptable. Here's why:

      Let's suppose we had a world without copyright, a world with moderate copyright, and a world with excessive copyright. In the first world, some original works are created (as we know will happen from historical example and the fact that other motives exist for artists besides copyright-derived revenue), but probably not a whole lot. This produces some public benefit, but not a great deal. Let's arbitrarily call it 5%. OTOH, there is total freedom with regard to those works, so everyone can have their own personal universal library, everyone can use whatever works they want in creating their own derivative works, without even so much as a transactional cost, and this produces a very large public benefit. Let's arbitrarily call this 44% (34% from the freedom, and 10% from the derivative works created, which will likely outnumber the original works, as we also know from history). The net public good is 49%

      In the second world, there is some copyright, but not too much. This produces a substantial incentive to authors and doesn't reduce their other incentives. This results in a large public benefit. Let's say 30%, since we know that copyright is an economic incentive, and we know that the vast majority of revenue from copyrighted works is made within a few years, tops. (Often a few months or even weeks, depending on the particular medium and market). There is some, but not total, freedom with regard to those works for a little while -- long enough for that revenue to get made -- at which point there is total freedom. So while eventually there is just as much freedom as before, there is much less in the short run. Let's call this 29% (24% from the freedom, and 5% from the derivatives, of which there will be far, far fewer). The net public good is 59%.

      In the third world, there is a very large amount of copyright. This produces only slightly more of an incentive to authors without reducing their other incentives. This results in pretty nearly the same public benefit as before, since the artists were already getting pretty much all the money possible out of their works, and now they're only getting a few pennies more. This isn't much of an increased incentive to create, but it's about the same as before. Let's say 33%, which is the max. There is little freedom during the copyright, and now it lasts much, much longer before there is total freedom. Let's call this 7% (5% for the limited freedom during copyright, 1% for the freedom when a work expires, which almost never happens, and 1% for the very small number of derivatives that get created). The net public good is 40%.

      Since we want to get the greatest net public good, the answer is clear: no copyright is good, but not maximally good, and too much copyright is worse than none at all. The best thing is to have some, but not too much copyright.

      DRM is an attempt to have permanent copyrights which are very very limited, and which are implemented privately so that the public and the gover

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    4. Re:Fight it how? by mgv · · Score: 4, Insightful

      As it happens, that's really hard. Computers copy information, that's what they do, and unfortunately people can't be trusted to just follow the rules of the system left to their own devices. Instead people do a cost:benefit analysis and think, well, it's not likely I'll be caught, so I'll go ahead and break the law. Who cares, everybody else does it anyway. So it has to be enforced at the technology level, otherwise we just screw ourselves over in the long run when content production just becomes economically unsupportable.

      Currently DRM forces me to double my downloads... Once off the iTunes store for the TV shows I want to watch, then a second time to get them DRM free for long term archive.

      If they came DRM free I wouldn't have to do the second download.

      Please explain to me what economic model describes how DRM is protecting the revenue of content creators here.

      I think its simple:

      The content creators are too nervous to try and sell stuff without DRM.

      Which is actually amazing - in all the history of recorded music, TV and film, until about 10 years ago nothing had significant DRM. You could tape music off the radio, video off the TV.

      And yet sales of these products brought great wealth to the content producers. According to what you espouse, they should have all gone bankrupt as everyone pirated all the content.

      In reality, people don't do this. Yes, they copy stuff. Always did. But they buy stuff too. And they always will, even if the DRM is removed.

      Its happening now - there isn't a reason for virtually any sales of music CD's - just copy them off the internet.

      But people still buy music CD's.

      More importantly, the fallacy in the argument is that someone who gets music off the internet will somehow pay more money to these companies if the music isn't available. In fact, they may not have the money to spend, or the will to spend it that way.

      Whilst someone like me is holding back on purchases when because I want to get it free of DRM also.

      So in order to get people (who may never buy stuff) to not copy content, they are screwing around with people like me (who are more than willing to pay for content) by giving me the inferior product.

