This Week In Techdirt History: December 12th - 18th
from the so-it-was dept
Five Years Ago
This week in 2016, calls were continuing for the outgoing Obama administration to save the CIA torture report from being buried, while the White House agreed to preserve but not declassify it and at least one copy was preserved in Obama's archives. Facebook was announcing new measures to deal with disinformation while Iran was using the "fake news" scare to justify widespread censorship. Ajit Pai made it clear that net neutrality was on the way out while Tom Wheeler resigned rather than stay on as a commissioner. Meanwhile, after so many years of the Prenda saga, John Steele and Paul Hansmeier were indicted and arrested.
Ten Years Ago
This week in 2011, Rupert Murdoch was personally lobbying for SOPA (as were sixteen former Judiciary Committee staff thanks to the revolving door) while RIAA boss Cary Sherman was defending it in the New York Times and MPAA boss Chris Dodd was getting desperate. Lamar Smith released an updated version of the bill that was still a disaster for cybersecurity (among other things) and even snuck in a new private right of action for shutting down sites. A nearly-twelve-hour markup session was a fiasco, and we also heard the first murmurs about a Wikipedia blackout in protest. Also, this was the week that Mike published his 40,000th Techdirt post.
Fifteen Years Ago
This week in 2006, we saw an overbearing proposal to protect kids online while Germany was considering an insanely draconian law to punish creators and players of violent video games and a Japanese court issued a worrying ruling about liability for software makers. It was becoming increasingly clear that the Zune would not be a hit, and people were starting to realize that Second Life might not be as big a hit as the hype implied. The rumors about Apple's mysterious "iPhone" were joined by more dubious rumors of an Apple MVNO to sell mobile service directly. And major labels were ignoring the demand for DRM-free music while Bill Gates was admitting DRM was broken, though not doing anything about it.
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Re: Major Labels and DRM
It’s quite interesting that 15 years ago major labels ignored the demand for DRM-free music because almost 13 years ago in 2009 all online music stores were DRM-free, including Apple iTunes.
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A nearly-twelve-hour markup session was a Wikipedia blackout in protest.
I think you've accidentally edited out a line of text here.
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John Steele and Paul Hansmeier were indicted and arrested.
Those were the days!!! /Edith
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Re: Re: Major Labels and DRM
It's quite a simple story, really. Outside of Apple's ecosystem, DRM was an unholy mess of incompatible competing systems. Because of this Apple became a defacto monopoly on digital music sales because they wouldn't licence out their own DRM to competitors, and it was hard to move out of that ecosystem once you were there as a result.
As soon as the labels realised that their insistence on DRM had handed almost complete control of the market over to Apple, they quickly changed their tune on requiring DRM, which immediately allowed competitors like Amazon to successfully enter the market.
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Re:
thanks, broken link in the html, fixed!
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Re:
And what happened after that was years of out_of_the_blue, Hamilton, Tero Pulkinnen and John Smith collectively losing their shit, pooling it together and losing it again. Fun times, fun times, and all thanks to the glory of copyright law.
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