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DRM Electronic Frontier Foundation Government United Kingdom

DRM Will Be Gone By 2025, Predicts Cory Doctorow (theregister.co.uk) 191

An anonymous reader writes: It's been two years since Cory Doctorow joined the EFF's campaign to eliminate DRM within 8 years -- and he still believes it'll happen. "Farmers and the Digital Right To Repair Coalition have done brilliantly and have a message which is extremely resonant with the political right as well as the political left." And now even the entertainment industry seems to oppose extending the DMCA to tractors. "The entertainment industry feels very proprietary towards laws that protect DRM. They really feel that they lobbied for and bought these laws in order to protect the business model they envisioned. For these latecomer upstarts to turn up and stretch and distort these laws out of proportion has really exposed one of the natural cracks in copyright altogether."
Doctorow also says that "If there's anything good that might come of Brexit, it's that the UK will renegotiate and reevaluate its relationship to the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development and other directives. The UK enjoys a really interesting market position if it wants to be the only nation in the region that makes, exports, and supports DRM-breaking tools."
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DRM Will Be Gone By 2025, Predicts Cory Doctorow

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  • by Anonymous Coward

    DRM will be gone because most of us will be using devices in walled gardens and will have to get content from the iTunes, Amazon, Play, whatever.

    Now jail broken devices or Linux? Well, you are gonna have to get your stuff from sources that have broken the walled garden content - and risk getting rooted, crap content, or something.

    • by Applehu Akbar ( 2968043 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @05:50AM (#54332345)

      And ordinary users are willingly gravitating to walled gardens because of the increased security.

      • by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:02AM (#54332379)

        ...because of the false sense of security.

        There, fixed that for you.

        • I predict... (Score:4, Insightful)

          by fyngyrz ( 762201 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:16AM (#54332783) Homepage Journal

          The UK enjoys a really interesting market position if it wants to be the only nation in the region that makes, exports, and supports DRM-breaking tools

          I predict that if the UK were to do this, then all future villains in entertainment media produced outside the UK would have strong British accents. All of them.

          Also, the UK is whole-heartedly chasing the power-mad 1%-er's dream of citizen repression just as hard as we are here in the US. So I don't think there's any chance at all that they would do this.

          DRM's not going away. DRM is the sugar in the authoritarian's tea.

        • ...because of the false sense of security.

          There, fixed that for you.

          When a walled garden operator the size of Google or Apple lets malware through, it gains immediate and massive notoriety. The problem gets detected and fixed much faster than it does for that direct-from-developer program you downloaded off her site.

      • by Entrope ( 68843 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:39AM (#54332461) Homepage

        Those walled gardens can only exist through DRM mechanisms. They were created specifically to make DRM more pervasive on the computing platform. Apple, for example, wants to be the only company that can authorize applications to run on iOS.

        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Apple, for example, wants to be the only company that can authorize you to run applications on iOS.

          FTFY.

          Remember Apple only delegates certain permissions to their device "owners". You can't do anything on those devices beyond turning them on, unless Apple grants you that ability.

          If they want to they can disable the device by via a remote reset to trigger an activation lock, then refuse to activate it. It's the sole reason why Apple should have lost that lawsuit made by the FBI. They (Apple) claims that the

        • Those walled gardens can only exist through DRM mechanisms. They were created specifically to make DRM more pervasive on the computing platform. Apple, for example, wants to be the only company that can authorize applications to run on iOS.

          With that comes the ability to skim 30% of each and every sale for those platforms. Own the platform, own the distribution, leech off sales.

      • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:49AM (#54332477)

        And ordinary users are willingly gravitating to walled gardens because of the increased security.

        Increased security my ass. People don't give a shit about security. Ordinary users are fucking lazy, and are "willingly gravitating" towards anything that can do everything for them without lifting a finger.

        Voice activated assistants and press-to-order buttons hanging on the wall are two prime examples of just how lazy people have become. Getting online to search and order a product manually is considered hard labor for the Siri generation.

        • by cfalcon ( 779563 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @07:05AM (#54332527)

          > Increased security my ass. People don't give a shit about security. Ordinary users are fucking lazy

          I disagree.