      I get stuff from iTunes movies because its available quickly, and the quality is good. The stuff I get on the internet takes longer to download. For the shows I want to watch (eg Heroes, BSG, Stargate) I'm more than happy to pay to know that I'll get the content as fast as I can.

      Bear in mind I live in Australia, and have to get the iTunes gift vouchers from the US to see this stuff.

      But no way could the music industry or video industry view someone like me as being their target market. No, its the 12 year old kids with no disposable income who they are interested in forcing into the market? Right.

      I'm probably the extreme example, but the general case is valid. Those with disposable income to spend on content will spend it. The competition is for how I spend my dollar. The content produces need to produce good content, and the money will come. Locking in bad content is not the winning formula here.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
  4. it can't be fought by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    DRM can't be fought, sorry.

    There aren't enough people who know or care. Only a few of us geeks, and we don't make up an appreciable fraction of the market.

    People will buy what the ads tell them to buy. End of story. We lose. Want to play the downloaded movie you just ordered from Netflix on Linux? Sorry, no dice.

    I don't like it either, but it's reality.

    1. Re:it can't be fought by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 4, Insightful

      DRM absolutely *can* be fought. Just tell everyone about the free & superior compeditor to Netflix: The Pirate Bay.

      Seriously, this is a simple issue of competiton: Netflix is easy to use, costs money, and provides moderate quality DRM-encumbered files. TPB is slightly more complex, free, and provides decent quality DRM-free files. If Netflix sucked it up and provided high quality DRM-free files, they'd have 2 out of 3 and be compeditive with TPB again.

      The only way to fight DRM is to point out one simple fact: DRM *encourages* piracy, because it's hard to get guilt tripped when the pirates are providing a strictly better product.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
  5. Jeesh by amplusquem · · Score: 5, Insightful

    How many DRM articles do we have to have on Slashdot? I mean I get it, I hate DRM just as much as the next guy and think it's ridiculous, but it seems like we are getting a new article on Slashdot about DRM everyday. The same type of comments are modded insightful every time to the point where they're no longer insightful.

    1. Re:Jeesh by caitriona81 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      This is almost trolling, but just far enough away from it that I'll entertain it with a reply. The more bad press DRM gets, the more chance the average consumer will reject it.
      Granted, speaking out against it on /. is like preaching to the choir, but the word needs to get out unless we are to be stuck under the cloud of it forever.
      It would have far more value for us to push for these kind of stories where they are more likely to be seen by regular consumers - write letters to the editor at your favorite newspaper, send letters to congresspeople, etc... those kind of things have far more reach than Slashdot does, at least where this is concerned.

    2. Re:Jeesh by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Articles like the one linked, however, do not really help. They tell those of us who already understand the problem about it, but the linked article is too long to forward to people who might not, and contains stupid errors like confusing AAC with FairPlay. I have a few thousand AACs with no DRM on them, but the article makes it sound like AAC must contain DRM.

      If you want to explain DRM to people outside Slashdot, let them read something like this article or Jasper Fforde's The Well of Lost Plots.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  6. Avoid defective by design by kherr · · Score: 5, Informative

    I agree, people need to avoid buying bad products. For me that means not buying stuff from iTunes (I troll used CD stores instead) and avoiding one of the biggest DRM sneak-attacks going on, HDMI. People are getting snared by the HDMI trojan, because it's such a convenient way to interconnect devices. But as we're starting to see with HDMI implementations on TiVo Series 3 and Vista, HDMI is going to be used to screw everyone.

    Note: I disagree that the iPod is defective by design, because it does not require DRM. It still works with the open formats of MP3, AAC and AIFF.

    1. Re:Avoid defective by design by TeknoHog · · Score: 4, Informative

      HDMI is not the problem, HCDP is. HDMI is a convenient version of DVI with audio, while HDCP can also work over DVI.

