Father of MPEG Replies To Jobs On DRM 234
marco_marcelli writes with a link to the founder and chairman of MPEG, Leonardo Chiariglione, replying to Steve Jobs on DRM and TPM. After laying the groundwork by distinguishing DRM from digital rights protection, Chiariglione suggests we look to GSM as a model of how a fully open and standardized DRM stack enabled rapid worldwide adoption. He gently reminds Jobs (and us) that there exists a reference implementation of such a DRM stack — Chillout — that would be suitable for use in the music business.
Completely Moot (Score:3, Interesting)
So frankly, who cares about this small part of Jobs' argument?
His main point -- that there shouldn't be DRM -- is correct.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:4, Interesting)
So Microsoft could choose to go a more flexible route with DRM. That might change the market. But I think we all know that's not going to happen.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
That's an interesting opinion to have. If party X is in charge of dictating the restrictions and policies in your product, isn't party X your real customer?
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
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The IT guy publishing media on that windows server is a user too.
It goes both ways.
No, it's not "1984" yet. But the technology is now in place... for the first time in our history, there's no practical reason why it can't be tomorrow.
This is push-button book-burning technology, plain and simple, and it's being rammed down our throats.
Those who developed it should be executed.
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I think the "moot" drops back to a quote from the article:
In other words, only 1-2 CDs worth of track per iPod are sold by iTunes. The rest of the music people are playing just use regular MP3's. I know I'd be ripping my 1200+ CDs before I'd be spending $1/track, which
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Point is, lots of industries serve as middle-men between different customers. Apple isn't doing anything new or revolutionary.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
What should we believe? (Score:4, Insightful)
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DRM doesn't kill music; people kill music. (Score:4, Insightful)
"Our view is it's our job to provide the weapons and the warlords can tell us what kind of restrictions and policies they want to apply to that." Where's the difference?
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Well, shoot, when you put it like that MS/other DRM creators seem in the right ...
Two issues here. First, Microsoft is using its monopolistic weight to require that all input and output hardware drivers allowed to load on Windows Vista are compliant with its weapon technology. The certification process can be cost prohibitive for hardware developed and sold by small businesses or non-profit organizations. Second, the ten members of the MAFIAA (Bertelsmann, WMG, Vivendi, EMI, Sony, Time Warner, Disney, NBC Universal, Fox, and Paramount) are using their oligopolistic weight to keep the pu
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
With Windows Media Player, I have no fracking clue. Will this track self-destruct in 3 plays? Will this track play indefinitely? Can that track only be used while my subscription is active? Can this one be burnt to a CD?
MS's approach to DRM is the same as their approach to Windows PC technology and is the exact reason their ecosystem, while vast in scope, is also vastly inferior. It's precisely this issue that has led MS to go with the more vertical approach with the Xbox and Zune. It's interesting to note that these two markets where MS is the underdog, where they must woo the consumer with a superior experience if they are to have any hope of success, they take the more controlled, limited approach (the type of approach, in fact, that they deride Apple for taking with their PC hardware and their iPod).
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Actually, this isn't completely true. A year or two ago (possibly more) Apple changed the number of computers you could authorize at one time and the number of burns you could make of a given group of songs. Since they can't legally [IANAL] change the rights of music you have already purchased, you may have Fairplay music
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i don't think you're right on that. i have some itunes store music that was bought before the change to the drm terms of service that gave you 5 activ
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I'm not sure how closely it tracks the contents of the playlist; you might be able to recreate the same playlist with trivial differences (song ordering, adding a 1s blank track, etc.) and keep churning them out.
Al
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Which is exactly what has structured the market so far. In Europe at least, when you look at downloadable content available for sale (or rental) movies or TV series, they are always wrapped in MS DRM. The services even typically have a little note up saying that they apol
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Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
If "management" *could mean (as TFA suggests) just attaching stuff to your work that indicates what you think your rights are, I'm all for it I guess. Attach it, be honest, and I'll avoid most of your crap like the plague.
But what many technologies do is actually digital rights *enforcement (i.e. of what your rights are) on people who might not share that opinion; in a great many instances, the federal government agrees with the *recipient about what is allowable.
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Waste of time and effect.
In fact the current situatuio is worse than no DRM, as the music co.s think they some "security" when they in fact don't.