          Personal anecdote: My mom started using the internet in the late 90s / early 2000s. Every time I visited her, I'd have to clean up all kinds of stuff for her. It was a constant nest of toolbars and other random shit she clicked on. She would sometimes install security updates, sometimes not, but there was always a nest of vipers under the hood of her laptop. She had no idea how to fix that, but she was aware it was an issue.

          Eventually, she got a Macbook. She LOVED that Macbook, and used it for over ten years. She never had that malware issue with the Macbook, obviously. Mostly, now she uses ios devices.

          She was motivated to keep crap off her machine, but she wasn't motivated enough to jump through the hoops needed to achieve enough mastery of her system that she could tell the difference between good and bad choices. When presented an option that offered her more security at a higher price, she took it. The ability to be her own sysadmin was not that amazing compared to her apparent ability to be tricked into installing crap.

          Nowadays, she would be safer with a Windows box than she was back then. But that ship has sailed, and she's still much safer with her ios stuff than she ever was on an open platform.

          I don't know how representative her case is, but I imagine, reasonably. There's definitely users who wish their machine was more secure, and of the set that don't have a need for advanced features, and can afford a proprietary solution, walled gardens are viewed as a boon.

          • Eventually, she got a Macbook. She LOVED that Macbook, and used it for over ten years. She never had that malware issue with the Macbook, obviously.

            Exactly. As well, the Unix based MacOS is designed to allow power users to bash around as much as they like. In addition, the interface is more stable.

            When presented an option that offered her more security at a higher price, she took it.

            And for all that, the higher price isn't all that high when you deal with the whole package. My iMac is in the same league pricewise with the HP Envy my wife got me for Christmas. Both very nice quality.

            Speaking of the wife, she now does her own maintenance on her Linux Mint Laptop, which is also pretty darn secure, and also works after updates.

            The ability to be her own sysadmin was not that amazing compared to her apparent ability to be tricked into installing crap.

            There see

            • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

              > That unless you have at a bare minimum, power user cred, you deserve every bad thing that happens to you on line.

              This is a semi-valid argument. Power users are a lot more familiar with what kinda goes on behind the scenes, and safely locking down something like the internet is either very hard or impossible, depending on the scope of your need. With this as an apparent physical reality, expecting a safe computer ecosystem is a lot like expecting safety on a mountainous region with numerous cliffs. "

          • > Increased security my ass. People don't give a shit about security. Ordinary users are fucking lazy

            I disagree.

            Personal anecdote: My mom started using the internet in the late 90s / early 2000s. Every time I visited her, I'd have to clean up all kinds of stuff for her. It was a constant nest of toolbars and other random shit she clicked on. She would sometimes install security updates, sometimes not, but there was always a nest of vipers under the hood of her laptop. She had no idea how to fix that, but she was aware it was an issue.

            Eventually, she got a Macbook. She LOVED that Macbook, and used it for over ten years. She never had that malware issue with the Macbook, obviously. Mostly, now she uses ios devices.

            She was motivated to keep crap off her machine, but she wasn't motivated enough to jump through the hoops needed to achieve enough mastery of her system that she could tell the difference between good and bad choices. When presented an option that offered her more security at a higher price, she took it. The ability to be her own sysadmin was not that amazing compared to her apparent ability to be tricked into installing crap.

            Nowadays, she would be safer with a Windows box than she was back then. But that ship has sailed, and she's still much safer with her ios stuff than she ever was on an open platform.

            I don't know how representative her case is, but I imagine, reasonably. There's definitely users who wish their machine was more secure, and of the set that don't have a need for advanced features, and can afford a proprietary solution, walled gardens are viewed as a boon.

            I hate to say it, but your example essentially validates my point. This example of obtaining a Macbook was nothing more than pressing the "easy" button, which essentially defined the motivational level.

            Yes, most users want a secure solution. The problem with pointing to walled gardens is most users don't even have a clue what the term "walled garden" even means, so they sure as hell aren't buying hardware because of it. They're choosing solutions because they're easier to use.

            • My mom loves her MacBook Pro, latest of my hand-me-down systems, for the same reason. Today, at age 95, she doesn't want the risk of getting ransomware from an errant download.

            • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

              Yes, most users want a secure solution. The problem with pointing to walled gardens is most users don't even have a clue what the term "walled garden" even means, so they sure as hell aren't buying hardware because of it. They're choosing solutions because they're easier to use.

