Welcome to the Future of DRM Media 734
MrFancyPants writes "'DRM, digital rights management, is quite possibly the holy grail of the music and movie industry, allowing them to control exactly how DRM protected content is used, distributed and above all can be tracked right down to the individual end user.' Hardware Analysis reports on a horror story of someone picking up a DVD recently and having to go through an agonizing process of installing DRM-enabled applications to even get it to play on his computer. If this is what the future holds, you'd better think twice about buying DVDs and other media, as you're basically at the mercy of the producer."
More About DRM (Score:3, Informative)
http://www.dlib.org/dlib/june01/iannella/06iannell a.html [dlib.org]
and
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Digital_rights_managRe:More About DRM (Score:3, Insightful)
"Buy the movie now." False advertising? (Score:5, Insightful)
If the commercial says "Buy the movie now" but the packaging says you are only licensing the movie, isn't this called false advertising?
Shouldn't the commercial be "Get your license to view this movie as we see fit, including 20 minutes of commercials that play each time you view the movie - which you cannot skip."?
"Own it on DVD today!" (Score:5, Interesting)
The problem isn't so much DRM, but rather that the consumer is being utterly defrauded about what they are getting for their money.
I have no problems with DRM that would enforce existing rights I may have as a user of copyright material: time shifting, media shifting, lending out media, selling media, etc. - though such a system does not currently exist (it would require communicaton and refutation of keys to authorized playback devices - say 10 simultaneously).
However, such a system must also recognize new rights I may be deemed to have by the courts. If timeshifting, archiving, and media transfer are deemed to not violate copyright, then all existing equipment I have that enforces DRM must be retrofited, at the DRM users' expense, to recognise those rights. Same goes for all other people encumbred by a particular DRM system.
In the past, one would build the device, and then defend that it offers fair use (MPAA v. Sony - Betamax decision). However, today that may be legally impossible (DMCA, and relatively uncrackable DRM). But, on balance, one should be able to petition the court for a preemptive decision on whether a particular use would be fair, and if the existing DRM mechanisms do not support it, they would have to be modified at the DRM users' expense. The idea is that the DRM mechanism is a proxy for the DRM user's rights and so must change as those rights do.
I am not suggesting that this would be an inexpensive undertaking for a DRM user faced with supporting a newly recognized fair use. But, it is a reasonable requirement, in the face of the control they exert.
Re:"Buy the movie now." False advertising? (Score:3, Informative)
Do the commercials say "Buy the movie now", though? Offhand, it seems to me that home video commercials tend to use phrases like "Available now on DVD", or "Bring the movie home for Christmas", neatly avoiding the issue of ownership vs. licensing.
What DRM is REALLY REALLY REALLY about (Score:5, Insightful)
You see, there is a parallel to the industrial revolution here in the information age.
History teaches that during the 1800's there were many people who believed that the entire meaning and purpose of the industrial revolution was to leverage inventions like the cotton gin to expand their plantations for unlimited growth and profit.Ironically just the opposite was true,the industrial revolution actually demanded a mobile and skilled workforce.
They responded first by making slavery last forever, and making laws so harsh you couldn't even teach a black person how to read. Then they responded by trying to micro-regulate the northern states, then they responded by trying to break off from the Union and fence themselves off from the rest of the world, and all hell broke loose.
Today many in media circles believe that the entire meaning and purpose of the information age is to use inventions like the internet to leverage their copyright holdings to the far reaches of the earth for unlimited growth and profit.Ironically,just the opposite is true,the information age demands the unrestricted flow of information.
At first they responded my making copyrights last effectively forever, then they responded by making it so that illegal copying could be punished worse than rape, then they tried to micro-regulate the tech industries (DMCA) then they fence the information that they controlled off from the rest of the world (DRM). It is only a matter of time before society tells them to go to hell, and all hell breaks loose.
Re:More About DRM (Score:3, Insightful)
Sorry, but that is wrong, and the fight is over if this nonsense is perpetuated.
DRM means "digital restriction mangement". Please don't help sell the idea that this is about the RIAA's or the MPAA's rights. It isn't
If you use their words, and allow the discussion to procede on their terms, you've ceded the fight.
self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
- bitch and complain
- return the product
- don't buy such products in the future.
