BSA To Join Battle Against DRM 177
Dunark writes "It appears that two of our favorite enemies are now at loggerheads with each other: According to The Inquirer, the Business Software Alliance has joined the fight against the Hollywood-backed attempt to legislate required DRM (the Hollings bill). Read about it in The Inquirer and also at Mercury News"
Hmm (Score:3, Insightful)
Standard American politics (Score:2)
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Why do so many
Re:Hmm (Score:2)
Re:Ain't it great? (Score:2)
If we are lucky (Score:4, Insightful)
WHAT???????? (Score:3, Funny)
hahahaha you FOOL (Score:2)
Re:WHAT???????? (Score:4, Informative)
Well, the BSA is controlled by the tech companies.
So, if the techs go after **AA, it will be through the BSA and (maybe) individually.
Hardly surprising.
Re:WHAT???????? (Score:4, Insightful)
The goal is the same: make money.
Tactics might be different, but who really thinks you make as many friends in Congress by kicking down their doors as you do at public schools? ; )
In other news... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
Re:In other news... (Score:2)
I thought this was more appropriate because we are talking about two evils.
mixed feelings... (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:mixed feelings... (Score:5, Insightful)
'The victor would emerge stronger than either, and free from doubt,' said Gandalf.
+4 Insightful. Place your bets please. (Score:2, Funny)
Obligatory BSA Joke (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, though, I'm suprised to see Microsoft take this position, since they had the most to gain if this scheme takes off. After all, if you can only watch future movies on "approved" OS's, guess which ones will be approved [microsoft.com] and which ones won't! [gentoo.org]
Obligatory MPlayerJoke (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft doesn't mind DRM, really... (Score:4, Insightful)
Microsoft's DRM scheme serves as yet another way to lock people into their operating system by restricting the choice (of content) that is available to users of other operating systems.
Think about it: if Microsoft is successful at convicing Hollywood that their content will only be safe on Microsoft Windows systems, then Hollywood will only produce content for Microsoft Windows systems.
Microsoft may actually fear legislative attempts at creating DRM schemes, since those attempts would be much less likely to favor one OS over another.
Yes (Score:1)
Maybe it's not illegal, but it looks bad...
BSA is not the **AA?? (Score:5, Interesting)
The difference is the business model.
**IA wants to control the media of distribution to protect their business model.
BSA wants you to "break the law" with their software watching to charge you after the fact.
You know penalities are "free" money.
Re:BSA is not the **AA?? (Score:2, Insightful)
hehe, and next we'll read about BSA becoming the new owners and distributors of such things as "Nero Burning ROM", "WinZip", etc. Heck, maybe they'll foot the bill for a pretty GUI DeCSS app. Of course, these will be special new versions which make handy use of your P4 serial number and your broadband connection back to their data warehouse.
With a couple of Perl scripts, their whole bully-fee-collection system could be automated.
Re:BSA is not the **AA?? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:BSA is not the **AA?? (Score:2)
DRM seems strikingly familiar ... (Score:5, Funny)
Please don't mod this +1 funny, as it's not meant to be that way. I really do find strinkingly large simularities between the way the Nazi's do things and the way certain members of congress try to force the people that elected them to give up their rights. Just because "Rights" is one of the DRM words, doesn't make it right.
I believe in Law [stanford.edu] that is for the people.
please follow the links...
Re:DRM seems strikingly familiar ... (Score:4, Insightful)
Of course not. If you look at the names of lobbying organizations, you'll find a number of organizations that sound like they are environmentally-oriented but are, in fact, run by oil or other big industry concerns. Same with supposedly health-related lobbyists who really work for tobacco companies, etc. Heck, even "Greenpeace" seems a misnomer sometimes
Digital Restrictions Management (Score:2)
Re:DRM seems strikingly familiar ... (Score:2)
Apparently that would be Godwin's [astrian.net].
W
Speaking of Nazis, I just saw The Pianist [apple.com] yesterday. It was amazing. And based on a true story [szpilman.net].
