EFF Officially Appeals Tim Berners-Lee Decision On DRM In HTML (techdirt.com)
Last week, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) decided to officially recommend the use of Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) for protecting copyrighted video on the internet. This will enable web surfers to watch media in a browser that requires Digital Rights Management copy protection without the need for browser-based plugins. "It moves the responsibility for interaction from plugins to the browser," the consortium states at the time. "As such, EME offers a better user experience, bringing greater interoperability, privacy, security, and accessibility to viewing encrypted video on the web." TechDirt shares an update: It's been a foregone conclusion that EME was going to get approved, but there was a smaller fight about whether or not W3C would back a covenant not to sue security and privacy researchers who would be investigating (and sometimes breaking) that encryption. Due to massive pushback from the likes of the MPAA and (unfortunately) Netflix, Tim Berners-Lee rejected this covenant proposal. In response, W3C member EFF has now filed a notice of appeal on the decision. The crux of the appeal is the claimed benefits of EME that Berners-Lee put forth won't actually be benefits without the freedom of security researchers to audit the technology -- and that the wider W3C membership should have been able to vote on the issue. This appeals process has never been used before at the W3C, even though it's officially part of its charter -- so no one's entirely sure what happens next.
Good for the EFF. Donated $50 because of this very issue. https://www.eff.org/issues/drm
"EME offers a better user experience"
Is this like one of those "up is down" or "black is white" postmodern things?
Because as far as I can tell, EME seems more like a scheme to lock DRM into browsers ?
Or am I misunderstanding?
-Styopa
I never thought I'd actually have a reason to use any of the Chromium or Firefox forks who strip down the core, but this will do it. I don't care what service I lose - I'd rather risk piracy. Just one big nope.
I can has video of cat cheezburger in browser still if DRM in browser? Oh Good! Spy Spy! Cheezburger cat! LOL!
W3C has created a standard set of Javascript APIs, and DRM providers provide a similar set of standard APIs that can talk to the JS APIs.
The web isn't suddenly locked down and all browsers must be closed source now. If you don't want to use DRM, then don't go to DRM enabled services like Netflix. You are not entitled to anything Netflix, Hulu, etc has to offer.
I feel there is a lot of FUD here, and in many cases, there is a conflation between allowing Netflix to send you content, and the erosion of net neutrality which is a separate, unrelated, and in my opinion, far more worrying problem.
I'm god, but it's a bit of a drag really...
The EFF should hire creimer to smother Tim with his lardass until Tim reverses the decision.
W3C is a joke
There shall be forbidden areas of research and knowledge!
Whoo hoo! The goals of a free society!
Remember this the next time some politician tries to censor stuff by saying, "It isn't speech. It's behavior we're regulating!"
(-1: Post disagrees with my already-settled worldview) is not a valid mod option.
You want to win the browser war and become the dominant browser? Then better be the browser where this junk can easily be removed so people can watch their content the way they want to.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
translation: Bend Over Here It Comes Again
Because whit all that is going on, it looks as if Churchill wrote their war speech.
We shall go on to the end. We shall fight in France, we shall fight on the seas and oceans, we shall fight with growing confidence and growing strength in the air, we shall defend our island, whatever the cost may be. We shall fight on the beaches, we shall fight on the landing grounds, we shall fight in the fields and in the streets, we shall fight in the hills; we shall never surrender,
Don't fight for your country, if your country does not fight for you.
Google paid Timmy $1,000,000 to make sure the DRM is in the spec. He's not going to change his mind.
..then they need to accept the increased rate of piracy, since the ENTIRE PURPOSE OF DRM IS TO MAKE THINGS NOT WORK. And I sure as fuck am not going to knowingly pay for something that doesn't work.
If you are paying for DRMed stuff, then you're the problem. Stop doing that. Just pirate it instead, until they get real. Music got real after its brief dabbling in telling customers to stop buying, and it's been great since then. Video just needs to follow in the footsteps of music, and denying revenue to the crooks is how to get there.
Pirate. Everyone, fucking pirate your video until DRM is dead.
The upside of all this, is that musicians (and ok, some of their administrators, distributors, etc.) are getting all the money that I used to spend on cable TV and movies. Makes me wonder if the music industry is who is really pushing for DRM on video. ;)
It would be good if the author of the snippet mentioned who the f tim berners lee is. Most people who read this probably didn't care because it was written awkwardly.
>EME offers a better user experience
Was it bad before? What the heck? Will EME suddenly offer pristine viewing resolutions and better FF & RW buttons or something?
What it 'fixed' was who gets complete master control which it can use for self-serving needs. Until a new standard comes along of course...
That is all.
And I think he's long for a pie to the face.
Drm content is going to close more doors on the open internet. The more content is closed off to only certain groups the less freedom we have. Don't be surprised if eventually a lot of site content we take for granted suddenly stops working. Memes? Didn't pay for using that image bro sorry. Free pron? Pffft - you didn't register. Sorry. The free and open web was destroyed by profit motives.
DRM as a concept is fundamentally flawed. If you want an application with DRM, keep it separate from the browser.