This Week In Techdirt History: September 20th - 26th
from the rings-a-bell dept
Five Years Ago
This week in 2015, a major scandal began when Volkswagen was accused of using software to cheat emissions tests. The White House was the FBI, CIA and much of the military were not doing basic email encryption — but in India things were going in the opposite direction. The monkey selfie saga began a new chapter with PETA filing a lawsuit on behalf of the monkey, and then an even bigger copyright bombshell hit when a judge ruled that Warner Chappell doesn't hold the copyright on happy birthday. Plus the world got a new famous villain with a sudden hike in drug prices introducing everyone to a man named Martin Shkreli.
Ten Years Ago
This week in 2010, Intel was threatening to break out the DMCA anti-circumvention lawsuits against anyone using the recently-leaked HDCP master key, state AGs were turning their attention to Backpage (which was gearing up to fight back), and movie studios were freaking out about fan pages. The MPAA was apparently fishing for censorship tools in ACTA by talking about Wikileaks, while the Senate was offering them a gift with a new bill that would enable global censorship of "pirate sites" (with a special loophole allowing the DOJ to avoid due process. And we saw a variety of interesting developments in various lawsuits: one judge was entertaining the notion of implied licenses in a Righthaven lawsuit while another was shutting down US Copyright Group subpoenas, a UK judge was similarly not impressed by copyright pre-settlement campaigns, and a judge in Spain smartly ruled that Google is not liable for user uploads.
Fifteen Years Ago
This week in 2005, there was a mess of internet jurisdiction cases in Canada with one ruling being overturned on appeal while another court muddied the waters with a ruling based on the overturned ruling. Hollywood was pouring money into an ill-fated attempt to build better DRM technology, which could be described as them calling their own bluff. Following the Supreme Court's decision in their case, Grokster was scrambling to sell to a "legit" company, as were several other file-sharing software providers. And one judge in a RIAA lawsuit thankfully recognized that parents aren't liable for their kids downloading music.
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Hollywood's best DRM tech
As it turned out, the best DRM technology Hollywood ever had was Netflix.
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Re: Hollywood's best DRM tech
Not really, you can find ripped copies of pretty much anything that Netflix has produced. There's 2 major differences - first, DRM is way more acceptable on content that you explicitly rent than on content you supposedly purchase. Secondly, Netflix have gone out of their way to make it as easy as possible to access content legally, with them making it available on as many types of device as possible with as little hassle as possible, offline or online.
In other words, it's not that Netflix have made a better DRM, it's that they did as much as possible to ensure that legally accessing content is easier than illegally accessing it - and that has worked, as anyone with any common sense was telling the entertainment industry 20 years ago.
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Re: Re: Hollywood's best DRM tech
When I said that "the best DRM technology Hollywood ever had was Netflix", I meant exactly what you wrote: that Netflix incentivized legal streaming over illegal downloading and stream-rips. I wasn't being literal.
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ahhhhh the monkey selfie....
That reminds me Mike, I still have a piece on that I need to finish up and send in!
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