      --
      Escher was the first MC and Giger invented the HR department.
    2. Re:Avoid defective by design by Graymalkin · · Score: 4, Informative

      What a red herring. There's no physical or logical lockouts on music on an iPod. The interface of the iPod relies on song indexing. When songs are added to it they're given a four character file name which is much cheaper to store as an index in RAM than a 255 character name. The song's metadata is added to the iPod's database and displayed in a variety of ways. Smart Albums and different sorting methods (by Artist, Album, Song, Composer, etc.) aren't going to work without an index of the device's content. Dragging files to arbitrary directories is not condusive to indexing as the iPod would then have to store file names up to 255 characters and do all the indexing itself instead of the host computer. A 2GHz PC can do the indexing and file organization a lot faster than an 80MHz iPod. A feature to make the iPod useful to a large number of people and an effective device is definitely not a defect.

      If you want drop and drop support stop complaining about the iPod and go buy a player that supports it.

      --
      I'm a loner Dottie, a Rebel.
    3. Re:Avoid defective by design by AusIV · · Score: 4, Informative
      Way to troll. iPods not being able to drag and drop has absolutely nothing to do with DRM. Apple uses iTunes to simplify the iPod interface. Many average and below average computer users (the target audience for iPods) have to be instructed on how to view their C drive in windows explorer. iTunes creates an incredibly straight forward interface for putting music on your iPod. It also streamlines indexing so the iPod can find files quickly and easily, decreasing the delay between tracks.

      The directory structure of iPods, while complicated, has been used by a number of third party applications. There is a program called ephPod that allows Windows users to manage their iPods without a iTunes, and I use Amarok for Linux to manage my iPod, which uses libraries from gtkPod, another program for managing iPods.

      Nobody's forcing you to use an iPod if you don't want one, but I'm able to use my iPod without DRM on the operating system of my choice with software of my choice. Just because iPods are capable of playing DRM doesn't mean they're limited by the DRM.

    4. Re:Avoid defective by design by xdotx · · Score: 3, Insightful

      If you want drop [sic] and drop support stop complaining about the iPod and [...]
      load rockbox http://www.rockbox.org/twiki/bin/view/Main/WhyRock box?

      My, now "old", 4G iPod has absolutely no problem handling this crazy drag and drop. I can browse the drive using "folders" that are a built in feature of the FAT32 FS. Or, just ask it to index all my songs (with their gaint strings), and it does so without any noticeable trouble.

      Although the parent's main point is completely correct.

      There's no physical or logical lockouts on music on an iPod.
      That would be like saying you can't browse the web efficiently because IE doesn't let you.

      See, like most of life's problems, this one can be solved with free, open source technologies. :)
      --
      Our wealth breeds emptiness
  7. United Front by mathemaniac · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The general population has very little idea about what DRM is or means. Here's an example: The DVD/VCR combo. Albeit anecdotal, several of my acquaintances have bought these products with the naive intention of renting a dvd and recording it to VHS tape, and needless to say, been very disappointed. Or the DVD-burner console, with the same type of intentions. None of them had any idea about copy protection, and certainly their intentions were less than honorable.

    But the point is that not being tech savvy, they are clueless as to what the superficial applications of DRM are, let alone the deeper implications. Until more of the general population is made aware of what is at stake, DRM will continue unabated because people buy it. Fortunately, there have been signs that the main stream media are noticing the implications of DRM as evidenced by recent articles in the New York Times.

  8. DRM will fail on its own by nightfire-unique · · Score: 4, Insightful

    DRM will fail on its own, because it is anti-consumer, and impossible (cryptographically speaking) to implement securely. We live in a (mostly) free market society. As publishing firms continue to push DRM, new markets will open and will eventually replace the DRM firms, by offering superior products.

    In the meantime, fight it, because it is a good thing to fight.

    But fight even harder against legislation that enshrines and codifies their right to monopolize above and beyond encrypting their content. The most important tool we have in protecting art and the public domain is our freedom to innovate, create, analyze and discuss. These freedoms are being threatened every day - not just in the United States. Even my own country (Canada) is under attack by the various recording companies and individuals with a stake the game.

    The DMCA is bad, but it can get even worse. While the market can currently fend off corporate greed and attacks on fair-use and information exchange, it cannot do so if we allow corrupt legislators to override the individual decisions we all make every day.

