Digital Copyright

DRM's effect on access to knowledge in the developing world

EFF's Cory Doctorow has written a groundbreaking paper on how DRM will undermine access to knowledge in the developing world:

The "DRM hypothesis" is that the public is dishonest, and will do dishonest things with cultural material if given the chance. DRM is deployed in order to force dishonest customers to behave honestly and buy media and to limit their activities to those that are authorized by rightsholders.

For this to work, it must be impossible for a potential customer for media to locate a non-DRM copy of their chosen movies, books, games or music. If a dishonest customer for an ebook can download an un-restricted version of a book that is otherwise available in a restricted DRM format, she surely will.

But DRM is simply not very good at doing this job. Because DRM is based on "security through obscurity" -- that is, in hiding from a user the way that it works -- it is inevitably broken in short order and the materials that it covers are put on the Internet where anyone can download them.

Indeed, there has never been a single piece of DRM-restricted media that can't be downloaded from the Internet today. In more than a decade of extensive use, DRM has never once accomplished its goal.

UPD was a co-signer to the report.

U.S. corporates trying to disable your record button

From Eric Hellweg at Technology Review:

Is 'Fair Use' in Peril?


...

Do you like fast-forwarding through commercials on a television
program you've recorded? How much do you like it? Enough to go to
jail if you're caught doing it? If a new copyright and
intellectual property omnibus bill sitting on Congress's desk
passes, that may be the choice you'll face.

[more after the break]

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U.S. Budget Office Issues Report on Digital Copyright

Rob Thornton posts this newsflash to the upd-discuss list:

"Last week the Congressional
Budget Office released a report on Copyright Issues in Digital Media.... According to a New York Times opinion article, "The report upholds exactly the kind of evenhandedness that has been missing in much
copyright legislation so far."

Thanks Rob!

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