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unixronin: Galen the technomage, from Babylon 5: Crusade (Default)
Unixronin

December 2012

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February 12th, 2007

unixronin: Closed double loop of rotating gears (Gearhead)
Monday, February 12th, 2007 04:56 pm

[livejournal.com profile] schneier tells it how it is about the DRM in Windows Vista.

The details are pretty geeky, but basically Microsoft has reworked a lot of the core operating system to add copy protection technology for new media formats like HD-DVD and Blu-ray disks.  Certain high-quality output paths--audio and video--are reserved for protected peripheral devices.  Sometimes output quality is artificially degraded; sometimes output is prevented entirely.  And Vista continuously spends CPU time monitoring itself, trying to figure out if you're doing something that it thinks you shouldn't.  If it does, it limits functionality and in extreme cases restarts just the video subsystem.  We still don't know the exact details of all this, and how far-reaching it is, but it doesn't look good.

Microsoft put all those functionality-crippling features into Vista because it wants to own the entertainment industry.  This isn't how Microsoft spins it, of course.  It maintains that it has no choice, that it's Hollywood that is demanding DRM in Windows in order to allow "premium content" — meaning, new movies that are still earning revenue — onto your computer.  If Microsoft didn't play along, it'd be relegated to second-class status as Hollywood pulled its support for the platform.

It's all complete nonsense.  Microsoft could have easily told the entertainment industry that it was not going to deliberately cripple its operating system, take it or leave it.  With 95% of the operating system market, where else would Hollywood go?  Sure, Big Media has been pushing DRM, but recently some — Sony after their 2005 debacle and now EMI Group — are having second thoughts.

Go ahead, read the whole thing.  Learn where the bodies are buried, and what it means to you.