If what the xxAA sells suits the needs of enough customers, they'll be successful with it. If they're overly restrictive then they'll fail. Obviously they think that most consumers won't mind the limitations, or even notice them.
Is that so difficult to understand? Just because YOU can't rip a DVD doesn't mean that the MPAA will care.
MadCow.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Interesting)
No, the point of the article is that IF you read it, YOU won't buy the product.
In other words, eventually the product will fail as it becomes obvious to people who haven't bought it yet that it's a dud. Not to mention that the people who bought one won't buy another.
Now, if the company can make a profit before that point is reached, it will continue to issue duds.
Sort of like Microsoft...
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:4, Interesting)
"Um, I tried to do what they asked, I don't have enough computer for what they are asking for. What is an XP anyways?"
"I went through a whole bunch of screens asking for something, or telling me to do this. This is crap. I think something is wrong with your product."
"I couldn't get it to work and called the dvd company. They said that there was a problem with the disk and I should ask for a refund."
The same thing happened with DRM and music CDs. Its easier for the manager to accept the return rather than handle a dumb user who is wasting everyone's time on what is complex task for anyone.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Informative)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:4, Informative)
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, people don't have to buy the movie if they don't like the DRM involved. But they had better make a lot of noise about it if that's the reason.
The movie industry can write off a movie that fails to sell, for whatever reason. They'll just assume that people simply dislike the movie. There's always another movie to take it's place.
You need to add the shout out (however it can get to the movie industry) that the sole reason for not buying it is the DRM.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:4, Insightful)
If a movie comes out with your favorite actor, you have two choices. Suck up the DRM and give away basic consumer rights, or not see the movie. Neither of which are good options IMO.
The sad thing is that the movie companies are making it _easier_ and a better alternative to go and illegally obtain movies off of P2P or some other method.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Insightful)
This is wrong, because the competition is every other form of entertainment ever devised by humans.
For example:
-- playing a game with family
-- reading a book
-- taking the dog for a walk
-- go see a stand up comedian
-- get drunk
-- read the Sunday funnies
-- play with legos with the kids
We don't have to watch any movie. What do you lose if you choose to do som
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
First, a DVD Player manfacturer _is_ allowed to copy his competitors goods. One manfacturer can go and put the same exact features in their product that their competitor has. They can even add _more_ features or keep the same features and sell it for less money. That is called competition.
Second, I would like to see you get the _same_ actors as were in the Spiderman movies and shoot a Spiderman movie. You would be in court in no-time and you would not be allowed to release that movie. Go and get all the actors that were in The Lord of the Ring trilogy and shoot a Lord of the Rings movie set in the Tokien world. You would be in court in no-time and you would not be allowed to release that movie. Go and get the actors that have been in the Star Wars movies and shoot a Star Wars movie. You would be in court in no-time and you would not be allowed to release that movie. [INSERT BIG TICKET MOVIE HERE] and clone it with the same actors, and let us see how far you get.
In fact, can you give me ONE example of a big movie that someone came along and made a _very_ similar themed movie with the _same_ actors? Oh, and the movie had to be done by a _different_ studio.
Thunderball (Score:3, Informative)
But all the legal wrangling does help to prove your point: Copyright is a monopoly.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:5, Insightful)
That depends wether you honor the law. If I've learned anything about the Microsoft trials, it's that it's perfectly OK to break the law as long as you don't get caught.
And quite frankly, that's what a lot of people do: They see that their DRM-stuff forces them to watch the stupid anti-piracy trailer every time they want to see the movie, they will have to worry about license servers, they can't copy the stuff to their mp3-player, etc. Just hassles.
As a matter of fact, a pirated copy is not only cheaper, it's also a lot better.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Insightful)
You can learn much more by the aftermath of the Microsoft trials: You can be guilty, be convicted, then run along free, if the President's brain trust doesn't like the anti-monopoly laws.
Apparently you can selectively nullify laws you don't agree with, if your name is Ashcroft.
But don't try it at home. Copy a movie, and you'll get a prison sentence more heinous than that you'
RTFA (Score:5, Informative)
Legitimate CDs and Philips (Score:5, Insightful)
As someone who doesn't illegally rip material, I'm starting to find all the DRM stuff annoying.
