Google Kills Off Videos People Thought They Had Purchased
from the see-why-DRM-sucks? dept
It's tough for many to remember these days, following the growth of YouTube and free videos online, but in January of 2006, when Google launched its online video service it was supposed to change the world. Remember, they had all these partners signed up who were going to sell video content via Google? It seemed pretty pointless at the time and the near total failure of the video sales to take off simply confirmed it. One of the key points that seemed particularly poorly thought out was the decision to create yet another type of DRM that would require the content you bought to call home every time you wanted to play it. Plenty of people pointed out all of the problems with this idea, with one big one being that, should Google ever kill the service, the content people "bought" would no longer be available. Guess what? Google is killing off the service and the content people "bought" will no longer be available. Apparently Google is handing out credits for Google Checkout for those who bought videos, but they can't use those credits to buy the videos anywhere else. Of course, chances are many of those videos are now available for free on Google-owned YouTube, but that's a separate point. In the meantime, does anyone else find it ridiculous that anyone who makes or uses any kind of tool to circumvent this DRM to view the content that they legally purchased will now be breaking the DMCA's anti-circumvention laws and could face jailtime?Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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Not circumvention to view
1) Viewing is not a copyright infringement.
2) Ephemeral copies created in the process of viewing do not constitute copyright infringement.
3) Therefore circumvention for the purpose of viewing does not constitute violation of copyright or the DMCA/EUCD, etc.
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Re: Not circumvention to view
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Re: Re: Not circumvention to view
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On the other hand...
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Google selleth then taketh away [showing evil power of DRM] (via hymn project) ...
> Also, it may not be up to Apple ... what if
> Universal (who just stopped selling on iTunes)
> decided that their agreement entitled them to
> un-sell all their music on iTunes, initiated a
> lawsuit, and won ... and then Apple was forced
> to un-sell all songs sold by Universal. Or, if
> Eminem wins his suit where he's claiming that
> Apple didn't have the right to sell his stuff
> in the first place.
>
> Scary stuff.
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(excluding DVDs and the like that are on established physical media)
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Why
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Hey!!
What IS this world coming to?
Honestly people. What are you thinking??
:-Þ
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Getting Out Of DRM?
I'm glad they're ditching this plan, with my apologies to those getting screwed. Now, once bitten, they and other companies will be reluctant to play according to Hollywood's rulebook.
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Perhaps google understands side effects that this
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DRM
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Re: On the other hand...
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THe alternative
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The alternative
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This is why
What these money-hungry, offended companies don't realize is that they're FORCING honest (yep, HONEST) people to resort to either leaving the internet table without ordering their DRM infested content, or getting it through "third party sales" that have removed DRM protection.
What a circle-jerk.....
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Blah
Thanks a lot, Google, for taking my trust in your company down about 50 notches.
My blog: http://www.pdsys.org/blog/
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This goes beyond DRM
This issue actually goes beyond DRM. We now depend on company websites to provide us with updates on all types of software and products. The availability of updates on the internet can also mysteriously disappear. Companies, when they discontinue, a software product should make a final version of that product available to their customers.
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Re: Blah
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Buzz,
I would rather they had fully refunded the money I spent on my videos, or re-released them in a DRM-free format.
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Re: Not circumvention to view
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Not circumvention tool to view
This is why the developers of such a tool should probably remain pseudonymous and distribute the source code on file sharing networks - because it would inevitably have a predominant use for copyright infringement.
The funny thing is MPAA needs circumvention tools too - if they want to circumvent the encryption TPMs that file-sharers might use, in order to inspect the copies of works that they're sharing. After all, how can they know whether people are sharing home movies* or Hollywood blockbusters unless they can circumvent the sharer's TPMs?
* Home movies are copyrighted too.
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Re: Not circumvention tool to view
Also, if a new file-0sharing format is invented, the rights to make a client for it should be liscenced subject to terms which prevent the use of any information gained by use of the service for any commercial purpose, or to provie evidence for a lawsuit, with a further clasue preventing its use at all if such a condition is illegal. THis would enable users to transmit files with impunity, since if the *AA wanted to gather evidence of uploading, they would have to break the terms of the liscence, and the inventor of the network could sue them through the nose for every infringement.
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Re: Not circumvention to view
it is forbidden to, in any way, try to crack or circumvent a (digital) copy protection
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