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DRM bad idea….no really!?
‘DRM was a bad idea’.
That’s the title of an article of the Dutch website / magazine Emerce. It is a quote of entertainment lawyer Fred E. Goldring of Goldring, Hertz & Lichtenstein who apperently said this during a panel at CES in Las Vegas yesterday.
It seems that not that many news outlets have picked this yet (or search engines haven’t updated their indeces yet) as I could only find one other article. This time in English (see here ). In this article the exact quote is:
Goldring added, “DRM was a terrible idea from the consumer’s point of view, but it did help the music space evolve.” The fact about music, he said, is that the industry is competing against “free.”
source: Betanews 2007
Interestingly this is the same person who said in 2004:
“People used to bitch that you can’t compete with free,” Ken Hertz of Goldring Hertz, Lichtenstein and Haft LLP, which represents artists and has lobbied for the universal licensing of content for use on the net.
“Now everyone has accepted that you can compete with free, offering something that is better than free.”
source: BBC NEWS 2004
Apperently offering paying customers songs encumbered with DRM or suing music fans with lawsuits is not the way to get or keep customers. Let alone competing with ‘free’. It took ‘em almost four years, but at least it did ‘help the music space evolve’. Yeah, right.
At least the music industry seems to finally take small steps in a more positive innovative direction. Something they should have done at the beginning. Let’s hope other industries will learn a lot quicker and don’t even start with DRM, although some people in European politics clearly did not get the memo.
Sign the petition and make sure the politicians get the memo! Stop DRM once and for all.
Stop DRM, sign the petition.
European Union commissioner for information society and media Viviane Redding seems to have missed the ‘latest’ developments around DRM . Let me say in clear terms: DRM is dead!
The recording industry knows it (EMI, Warner) . The public knows it (British Digital music survey 2007 (PDF) , see attitude towards DRM on page 84). So why bother?
Nonetheless she is proposing that the EU should enable a framework for interoperable DRM. This seems a silly idea to me. DRM and interoperability is like water and oil. It doesn’t mix and it’s a lousy tasteless cocktail as well. Not too mention a technological farce.
Drm is not the way to enable new markets nor does it promote innovative ideas. Innovation starts with openess and freedom. Business models built upon control and monopolies are and were a stupid idea to begin with. It’s time for these 19th century companies to face the music: innovate in a 21st century style or perish.
Please stop this ignorant, silly and plain stupid idea. I’d to say it again: DRM is dead! Get over it.
Sign the open letter to Viviane Redding and stop DRM.
Drm or so?
[kml_flashembed movie="http://www.youtube.com/v/XYPnnp36PfA" width="425" height="350" wmode="transparent" /]
Nice cartoon which touches the subject of sharing and the methods of corporations in trying to prevent this.
Contactgegevens
Terzijde
The first step — especially for young people with energy and drive and talent, but not money — the first step to controlling your world is to control your culture. To model and demonstrate the kind of world you demand to live in. To write the books. Make the music. Shoot the films. Paint the art.Chuck Palahniuk