Hoo boy . . . (Score:1)
"With friends like these . .
heh (Score:5, Interesting)
This is like an American version of Godzilla vs. Mothra, 2 monsters in suits battling eachother in the courtroom, you're not quite sure who'll win, you're not quite sure you care, but you have to watch it and cheer them on.
Re:heh (Score:5, Funny)
Re:heh (Score:2)
Re:heh (Score:2)
> This is like an American version of Godzilla vs.
> Mothra, 2 monsters in suits battling eachother in
> the courtroom,
Precisely what I was thinking. Especially since, in the 1964 movie, Mothra used Godzilla (then himself a bad guy) to off the human bad guys while trying to stop Godzilla herself (herselves by the end of the movie, as her twin daughters were the ones to defeat him). The two men Godzilla killed were the greedy execs of Happy Enterprises, a show biz company that thought it owned Mothra's egg, and thought it could buy or enslave her fairies. It thought wrong.
Mothra spent most of the early and mid sixties expounding on how evil the movie and music industries were, long before the **AA came into being. Godzilla (long since a good guy, though he does revert to his nuclear nightmare persona at times) recently did a movie on the evils of Microsoft, called "Godzilla 2000 Millennium".
> you're not quite sure who'll win, you're not
> quite sure you care, but you have to watch it
> and cheer them on.
You better care. The Goddess of Peace fights the God of the Atom in the heart of the Cold War. Which one can you survive winning?
"Really, gentlemen, if that's the case, let's see the power of attorney given to you by Mothra."
Torahata, "Mothra vs. Godzilla", 1964
Good thing this bad dude is dead, or the **AA would recruit him.
"At this moment, it has control of systems all over the world. And...we can't do a damn thing to stop it."
Miyasaka, "Godzilla 2000 Millennium" (Japanese version)
Miyasaka, that's what you get for installing Windows XP Service Pack 1. Now only Godzilla can save you.
Which side is MS on??? (Score:1, Interesting)
But doesn't Microsoft *want* to cram all this DRM shit down our throats, so they can achieve greater lock-in over their customer base (i.e. "Switch to another OS and your DRMed MP3's stop working... and you won't be able to use MovieLink!)
Re:Which side is MS on??? (Score:2, Interesting)
Be afraid.... Be very afraid....
Don't be so supprised (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't be so supprised (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Don't be so supprised (Score:1, Informative)
Re:Don't be so supprised (Score:2)
I'd wager that this "BSA vs. DRM" fight is actually more of a "MS vs. Hollywood" fight when you find out who the big players are. I can't see the roll-up-your-sleeves back office database crowd really caring about DRM, since its far more focused on entertainment generally and Windows desktop OS + Music Files specifically. (Yes, I realize they probably do care about it at some technology geek level, but perhaps not at the legislative lobbying level).
I mean, maybe Apple cares and maybe a few of the multimedia software vendors care, but would Oracle, Sybase or someone like that, outside of making Microsoft's life hard?
So confusing! (Score:2)
Re:So confusing! (Score:4, Funny)
What fools we all have been! (Score:5, Interesting)
Market-Enforced DRM. You can only get your software,
movies, music and what have you THROUGH their
blessed Palladium.
The reason they don't want Hollings bill is
that it forces them to consider things that they
otherwise wouldn't for economic reasons, for
example fair use and expiration of copyrights, which
would come into play IF the DRM solution was
part of a law.
So -- Remember. They are NOT anti-DRM, they just
want to CONTROL the DRM. And it is a LOT more
difficult for government to interfere with
the private choices of individuals (you bought
this hardware knowing it had DRM -- but you
can't connect to your online banking otherwise and
the $10/teller visit fees added up!)
Re:What fools we all have been! (Score:3, Funny)
"This DRM bill should help our strategy a lot then."
"Sir, we just realised that we could get even more control WITHOUT the bill!"
"Everyone to lobby stations! Release the $2 billion emergency bribe money!"
Re:What fools we all have been! (Score:2)
1. Just set the date on your PC to next century, open the DRM-protected data, it sees the copyrights have expired and allows you to copy it.
2. Use a central authority to determine when copyrights expire; this would prevent 1. from working, but what happens when that central authority goes out of business?