              For most people, computers are a curious tool, but they are NOT worth investing time into just to make them work properly. They want something that is simple and easy while doing what they want.

            • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

              > This example of obtaining a Macbook was nothing more than pressing the "easy" button, which essentially defined the motivational level.

              Her switching to Mac was only easy from a *security* perspective. It was more expensive, and she just walked away from any software she used to have that needed Windows. Granted, there wasn't a lot, but still. Swapping ecosystems at (comparatively) high cost made it easier for her to do everything she really needed, without the malware that she knew she would always

          • Eventually, she got a Macbook. She LOVED that Macbook, and used it for over ten years. She never had that malware issue with the Macbook, obviously. Mostly, now she uses ios devices.

            That has nothing to do with DRM. That has to do with the fact the default MacOS browser doesn't let you install stuff with a click like those other browsers will. It's harder to install software when the OS is just naturally hostile towards (but does not totally block) 3rd party solutions.

            I used Macs for many years when I was at college, owned a couple myself, and stopped using them entirely for this and many other reasons.

          • Nowadays, she would be safer with a Windows box than she was back then. But that ship has sailed, and she's still much safer with her ios stuff than she ever was on an open platform.

            Two years ago she'd have been safer with the windows box, but now the windows box itself is the attacker.

            • by cfalcon ( 779563 )

              > Two years ago she'd have been safer with the windows box, but now the windows box itself is the attacker.

              She doesn't care about any of that. She knows I do though, lol.

        • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:15AM (#54332777)

          Increased security my ass. People don't give a shit about security. Ordinary users are fucking lazy, and are "willingly gravitating" towards anything that can do everything for them without lifting a finger.

          Not true at all. They care about security to a reasonable degree. The problem is that A) security isn't their only or most pressing concern and B) most of them are not security experts nor should they be expected to be. Too many programmers write system that fail to assume that the computer will be utilized by someone who does not understand security and cannot reasonably be expected to understand it even if they wanted to.

          My parents are delightful people who are smart and capable and they certainly aren't lazy. But expecting them to be well versed in the nuances of computer security is both naive and unrealistic. It has nothing to do with laziness but simply where their competencies lie and what time they have available. You would do a shit job at what they do for a living most likely. That doesn't mean you are lazy or stupid but merely that you have focused your energies elsewhere.

          Furthermore there is NOTHING wrong with the expectation that the software you use be designed to be secure and to make your life simpler. If your software doesn't do that for users it will eventually be replaced by software that does and rightfully so.

          Voice activated assistants and press-to-order buttons hanging on the wall are two prime examples of just how lazy people have become. Getting online to search and order a product manually is considered hard labor for the Siri generation.

          That's akin to arguing that people are lazy for not wanting to drive to the store to do their shopping. Spending your time efficiently isn't sloth - it's just smart. Spending more time than absolutely required to do a task is idiotic and wasteful. Time is the most precious resource any of us have and wasting it bothering with navigating unnecessary websites out of some misplaced idea of what laziness is is foolish. Maybe you enjoy spending your time jumping through extra hurdles to order something. Personally I have better things to do with my time. I'd rather spend even that modest amount of time doing something that adds value to my life.

        • press-to-order buttons hanging on the wall

          ...

          prime examples

          I see what you did there...

        • One man's laziness (Score:5, Insightful)

          by rsilvergun ( 571051 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @12:07PM (#54334483)
          is another's time management. If you view technology as interesting and exciting then spending hours managing security settings and learning which repositories are safe (and occasionally cleaning up when one goes rouge after it gets bought out by a spammer) isn't a big deal.

          If, OTOH, your interests are in say, Law, then you probably spend your days pouring over legal briefs instead of computer code. Speaking of Law, I never hear lawyers say "The problem with my clients is they're _lazy_". And I seldom hear Doctors saying that either. Sure, my doc tells me to eat better and exercise more, but he also recognizes that that's hard to do and takes a significant commitment. It's only computer techs that have this utter disdain for everyone who's not a computer tech.
    • by TheRaven64 ( 641858 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:25AM (#54332433) Journal

      There's only one thing that will kill DRM: when content producers realise how much power it gives to content distributors. DRM on music is completely gone now. Why? Because the big four record labels realised that requiring DRM was giving Apple a much stronger negotiating position than them (want your music to work on iPods? You had to agree to Apple's terms or provide your music DRM free). With TV movies, we're increasingly seeing Netflix and Amazon get a similarly strong position. Netflix maintains streams for around 80 different types of device, including a load of set-top boxes that don't have upgradable firmware. Want to reach those customers? License your content to Netflix or allow it to be distributed without DRM (pretty much anything can play back plain H.264).