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Re:Completely Moot (Score:4, Insightful)
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Also, Chillout isn't the only open-source DRM project, Sun has (had?) their DReaM [wikipedia.org] initiative. But none of these attempts seem to be gaining any traction. The only widespread DRM scheme is Apple's, and Jobs himself says they would rather not be using it at all. The media companies should listen to him and finish the entire embarrassing affair.
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It is somekind misleading for me. DRM itself is not bad per se - it is only a product, a technology. Same as with knifes - knifes are not bad. It is bad to kill somebody with knife but not bad to prepare delicious meal using knife.
So using DRM to take their rights from users is bad. Not DRM per se. DRM as a way to control information is neutral. It would me nice to have The Good DRM in your use. F.e. in organisations that proces confidential data - to con
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So frankly, who cares about this small part of Leonardo Chiariglione's argument?
My main point -- that there shouldn't be comic sans on the internet -- is correct.
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DRM is a tool, and it has positive (for the producers and indirectly for consumers) and negative (for same) aspects. The key is to get it done right, or not at all.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Interesting)
Jobs and Gates are essentially doing the same thing here. They both understand that DRM is pretty bogus, they are both supporting it since that is the only way to bring the content providers onboard at the moment.
Having attended one of Leonardo's SDMI meetings I would not trust him as far as I could spit. He was the architect of the SDMI fiasco. I have no confidence in either his technical or his political skills.
Incidentally the title father of MPEG is somewhat overblown.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Informative)
The End of SDMI [archive.org]
The reason why the article says SDMI is "ending" is because SDMI was a "solution" to the MP3 problem of the late '90's. When Eric Scheirer wrote the article for MP3.com, he had this to say:
"The solution is to get the technology companies into bed with the record industry. But the consumer-electronics industry knows a hard lesson that the RIAA has yet to learn: regardless of the business model, it has to start with value to the consumer. What it all adds up to is this: the floodgates are opening. Portable devices will be huge for Christmas this year [Article published Oct 15 1999]; they will all play MP3, and none of them will be SDMI-compliant in any way that matters."
So if SDMI (Mr. Chiariglione 's baby) was truly failing in October of 1999, and MP3 was going to be the wave of the future, the core problem was DRM.
But Mr. Chiariglione had a rebuttal for that article (also on mp3.com), just like he has a rebuttal for Jobs today.
SDMI Checks In [archive.org]
Moreover, in contrast to your report on October 15, SDMI is not merely some theoretical possibility. I am sure you have seen the same announcements I have-advertisements and other public statements that announce the intention of some leading manufacturing companies to produce portable devices complying with the SDMI specification.
Mr. Chiariglione is convinced that SDMI will be a success.
Finally, read the Wikipedia article on SDMI for the rest of the story:
Scheirer's comments proved to be correct; the SDMI has been inactive since May 18, 2001.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Insightful)
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OK, you tell me which one you think is Jobs and which you think is Gates here.
Jobs has been giving the RIAA exactly what they want since the launch of iPod. He clearly has no intention of changing. The only 'change' in his position here is that he has repeated earlier
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You honestly don't know? You didn't read the recent open letter by jobs? You should.
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Sure, that's a practical POV. It's just not one that is consistent with believing DRM is bad. As I said in a related discussion, nobody forced Apple to open the iTunes store. If Jobs realized that it couldn't be successful without DRM and he really believed DRM was bad, he would have decided against opening the store in the first place. If Jobs was correct when he claimed that only a small percentage
Re:Completely Moot (Score:4, Interesting)
Or he could, you know, like, open the store and let the MARKET decide how they felt about it.
Being "consistent" would have removed OUR choice in the matter. It's one thing to get on your high horse and make a decision. It's quite another to do so and assume that what you're doing is right for everyone else. For example, I've no doubt that a pro-life individual would be happy to stand up and make your decsion for you in that matter, but that ignores you right to choose for yourself.
Further, consistency is the hobgoblin of small minds. Steve could well have accepted the idea that DRM is a neccessary evil and now, after years of actually running the business that's the iTMS and seeing the results, decided that it's no longer needed.
I "expect" people to be able to look at the world and have the wisdom and courage to change their minds if needed.
