Tuesday, February 14, 2006

what is DRM?

digital rights malware (or digital rights management software if you prefer) is any program bundled with media (text, graphics, audio, video, or some combination thereof) that takes some measure of control over the user's electronic device(s) in order to limit what the user can do with the media, often in contradiction to some extent with what applicable laws say the user should be allowed to do with it...

the user is often unaware of the presence of the digital rights malware his/her media purchase has been crippled with or how it invariably works against his/her interests, so it therefore qualifies as a kind of trojan...

in recent months there has been a trend to label any form of digital rights malware that uses stealth to hide itself (and in order to be effective against any user with half a brain they have to use stealth) as a rootkit... this is part of a larger and rather misguided trend to call anything that uses stealth a rootkit... while DRM is malware, it is not necessarily a rootkit...

there is an older trend (and some well known examples of success) of trying to get protection of digital rights malware enshrined in the law... this moves the creation and maintenance of copyright policy out of the hands of the government and into the hands of various corporate interests and has sometimes been called paracopyright... in places where this has taken place many of those corporate interests have proven themselves uninterested in the user's rights many times over...

(see my previous posting on digital rights malware here)

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