      I quite enjoy the fact that the organisations insisting on DRM are the ones most harmed by it.

      • There's only one thing that will kill DRM: when content producers realise how much power it gives to content distributors.

        But these are increasingly the same people. TV production companies are running their own online streaming services. Bands are providing digital downloads from their own web sites or via marketplaces that work for them. Authors are self-publishing e-books.

        It is probably in the interests of both smaller creator/distributors and streaming services for something equivalent to DRM to exist.

        DRM on music is completely gone now. Why?

        Because you can sell copies of music tracks at sub-dollar impulse purchase prices and still make a profit anyway. Sadly, th

        • Because you can sell copies of music tracks at sub-dollar impulse purchase prices and still make a profit anyway. Sadly, that is not true for many other kinds of creative works.

          Well, it might be, but the only way to find out is to try it. And all I see are ridiculously steep prices. It doesn't make me take a black hat approach – IMHO, piracy is ethically bankrupt – but I won't pay those prices. So I don't see a lot of new movies until they're quite old, resulting in them landing in the group tha

          • Well, it might be, but the only way to find out is to try it.

            But some people have tried experiments in this area, right down to "pay whatever you want, including nothing". They typically seem to raise very little money, with the more successful cases mostly being work by creators who had already become established and developed a large fan base built with a more traditional funding model. I'm not saying it's impossible that there are exceptions, but the trend looks pretty clear and it would be a brave studio that spent 8-9 figures on producing some new content and th

        • by serviscope_minor ( 664417 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:51AM (#54332957) Journal

          People keep saying things like this, but believe it or not, the executives running these massively successful businesses are neither stupid nor ignorant

            This is demonstrably not true. With just about every major, the industry has declared that it will be the death of them. Remember video tape players being like Jack the Ripper? That want even the first. Piano rolls were going to be the death, as has just about everything new since then.

          The industries have demonstrably survived however, and things like videos proved wildly profitable.

          So no, your claim is not correct. The executives have a proven track record of having no insight, simply wishing to protect the model as it is today.

          • The executives have a proven track record of having no insight, simply wishing to protect the model as it is today.

            One of those does not follow from the other. If the current model is working for them and they can protect it, why wouldn't they?

            It seems that your argument is based primarily on what industry people say in marketing and/or lobbying efforts. It's important to remember that those are about putting forward the message they think will work best, which is not necessarily what they actually believe or what their data actually tells them. As I said before, if DRM were demonstrably harming their revenues as many o

            • One of those does not follow from the other. If the current model is working for them and they can protect it, why wouldn't they?

              For the same reason that King Canute thought it was a silly idea to order the tide to turn back. He knew it would be awesome to have that amount of power. He was wise enough to know he didn't. Just because you want to, doesn't mean you can. History is littered with the attempts of people trying to stand in the way of it.

              The thing is, copyright law is already strong enough to cover

              • Just because you want to, doesn't mean you can.

                Right, but as you pointed out yourself, Big Media still seems to be doing just fine financially, so apparently they can.

                Then they still have this rather anachronistic idea of region based licensing. It's the old model, but it looks a little silly on the internet.

                Why? Most people don't even realise when it's happening, and there are different situations in different places. Taxes alone can easily make 20-30% difference in the real cost of something from one place to another. And of course some markets have lower cost of living and spending power, so advertising at your normal price for a well developed first world area in those markets might just b

          • Remember video tape players being like Jack the Ripper? That want even the first. Piano rolls were going to be the death, as has just about everything new since then.

            Piano rolls cannot be copied at almost zero cost, and analog videotapes cannot be copied indefinitely, so these analogies don't help when applied to digital downloads.

            • Piano rolls cannot be copied at almost zero cost, ...? Those who don't know history etc etc...