Re:What fools we all have been! (Score:2)
Excellent news! (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Excellent news! (Score:2)
eg. Microsoft and AOL... Microsoft and WinZip... etc.
moron FraUDuleNT last gasper FUDgePacking (Score:3, Interesting)
2) Speculating on Their Own Stock: Microsoft issues a massive amount of put options. During the same quarter ended 3/31/99, Microsoft sold put contracts on their own stock for $400 million, basically betting that the stock will not decline. They need not worry because they are allowed to "cook the books." Of Microsoft's significant cash balance, it is also a financial fact that more than 65 percent of that cash did not originate from product sales but rather from tax benefits associated with the exercise of stock options, employees prepaying their own wages, and the sale of put contracts on its own stock. Microsoft's financial innovation is making a mockery of financial integrity, ethics, and the securities laws, just as Insull did in the 1920's.
3) Convincing Employees to Take Less Real Wages: Microsoft aggressively markets stock options to new employees in an effort to take wage expenses off the books. They also know that they can pocket the exercise price employees will be required to pay to take ownership of the stock. What also seems clear is that Microsoft is still aggressively marketing its stock option program to new recruits. To quote an email received, "I am about to begin employment at Microsoft and the stock option was the selling factor. Does your article overall state that it will be bad for me and will fail me in my retirement planning?" Is Microsoft fulfilling its disclosure obligations to its own employees, especially those that have put their entire 401K balance in Microsoft stock? This explains how 22 percent of Microsoft's massive cash balance has actually come from its own employees in the form of them prepaying their own wages through stock option exercise prices.
4) Publicly touting the stock: In a recent earnings release, CFO Greg Maffei jokingly cited 10 reasons why Microsoft is a $1 trillion company. A common strategy here is to have top executives issue conflicting statements, one talking up the stock and the other talking it down and then within a few days financial analysts all come out with buy recommendations on the stock due to a small decline. They are making a mockery of financial integrity, ethics, and the securities laws.
5) Controlling the media. After issuing several press releases on PR Newswire, Microsoft told the service to stop issuing my press releases. Microsoft is PR Newswire's largest client. PR Newswire is owned by Miller Freeman of the UK, a large media company that publishes many computer related publications including Information Week in addition to Microsoft focused journals such as the Windows System Developer. Miller Freeman does indeed function as if it were a department of Microsoft itself.
6) Stock Option Accounting: It is important to note that any discussion of stock option accounting must address two completely different and independent situations. The first is to analyze the impact of options exercised and already retired and the second is to analyze the remaining options debt outstanding. This study focused on both whereas most media coverage only focuses on the remaining options debt outstanding.
it's coming (Score:1)
Re:it's coming (Score:2)
> we all know it's coming anyway. There's no way to
> stop the copy protection asshats unless a judge
> orders them to be stopped.
We know they are trying to bring DRM out and make it some kind of standard. The Hollings bill is the big problem. If it became law, it would be as hard to stop as the DMCA is now, six years after it was enacted. Then you would need a judge to stop it.
But this is now, and it seems the software industry (the BSA is a professional association of software makers as well as Microsoft's private inquisition) has woken up to the danger the Hollings bill poses, or at least are trying to stop it for their own agenda. We need to hear from the consumer electronics industry as well, they are likewise threatened. If both industries were to scream *no* at Congress, they would easily drown out the much smaller entertainment industry. Anyway, Hollings no longer holds the Commerce chair, so he may lack the power in the new Congress to push his bill.
Without the Hollings bill, Microsoft's monopoly and the **AA corner on content may be used (legally or otherwise) to try to push DRM on the market. Copy protection was rejected once by the market already, back when the PC market was much younger. It can be rejected again. DRM does not take the customer into account (except as an untrustworthy person to protect content against), and offers the customer no real value and many headaches. This would accelerate defection from Microsoft to alternative, DRM free, operating systems. Without the Hollings bill, it would be legal for them to exist DRM free and compete.
