|  | Posted by Bob on 11/17/05 21:51 
On 17 Nov 2005 12:21:37 -0800, omarenoryt@aol.com wrote:
 >Oh no, are thieves throwing temper tantrums because media companies are
 >fucking them over from being able to steal? Their hysteria is even more
 >funny than their utter cowardice.
 
 You are one sick top posting retard.
 
 >Bob wrote:
 >> Copyright =A9 2005 MarketWatch, Inc.
 >>
 >> Commentary: Sony faces 'spyware' backlash
 >> By John C. Dvorak
 >>
 >> BERKELEY, Calif. (MarketWatch) -- Content theft is here to stay and
 >> the big media companies are going to have to get used to it.
 >>
 >> Attempts to manage content with protection tricks simply antagonize
 >> the consumer and can become a long-term public relations nightmare.
 >>
 >> Over the past few weeks such a PR nightmare unfolded for the Sony
 >> Corporation music division as the company attempted to protect its
 >> music with a Digital Rights Management tool that consisted of what is
 >> considered onerous spyware. And it was the worst kind of spyware --
 >> the dreaded "rootkit." It makes a computer vulnerable to all sorts of
 >> other forms of malicious software.
 >>
 >> Numerous geeks and nerds discovered this and became alarmed. Within
 >> hours of the discovery of the Sony malware, the intertwined mesh of
 >> blogs and websites went berserk and the situation forced Sony to
 >> recall all the discs. Now Sony is seen as some sort of evil villain.
 >> Its reputation tarnished.
 >>
 >> Here is probably the most elaborate explanation of what this onerous
 >> software is all about.
 >>
 >> http://www.sysinternals.com/blog/2005/10/sony-rootkits-and-digital-rights=
 >.html
 >>
 >> It tells the whole story followed by a massive public denunciation of
 >> Sony by way of added reader comments.
 >>
 >> Thinking you are going to trick an audience filled with technologists
 >> who hate to be tricked is folly. From my perspective all DRM schemes
 >> have to be out in the open and people need to be warned in advance
 >> about what they do and how they work.
 >>
 >> It seems that the marketing folks know that this sort of thing will
 >> actually hurt sales and thus you have attempts to fool the public in
 >> hopes that nobody figures it out. One day someone will realize that if
 >> DRM is hurting sales, then perhaps it's not such a good idea after
 >> all.
 >>
 >> The idea behind DRM is that content in electronic form is so
 >> effortlessly copied and distributed with computers and networks that
 >> some tool is needed to keep tabs on the content itself. It needs to be
 >> managed somehow in the wild.
 >>
 >> This means mechanisms not dissimilar to the copy-protection schemes
 >> designed to keep commercial software from being copied. These began to
 >> appear in the 1980's resulting in the growth of commercial companies
 >> such as Central Point Software which specialized in devices that could
 >> defeat these systems.
 >>
 >> Back then there was a real fear that not having backup copies of
 >> software could be a disaster. This was a legitimate argument.
 >>
 >> But the rationale for defeating these systems has changed.
 >>
 >> Today the users and buyers of content who dislike DRM mechanisms
 >> believe that once they own a copy of the content they should be able
 >> to listen (or watch) it on whatever device they choose and make as
 >> many personal copies as they want. This is a massive change in
 >> rationale for cracking the protection mechanisms.
 >>
 >> This change in mentality I believe evolved from the cassette tape era
 >> when people legally copied music from record to tape. Each blank tape
 >> had a copy fee attached to it paid to the record companies who
 >> factored this into their finances. Once this model was established it
 >> became common (and acceptable) to copy.
 >>
 >> It is not possible to reverse this mentality. Any attempt to do so
 >> brings with it a backlash, as we've seen with the Sony situation.
 >>
 >> Once computers were able to read data from CD's and DVD's it was
 >> inevitable to everyone (except those who did not understand computers)
 >> that copying would run rampant. Worsening the situation was the
 >> Internet that allowed the data on the hard disk to be transferred over
 >> a network to anyone. Thus an actual sale was lost with each transfer
 >> and the industry saw this as a theft -- not of physical property but
 >> of a virtual sale whether real or imaginary.
 >>
 >> From here it gets fuzzy and debatable with the concept of "sharing"
 >> suddenly appearing.
 >>
 >> There is absolutely nothing that can be done about this problem.
 >>
 >> Content management will never work. If it did work then nobody would
 >> buy the products. The fact is that content producers are going to have
 >> to rethink their business model and make less money, the way print
 >> folks have had to do.
 >>
 >> Writers like myself and my editors make 1/10 the money people can make
 >> in the movie or music business for doing about the same amount of work
 >> (content generation). Our value is lessened by the fact that we cannot
 >> protect the written word from rampant copying. It started with the
 >> printing press, bootleg publishing, plagiarism, Xerox machines, email,
 >> online pilfering, cut-and-paste, etc., etc. We simply got used to it
 >> and live with it.
 >>
 >> Sony and all the other big media companies are simply going to have to
 >> live with what writers and editors have lived with for some time: a
 >> big cut in pay.
 >>
 >>
 >> --
 >>
 >> BOYCOTT SONY!
 >>
 >> SONY IS TRYING TO TAKE OVER YOUR COMPUTER!
 >>
 >> HOMELAND SECURITY TOLD SONY TO CEASE AND DESIST!
 >>=20
 >> YOU DO THE SAME - BOYCOTT SONY!
 >
 
 --
 
 BOYCOTT SONY!
 
 SONY IS TRYING TO TAKE OVER YOUR COMPUTER!
 
 HOMELAND SECURITY TOLD SONY TO CEASE AND DESIST!
 
 YOU DO THE SAME - BOYCOTT SONY!
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