I bought Dido's second album, for example, only to discover that you can only play it on a PC through a proprietary software player (assuming your OS will run it, naturally). That player sucks, and does annoying things like messing up my system-wide volume levels. I haven't tried personally, but I'm reliably informed that it doesn't work in some car CD players, either.
The point here is that what I bought was marketted as a CD. It was right there on the shelf in the CD section, next to other CDs, with nothing obviously saying that it wasn't. To be fair, there may have been a note about whether or not you could play it on certain computers visible in the small print; I can't remember and don't have it with me to check. But who reads all the small print when buying a CD from the CD section of a shop?
Now, "Compact disc" is a trademark of Philips, as is the CD logo you see on cases. Philips officially denies permission to use that mark to companies using technology that prevents playing the disc properly on standard equipment. (Google for this if you're interested.) Thus anyone marketting the material in the manner I saw it (be it a record shop, the music publishers, or whoever) is infringing on Philips' rights, and deserves to get smacked down for it.
It's a shame Philips don't seem to be pursuing this more aggressively, because preventing this kind of dilution of a mark is exactly what trademark law is for. I imagine that if all record shops were suddenly required to separate out normal CDs and copy-protected not-quite-CDs in an obvious way, sales of the latter would probably drop PDQ, and the problem would disappear just as fast. I can only assume that since everyone's doing it, they want a clear test case in their favour first to make it quick, easy, and most of all cheap to follow up with others. Maybe they're looking for such a test case and just waiting to make their move. Maybe they just don't care, but as one of the world's biggest manufacturers of CD/DVD burners, that seems unlikely.
Anyway, the bottom line is that I really haven't bought a new CD since that album. I was always fairly selective, but I did buy a few each year until that point. So they really have lost a genuine, paying customer in me. I don't find the loss has ruined my life; I listen to the radio if I want to hear some new music, and occasionally use a legal download service if I really like a track I've heard. Now I'm a living own-goal for the media industry's DRM technology. Anyone else?
Re:Legitimate CDs and Philips (Score:3, Interesting)
Worked for me - I read on the box "won't play on PCs" so I slapped it in my machine, fired up GRIP and a few minutes later the MP3s were sitting on my hard drive.
(I should clarify - I don't distribute MP3s, I simply find it a lot easier to have all my music sat on my hard drive so I can listen to it without going and finding the C
And "piracy" perpetuates problem, doesn't solve it (Score:3, Insightful)
It's only logical; the more people "pirate", the tighter the industries are going to try to clamp down. All at the expense of legitimate users who just want to watch/listen to what they paid for.
Let's face it, folks. DRM didn't just will itself into existence. It was the industries' response to peopl
Re:And "piracy" perpetuates problem, doesn't solve (Score:5, Insightful)
DVD regions were added to control distribution, in order to make as much money as possible. Now, people got fed up, and started cracking it as a response, or they simply downloaded the DVD or DVD-rip instead of having to wait for the latest and greatest movies to reach their country/region.
DRM is ultimately about control, as this story proves. It is not about piracy at all. It's about forcing people to license things for limited periods of time, thereby squeezing more money out of us.
Don't kid yourself with ignorant comments like "it was the industries' response to people who wantonly ignored copyright laws". It wasn't at all. It's just an excuse. DRM is about controlling distribution and forcing people to pay more for less.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Insightful)
That's what he was doing and what were doing as well. Self correcting doesn't mean we can just sit back and it will be corrected. Self correcting means that if we act as typical people do it will be corrected. And our complaining is acting in a typical person way.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:4, Interesting)
That doesn't accomplish anything. You don't think enough people have been complaining already about DRM on software, music or DVD's?
Ah, but bitching and complaining does work at removing DRM in some cases.
Specifically, I'm referring to Intuit's TurboTax DRM fiasco of 2002. That year, they included Macrovision's DiscSafe which installed an NT service called C-Dilla. While not a lot of facts were known at the time, C-Dilla was supposed to be some kind of licensing manager that would either stop you from running a copy from a burned CD of ANY DiscSafe protected software. It was rumored that once you installed C-Dilla it would check for OTHER licensed products, such as audio CDs, and somehow prevent burning copies of it. One easily discovered fact was that even after you uninstalled TurboTax, C-Dilla remained on your computer. C-Dilla was installed in a protected hidden folder and given a random executable name, and in general it looked and acted more like "spy"ware than any product I'd ever seen before.
