Hacker Newsnew | past | comments | ask | show | jobs | submitlogin
Landmark study: DRM truly does make pirates out of us all (arstechnica.com)
38 points by terpua on May 28, 2009 | hide | past | favorite | 6 comments


Now this is a good reason to support the Pirate Party if you have one in your country.


In my country, DRM is unlawful de-jure (but is in use, de-facto), because it violates bunch of laws.


Congratulations; where do you live?


Congratulations for what? Law is not working due to weak government. I am afraid that if somebody will try to enforce DRM software to comply with law, law will be changed quickly.

I live in Ukraine (Eastern Europe).


They mention that these cases are just a few "edge groups". That may be the case, but while these "edge groups" are being punished so much, the remaining 99% of the world either doesn't notice the difference between DRM'd content and free content, or they bypass it in two seconds. Heck, they could avoid it all together by illegally downloading an 'unlocked' version of the software.

So where's the gain that justifies the infringement on the rights of 'edge groups'?


I bought a dell at work. Came with windows. Installed linux ans want to set up a windows vm to use necessary win software for work.

So naturally I can't register my oem xp pro because its bound to my hardware which differs from vm. Basically I must pirate windows even though I own a copy which I should be able to legally install on a vm. Not to mention that I can't install os x just because its not apple hardware on a vm.

So yea this sort of bs is what makes us all have to resort to piracy because the alternative is too expensive.




Guidelines | FAQ | Lists | API | Security | Legal | Apply to YC | Contact

Search: