On Oct 8, 2013, at 13:38 , Alastair Campbell <[email protected]> wrote:
> Mhyst wrote: > As for me, I'd prefer to deny the existence of digital copies of what content > owners want to "protect". I don't give up freedom just for convenience. > > Personally I agree with you and don't buy DRMed content [1], but if most > people agreed with you and refused to buy DRMed content this would be a very > different discussion. There was a significant period in which the content owners did not embrace electronic distribution, effectively telling people "if you want an electronic copy, your only choice is a pirated one". They realized that this was not the best message. If you can take a principled stand and resist both piracy and DRM, I applaud you; but for many people, the inconveniences of DRM are outweighed by far by the conveniences. Personally, when rent or buy a movie to watch once, I don't really care if it's locked to the account (which may be closed) the distributor (who may go out of business) or a device I choose (which I may not have at some time in the future). It was a short-term question anyway. David Singer Multimedia and Software Standards, Apple Inc.