Thousands of people wrote them complaining about the software. I sent them the most vitriolic flames I could conjure, and vowed to never purchase an Intuit product ever again because they had already convicted me as a criminal and not treated me as a paying customer. To their credit, Intuit responded quickly; first by providing links to a C-Dilla uninstaller on their web site, and then the next year they did not include SafeDisc on their TurboTax consumer product.
As for me, I'm trying to get used to TaxCut, but I've discovered it's a vastly inferior product to TurboTax in terms of ease-of-use. It's a similar problem that equates to "don't go out to see movies produced by Sony."
So, kids, the lesson learned is: bitching can help. Bitch to the record labels, bitch to the store managers, bitch to your congressional representatives, bitch to your state's Attorney General that you're the victim of a bait-and-switch.
Yelling at Sally Salesdrone over at Best Buy won't do anything except get you deservedly kicked out of their store. Calmly talking to Mollie Manager might have more of an effect, but keep your arguments short and to the point. The most you can expect any large organization will do with your complaint is add it to a list. Then, when some magic threshhold like 0.1% of their customers have complained, they'll carry it up the chain to someone who actually has the power to alter their practices.
Re:self-correcting problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Seems pretty illogical when we wanted to buy a more expensive one.
Planting both feet at the head of the line in the exchange aisle, and refusing to move, talking our way up the manager list is what it took
ah, fvck 'em (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:2)
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:5, Insightful)
Look, if you insit on violating the IP rights of others, or supporting that violation (whether explicitly or implicitly, eg by modding up this sort of comment), then don't complain when someone takes GPLed code, modifies it, then releases it without making the source available.
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:5, Insightful)
Based on the current situation, I personally don't think it is a big deal to pay money to rent a DVD and then keep a copy for _personal_ use only.
If the current situation was not how it currently is with DRM and all the other crap, then I _would_ think it was wrong to rent a DVD and then keep a copy for _personal_ use. Because the system would be balanced between producer and consumer and _everyone_ would get a fair shake.
That is why I don't feel sorry for all the people crying about "thier IP rights". Stop taking away _my_ rights as a customer and I won't take away your "IP" rights. Just sell me a product with NO DRM and then get off my back. Don't try and stop me from making a backup for _personal_ use. Don't try and stop me from watching the content where and how I want to. I paid you, now leave me alone until it is time for our next "business transaction".
The Indiscriminator (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Indiscriminator (Score:5, Funny)
It's all foiled by issue #25, when the Indiscriminator finds the executives price fixing and lobbying senators illegally. Things get a bit crazy in the D.C. issue, taking him straight to the White House!
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:3, Interesting)
Then again, there's the route of not buying the DVD, and applying something similar to the RIAA sticker [downhillbattle.org] to the cases in the store. Less punishement, more of a logical link, and it actually serves the useful cause of informing others through your civil disobedience.
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:3, Insightful)
Entirely incorrect. The GPL is still about an author's control of a piece of work insomuch as the author stipulates that his work falls under the GPL and is beholden to the rules stated therein. You've missed the point of the parent's post entirely, that both the GPL and the xxAA are 'entities' that function solely due to copyright so we can not selectively decide copyright is bad in some cases
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:ah, fvck 'em (Score:4, Informative)
1. Editing or forcing producers to make Blockbuster-friendly versions of films.
2. Reinforcing the encrypted DVD business model...Blockbuster still pays for the rental DVDs, MPAA keeps producing them.
3. Reinforcing Hollywood's trend of making Bruckheimer-esque crapulescant action films with recycled plots and oneliners.
So even if I could condone a campaign of blatant copyright infringement, I would still oppose your behaviour as it reinforces existing business models which produce CRAP.
Plenty of time... (Score:5, Funny)
Plenty of time to make a "fair use" DivX copy. And share it on BitTorrent just out of spite.
Re:Plenty of time... (Score:5, Funny)
think twice about buying DVDs (Score:4, Insightful)
> the mercy of the producer
Not just that - most users simply aren't capable of installing all that crap even if they wanted to. Loads of people have problems even double or right clicking on something (and I'm not just talking about Apple customers, either).
