Apple's new MacBooks have built-in copy protection measures

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  • Reply 61 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by rhowarth View Post


    Well, if you buy a Wall-E DVD there are still plenty of things you CAN'T do with it, like project it on a big screen and charge people to watch it, rent it out for money, copy it, etc.



    I'd edited my reply further above to incorporate my response to that: you can do these things, but not legally. Those choice to abide or break those laws is still yours to make.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by rhowarth View Post


    And your argument that if you buy a digital copy of a movie you should be able to do with it what you like breaks down also with a very simple counterexample: supposing you RENT a movie from a digital store? What you do is exactly the same, you download file, and have a copy of some digital bits on your hard drive. Sure, you can delete that file if you want, but if the DRM enforces conditions such as you can only decrypt and play the movie once, you can only play it for 7 days from time of purchase, etc. then presumably you wouldn't complain too much because you knew what you were getting. In both cases the situation is the same. You're not "buying the movie" but buying the right to do something specific (play a movie in a particular way on a particular machine, play a movie in a particular way on a particular machine for a particular amount of time).



    The problem is that collectively we're transferring the concept of "buying" or "renting" a physical DVD and extrapolating that to a digital copy but the situation is very different. It's much more akin to purchasing a license for software.



    I could write some software and grant you a license to use it subject to any conditions I care to impose. Perhaps there's an annual or monthly license fee. Perhaps you're limited to how many users can use it or how many transactions per second you can perform or how big an image file you can process. That surely is up to me (though clearly, you don't have to purchase the software under those license terms if you don't want to).



    What people selling digital content (whether software or movies or anything else) SHOULD be required to do, however, is make it VERY clear what you are or are not purchasing. Don't make people think they're "buying a movie" the same way they buy a DVD and can do with it what they want (such as playing it through a VGA projector) if you're not actually going to let them do that as that's false advertising. The iTunes Store, and other digital stores too of course, should be forced to have a big warning sticker saying RESTRICTED RIGHTS on the purchase page (which links to a summary page that says exactly what you are and are not allowed to do with that copy).



    There are a number of great points in here rhowarth, and my argument is that not that DRM is wrong - ideally, I want a reasonable solution that respects the rights of the copyright holder, but at the same time does not limit legitimate consumers from consuming media in the way they see fit. I just feel that the current solution is too simply too restrictive.



    In your renting example, the intent is clear. You download a movie, and (like a physical copy), you only have it for a limited period of time, after which it presumably expires. But I've known some DRM that restricts the number of times you can play it, some even at one. I don't remember any DVDs I've rented and wasn't able to skip back a chapter! I've also rented movies where I didn't get time to watch it during the rental period, and returned it late (paid a late fee). A digitally rented does not support this ability, and while I should have watched it and returned it on time, I had the choice not to. Such a choice has been removed during the transition to digital media, and that's where my issues lie.
  • Reply 62 of 246
    teckstudteckstud Posts: 6,476member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by pt123 View Post


    Well, if you want to get more cynical, Steve Jobs is the largest individual shareholder of Disney.



    ANd DIsney was/is one of the major proponents of MAcroVision, etal.
  • Reply 63 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sflocal View Post


    This is the sign of the times boys. Get over it. Yes, a huge amount of people are going to be inconvenienced by this since a majority of users do not have HDCP-compliant equipment. This is certainly nothing new and if anything, Apple is one of the last folks to be forced (??) to get on the bandwagon if the studios are to allow their media to be distributed via iTunes.



    You can gripe and moan all you want. Anything digital is going to have this kind of lock-down. HD TV's have them, HDMI equipment, DVI, etc.



    If this means you will never buy Apple again, then by all means... go to an alternative vendor then. Oh wait... they do it too and they have been doing it far longer than Apple has. Quite possible, Apple arguably may have implemented it in a way that is not a major headache compared to the other solutions offered by other systems.



    Everyone is beating a dead horse here folks. I don't like it any more than anyone else. Fortunately, most of my equipment is already HDCP-compliant and has been that way for a couple years now.



    But I feel your pain. I raise my glass for a goodbye-toast to an era now past.



    Everyone knows these measures simply encourage people to using torrents to find material they want. Another short-sighted move.
  • Reply 64 of 246
    teckstudteckstud Posts: 6,476member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by TenoBell View Post


    I was going to say also this is the same deal for Blu-ray, what are you all so surprised about.



    That it's coming from the hardware not the disc itself.
  • Reply 65 of 246
    pxtpxt Posts: 683member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by sausage&Onion View Post


    Well, this a another phenomenal reason to avoid ITMS and just use netflix. If netflix gets their act together and start streaming even more material, they are going to bury iTunes. I can't really say Im gonna miss it either...



    "...from November 19th, users of the updated Xbox Experience will be able to access both standard and high-definition streams in the same way as owners of Roku?s Netflix box can. However depending on your Xbox 360 setup, you may find yourself frustrated; Netflix are insisting on HDCP protection for the digital connection..."



    http://www.slashgear.com/netflix-on-...ction-3020852/
  • Reply 66 of 246
    And this time Apple is one of the promoters.