Re:Completely Moot (Score:5, Interesting)
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Yes it is. For example it's technically illegal to use a video recorder or Tivo or to rip a CD that you own into itunes (the apple 'rip, mix, burn' advertising was in fact an incitement to break the law - a crime in itself).
However a law has to be backed up by enforcement to by effective. Nobody has ever tried to jail someone for recording Eastenders for example.. and they would look pretty damned stupid if they did. It's unlikely
As a wireless/microwave engineer (Score:5, Interesting)
Yet it is the most widely used wireless personal communication standard in the world. Woe are the hackers and crackers who try to attact it directly. But like any encrypted system, the weak points usually lie elsewhere. Those would be the point of attack.
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However, it is important realize that there isn't as much motivation to crack/hack a communications protocol as there is to
Re:As a wireless/microwave engineer (Score:5, Insightful)
GSM is very secure, but is a communications protocol, not a DRM protocol. GSM allows Andrew and Betty to talk, without Charlie hearing. As has been stated often before, in DRM, Betty and Charlie are the same person.
He means the DRM in phones, I think (Score:2)
This only works because most cell phones are limited-capability devices tied to a particular service provider. Similar schemes can be used with set-top boxes, but not with PCs unless the PC's functionality is also drastically limited so that it becomes more like a phone than a computer. (The iPod is sim
Re:As a wireless/microwave engineer (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.gsm-security.net/faq/gsm-a3-a8-comp128
Re:As a wireless/microwave engineer (Score:4, Interesting)
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Re:As a wireless/microwave engineer (Score:5, Informative)
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There is a major difference in protecting an on-going communication system and a write locked, read-only system, such as recorded entertainment material. In a communication system each recipient gets a unique temporary key for that one time. For recordings the key has to be tied to the recording or the device or some combination. Once that is done and the secret of the key is out, the key can be used on all recordings using that key.
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Early versions of some encryption "algorithms" were "cracked" and soon replaced by updated versions. BTW, those encryption algorithms are proprietary and not officially part of the specification: only the encryption protocols are. The new algorithms used for 3G are based on standard algorithms (AES, SHA-1) and were designed through an open process.
"Lawful Int
GSM is insecure (Score:4, Informative)
I am shocked to see this statement so highly moderated ! You are obviously not qualified to comment on the GSM standard. GSM is riddled with flaws and makes use of particularly weak ciphers that are known to be so poorly designed that communications can be decrypted in a few seconds with a stantard PC. [technion.ac.il]
Standards adoption in an existing marketplace (Score:2, Insightful)
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Mr. Chiariglione differentiates between DRM (management), which would be that unencrypted MP3 with license notice attached, and DRM (protection) which enforces.
Fair use doesn't have to be convenient (Score:2)
Under United States copyright law as interpreted in the DeCSS cases such as Universal v. Reimerdes, fair use doesn't have to be convenient or full quality in order to be constitutionally sufficient. Line-out is still available.
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From what I gathered analog line out is disabled in Vista when you play protected content. Of course you can always record the sound coming out from the speakers or film the screen.
Until recorders recognise the embedded signatures in content of course...
In other words, a lot of pe
[citation needed] (Score:2)
From what I gathered analog line out is disabled in Vista when you play protected content.
It's the fcuking headphone jack. Cleartext digital audio outputs have been turned off for some restrictions-managed content since Windows Millennium Edition, and high-definition video outputs may be degraded to enhanced definition if they are not digital and encrypted, but this has never affected analog audio outputs to my knowledge. Please cite your sources.
Until recorders recognise the embedded signatures in content of course...
But then you really get into constitutional issues. The opinion of the Supreme Court in Eldred v. Ashcroft stated that without the possibility
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The very intention and implementation of DRM is unfair. DRM is a fancy way of saying "We're going to do our best to force you to abide by copyright laws even while potentially interfering on your rights because we care more about our rights and/or think our rights are more important."
You cannot conceivably enforce DRM without infringing on the rights of consumers. Period. This is because the process of copyright infringement--copying
please define your terms .. (Score:5, Insightful)
If I was on Usenet I would assume the OP was doing the meaning of the word shuffle. Pretending to misunderstand what the other fella meant and addressing a made up meaning instead.
"while it makes sense to claim, based on empirical evidence, that protected music does not sell, it remains to be demonstrated that managed music does not"
What's the difference between 'managed' and 'protected' in relation to Jobs meaning of DRM and your version of DRM.