In the end, if the Hollings bill does not pass, but Linux is unsuccessful in unseating Microsoft's Palladium by itself, help may come from Apple. Apple won't let DRM take over, and they certainly won't let the **AA turn computers into content viewing devices (as opposed to content creation devices). DRM won't succeed, even if it means letting a Jaguar loose on the PC.
"No one's going to die, mister. Mothra's going to come and save us."
Taiki Goto, "Mothra", December 14, 1996
(Released in Japan six days before Apple's surprise announcement of the return of Steve Jobs.)
BSA versus BSA (Score:1)
Idiots is idiots (Score:1)
Special PAY PER VIEW EVENT! (Score:2)
Or if we're real lucky no one comes out.
-
Re:Special PAY PER VIEW EVENT! (Score:4, Funny)
> pichforks and chainsaws. Two go in, one comes out.
Might I add, that we'd need to keep a shotgun handy to deal with the winner.....
BSA our enemy? (Score:5, Insightful)
I bet many companies are evaluating open source alternatives for their existing proprietary applications right now, because they might not have bought quite enough licenses to cover all their use. That wouldn't be the case if BSA was less aggressive.
Re:BSA our enemy? (Score:5, Insightful)
They may cause people to move to open source but the collateral damage is too much.
Re:BSA our enemy? (Score:4, Interesting)
Incidentally, I've been a part of BSA enforcements before... and they treat the consumer much more fairly then they have to. At the end of the day, I'm just glad open source is gaining some momentum and the BSA will be unnecessary.
$G
I agree (Score:3, Insightful)
When they harass open-source shops (Score:5, Informative)
It is not supposed to work that way (Score:5, Insightful)
I'm no historian but I think the intent of the people who set up the USA Congress and other government organs was to enable the rule of the people for the common good. Now we see a group of corporations *buying* new laws for their own profit and the *only* thing that has the slightest chance of stopping them is another group of corporations who see a threat to their own bottom line.
It might be nice to see bad laws failing to get enacted but if you believe that the BSA are acting for the good of the people you are very naive. They act for their own good *exclusively* and it is pure chance that in this instance it coincides with what is good for the general population (indeed, there are many examples of the same group working directly *against* the common good).
So rejoice while you can but know this: you no longer have a say in the making of your own country's laws. Every time an expensive lobbying campaign is successful, it is one more battle lost for democracy; the exact legislative result is of little consequence.
The silver lining (Score:2)
However, when two titans are fighting, they distract each other.
This opens opportunities for the little creatures to sneak by with what would otherwise attract resistance from the titans.
For example, while congress-critters are trying to sort out the mixed messages from the lobbyist crowd, they might give a little more weight to the public's messages.
The opportunity lies in a carefully tuned message that plays on the combined weaknesses of the conflicting commercial interests.
Re:It is not supposed to work that way (Score:2)
Lol, you forgot about the American King George, didn't you? How does it feel to be a colonist?
Re:It is not supposed to work that way (Score:2)
What are we supposed to do?
Mercury News article optimistic? (Score:3, Interesting)
New organization! (Score:2)
Hi-tech? The Comptuer Systems Policy Project? Is this a new organization specializing in greetings technologies, or have they used a secret DMCA-protected encoding scheme to hide the real name and purpose of their organization?
I hope The Inquirer's fact checking is better than their spell checking.
DRM is at odds with BSA business model (Score:4, Insightful)
DRM prevents piracy; who you going to sue, if no one can use software in violation of its license?
Tom Petty's lyrics finally getting though? (Score:4, Interesting)
It's even more effective than establishing control over the radio playlists, something Tom Petty voiced in the lyrics to "The Last DJ".
Huh ? (Score:2)
Does anyone care to explain what exactly does that mean ? It *IS* assumed that these movies are not free for download by anyone....right ?
Re:Huh ? (Score:3, Funny)
In other news, Osama bin Laden issued a statement saying that part of the problem is a perception that his organization is a band of murderous thugs.
In both cases, the statements are being subjected to sophisticated high-tech analysis to determine whether they are the work of a live speaker, or have been patched together posthumously from old clips.
Now why would they do that? (Score:2)
It lets them restrain use of software. UNLESS, they are worried it will WORK and put them out of business!
