Copy Protection Is a Crime
Digital rights management sounds unobjectionable on paper: Consumers purchase certain rights to use creative works and are prevented from violating those rights. Who could balk at that except the pirates? Fair is fair, right? Well, no.
In reality, our legal system usually leaves us wiggle room. What’s fair in one case won’t be in another – and only human judgment can discern the difference. As we write the rules of use into software and hardware, we are also rewriting the rules we live by as a society, without anyone first bothering to ask if that’s OK.
The problem starts with the fact that digital content can be copied – perfectly – from one machine to another. This has led the recording and movie industries to push for digital rights management schemes. Buy a one-time right to play the latest hit song or movie, and DRM could prevent you from playing it twice.
Of course, to exercise such exquisite control over content, DRM requires deep changes to all parts of the equation – the hardware, the operating system, and the content itself. Sure enough, some in Congress recently pushed the FCC to add a “broadcast flag” to content which digital hardware would be required to honor. DRM is barreling down the pike.
Related Posts
- Microsoft Shells Out $500 Million For CD Copy Protection ‘Fix’
- New DVD Copy Protection Unveiled
- Senator wants limits on copy protection
- Copyright Office Upholds Copy-Protection Law
- Bono Asked to Aid Copy-Protection Fight