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:5, Interesting)
If/when I start getting calls from friends/family who have bought DRM'd DVD's and can't get them to play I'll suggest:
Only by doing the above are you likely to get your money back and/or start generating some noise about consumer problems with DRM. It's only by making a big stink about these problems with DRM that people will start to notice. If big companies like Best Buy start getting significant numbers of returns & complaints they're more likely to go to their distributers and tell them to stop using DRM. (Yeah, I know... I'm smoking crack) But think about it - the alternative is that the masses will quietly be the sheep that they are and accept that in order to watch a DVD they have to run a Microsoft Windows-based media player that requires a full-time net connection, has to download a different DRM utility for each DVD you own, tells the suits in Hollywood when you're watching Attack of the Killer Tomatos for the 42nd time, and won't let you watch the movie if it decides the moons of Jupiter aren't in the proper alignment.
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:3, Insightful)
The article says that he had to route his connection through an anonymous proxy in the US to get a DRM licence to view his legitimately purchased content - are you telling me that the masses would know how to do this? I think not.
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:5, Insightful)
Every day, I have to explain the difference between a slash and a backslah. Twice last year I had to tell someone what a colon was. A few times every week I have to explain right clicking to someone. Almost every day, I have to explain to at least one person the difference between their operating system and their browser, or the difference between the internet and their browser, and especially the difference between AOL and their browser.
I'm sorry you're offended that slashdotters are eager to point out the general ignorance of the public at large in re: computers, but your offense doesn't make it not so.
This doesn't, of course, mean that slashdotters are better, smarter, or superior to the average person. We're just better with computers. I have no illusions about being able to perform pulpotomies, gingival debridements, or apicoectomies. I am not superior to the dentists I support. But I do no a metric fuckton more about computers than they do, and I'm faced with the appalling - to me - breadth of their ignorance on a daily basis.
I'm sure at ADA conventions, dentists complain about the general ignorance of the public about proper oral hygiene and dental care. In fact, I know they do, because our dental directors (all of whom, obviously, have their own DDSs) complain about this ignorance all the time. Your surprise that a group of people who are knowledgeable about a field complains about the ignorance of people who aren't knowledgeable about it is somewhat surprising to me.
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:4, Funny)
It's a good thing you aren't providing support to proctologists.
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:3, Insightful)
I have never met anyone who uses a computer and doesn't realize the difference between left click, right click and double click.
You lucky, lucky bastard. I have to deal with that all the time.
Re:think twice about buying DVDs (Score:2)
No, stupid! You're supposed to right click on a link then double-click where it says "open." Sheesh!
Coralized link + Summary (Score:5, Informative)
Coralized link of the DRM'ed T2 Extreme DVD [nyud.net]
Quick summary for all those too lazy to read the article:
Content needed WMP9 with InterActual Player, which required a license, which could only be retrieved if you connected from US or Canada. And, the content could only be played for 5 days. Author concludes "Shame on you Artisan Home Entertainment Inc. and may this serve as a prime example of DRM at its worst."
Re:Coralized link + Summary (Score:2)
The best I can come up with is it will force the consumer to continue to upgrade the software required, which of course, some day will not exist. Anything online will not last. What happens when the movie company merges again (obviously it will). Will the they bother to keep up to date on all these little things?
OLD NEWS (Score:2)
This is also old news, I think as of last year? Man, Slashdot editors really is getting stale and behind the times.
Mercy mine. (Score:5, Insightful)
They're gonna try this because they are stupid and need to be dragged kicking and screaming into every new market that opens for them, but ultimately the power is in *our* hands because we have the money they want. When we stop buying DVDs that are overpriced and burdensome, they'll dump the DRM.
DRM isn't nearly as valuable to them as... say... having a market for them in the first place. When the returns start coming back to retailers from people like my mother-in-law, they'll relent.
Trust me.
She's very persuasive.
Re:Mercy mine. (Score:2)
Re:Mercy mine. (Score:5, Insightful)
More so, with our supermegacorporateconglomerates that we have today, it will truly be universal. There will be no competing products for people to "vote for with their dollars". The only way to vote against DRM then, will be to become some type of mountain man Ted Kascinzki-style, who abhors and retreats from any and all entertainment (and in the case of computer software, even useful computer tools/utilities).