'That would be like saying that the Creative Commons movement is a hollow shell'
False analogy and strawman
"Curiously Steve Jobs restricts his analysis to just one option: how can Apple safely license its DRM technology to other manufacturers and be able to keep its obligations vis-à vis the record companies"
Well he can only speak for Apple after all.
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Jobs also seems to ignore the possibility of an industry standard system as well.
Being unwilling to compromise and blaming others for the problem when a reasonable solution exists is not what I call the mark of a reasonable person. Maybe there are
The letter also ignores the fact that much of the issue the Norwegian consumer g
They are scared. (Score:5, Interesting)
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No, seriously. This can only be good news, regardless of Jobs' motives. Thank you for a great post.
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And frankly, as a Mac user, Steve Jobs has done a much better job for me than any consumer rights group: he has allowed for Mac users to be able to buy music online, something they could not do if there wasn't an iTunes Store. Because almost everything else is under a Microsoft format unreadable on a Mac.
And I say this as someone who never bought anything on the iTunes Store. But at least I have the option. Something Norwegian Mac users won't have in a few months when Apple is forced to close
Difference between a comm protocol and content (Score:3, Informative)
DRM TPM GSM... bwahhh??? (Score:3, Insightful)
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Why can't the author explain those things? Simple journalism: who, what, where, why, how.
You seem to be new here. Welcome to Slashdot!
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1. with GSM, your "key" is in your SIM, which means you can take it with you from device to device.
2. Wtih GSM, you only need the key to access a particular network. To switch networks, you throw away the old key and buy a new key. Now that the US (and soon Can
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All lies in the definition here (Score:3, Insightful)
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The TFA uses the classic technique of misdirection - changing the topic of the argument and using the differences between the redefined topic and the original topic to attack the original argument.
DRM means Digital Rights Management, and the term applies specifically to software intended to restrict the use of a particular document (be it a sound file, movie, or PDF). What TFA is talking about is copyright notification, which is already supported through ID3 tags. The author of TFA needs to read up on def
OMA DRM (Score:5, Informative)
The issue isn't DRM, it's greed (Score:3, Interesting)
And with such low pricing, people wouldn't even think twice about buying every new album that comes out in their genre. Youngsters have no money anyway, so asking them to cough up inflated prices is just completely ridiculous, and counterproductive since kids create much of the music buzz. They'll eventually purchase all the CDs that they really appreciate once they've grown up anyway --- just have patience!
You wouldn't need DRM not only because very low cost would make non-market acquisition pointless, but also because everybody would have all the music they want --- there would be nothing left to copy, in one's area of interest!
[The argument that pricing music logically would make new music cost hundreds of dollars per album is bollocks: like in all industries, development of a new product should be funded from past profits, and amortized across projected future sales. Music should be no exception, and the fact that currently the income from sales of age-old music is pure untouched profit and not reinvested to fund new production just shows the extent to which greed has distorted the music industry.]
DRM is only an issue today because of the artificial scarcity created by artifically high pricing --- greed.
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LMAO. I'm going to take a wild guess and say you don't work or operate in the music industry at any level from the top 40 / big 4 end to the grassroots scene.
Sounds like this guy .... (Score:2, Insightful)
He pretty much restates the overall theme of Jobs' point, in a manner that sounds condescending because we "stupid" people don't understand that DRM can apply to multiple facets of information and technology.
What a prick.
protection vs. management (Score:2)
It doesn't seem like one could be much different than the other.
There are two types of people. The RIAA see's customers and priates. The truth is there are customers and meme-speaders. Most people at times perform both roles. While it's great if people want to buy your stuff, the 2nd best choice is to have your stuff be made popular by the meme-spreaders.
If I want something from a store (brick, "e," or otherwise); I have to pay..
Pe
Open letter to Steve Jobs (Score:5, Interesting)
http://www.theinquirer.net/default.aspx?article=3
MOD PARENT UP !! (Score:2)
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I see that TPM has been mentioned. While my MBP has a TPM module, there are no drivers for it and the updated MBPs do not come with TPM.
Consider this, DRM costs Apple money to implement and update whenever someone cracks it. They a
Existing players and compatibility (Score:2)
Of course, manufacturers can write new firmware, but I'm sure that would only be done for current models.