Of course. (Score:5, Insightful)
In fact, if a workable DRM scheme were possible, the raison d'être of the BSA, SPA, and similar criminal enterprises is completely kaput, vanished, gone, history . . . you get the idea. Additionally, their members would lose the mind share they currently gain from unlicensed use of their products.
Re:Of course. (Score:2)
Yes, if DRM is enforced, then there is no longer any argument for fighting piracy, conducting audits, airing threatening radio ads and enticing employees to squeal on their employers.
We have a corporate entity now facing their entire business model becoming obsolete. Observing how the RIAA reacted to this kind of scenario, this fight should prove interesting to watch
The law in the U.S. has become corrupt. (Score:5, Interesting)
The biggest friends of business are business men and women. The biggest enemies of business are
The law in the U.S. has become corrupt, as this July 2002 article, linked at the bottom of the Inquirer article, says: Political contribution watch [theinquirer.net].
I've done some research about how law is made in Oregon: Airplanes are safe, but laws often crash [hevanet.com]. (For those who live outside the U.S.: Oregon is a U.S. state.)
Basically, it appears that the law in the U.S. is being driven by those who have a financial interest, not people who have the best interests of the country in mind.
Re:The law in the U.S. has become corrupt. (Score:2)
And, fundamentally, is there a real semantic difference between the two concepts?
There is a fundamental difference. (Score:2)
Both.
There is a fundamental difference. When Oregon laws are faulty, there are two reasons: 1) Nixon: Someone wants something and needs a faulty law to get it, and 2) Boot sector: The legislators just aren't thinking clearly.
The article has an odd take on the issue (Score:2)
There are two responses we should consider. First, we could ally ourselves with the BSA, in an effort to demonstrate to third parties that the free software movement is not simply a collection of unreasoning zealots (a perception Stallman has managed to promote unfortunately), or we can just sit back and watch the carnage. Although the former is a more reasonable and politically benefitial stance, I favor the latter, just for it's sheer entertainment value.
--CTH
Re:The article has an odd take on the issue (Score:2)
Not likely -- Hollywood has a (justified) reputation as a liberal bastion and a money machine for the Democrats. Unless the Republicans are as dumb as rocks (which can't be ruled out, to be sure), they'll turn a deaf ear to their concerns and might even be willing to whack their pee-pees a bit.
it comes down to something very simple... (Score:2)
The BSA does nothing for the good of anything but their own pockets. They are looking to mold DRM into something that lines their pockets.... The forcing of DRM from their members not something that is open nor something that has limits.
Anything the BSA does is pure unadultered evil that is only another way to extort money out of the citizens of the world.
BSA = an extortion racket.. plain and simple.. and unfortunately, they now have a new racket scheme that they want control of.
The Business Software Alliance is the absolute worst thing to ever happen to the United states of america... and they need to be watched very very carefully.
Re:it comes down to something very simple... (Score:2)
You weren't alive during the Red Scare, were you? Or the Trail of Tears? And you're probably white (like me), and so don't have to worry about innner-city gang violence or the KKK...
The BSA is absolutely, positivley tame compared to the USA's real problems, most of which have been happilly dealt with or contained. The BSA might be the worst thing to happen in the world of slashdotters--but that's not what you said.
Re:it comes down to something very simple... (Score:2)
We already know the massive evil the BSA is trying to push. They want people to "borrow" copies of software until they've used it enough to come to depend on it. Then they can shake down the businesses (and the occasional individual) for the money with that dependence as leverage ("Isn't it cheaper to pay us danegeld than to have to completely change your entire company's software systems out?").
That's why they don't want working DRM: it cuts off that all-important first step. We all know the licensing fees are getting expensive. Right now companies get off cheaply by fudging the licensing until they're dependent on the software. With working DRM applied to software companies would wind up facing that huge licensing bill immediately, and the beancounters balk and say "Well, we haven't built anything yet, can't we find a cheaper alternative to start with?".
Re:it comes down to something very simple... (Score:2)
Therefore we should be looking forward to the days where Microsoft will sell WinXP and Office bundled together for a pittance and other software prices come crashing down due to the lack of piracy.