Go ahead, wait for magic capitalism to "correct" this, to rescue you from it.
unabombs from hollywood (Score:4, Interesting)
The reality is that Hollywood, Madison Av., and their ilk are focus-grouping themselves into oblivion. Mass-market values are a symptom of industrial production. There is no more mass. There is no more market, at least as understood by the behemoths.
Its a generational shift and its taking place now, before your eyes.
Re:unabombs from hollywood (Score:3, Interesting)
What happens, in this indy game you want to play (the equivalent of an indy band mp3 right now) refuses to play, because Microsoft Windows 2009 claims that the binary is unsafe, and a digital signa
Re:Mercy mine. (Score:5, Insightful)
The vast majority of people don't play DVD's on their computers (yet). As long as the DVD will play on an "approved" DVD player, they will continue to buy them. Before long, all DVD's will come with DRM.
If people could organize a mass boycott of these DRM'd DVD's, and make it work, the MPAA might take notice. I doubt, however, it would work.
I used to say "vote with your wallet" on these very threads, but I've become disillusioned, and no longer even try.
Re:Mercy mine. (Score:4, Interesting)
I used to say "vote with your wallet" on these very threads, but I've become disillusioned, and no longer even try.
You never clearly defined the "sheep factor", but I'm guessing that "putting up with crap without doing anything like everybody else" is the gist of it.
The scary thing about the "sheep factor" is that the few "in charge" are really becoming aware of this and are using this knowledge to kindly fuck people whenever they can.
Take for example one to two year contracts to talk on the phone. Why anybody in their right mind would do this more than once is beyond me. These contracts exclusively benefit the company and more often than not hurts the paying customer. I was in a one year contract once for my first cell phone. It was with verizon before they became the reliable company that they are today. I cannot vouch for this, I'm just going by their extensive advertising, which should be honest and accurate right? Anyway, I got this cell phone because I was between jobs and between homes. I didn't have a fixed land line to put on my resume for jobs, and I needed a phone to get a job, so I got one. Well, after the first $400 bill came when I was unemployed, I was unhappy to say the least, and I switched my minutes around and played all kinds of games guessing how much I was going to talk this month on my phone. Not to mention that the phone dropped calls _all the time_. As soon as I got the phone call on my cellphone that I was going to have a job, I considered the cell phone as something that had served its purpose, I immediately went to the verizon office, and I paid them how ever much money I needed to pay them to stop using my phone, and I threw the phone in the trash while leaving the store.
Since everyone seems to be OK paying extra for their cellphone and entering contracts with people, it is not common for other companies to do the same like DSL and satellite, and as long as you dumbasses keep doing this, more and more companies will do this. Yes, you are a dumbass if you sign an annual contract for a monthly service, and you are only fucking yourself and myself when you do this.
Baaaaaaa Baaaaaa
Re:Mercy mine. (Score:4, Insightful)
I wish that were true.
Unfortunately the power is in their hands, because they own the politicians who make the laws that govern us.
There is a choice, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
As we saw in another slashdot article [slashdot.org], the DVD business makes up a large amount of the Hollywood's profits. Watch the movie in the theatres and don't buy the DVD's and watch the DVD portion of the profits plummet.
Hollywood and the music companies aren't budging. The masses are just accepting what they push down our throats. Perhaps it is time to use our power as consumers?
Here's another choice... (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:There is a choice, right? (Score:2)
If you don't like the music industry, then simply don't buy or listen to anything the RIAA backs.
If you don't like the film industry, then simply don't buy or watch anything the MPAA backs.
There are plenty of independent alternatives out there. Claiming that you are somehow a victim of the industries you willingly buy from doesn't lend yourself much credibility.
Always a software solution (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Always a software solution (Score:2)
RTFA (Score:4, Informative)
The buyer already owned a regular copy of the film. He bought this version because it had a HD format copy of the film in WMV9 format, but this version was DRM'ed.
If he DVD Shrink'ed the film, that would defeat the purpose of buying the better quality HD version.
Re:Always a software solution (Score:2)
Of course for the rest of the users who don't venture on P2P they're screwed messing with license agreements and shit. This of course won't stop them from buying it. Afterall a commercial on TV told them to buy it. They must obey. Stupid serfs.