    Just my $0.02.

    --
    A government is a body of people notably ungoverned - AC
    1. Re:DRM will fail on its own by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Companies always scream 'let the market decide', yet they manage to pressure politicians into passing laws which are anything but the market deciding. I don't live in the USA, so normally this shouldn't bother me but it does. It bothers me because the USA in turn manages to pressure members of international trade to establish the same laws, or risk being excluded from international trade. It is disgusting, but that's what seem to be happening. While I hold out hope for the customer to win this one, it won't be easy since the media industry has so much more money to influence the powers that be. At least having their security systems bypassed makes them think about the money the invested in these stupid systems.

      On the other hand we have some companies, such as Disney, who recognise that piracy is another business model and that if this business model is succeeding then something is going wrong in their own business model. In many ways they have got passed the point of denial and started recognising maybe they should be taking another approach. Unfortunately this is not true for the rest of the large media companies. Two of the issues I see are pricing and availability:

      - Pricing: If you look at the DVD series of Star Trek and Farscape, then you are looking at around $140 USD+TAX per season. This sort of pricing stinks of price gauging and targets the core fans. Anyone else who is interested, yet doesn't want to pony up that sort of cash, in acquiring the series either pirates or goes without. On other hand when you see a series such as 'Stargate SG-1' retailing at $30 CAD+TAX, you are tempted into making a purchase.

      - Availability: What do I do if I want to buy some music not available in my country? Sometimes if you hunt down hard enough you may find some willing to order it for you, but it isn't easy. Now that there are online stores, such as iTunes, you would have thought you would finally be able to buy music from anywhere easily: wrong, since the music industries still impose their outdated distribution limitations on online stores.

      Although I did mention two, DRM makes buying online music inconvenient and also makes it hard to explain to your parents why they can't do what they want with their music. For me technology is all about making the difficult easy, yet DRM is all the opposite: making the easy difficult and makes listening to my legally bought music akin to trying to deal with government. I still buy CDs because they are free of DRM and easy to use because of it.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
  9. DRM List by solitu · · Score: 4, Informative

    Someone posted a good list about Vista's DRM against XP's DRM http://msmvps.com/blogs/chrisl/archive/2007/01/25/ 519180.aspx

  10. How about a chain letter from us to everyone? by callmetheraven · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Probably every single person on Slashdot has received all the "boilerplate" emails that circulate the web eternally it seems. The rocket-powered-impala, the no-headlights-gangsters, the endless new-virus-gonna-format-your-HD warning mails forwarded again and again Aunty Marcia, etc ad nauseum.

    But what if WE did the same thing? What if the most articulate amongst us came up with a DRM warning letter, and we forwarded it to all the Joe Sixpacs of our worlds with the a title like "WARNING: DRM THREATENING YOUR PC" and "FORWARD THIS TO ALL YOUR FRIENDS!!" message?

    Maybe I'm just idealistically dreaming, maybe I'm being a little rtarded, but how else will Joe Sixpack ever find out otherwise? Broadcast media? Nope. Blogs? Not the ones he's reading. And you know Joe HAS read about the rocket impala.

    --
    You can have my SIG when you pry it from my cold, dead hands.
  11. Re:Right "rights". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The Constitution does not grant our rights, it essentially states that any rights which are not stated that we do not have (e.g., the state may punish you for really evil things, but in such cases you retain your right to trial by jury) are retained by default, but that certain rights which are explicitly stated within the Constitution are inalienable and cannot be revoked under any circumstance, ever. Again, it's the besic jist of the Constitution, now how it's worded, read it through completely and you'll get it.

    Unfortunately the "state" (read: Federal government) has succeeded in convincing us that it is the reverse. They even go as far as to suggest that suspension of the Constitution may even be a necessity in certain cases (e.g., natural disasters where FEMA is concerned) and due process may be ignored or even bypassed (ref: 16th amendment never being ratified by the strict process demanded by the Constitution), and that executive orders by the president are allowable and may even conflict with or in many cases override the Constitution.