The only way forward is to have no DRM to allow for 100% compatibility.
Interesting Times (Score:3, Informative)
It's also a little bit strange that "the father of MPEG" is how Leonardo Chiariglione is described, rather than the more relevant "father of SDMI".
DRM=cost centre for Apple, profit centre for MSFT (Score:2)
MSFT earns revenue from DRM t
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Yes, let's waste more money on DRM (Score:2)
A universal DRM that everyone uses? Yeah, right. Companies won't go for it, it'll cost too much, and it'll be br
who cares standardized DRM stack enables adoption (Score:2)
we do not care about different drm abilities or possibilities or easy adoption or whatever - we just DONT WANT DRM.
Missing the point? (Score:2)
What it doesn't do is specify (except for a reference to "users using smartcards") how to handle the problematic parts: How do I make sure that someone who isn't a legitimate user cannot pretend to be an existing legitimate user. How can I make sure that nobody can fake a permission to play music. H
Who says that they HAVE the rights they "manage?" (Score:3, Informative)
The most obnoxious thing about so-called DRM is that it allows content owners to manage any arbitrary restrictions. There is absolutely nothing about DRM to ensure that those restrictions are, in any way, aligned with rights the manager actually holds, and in practice DRM users invariably overreach.
A famous example was Adobe releasing an eBook version of "Alice's Adventures in Wonderland," which is well and truly in the public domain, with restrictions prohibiting its use with text-to-speech converters... and compounding the error by presenting this with unfortunate wording, which said, not that they were preventing the electronic conversion to speech, but that the user could not "read it aloud."
Adobe has insisted that it was all a mistake, as it may well have been, but nevertheless DRM allowed them to exercise "rights" they did not possess.
Now, since nothing about intellectual property is obvious, and most likely not even a lawyer knows what the law is until there is a court case, there probably is no way at all to implement a technology that actually manages "rights." In practice, DRM manages whatever the content vendor believes or wishes its rights were, not what those right may actually be.
In practice, content rights owners opinions of the extent of their own rights are, at the very least, expansive and optimistic. The RIAA believes, for example, that when I copied my collection of vinyl LP's to CD-Rs, and the moment when I threw away the LPs I lost my right to listen to those CR-R's. Without DRM, such beliefs are no more than a curiosity. With DRM, the content owner becomes judge and jury, and the DRM techology becomes the executioner.
Word games and red herrings (Score:3, Insightful)
What Steve was talking about was content protection technologies - restricting the ability of the user through technical means. That's what people mean when they say DRM. Anything you have to say about Steve's letter that doesn't have
to do with that face of DRM is, well, it's got nothing to do with Steve's letter.
Yep, a DRM system that didn't restrict a user's abilities wouldn't get any pushback, Steve wouldn't be writing about it like this, it'd be great, but it also wouldn't exist. The only reason to statically encrypt a published document, song, or movie is to restrict the abilities of the person who buys it. Without region coding, there would be no CSS. Without the restrictions in iTunes music, there would be no Fairplay.
GSM is a red herring. GSM is a communications mechanism. It's not using a broadcast model, the call is point-to-point. Using encryption for authentication and privacy has nothing to do with anything the music industry wants out of DRM. Take out the restrictons on the end user, and there's no point to it.
We must hurry... (Score:3, Insightful)
This is a false dichotomy, as in both cases we end up prisoners.
Instead of "rushing" to create or accept a single form of Illegal Prior Restraint (often misspelled "DRM") we need to rush to prevent any such Illegal Prior Restraint.
A side effect of this Prior Restraint is that, when combined with the DMCA (in the U.S. and its puppet regimes), is that even as we speak "technologists" can create untested, arbitrary technologies which, at them moment of their initiation have the force of law. That is, if you read the law it basically says "anything created within [these bounds] immediately functions to create a new body of criminal estate, and in so doing may immediately and retroactively reclassify existing technologies and inventions as illegal."