    Bad move Apple unless you want to be the next M$ !
  • Reply 67 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by PXT View Post


    In the same way that we all pay a theft-tax on clothes, because of the people that leave stores without paying, those of us that pay for legal content pay a piracy-tax, because of people that download/copy content illegally.



    So, if we want to minimize that piracy tax, we need DRM - both on files and on cables. The problem is that the definition of fair use needs to be updated to match a world of digial content and the internet, such that piracy is thwarted, but users can get their fair use.



    Until there is a major programme to review the electronic landscape, classify devices ( distributors, downloaders, players, etc ) and redefine fair use so that is implementable with common technology, pirates will rip-off the content-owners, who will pass the cost onto us non-criminals.



    Not only do we pay more for our content, but I know that the cost of each iPod in Europe includes a piracy-tax applied to the price. Also there is a human cost: we saw the content companies convince the police to go into people's homes and arrest housewives and teenagers during the Napster years, now the border guards are searching through our laptops and iPods.



    Until then, DRM doesn't work, and DRM-free doesn't work.



    ( Steve Jobs for CTO ? )





    Right argument, wrongly applied...



    I don't care either way, I have never bought from ITMS and never will. Whilst it is still much cheaper to actually pick up a CD, even with pressing, printing, materials and transport I will continue to do so.





    if the general populous want to start a serious uprising then you all need to stop buying the affected content and ALL of you need to torrent download whatever you like.



    The weight of a protest like that would soon make all of the industry change their minds and force them to meaningful debate. It is easy to go after small groups of uploaders but a mass move to illegal downloading could never ever be combated.



    Once the debate is done though and drm free is the norm then torrenting movies must never return..



    power to the people.





    Apple suck at this sort of thing worse than MS...
  • Reply 68 of 246
    These DRM restrictions and hardware issues with external monitors are just disgraceful and infuriating. I have a brand new MacBook and I have experienced both the restriction on playing downloaded material and general display problems on my external monitor.



    I won't be buying anything from iTunes from now on. I hope Apple fixes the monitor issue quickly (along with the Bluetooth issues I and other new MacBook owners have been having). This is just so disappointing that Apple would sell a product in this state.
  • Reply 69 of 246
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by teckstud View Post


    That it's coming from the hardware not the disc itself.



    Not likely. The DRM is implanted in the media file. Its possible to play other iTunes video files over VGA. Just not some of the HD movies.
  • Reply 70 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Johnny Mozzarella View Post


    This means your are not a consumer and not part of their target market.





    Sounds like a lot of hoops to jump through just to get DVD quality video for FREE.





    I'm a fan too and if HDCP means I can BUY HD movies on my Mac then I am OK with it.

    I'm sure Steve would love to give us DRM free HD movies, but there is no way the studios will go for it.



    no its quite fun actually, getting the exact settings, quality you want. Crikey I sound like a linux geek.



    and...



    if you really believe that Jobs wants to give us DRM free movies then you are living in Dreamland!!



    he's the biggest individual shareholder in Disney........



    with Jobs you have to remember he isn't 2 faced...he has more than that. I bet you believe that what he says on stage is true and what he actually means...!



    who reaches around who by the way...?
  • Reply 71 of 246
    bageljoeybageljoey Posts: 2,008member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by tibbsy View Post


    @Bageljoey, Leonard and others who have respectfully argued against:

    All of your counterexamples are not true. You CAN do all of the things you've mentioned (except Leonard's region example): you just can't do them legally. You are not supposed to.



    That's, again, my point here: I never said it was legal, or right/wrong. Exactly as you mention in your own example, my issue is that those decisions are being taken away from the consumer: in scenario 3 your choice has been made for you. In scenario 1 and 2, you still have that choice. Your ability to choose how to use things, whether legal or not, is being eroded. You're not supposed to speed while driving, you're not supposed to be reading and replying on a AI forum during work hours, but we're not agreeing that the choice to do these things should be left to us?



    OK, but I think you are changing your argument here. Let me quote from your original post:

    Quote:

    DRM woefully restricts rights you should have to something that you pay money for and thus (theoretically) own.



    and

    Quote:

    I just think that when I buy the songs in a digital-only format, I should be able to treat them like songs I own on CDs.



    These quotes indicate that you feel ownership of the copyrighted material that you have only bought the restricted rights to.

    Your new argument is that legality is not an issue and that nobody has any right to restrict your ability to choose to break the law. You can make that argument, but you start to look silly doing it...
  • Reply 72 of 246
    So this means that the only time I'd run into this is if I try to watch something through a VGA port converter, right? Since if you were on a machine that has a DVI or HDMI or DisplayPort connection and you are connecting it to a DVI monitor (like, but not exclusive to, the last gen Apple Monitors) or a Flatscreen TV (with either DVI or HDMI) or the new Apple monitors (with DisplayPort), then you'll be fine? What's the problem? It's not like the movies didn't have DRM to begin with. They had regulated where and how you moved the files as well as how many copies you could make.



    The way people all over the web were ranting was making it sound like you needed a new apple monitor when really all you need is a DisplayPort to HDMI or DVI connector since they all are HDCP compatible. If DVI doesn't work for you, then it's time to by a new monitor.