    But having said that, the Constitution does not grant us rights in ANY case; it protects our rights and simply limits them in very specific instances.

    Take the time to read it sometime, it is well worth your effort. Also refer to peripheral supporting documents written by our Founding Fathers and you will become pissed off at just how far out country has strayed and at how much our apathy and voting for presidents based on party affiliation rather than character and principle has sold our very liberties out. Go read it though, you will appreciate what our Founding Fathers worked for, and will be very disappointed at what has been going on during the last 18 or so presidential administrations.

    Know your basic inalienable rights, and use them; especially the right to vote, and the right to bear arms. Your right to bear arms guarantees your right to vote.

    Posting anon since stating the truth often gets one modded troll here.

  12. Bah why fight it? by tomstdenis · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I got my stash of mp3s and dvds already. I'd rather sit back and watch society slowly destroy itself.

    It isn't like people really take the hippie goals of OSS and FSF [and the like] to heart anyways. The vast majority of OSS users tend to be commercial shops that use it just because it's cheap, not because it's libre. Worse yet, they use it to support the development of proprietary software/hardware (example: IBM uses it to develop DB2 which is proprietary).

    Frankly I think society as a whole is a lost cause. I suggest folk just get a comfy lawn chair and watch the ensuing madness.

    Tom

    --
    Someday, I'll have a real sig.
  13. Re:Right "rights". by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Fair use is definitely not in the US Constitution, and I doubt it's in any others. It just gives the Congress the right to issue copyrights, patents, etc, for a "limited time". Unfortunately it does not specify any other limits on this power, nor does it spell out how long a "limited time" should be.

    Congress has the power to make all fair use null and void, and to extend patents and copyrights to 3.2 billion centuries from the date of issue. That's legal.

    The US economy was built on patent infringement, though. Once we "pirated" enough to get a leg up on the Europeans, we erected intellectual property walls to hold our advantage.

    The US is now, intellectual property-wise, in the position of 19th century Europe. High legal barriers protecting old, wealthy, stagnant industries. China is in the position of the US in the 19th century--nominal legal barriers and lax enforcement. And unfortunately for us, the result will likely be the same.

  14. Re:This isn't about freedom by bmo · · Score: 4, Interesting

    From earlier in the month, from Usenet, a post from Me. This is what DRM does.

    *begin paste*

    Alt.Rhode_Island buys music. REPOST

    So I'm an Elvis Costello fan. I bought "The River In Reverse" and "The Delivery Man"

    The CD for "River in Reverse" wasn't copy protected, but the DVD would only play in my wicked small low-fi portable DVD player that has 1 inch speakers. It craps out after about 5 minutes in anything else. I watched the whole thing. It wasn' worth the effort. They're doing copy protection for THAT?

    The first CD in "Delivery Man" is copy protected and will only play in the low-fi DVD player.

    I heard mutterings of the CEO of UMG saying that ipods are repositories of stolen music. I didn't figure that he'd be stupid enough to follow through. And good luck figuring this out on your own, as these disks are not labeled as such plainly. The "Delivery Man" cd is labeled as "enhanced cd" on a tiny logo on the back of the package instead of the standard Compact Disc label. In other words, they get around not selling a Compact Disc by not calling it a Compact Disc as defined by the Phillips standard (which gets the manufacturer the Compact Disc label).

    I went to the UMG site that describes the copy protection. Apparently if you have a Macintosh you're screwed. They're "working on it" because they say that the only software they have to let you play the cd works only for Windows PCs and it's spotty on that depending on the age and model of your optical drive.

    Fine.

    I have been hosed for being an honest guy.

    I'm not a thief. I will never pay another cent to UMG. This is insane.

    You have been warned.