Consider, I produce a tool that does stenographic analysis on images; this tool specifically analyzes an arbitrary image to identify the best ways that the picture _can_ _be_ used to store hidden information. (That is, it identifies the best places and means to encode information. e.g. it tells you that you _could_ fit 2kbits in the sky-part, while you could put 8kbits in the ocean part of a given image before the image is degraded enough to start showing visible signs of manipulation.) This application is completely legal. Then some guy produces an "effective content protection mechanism" that uses the "album cover" image as a Illegal Public Restraint key vector. When he does that, my existing program is "automagically" reclassified as a criminal-grade circumvention tool. It's legal magic!
So, again, here we are being encouraged in a race to the bottom, fueled by technologists who think that just because a thing can be done (half-assed-ly at best) it really ought to be done.
Just say NO to Illegal Prior Restraint and any technology that is being sold to you as a "kinder, gentler" IPR.
Whenever someone proposes something outlandish they are just hoping you will fight them back to "a reasonable compromise", which will seem "not so bad" but which if you mentally went back to before the whole debacle you would see for what it was. A Really Bad Idea.
Enough Already. The continuous questions of the "what if we make it shaped like a bird? What if we make it taste like pancakes?" form are just telling them how to focus their marketing while lulling you into a sense that there _simply_ _must_ be a configuration that you could live with. It's emotional manipulation. You begin to feel unreasonable because you don't want IPR "even if" thy go to the trouble to make it strawberry shortcake IPR with medical care attached lovingly by your grandmother.
You don't want it. You really don't. No matter how palatable they try to make it.
How bout this? I'll cut off your leg and use it to beat your children to death. But I'll give you ice cream... how about that?
IPR is just as self defeating.
The ONLY REASONABLE ANSWER is NO Illegal Prior Restraint.
Summary of the argument (Score:3, Informative)
Here's a summary of his argument:
"DRM IS NOT BAD ... if you redefine "DRM" to include stuff like Creative Commons licensing and xpdf's implementation of the PDF permissions system."
Re:What's with the Pro DRM Articles? (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:What's with the Pro DRM Articles? (Score:5, Funny)
42
Swi
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You put DRM in your stuff, I don't buy it, that simple. There's no such thing as good DRM.
Re:What's with the Pro DRM Articles? (Score:4, Informative)
I'll second that.
If I can't buy a product without DRM, I'll download it from a torrent site, or I'll go without. If I crack the DRM to get a copy in a different format, I'll be a "criminal" anyway, so might as well go the path of least resistance.
Re:What's with the Pro DRM Articles? (Score:5, Interesting)
Lots of people here are anti-drm / information wants to be free. In varies from the college student being as ethical as they can afford to be (buy a few CD's and then pirate the rest when they run out of money) to the folks who have absolutely no respect for copyright to people like me that have no respect for the extended copyright periods that I feel were bought by media companies (If it's over 28 years old, I'll pirate away unless i can get it for a *reasonable* price).
For example: I put down $200 smackers five seasons for get smart. On the other hand I ahoy'd some 1960-1966 comics in cdisplay format vs paying $50 for them in hardback format. I'll also download things so I can take them on a trip with me- for example I downloaded Moulin Rouge (which I own on DVD) because I wanted to take it with me and not risk losing my original.
I have a problem with DRM period. I think we have a temporary window where these products are grossly overpriced. I completely disagree that an "artist" should get paid for the rest of their life for a song when the rest of the world gets paid by the hour. The purpose of copyright is not to provide artists/ creators retirement but to encourage them to create works for the public. Given how many artists there are striving to create entertainment today- I really doubt they need any more encouragement.
Fraud. (Score:3, Insightful)
In fact, I believe that most medi
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Unfortunately DRM, that is preventing digital copying, is IMpossible, even in theory. Like Jobs wrote, such DRM is based on keeping a secret. That secret is the whereabouts of the key which MUST be given to each user in order to unlock the content so it can be seen/heard. Like Mr. Jobs rightly said, secrets cannot be kept from a large number of people. AFAIK there has NEVER been a digital copy-lockout system that has NOT been broken. Digital R
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Wrong. Many here are.
Wrong again. That's just a line used to sell DRM. Artists have been getting paid for ages before DRM existed. This FUD against copying and sharing is the same drivel that was pushed against people sharing cassettes, copying videotapes, or taping television/radio broadcasts.
There is no justification for DRM and your hypothetical well implemented DRM is not possible and therefore will never be created.
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But you're right, I should go read wikipedia now on the details of the GSM implementation.