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FSF US takes street to protest Vista DRM

At Seattle's WinHEC conference yesterday, activists of the Free Software Foundations "Defective by Design"-campaign informed attendees about the dangers of Digital Restrictions Management (DRM), just as Bill Gates was about to give a keynote speech on the new Windows Vista's DRM features and Microsoft's future.

From FSF's article about the campaign: 

"In any other industry, such limitations or invasions would be
considered major flaws. A media player that restricts what you can play
is like a car that you won't let you steer," said Brown. "Products
containing DRM are defective -- only, unlike other products, these
defects are deliberately created by an industry that has long stopped
caring about us."

The protesters wore bright-yellow suits for dealing with hazardous material, conveying the message that DRM pollutes personal computers and turns them into a danger to their users.

Photos are available on flickr. 

via BoingBoing

'Open Source DRM' vs. Free Software: RMS, Lessig in Register

The Register is running a nice, long article on Free Software and DRM. It has Richard Stallman's view on DRM in general, as well as Lawrence Lessig's sort-of-endorsement of Sun's "open DRM" in particular.

 While the matter under discussion is hardly breaking news, the article sums the problem up nicely.

Those who prefer their information only moderately pre-chewed might want to read Ciaran O'Riordan's summary of DRM and the GPLv3. (He has another one of those on patents right here.)
 


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