              With musicians you have to pay them every time to do a performance. The performance once on a piano roll can indeed be duplicated at almost zero cost as the performance can then be given a thousand or so times at almost no cost.

              You've forgotten the historical context about copying music, and assumed it always applied to media, not the actual music itself. It was thought it would destroy the music industry because

        • But these are increasingly the same people. TV production companies are running their own online streaming services. Bands are providing digital downloads from their own web sites or via marketplaces that work for them. Authors are self-publishing e-books.

          It doesn't work that way. DRM requires huge economies of scale (it's not worth developing a DRM scheme for a single album, you won't get enough devices to support it). Your choices are to either go through a distributor like Amazon or Apple who will use their own DRM model and gain the strong negotiating position, or license a DRM scheme from a company like Adobe or Microsoft and give them the same control.

      • DRM are a necessary evil if you want a rental market. Rentals and/or borrowing have been used a lot for movies and books, as many movies and many books are the kind of "read once" type (however, this is another story). With the ability to easily copy and distribute digital media, it is hard to tell if extra copies are being made unlawfully. DRM is the solution to this question that we have right now. And it is fairly restrictive, as you cannot have your movies and books in the media you want.

        I believe that

        • by sjbe ( 173966 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @10:12AM (#54333437)

          DRM are a necessary evil if you want a rental market.

          The concept of "renting" an intangible product with near-as-makes-no-difference zero marginal cost to reproduce is more than a little absurd. If you need DRM to protect your product then your product is overpriced and you will induce piracy. A from Princess Leia seems to fit here rather well.

          With the ability to easily copy and distribute digital media, it is hard to tell if extra copies are being made unlawfully.

          Doesn't necessarily matter if they make extra copies. It matters if they DISTRIBUTE extra copies. It's not hard to determine if someone has a the legal right to distribute a given bit of copyrighted material. They have an absolute right to so-called fair use copying. DRM is a problem in large part because it attacks the wrong issue. It is an effort to inappropriately control distribution via controlling copying but copying is not the same thing as distribution. DRM is a blunt instrument that restricts all copying whether or not it is legal or desirable.

          So, I know DRM is evil and we do not want that. What are the alternatives that can keep traditional shops open? I am all ears.

          Implicit in your question is that we should care about keeping "traditional shops" open. I'm not convinced that is an important consideration.

      • by brunes69 ( 86786 )

        If what you say were true, then all of the Netflix-original shows, which they maintain near total control over, would not have DRM. But they do.

        • Why? It's in Neftlix's interest for Netflix to have control over the channel, which is what Netflix DRM gives them. It's just not in the interests of content producers other than Netflix.
    • by mark-t ( 151149 )

      You contradict yourself.

      First you say ...

      DRM will be gone...

      And then you say that we...

      ...will have to get content from the iTunes, Amazon, Play, whatever.

      If you cannot see how these two notions are mutually exclusive, then I'm not sure you understand what either actually is.

  • Sure! (Score:5, Insightful)

    by fph il quozientatore ( 971015 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @05:40AM (#54332321)
    And proprietary software will be gone by 2030.
    • Re:Sure! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Kohath ( 38547 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @07:46AM (#54332659)

      And seriously predicting the future will be gone by 2027. People will look back on all the predictions in the last 20 years and finally conclude it's not something serious people should do -- at least not with a specific deadline year.

    • Re: (Score:2, Redundant)

      by Gravis Zero ( 934156 )

      And proprietary software will be gone by 2030.

      YES! 2030 will be the year of the Linux desktop! ;)

      • Except, in Q2 2028, remaining tops of desks will be deprecated in favor of enhanced vision personal work environments. Employees will be provided a 73 cubic inch cubby in the wall of their cubicle for personal effects, so long as they have the courtesy to install an easily removable cubby liner before storing any objects.
        • What the politicians supporting the laws to enforce such policies failed to understand is that, since the employee is expected to furnish their own cubby liner, the liner is, itself, a personal effect and can not be installed in the cubby prior to the installation of said employee-provided cubby liner. This, of course, renders the availability of said cubbies moot, as the employee can never actually put anything in them.

          This is our future.
    • by OYAHHH ( 322809 )

      Didn't you say the same thing, different year referenced, in 1995.

      Been hearing this refrain since at least that year. It's been 27 years now and that "dream" is at best partially implemented.