    --
    BMO

  15. AAC is not by Apple, and not DRM only by zoeblade · · Score: 4, Informative

    Considering that the article cites Wikipedia, it's curious how it perpetuates the myth that AAC was "invented and promoted by Apple." While Apple is one of the corporations using it, and it does support FairPlay, it is possible to have completely non-DRM-encumbered AAC files. I've ripped most of my CD collection into AAC format using iTunes with no restrictions placed on how I use those files. The format wasn't invented by Apple either. From Wikipedia: "AAC was developed with the cooperation and contributions of companies including Dolby, Fraunhofer (FhG), AT&T, Sony and Nokia, and was officially declared an international standard by the Moving Pictures Experts Group in April 1997."

  16. Re:This isn't about freedom by bmo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "I am quite worried by DRM, because I see a significant potential for backlash against copyright holders when the public realises that we are not keeping up our end of the bargain."

    "We"? Who is "We"?

    If you are indeed in the industry, please read my previous messages to the OP of this thread.

    UMG has ceased to treat me as a customer. Instead, they have treated me as a potential thief. I have ceased to treat them as something to respect. I could just start downloading UMG content off the 'net out of spite, but I won't, because I won't sink to the level that they expect me to.

    --
    BMO

  17. New Zealand's own DCMA by Blancmange · · Score: 4, Informative

    Now's a good time to oppose this bill:
    http://www.brookers.co.nz/bills/new_bills/b061021. pdf

    Particularly obnoxious is Section 226. Breaking a technological protection measure (TPM) even if only to play music you legally bought can land you in prison - unless you're one of the 'qualified' persons such as a librarian.

    This blog I picked from a list of Google hits has a fair bit to say about the bill:
    http://artemis.utdc.vuw.ac.nz:8000/pebble/2006/12/ 18/1166402040431.html

    --
    Blancmange
  18. The fault, dear Brutus, is not the iPod but iTunes by internic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Dragging files to arbitrary directories is not condusive to indexing as the iPod would then have to store file names up to 255 characters and do all the indexing itself instead of the host computer. A 2GHz PC can do the indexing and file organization a lot faster than an 80MHz iPod.

    My Sansa e260 does exactly this with no problem. The indexing doesn't even take long. Now, granted, my player only has 4GB of flash memory (expandable), so this doesn't necessarily apply to the HD-based iPods, but it does seem to suggest the Nanos could do the same. Given that an equivalent iPod nano costs considerably more than the Sansa, I'd guess it would have all least comparable system resources.

    More generally, though, I agree that the lack of drag and drop doesn't mean the iPod is defective by design. It doesn't really even have to do with the iPod (beyond the fact that the iPod indexes songs). What is shows is that iTunes is defective by design.

    --
    "You call it a new way of thinking; I call it regression to ignorance!" -- Operation Ivy
  19. ars technica post by Ken Fisher on the topic by 6350' · · Score: 3, Insightful
    This is probably an appropriate place to mention Ken Fisher's post on Ars Technica, where he opines on the topic. In a nutshell, he notes:

    DRM's sole purpose is to maximize revenues by minimizing your rights so that they can sell them back to you.
    http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070115-8616 .html
  20. DRM story by LesPaul75 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A good friend was just telling me a story about DRM that I found kind of funny. He's loaded, and loves electronics. Who doesn't?

    This is a list of stuff that he's bought over the last year or so.
    - A really nice "Brillian" HDTV ($10000)
    - A PS3 ($600)
    - A really high-end Sony digital camcorder that records 1080p ($2500?)
    - A really, REALLY high-end Sony laptop that can burn Blu-ray movies ($5000)
    - A de-interlacer ($3000)

    Ok, so he has all this stuff, and he's excited to start recording 1080p content with his camcorder and burning it to Blu-ray disks, and then watching it on his top-of-the-line entertainment system. Every piece of his setup is among the best you can get, and it all supports 1080p. So he records some stuff, finds burns it to disk, and can't get it to play. I talked to him about his setup several times over the course of a couple of weeks... There were so many roadblocks that he ran into, and every single one was because of DRM. It was comical.