You know what the real cause of all the **AA problems are? Too much sun. See they're all the way down in California too much where their brains get blea
Customers should reject this . . . (Score:5, Insightful)
If sales of the DRM versions of films stink, then the powers that be won't be able to implement them profitably. We need to make sure that the cost in lost sales due to DRM techniques pissing of the customer exceed the lost sales due to the media being copiable. Of course this is easier said than done, as there are millions of customers that need to be organized versus just a few production companies that can easily rally together, but it is the only way that production companies will get the message.
It's like DIVX (no, not the video compression, the now defunct DVD competitor that had embedded DRM), DIVX movies were cheaper than DVD's but they had a limited license that had to be renewed for multiple viewing (like pay per view). Customers rejected it and it (thankfully) died an ugly death.
my story. (Score:5, Interesting)
I used to buy a pile of music cd's. Even after mp3's appeared, even after napster and their ilk... I liked having the CD, and I liked having the highest possible quality recording I could get.
What has happened now, is that the last two "CDs" I've bought had DRM on them, and the only reason I bought them is because I love the two bands (radiohead and the tea party). I can't play them without putting special sfotware on my XP box. Which I refuse to do because it's stupid and I paid for the CD in the first place.
So now I never listen to those two CDs.
And then I realised, why buy something I never listen to?
So I dont buy anymore CD's. That was a year ago.
Re:my story. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:my story. (Score:3, Informative)
*snickers* DRM...
Re:What sort of DRM? (Score:2, Interesting)
agony! (Score:2, Interesting)
The Big Problem... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:The Big Problem... (Score:2)
Analog hole (Score:5, Insightful)
At some point, no matter how high-tech the DRM gets, the data must be presented in a form humans can perceive. All the encryption in the world won't stop little Mikey from holding a microphone up to the outputs and making a non-DRM copy.
To anyone who says that such a copy will be inferior in quality, I note two points:
1) The loss only occurrs once. The non-DRM copy can then be shared digitally with no further loss of quality.
2) The original work was recorded from the air. The band actually played its song, or the actor actually did his thing. If similar technology is used to create the non-DRM copy, the loss will be negligible. (Imagine a home theatre system set up on a soundstage in someone's basement, with pickups and equipment to record its "performance")
People also seem to have this irrational fear that the old technology will suddenly disappear. My digital camcorder is pretty good, and it will still exist when the world is DRM'd. So will my mp3 player, and so will my non-DRM compliant microphones.
Furthermore, there will be a high demand for DRM-noncompliant technology. Even if it is illegal, I predict a briskly moving black market in such technology. If there's a dollar to be made, someone will make it.
As for watermarking: pay cash.
Re:Analog hole (Score:2)
Do you have access to technology similar to that used by profe
Horror story (Score:2, Funny)
I get the rights when this gets on the big screen.
Who stole... (Score:2)
That was my Christmas Slashdot Discussion Contribution this year!
One Solution.... (Score:2, Interesting)
A Losing Battle (Score:3, Insightful)
At the other extreme, as usual, DRM will not stop the real pirates who have time and resources to defeat any DRM scheme. So ironically for Microsoft and the entertainment industry, people will still be able to get cheaper pirate DVDs they will happily play in DVD players that do not (in most cases) use any Microsoft technology. Knowledgable PC users (ie geeks) will continue to find ways to get around DRM and/or b*tch about it here on
No Shit (Score:2)
And we need to think twice before buying that DVD? I don't need to think even once. If they don't put it in a format that I can use (and yes, these formats exist), I just don't buy it.
Ironic (Score:5, Interesting)
When will these industries learn that you can't slow P2P by pissing off legitimate customers?
freaking "no skip ads" DRM on DVDs (Score:2)
Tales of the Macabre (Score:2)
If I dare read this article, I'm not going to be able to sleep tonight. Sounds like chilling stuff!
Remember - DVD's are not a necessity (Score:5, Insightful)
SHOUT to Artisan Entertainment (Score:5, Insightful)
Return the DVD to the store for a refund.
If you don't hit them in the sales, they'll NEVER hear your message. If you keep the DVD and gripe online, they won't HEAR your message quite as clearly as if you return it. True, they will see reduced revenue as Slashdotters stay away from the DVD, but it won't be quite as direct.
What about elvis. (Score:3, Insightful)
So, what about DRM.
if I download Elvis from Real and they put DRM on the track how the hell am I supposed to make as many copies of the public domain work as I want?
This is based on the assumption that...
