Shouldn't there be some degree of markup for the specification of digital 
rights for a chunk of a content?

Wouldn't inclusion of drm markup from content acquired from other parties allow 
for giving credit where credit is due?

Markup would aknowledge digital rights and state digital righs or preferences 
for any given content.  If there was such markup would these tags be displayed, 
or displayed as part of tooltip data? Or would it be invisible metadata like 
tagging that could be made visible via css?

Digital rights enforcement is another issue. 

In the context of html though digital rights markup (which is arguably part of 
managing digital rights) seems a relevant topic.

Art C


On Jun 12, 2013, at 5:28 AM, Driedfruit <[email protected]> wrote:

> On Tue, 11 Jun 2013 14:18:49 -0400
> Chris Baker <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
>> Putting aside your opinions on DRM itself, can anyone justify HTML as
>> an appropriate place to manage copyright enforcement? Isn't DRM more
>> appropriate at a different layer? 
> 
> That is an excellent point, everyone should consider.
> 
> Even if you're all for DRM, what relation does it have with HTML ?
> Shouldn't you attack HTTP itself or some other layer ?
> 
> The whole thing sounds like a no-win situation for all involved
> parties. It will not help copyright holders, and it will not help page
> authors, at all.
> 
> -- 
> driedfruit
> 


Reply via email to