    The PS3 refused to even play the disks because they appeared to be pirated. This has come up quite a bit in various Blu-ray forums. So he found a workaround for this, but it sucks because you have to use this "special" format that doesn't allow your movies to have menus. Ok, so he burns another disk with the crappy no-menu format, and the PS3 still refuses to play it. Turns out the PS3 can't "authenticate" the TV over HDMI, so it won't output anything in 1080p. So he has to deal with Brillian on the phone to get a firmware update. He finally gets that, and tries again. Still won't play. Now, the PS3 says it can't authenticate the de-interlacer box. So, he still hasn't found a fix for that, but he can finally watch his movies as long as he plugs the PS3 directly into the TV, AND, burns his movies in the special format with no menus.

    The net result is that his movies can't have menus, his $3000 de-interlacer is collecting dust, but after two weeks of debugging and tech support calls and firmware upgrades, his $20000 worth of equipment will actually allow him to record and watch movies. Makes you think back to the good old days, when you recorded something onto a VHS tape and stuck it in the VCR.

  21. and OSX? by danielk1982 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Vista is getting (rightfully) a lot of bad press because of DRM, but where is OSX in this debate? As far as I can tell, Apple will be/and probably already is, going down the same route as Microsoft. OSX will support HDCP and the protected path from OS to video source, just like Vista. I think we should be a little fair here and burn them both?

  22. Your computer is an extension of your home by HermMunster · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you think about your computer, your possession and then you think about your home you'll see that your computer is just an extension of your home. No more would you let advertisers paste advertisements onto the walls of your home (unless you do it for them) then you would let advertisers take over your computer. You would not let Microsoft employees or agents enter your home to search it so you should see that allowing DRM to exist on your computer is the same as doing just that.

    Your computer is an extension like your filing cabinet. It is like your CD collection. It is like your games collection. If you consider all legal and part of your home you would never allow a company such as Microsoft to enter it to inspect your filing cabinet, your CDs, nor your games collection, even if they claim they would never look at anything other than those things. It is a violation of your privacy to not fight against such a thing while watching it happen.

    We don't allow private companies to make and enforce their own laws. Just as everyone would love to own their own bank we know every large corporate entity would love to own their own bank, to grant them loans, to set their own interest rates, etc, to collect income off their own interest rates. We don't allow corporate entities to make nor enforce the laws. We elect government to do just that. We know that corporate entities would greatly abuse you. There's no standards of conduct on them set by the law. If we let them make their own laws and enforce them in your home I'd feel that we'd be sanctioning the likes of HP pretexting employees.

    You see, the big thing about what happened with HP was that they felt they could do what they wanted and that they could get away with it if only those ordering it were given plausible deny-ability. What really was bad about this wasn't that they violated the rights of free speech and the freedom of the press nor that they participated in illegal acts (in some states), but that they told every single employee that they were subjects (in their personal lives) of the business they worked for. This told every employee that they had no rights when it came to the employer.

    This abuse is only an example of what is happening with DRM and content rights management. It tells you that you are subservient to the content provider and that they have the right to enter your home to investigate you and to take action against you even if you were never even in violation.

    You need just understand that your computer is an extension of your home.

    Think about someone using their vehicle to steal from some business. The way DRM and CRM works is that the owners of those materials can search your car without your permission and can boot your car so that you can't do anything of the sort with it again, even if this inhibits legitimate use of your vehicle for other purposes. Even law enforcement agencies can't search your car without evidence and a warrant while the car is located on your premises. They can't open a door, they can't search through the trunk, they can't do anything to it. While on your property probable cause would be extremely difficult to prove.

    Your computer is an extension of your home.

    CRM and DRM are the equivalent of allowing companies to make and enforce their own laws and to violate your rights and your privacy. It allows them to do this without the true legal system (with all its procedures and policies, without selective training and strict adherence to the rules of law) having even taken part.

    When you can come to grips with the fact that your computer is an extension of your home you'll understand why you can't let DRM/CRM exist in any form. It should be your responsibility to ensure that your children's future is free of private laws created by private companies which are not designed to protect you as an individual (instead giving priority over the company and content rights holder).

    Everything that is done in the computer would can be equated to the world we move in. You need only think about it as part of the real world instead of some cyber-world where you can give or take what happens.

    --
    You can lead a man with reason but you can't make him think.