      So, you have set a pretty ambitious schedule, 13 years, given 27 years hasn't been enough to date.

    • And proprietary software will be gone by 2030.

      Nobody thought a paperless toilet would become reality, but here it is. [dailymail.co.uk]

  • by mwvdlee ( 775178 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:01AM (#54332375) Homepage

    DRM gone? Not if the powers that be (...lobbying and bribing politicians) have anything to say about it.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Interesting)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:02AM (#54332381)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • by Trailer Trash ( 60756 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:16AM (#54332781) Homepage

      Individual farmers may be furious at John Deere here, but there's a massive difference between that and a lobby big enough to actually get Congress to take action and pass laws.

      LOL!!!!!!!

      Somebody doesn't know about the agricultural lobbies.

      Give you a clue: why do you think we have corn ethanol in all of our gasoline?

      Farmers are *very* powerful.

      • Comment removed based on user account deletion
        • No, farmers aren't. The agricultural industry, of which John Deere is a part, is. The giant conglomerates who control farming are. But the actual people who get upset when they're told they can't fix their John Deere tractor so it can run on methane have virtually no pull whatsoever.

          What you're saying is akin to saying movie directors have huge amounts of political power because the studios do. They don't, and farmers don't either.

          When in a hole, quit digging.

          Ever heard of the Iowa caucus? Ever been to Iowa? That's a big part of the power of farmers.

          http://people.howstuffworks.co... [howstuffworks.com]

  • Delusional... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by blahplusplus ( 757119 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:07AM (#54332389)

    ... all modern videogames have just been rebranded "mmo" or "online or always online" it's still drm, smite, league of legends, dota 2, all the f2p games where game devs want money with no ownership for gamers. The man is smoking something to believe drm will disappear it has gotten worse, every server locked game is a drm'd game. Hell the game industry has been experimenting with encryption and virtual machines like denuvo.

    Windows 10 basically wants to re-engineer the whole application environment so that people don't have access to their own files via encrypted file systems, etc. What of Magicka: wizard wars?


    http://www.pcgamer.com/magicka... [pcgamer.com]

    The whole game industry is basically destroying games willy nilly and steam has been slowly hiding the fact they encrypt game files and make it difficult for people to modifiy the games they paid for. Shit's out of control and it's because the average person is grade A tech illiterate moron.

    • Re:Delusional... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:02AM (#54332731)

      ...all modern videogames have just been rebranded "mmo" or "online or always online" it's still drm....

      Stop playing them. Video games are luxuries, pure and simple. They are extremely elastic. Stop playing them, and game companies will stop abusing you.

      Windows 10 basically wants to re-engineer the whole application environment so that people don't have access to their own files via encrypted file systems, etc.

      Stop using Windows. It is also highly elastic. Locking yourself into Windows is a conscious choice, not a requirement. There isn't a single piece of software you can't replace, recreate, isolate, or live without.

      Even those proprietary industrial control programs can either be replaced or isolated. There are always other ways, if you are sufficiently motivated. But the longer you allow yourself to be ass-raped by abusive companies, the more expensive and painful it will be to replace them. The easiest place to start is by running Free Software on your current operating system, then switching to a Free operating system once you're comfortable with the available software.

      I made the switch in 1999 (after dabbling for a few years), and have never regretted it.

      • I'm sorry to tell you but your whole post is stupid...

        The free market is a myth and so is freedom of choice, the only way could effect corporations behavior is if you had physical proximity to their offices whenever they try to do something underhanded their is genuine fear of the population next door. Steam would have never got off the ground if the outraged gamers in 2004 were two blocks away from valve. Your whole post reeks of the 'freedom of choice' and 'free market' nonsense which is 100% false. Pre

        • Mo idea why you are ranting over Steam and Valve.

          However I like to point out that DRM and the internet are concepts that have nothing to do with each other.

