, 2006-03-01
Digital Rights Managements hurts paying customers, destroys Fair Use rights, renders customers' investments worthless, and can always be defeated. Why are consumers and publishers being forced to use DRM?
Expand all |
Post comment
The big DRM mistake
2006-03-01
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: The big DRM mistake
2006-03-03
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
The big DRM mistake
2006-03-01
Anonymous (3 replies)
Anonymous (3 replies)
Re: The big DRM mistake
2006-03-02
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
The big DRM mistake
2006-03-01
Tom Arnold (1 replies)
Tom Arnold (1 replies)
When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-02
Anonymous (4 replies)
Anonymous (4 replies)
Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-02
Mister Jalopy (2 replies)
Mister Jalopy (2 replies)
Re: Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-02
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Re: Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-03
Anonymous
Anonymous
Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-03
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)
Re: Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-04
OK Mores (2 replies)
OK Mores (2 replies)
Re: Re: Re: When you buy copyrighted material, you are BUYING IT, not licencing it
2006-03-06
Anonymous (1 replies)
Anonymous (1 replies)

What's missing is personal liability. We have good laws in place but we keep thinking we need new cyber laws. No we need better citizens. And that's on both sides of the equation. People need to understand that they buy a movie then they can loan it out to people but like everything else, those people shouldn't keep loaning it out in the tree-branch effect. On the other side, content creators need to understand that Fair Use will bring them more publicity and open new markets more than not. They also need to see that not all markets are equal. So if the entire country of Whogivesadamnastan who lives in 99.9999% poverty is sharing the content then that does not immediately make it a market. Eventually it will as those people do enter the world economy and start demanding their own original copies.
It's the case of the rotten apple. So yeah, DRM exists because people mostly suck and that hurts those people who suck less.
[ reply ]
Link to this comment: http://www.securityfocus.com/comments/columns/390/33203#33203