Wait... let me get this straight. You're comparing circumventing copy protection to blowing up planes. I'm sorry but I don't believe they are comparable and also people don't avoid blowing up planes because its a crime. Now let me counter your points on DRM. The recent revision to the AACS protection was cracked a week before it came out therefore it is not alive and well. It is actually on deaths doorstep if we are using metaphors. Also, circumventing copy protection can land you in jail for more than a year especially if your distributing large quantities and yet this is still not stopping anyone. In fact I think that copied movies are more common today then they were 5 years ago from major distributors. I live in NY and I see this everyday and with amounts that would easily land anyone in jail. Finally, copy protection is not circumvented because it is free to do. It is circumvented because people want the freedom to do what they please with the media that they purchased, whether those decisions are morally and legally right or wrong.
Reader Comments (Page 1 of 1)
K3ViN187 @ May 18th 2007 11:52PM
Wait... let me get this straight. You're comparing circumventing copy protection to blowing up planes. I'm sorry but I don't believe they are comparable and also people don't avoid blowing up planes because its a crime. Now let me counter your points on DRM. The recent revision to the AACS protection was cracked a week before it came out therefore it is not alive and well. It is actually on deaths doorstep if we are using metaphors. Also, circumventing copy protection can land you in jail for more than a year especially if your distributing large quantities and yet this is still not stopping anyone. In fact I think that copied movies are more common today then they were 5 years ago from major distributors. I live in NY and I see this everyday and with amounts that would easily land anyone in jail. Finally, copy protection is not circumvented because it is free to do. It is circumvented because people want the freedom to do what they please with the media that they purchased, whether those decisions are morally and legally right or wrong.