        • by Rakarra ( 112805 )

          The free market is a myth and so is freedom of choice

          Freedom of choice exists. What the average Slashdot nerd often fails to acknowledge is that most people do not share their priorities about what is important. They do not consider your problems with Valve to be actual problems that they'd care about -- certainly nothing to organize a boycott around. Instead, most people who love Steam like the way that Steam organizes and updates game libraries because they remember the haphazard shitty ways such things have done in the past. They don't ever use the phrase

          • The average person is dumb as a bag of hammers, so of course they would love steam, they are technology illiterate, aka not intelligent nor capable enough to even be participating in the market. But don't let the facts get in the way of your uninformed opinion. People are NOT the best judges of whats in their interest, see the science:

            On reason [youtube.com]

    • Oof. That's some knee-jerk reactionism if ever I've seen it.

      Why did you list a bunch of games whose entire gameplay model revolves around online interactions between players? Frankly, I'd be shocked if those games *weren't* online only. Are games of that genre becoming more popular? Yes, there does seem to be a growing market segment interested in them that they can compete for. But you make it sound like there are no single player games or games with multiplayer that don't require a central server. W

      • "Why did you list a bunch of games whose entire gameplay model revolves around online interactions between players?"

        You're naive, in what world do you live in where Quake was once a game you owned with dedicated servers and level editors providing free content to players and goes to a server locked f2p model where the game you are dumping money into (should you be stupid enough to buy the 'unlocks' to a game you don't own), can be 'shut down' at the behest of besthesda, aka gaming history is being literally

        • Quake was once a game you owned with dedicated servers and level editors providing free content to players and goes to a server locked f2p model where the game you are dumping money into

          Did I not just say that there are companies still trying to pull shenanigans?

          You act as though Quake and Quake Champions have anything to do with each other except for the licensed brand name. It's not the same development studio. It's not the same target market. It's not the same business model. It's not even the same gameplay experience. Different things are different.

          I loved the original Quake and Quake 2. I found Quake 3 to be underwhelming. I find Quake Champions to be a completely uninteresting

  • by SuricouRaven ( 1897204 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:14AM (#54332413)

    If anything, leaving the EU will serve as a pretext to make our copyright laws even stricter, and DRM even more legally-supporter.

    Why? Because very few voters care even the tiniest amount about copyright policy. It's just not an issue in elections, at all, not in the slightest, which means the only voice there to influence MPs comes from lobby groups who are happy to point out the economic success of the entertainment industry and hint at favorable media support and a bit of help with the fund-raising come next election season.

    Only days ago we passed the Digital Economy Act which, among many other things, increased the criminal penalty for copyright infringement from two years to ten. A provision that went largely unnoticed, as most of the attention of even the technical press has been on ridiculing another section of the act introduces another entirely unworkable attempt to restrict access to pornography on the internet.

    • Sad but True (Score:4, Interesting)

      by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:42AM (#54332467)
      I just hope that if the human race survives another couple of thousand years - and if we're able to move past the current control structures in our society - that dictionaries may well have entries such as:-

      Democracy - n. A form of government popular up until the mid-21st century, in which groups of populations known as nations were governed by a tiny minority of representatives. Although the selection of the minority was originally intended to be fair, open, transparent and above-board, the mechanisms of democracy proved to be ideal for corruption, the formation of monopolies, indentured servitude and dictatorships - the very things that the democracies were formed to defeat. Eventually, democracy fell out of favour after a steady succession of corruption scandals showed how large multi-national corporations were colluding with governments to keep populations in poverty and indentured. Overthrown by the AI-led coups of 2066 through 2068 and the subsequent introduction of Egalitocracy, in which, by law, every government decision is undertaken transparently and through the use of one-citizen-one-vote digital voting systems.
    • by mccalli ( 323026 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @07:26AM (#54332601) Homepage
      This is the exact opposite of what has happened - in fact the EU already prevented the UK from liberalising such rules [telegraph.co.uk], as it wanted a tax on blank media or similar as per other EU countries. Guardian link [theguardian.com] on the same subject if you prefer.

      The UK was ahead in recognising format shifting, but was slapped back by the copyright lobby demanding payment for format shifting and working that angle via the EU.
  • by ytene ( 4376651 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:29AM (#54332447)
    Whilst the Digital Industries (currently predominantly music, film, television and software) pile on ever more restrictive rights, both they and the law seem to be overlooking the need for the reciprocal terms in this arrangement.

    If a company (say a game studio, for example) wants to enforce an always-on internet connection as part of their DRM control over their software, then at the same time it is only fair that the same studio commit to hosting the on-line services required to play that game for a minimum period, even after sales of the game stop. Either that or the studio must issue a "final update" patch to allow players to continue to play the game in solo mode.

