Clearly, DRM is not the best way to go to help prevent piracy
Will Wright on the Spore DRM controversy:
“I think one of the most valid concerns about it was you could only install it so many times. For most players it’s not an issue, it’s a pretty small percentage, but some people do like wiping their hard disk and installing it 20 times or they want to play it 10 years later.
Spore doesn’t seem to be anywhere near what it was promised to be — in 10 years it is quite probable that few will remember it (let alone play it), unless it is followed by vastly improved sequels. That cannot be said, however, for several of Wright’s other games. SimCity 3000 is still enjoyed by many, 9 years after it was released, especially as it was (and probably still is) part of several ‘classics’ low-price bundles. SimCity 4 is practically universally still considered superior to the ‘Societies’ spin-off and still enjoyed by millons globally. And while it may be true that the, ever-elusive, ‘market’ could, potentially, boycott games in lieu of their ridiculous DRM, Wright’s response is unfortunate in the way it treats both replayability and consumer rights.
According to the BBC report, 7digital.com is the first online music retailer to offer Warner music sans DRM in several European states. This is not exactly true: Technically, even though you cannot actually download the tracks, the honour falls onto the popular last.fm service which started offering DRMless music on demand in the US, UK and Germany a few months earlier. Still, this is a great sign of things to come and hopefully the availability of AmazonMP3 in Europe later this year will makes things even better. At the same time, the success of Radiohead’s latest release, as well as NIN’s Ghosts I-IV that just came out — and which netted $750K in its first few days through the sale of the $300, 2500-copy vinyl limited edition alone — are certainly signs of change that seep into what one might call the ‘mainstream music’ realm.
The first fully DRM-less music store is here, offering ‘over 2 million songs’ by EMI and Universal encoded in 256kbit mp3s — the largest unencrypted music downloads offering to date. Although the service is currently in beta, I have a feeling this is going to usher a new era in music downloads and spur competition. Let’s hope more record labels align themselves behind either Amazon’s or Apple’s store. What’s sad, although completely understandable given the very low proliferation of capable devices, is that tracks are using the ageing mp3 format instead of newer and higher quality codecs, such as AAC. Maybe in the future I guess.
DRM, privacy, the way the net is turning out to be!
Well, I have managed to correlate several – seemingly unrelated – things again to my own surprise. Think for a sec. about the way the unipolar governing of the world by — currently — the US, personal freedom/privacy, the power provided to the world by electronics and computing. I just watched Colossus: The Forbin Project, a cheesy 1970 sci-fi film about a computer similar to SkyNet in Terminator, that decides to take over the world: fortunately not immediately killing the whole of mankind plus Colossus, the computer at hand, joins forces with an equivalent Soviet computer called Guardian and combine their forces to achieve total control over the world. In the movie, the computer demands that its creator, a certain Dr. Forbin, is being put under constant surveillance.
Think for a second how easy it is today, 33 years after the release of that movie to monitor someone’s actions. Most personal financial transactions take place using credit or debit cards or at the very least ATMs. Registrations everywhere provide information as to someone’s personal details. And computerised bank networks as well as digital telephone exchanges retain (in the post 11th September world) extensive logs about people’s phonecalls. As if this was not enough, anyone living in a large city will have noticed the hundreds of CCTV cameras everywhere. I am sure this is more evident in the States than Europe or the rest of the world. The recent Verizon appeal turned-down, to not reveal their subscribers’ identities to RIAA increasingly worries me about how Orwellian the future could end up. A lot of people have written about privacy on the internet and how the Verizon case — at least in the case — will set a precedent that could literally end up forcing ISPs to reveal user data to anyone claiming they have broken the law *before* they prove it!
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