FTC Warns Against Deceptive DRM
Jane Q. Public writes "At the Federal Trade Commission's Seattle conference on DRM, FTC Director Mary Engle started off by referencing the Sony rootkit debacle, and said that companies are going to have to get serious about disclosing DRM that may affect the usability of products. She also said that disclosure via the fine print in a EULA is not good enough, and 'If your advertising giveth and your EULA taketh away, don't be surprised if the FTC comes calling.' Transcripts and webcasts are available from the FTC website." Update 18:13 GMT by SM: as Jane Q. Public was nice enough to diplomatically point out, the webcasts are no longer functioning, but transcripts are still available.
Is there any DRM that is not deceptive at some level? It seems that the makers try very hard to gloss over what the DRM actually does/restricts when they are trying to sell you their stuff.
'If your advertising giveth and your EULA taketh away, don't be surprised if the FTC comes calling.'
Does this include, "Own it on DVD"?
Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
I'm absolutely delighted to have the FTC's assurance that regulatory capture could never ever happen to them.
In fact, I would argue, it already has. Let's be real clear here: what Sony, for instance, did with their rootkit was a crime. If I had done it, I'd probably still be sharing a cell with Bubba. Because it was done by a corporation, under a layer of legalistic obfuscation, to "consumers" it was treated as a fairly minor civil matter. Sony handed over some money, offered to replace a few CDs, and mumbled something about being sorry if anybody was offended. Pathetic.
Uh - your complaint is what the Bugs link is for, nobody from /. is going to read it here.
Did you ever wake up in the morning, with a Zombie Woof behind your eyes? -- FZ
don't be surprised if the FTC comes calling.
Sony: "Hello?"
FTC: "Hi, this is the FTC, you have some deceptive DRM in your latest product"
Sony: "Oh?"
FTC: "Yeah, so we're just calling to let you know"
Sony: "I'm not surprised that you're calling"
FTC: "Wonderful. Have a good day, sir. Goodbye."
Mod parent up.
Awhile back I was trying to explain to a stickler-for-the-rules nothing-to-hide trust-the-system colleague why dvd regions were stupid. He didn't see the problem. Until he brought back some DVDs from overseas.
If our heads of state and legislators actually experienced DRM for themselves, DRMs days would probably be numbered.
they should require a prominent logo of a broken CD if DRM is in use.
if this is supposed to be a new economy, how come they still want my old fashioned money?
The problem appears to be that corporations being imaginary beings and not physical are rather hard to put in a jail.
Put the highest level manager who cannot produce written proof this was ordered by somebody higher up the chain in jail. Next time, the CYA chain will go all the way to the CEO.
-- Support a free market in the field of government
So when are they going to kick the arse of all the movie studios?
They advertise "OWN IT TODAY" on all their dvd releases. Yet they claim in courts and elsewhere that you dont own anything but are merely licensing it.
I want them forced to advertise "Get your limited, conditional and revokeable without warning license to view it today!"
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
the only difference is, is that it doesn't affects as many people since not too many import videos or go overseas
Region-locking affects millions of people every day, because it is a barrier to open competition in the markets and allows charging different rates for the same product via artificial means. Perhaps those in the US may be less aware of this because they tend to get things first/cheapest, but don't tell anyone from, say, Europe or Australia that.
Now, I'm not saying a company shouldn't be free to sell a product in one country at one price and in another country at another price. Sometimes, this may be justified, for example if the costs of manufacture/transportation are different in the two cases.
However, blocking someone who is willing to buy where the price is lower and deal with any extra logistics themselves has no ethical or legitimate commercial basis. It doesn't even have an economic argument like copyright, unless you believe in protectionism. So why should the law say that anyone who circumvents such provisions is wrong?
If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
Now you're just being silly.
Since DRM has no actual definition..
DRM is Digital Restriction Management, or if you drank the koolaid, Digital Rights Management.
Regional encoding is a form of DRM, the bullshit Lexmark pulled with chipped cartridges is a form of DRM, HDCP is a form of DRM, any technology which uses software to implement an additional layer of restriction above the hardware layer is a form of DRM.
And under the broad strokes people are using to paint region locking as DRM, SNES cartridges would be considered DRM because you can't play the game enclosed in them using your Atari 2600 or Sega.
No. That is hardware compatibility. Checking whether an inserted cartridge is an official cartridge is DRM.