It's what the industry has been claiming is one of the reasons why software costs are high, isn't it?
But then again, I would more likely expect the prices to increase dramatically. The cynic in me says so.
Re: (Score:2)
Just one Question (Score:4, Insightful)
I read how the DRM is bad, and I agree. As a customer, I would not ever purchase something that limited MY USE of it.
The BSA is an extortion racket of the worst kind, not so much as what they purport to do, but rather in their methods of DOING It. The same can be said about the RIAA, MPAA, and even so much in the aspect of DRM.
Which brings me to my question: When did I become a CONSUMER as opposed to a CUSTOMER?????
I have seen the trend in the computer and electronics industry from as far back as 1995 to state that I, as a user of a certain product, no longer have the right to Support of that product when it messes up, that I no longer have the right to ALTER the product that I PURCHASED with my Hard Earned CASH to make it NOT prevent me from using it in a way that prevents it from messing up other items, and NOW, the fact that if I DO alter, fix, repair, modify or explore that product that I as a CUSTOMER bought, I can and will be prosecuted.
This is not the America I grew up in. This is not the America I swore to defend.
Yes, I know....Welcome to Corporate America. Where wars are fought not to win, but only to deplete the ever standing supply.
The mantra has gone from "This we'll defend" to "You better BUY it NOW!!"
Yes it is (Score:2)
This is not the America I grew up in. This is not the America I swore to defend.
Unless you're at least 50, this is the America you grew up in, because you've been a consumer since the first time Eisenhower sent a vacuum cleaner manufacturer to the Soviet Union to show them all about what freedom means to us. And it continued through the 1970s when Disco was the corporate tweeze and everyone was dismantling to manufacturing sector to buy powder for up their nose and the 1980s with the PMRC and Jack Valenti, who is pushing Dick Clark for longevity. And, oh yeah, the latter 1980s when everybody was sick of career politicians and wanted business people in office and hooray for Ross Perot. And people were pointing out the dangers of this the whole time, but nobody cared, so long as the trash gets picked up, and if anyone did notice, they were all called Paranoid, Commies, or Right Wingers. Guess what! Big, fat, hairy, thwacking surprise!
And now you've noticed it. Oh, my. I bet they're just quaking in their boots at this new American Spirit.
Re:Yes it is (Score:2)
I doubt you can say the same.
Alternative strategy: Let them have DRM (Score:2)
Boy scouts? (Score:2)
When the elephants fight... (Score:3, Insightful)
-- ancient saying from Africa or somesuch.
I'm only saying this since rash uninformed proverbs with no real content is a great way of getting "+5 insightful".
Somebody was bound to post this, so I might as well get the karma...
This reminds me... (Score:2)
OK, I sorta owe South Park for that one... ;)
I'm waiting for the day... (Score:2)
Legislation isn't everything (Score:2)
I'm am reminded of this quote (Score:3, Funny)
BSA = Boy Scouts of America (Score:2)
Boy Scouts (Score:2, Funny)
This makes perfect sense to anyone who understands (Score:3, Interesting)
MS is the majority member, founding member and has the most control of, over and in the BSA. If you look at their neat figures and understand them, you will see that 90% of their "successes" battling piracy are MS related, and most instituted by MS.
Of course MS will not endorse a bill that puts into question their (stolen) DRM technology, much less one that legislates how DRM will be implemented (regardless of who implements what).
Rob
Re:Free karma alert! (Score:1)
Re:Free karma alert! (Score:2)
Anybody noticed their spider in a webserver logfile?
Re:Free karma alert! (Score:2)
The actual member list is at http://www.bsa.org/usa/about/members/
Re:Free software and BSA? (Score:2)
To take you on your word I think the BSA would love just that. Remember Microsoft: "GPL is viral! You can't protect your intellectual property if you use GPL programs!" If they got a chance to burst in the door somewhere for GPL violations they'd use it for show-and-tell.
Fortunately not very realistic though, neither politically nor legally
Re:for the uninformed (Score:2)
Link your links [macworld.com]
Use "view page source" to find out how (remember to post as "HTML Formatted"