DRM is technical not artistic so it doesn't count as a new work, just a copy.
Real used the original Elvis recording (or copy of).
you live in the UK (or possibly the EU as well)
But still holds true in 50 years time when that DRM music you purchased comes out of copyright, how can you then put it into the public domain?
Say Hello to Divx... Again (Score:4, Insightful)
Don't be surprised when it makes a comeback in HD-DVD or BluRay. Regardless of how catastrophic a failure Divx was it was exactly what the MPAA wanted, which was a way to tell a DVD not to play unless the MPAA says so.
Simply put, the MPAA knows that the box office is eventually going to die. I mean why go to a cineplex and pay outrageous prices (for tickes and food) and then have to deal with cell phones and babies making a ton of noise in a sticky seat when you can just watch it in your own home theather on your couch with the same visual and audio quality on a HDTV.
Basicially their overall plan is to shift ticket sales from the Movie Theather to your Home Theather. It's already on in the Cable and Satellite Industry and it's going to start soon on the DVD side, if not with HD-DVD or Bluray then with the Next Format.
NOT digital rights management (Score:5, Insightful)
Who do you think invented that term? if you call it digital rights management you are playing right into their pathetic marketing game. Call it digital restrictions management - a far more fitting description?
No Win Situation (Score:5, Insightful)
Predictions (Score:4, Insightful)
I believe they are hoping to make stored home media a thing of the past.
Think of the profit on this idea. They store the media and just play it back for you on demand and each time, they get more money. It's not like a public performance where the actors get paid for each time they act. The makers get paid once. The publishers get paid forever.
I don't like where things are going, but who does? I can see where all kinds of "inconvenience" will be installed when playing back your old stuff or even current and new stuff. If it weren't for VCRs learning to set their own time, I'll be there'd be MORE VCRs blinking 12:00 than not even now... how much worse will it be when you are required to have a broadband internet connection just to play your own damned movies thanks to DRM.?
"Secure" Digital (Score:3, Interesting)
How long before they do to us what Compuserve tried to do to us with GIF: a submarine technology we gladly accept, until we depend on it, and only then do they activate their claims on it, which we would have rejected had we known, before it was too late? When will they flip the switch on SD DRM, locking up our content with handcuffs we've been happily buying all along, while letting them keep the keys?
Ironically I just sent a letter to the MPAA... (Score:4, Interesting)
Because of your contributions to Digital Rights Management, you have deprived me of the ability to edit my own home videos. Thanks to your lobbying and cooperation with Microsoft, I am not able to take still screen captures from mpeg videos from family gatherings which I took with my own digital camera, due to the constraints that have been added to software at your behest. Thank you very much for protecting me from being able to preserve my own family history and memories. I so very much needed to be protected from myself.
In reality, by the end of the hour, because I am very technically adept, I will have accomplished what I wanted to do tonight using video editing software on one of my home linux machines. I feel absolutely sickened for the people who are not as computer savvy as myself who have effectively had their rights taken away because of you since they do not know how to perform work-arounds or use open source software that is not cripped by "digital rights management".
I will be spreading the word to my family, friends, and coworkers. By the end of the hour as well, I will be ebaying all of my movie DVDs, except those which are independent foreign films and anime series not produced or distirbuted in the U.S. I will no longer be supporting your films, whether in movie theatres or through DVD purchases, and I will encourage everyone I know to do the same.
You think you can push the average person around with your influence and money. And you are indeed correct to a certain degree. Where you are wrong is in forgetting that the source of your money ultimately comes from us, the consumer. There comes a breaking point where people will realize that their rights are being treaded on, and they will take action. This person has already arrived at that point, and I will be taking others with me. And once you have killed the roots (the consumer), the tree will die too (you).
Since this has been a tight year for me due to medical bills, I was considering letting my membership in the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF) lapse, but after this incident tonight, I certainly will not be doing that now. The money I would have spent on movies and DVDs will be spent on renewing my EFF membership and my Free Software Foundation (FSF) memberships to prevent you from deciding what I can and cannot do on my own computer and with my own data."
Re:Slashdot material? (Score:2)
Re:umm ... (Score:2)
Re:What are we ganna do? (Score:2)
Re:DRM personally offensive (Score:3, Insightful)
(budget and sales figures from IMDB [imdb.com]