    Our society is well aware what happened to the ill-fated Zune music player, developed by Microsoft as an iPod competitor - but which failed to gain the market share it needed to survive and so was cancelled. Shortly after that, when Zune players were unable to connect to the Mothership, their integrated DRM simply bricked the devices. Owners of Zune players lost not just their investment in the devices themselves, but all the music they had purchased with it, too.

    There are other complexities. We've seen news stories of people who have left [sometimes huge] iTunes music collections to their children as part of their estate, only to have Apple attempt to tell those children that they could not inherit the assets purchased by their deceased parent because the children were not party to the original agreement and therefore had no legal right to access the content... it is only a matter of time before 8K TVs and media players are released - I am waiting for the announcement that the media players will all be internet-only devices.

    I share the anger and frustration of other slashdotters with respect to this one-sided and corrupt state of affairs, but fear that for as long as the majority of people continue to purchase DRM-protected content, those of us who understand how are rights and freedoms are being eroded will remain out of luck. The vast corporations we are dealing with care about one thing and one thing only: profit. The only thing that will persuade them to change their minds and step back from DRM will be a direct challenge to that profit.

    Nothing else will make a difference.
    • Not with the shit us internet much less 8k. Now we may see PAY OTA tv come back with atsc 3.0

    • If a company (say a game studio, for example) wants to enforce an always-on internet connection as part of their DRM control over their software, then at the same time it is only fair that the same studio commit to hosting the on-line services required to play that game for a minimum period, even after sales of the game stop. Either that or the studio must issue a "final update" patch to allow players to continue to play the game in solo mode.

      I wonder whether transparency would suffice, rather than requiring changes in the underlying model.

      Obviously plenty of people are willing to rent a movie or watch one-off pay-per-view events, even though they are restricted compared to buying a permanent copy. I don't really have a problem with that if it's clear what the deal is and they're paying what they consider a fair price for what they get.

      However, I think it does have to be clear what the deal is. IMHO, perhaps the biggest problem with some modern

  • by geekmux ( 1040042 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @06:53AM (#54332485)

    "... they lobbied for and bought these laws..."

    While this is the most accurate statement I've seen in a long time regarding how laws are passed, there's no need to be redundant about it.

    Just say they bought the laws, because that's exactly what the fuck lobbying is.

  • Any prediction farther than a few years makes no sense.
  • by kbg ( 241421 )

    No they will not ever. This is just a fact.

  • by Registered Coward v2 ( 447531 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @07:47AM (#54332665)
    when it will impact groups that have lobbies as powerful as theirs. If the farm lobby is successful, there may be collateral damage to the entertainment industry. Changes in the law may not be limited to right to repair or such changes may be broadly interpreted by courts to allow things the entertainment industry fears; such as circumvention technology that gives users access to DRM protected materials. Since what is at issue is software it's not hard to imagine a scenario where changes to the DCMA have unknown, potentially far reaching implications and that is what the industry fears. Now if only some gun manufacturer introduced software that required you to use a factory technician to clean your gun...
  • by mouthbeef ( 35097 ) <doctorow@craphound.com> on Monday May 01, 2017 @08:10AM (#54332761) Homepage

    Hey folks! Just to clarify: I said that the UK would renegotiate its relationship to the EUCD (European Union Copyright Directive) and Iain (reasonably enough, given the noisy room) heard OECD (Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development). Just a minor clarification, but I'd appreciate an upvote so confused people see it.

  • by sootman ( 158191 ) on Monday May 01, 2017 @10:32AM (#54333633) Homepage Journal

    We may have a couple good points against DRM, but there have been good points against LOTS of things that are still in place. As long as the people with money and power want DRM and think* it helps, we'll have DRM.

    * Note: it doesn't have to ACTUALLY help. All that matters is what the people on top think.

  • Cory Doctorow wears the habitual rose-colored glasses of the impassioned activist, so I tend to take what he says with more than a few grains of salt. Nonetheless, it's nice to hear a little optimism [teleread.org] even if it may be largely unfounded. We'll just have to wait and see what comes of it.

The fancy is indeed no other than a mode of memory emancipated from the order of space and time. -- Samuel Taylor Coleridge

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