    Here's some help....



    Welcome to the pervious generation...
  • Reply 73 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by pt123 View Post


    Well, if you want to get more cynical, Steve Jobs is the largest individual shareholder of Disney.



    dang beat me to it...



    with Jobs I am more cynical than anyone!!



    iCon...
  • Reply 74 of 246
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by zcam View Post


    . I won't be buying anything from iTunes from now on. I hope Apple fixes the monitor issue quickly (along with the Bluetooth issues I and other new MacBook owners have been having). This is just so disappointing that Apple would sell a product in this state.



    Unfortunately experiencing bugs goes along with the risk of buying brand new build of hardware. Their have been many on this list who've said they will wait until the second build of the MacBook's to buy one. Because by that point Apple should have shaken out the bugs.
  • Reply 75 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by tibbsy View Post


    @Bageljoey, Leonard and others who have respectfully argued against:

    All of your counterexamples are not true. You CAN do all of the things you've mentioned (except Leonard's region example): you just can't do them legally. You are not supposed to.



    That's, again, my point here: I never said it was legal, or right/wrong. Exactly as you mention in your own example, my issue is that those decisions are being taken away from the consumer: in scenario 3 your choice has been made for you. In scenario 1 and 2, you still have that choice. Your ability to choose how to use things, whether legal or not, is being eroded. You're not supposed to speed while driving, you're not supposed to be reading and replying on a AI forum during work hours, but we're not agreeing that the choice to do these things should be left to us?



    I don't see the benefit of allowing people to choose whether to act legally or not, if there's an effective way to simply compel legal behavior. Laws are not passed in order to make people better, or give them fodder for exercising their free will in a self-actualizing manner, or whatever you have in mind. The purpose of laws is to remove choice, not create it. Again, our perception of legal and illegal behavior as two possible courses of action that present us with choices does not accord with the rationale or motives behind legislation. It's a side effect.



    Besides which, if you're just talking about people having choices, you've talked yourself into a corner, because the technology you're upset about was also created by people exercising their choices. If it's all about choice, then the entities with the resources and power (read: corporations) will exercise their choices at the expense of the entities with fewer resources and less power (read: individual consumers).
  • Reply 76 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by InsideApple View Post


    And this time Apple is one of the promoters.



    Bad move Apple unless you want to be the next M$ !







    Apple were/are way ahead of MS on this one....
  • Reply 77 of 246
    tenobelltenobell Posts: 7,014member
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Archipellago View Post


    if the general populous want to start a serious uprising then you all need to stop buying the affected content and ALL of you need to torrent download whatever you like.



    I can agree. Not buying DRM content is the best protest you can make against it. But unfortunately most people don't care so it may not make much difference.





    Quote:

    Apple suck at this sort of thing worse than MS...



    Windows adopted HDCP right away. MS has developed about 5 different DRM schemes within Windows itself. Apple only has 1.



    I'm sure this is a concession Apple had to make to get HD content onto iTunes.
  • Reply 78 of 246
    MarvinMarvin Posts: 15,481moderator
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by jawadde View Post


    That or DVD-jon will break DHCP.



    But we'll run out of IP addresses.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by jawadde View Post


    i'm not worried at all about this technology : they'll never learn



    Very true.



    All they are doing is hurting legitimate sales more. It's like teaching a kid by putting up a mild barrier to doing something. This presents nothing more than a challenge/rebellion of unwanted authority.



    Chances are that removing the challenge wouldn't really change anything. People tend not to steal digital content because they like to steal. People steal digital content for convenience and freedom. DRM removes convenience and freedom and you have to pay for the privilege.



    I always found that funny about the copyright notices. They make legitimate buyers sit through that crap on every single movie, every time you put the movie in the player. Even VLC skips past it but people who steal the film get the best experience. No feeling of regret when they discover the utter waste of money it was paying for the drivel Hollywood churns out.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Leonard


    Didn't we want HDCP compliant displays and the software and hardware to handle this, so that we could watch Blu-Ray movies???



    I think the expectation was that it would enable playback of HDCP movies without restrictions.



    Quote:
    Originally Posted by PXT


    What MAY change, is that we could see a major increase of content in iTunes.



    And nobody buying it. I think HDCP will be a major drawback for HD content. Think what people have to go through to support it. New players/computers, new displays, more expensive discs all for what? A slightly sharper image. Are people really unhappy with DVD quality? My view is it's about the content and not the quality. I can quite happily watch video in ipod 320 x 240 format.



    This move to HDCP will not change my future Mac purchases, it will just mean I don't buy from itunes, which I don't do now - I rent DVDs - and I won't feel the urgency to buy Blu-Ray discs, new displays etc. In 5 years when movies start being HD-only, then I'll see what options they have then and pick what is most convenient for me.
  • Reply 79 of 246
    If you think this is a ridiculously bad business choice on Apple's part then you need to let them know. Apple has always been fairly responsible when it comes to DRM, but this is completely unacceptable. They are putting their customers second to big content, and the only way they'll stop is if we let them know how bad a decision it was for them.



    Everyone, go to this feedback page and let them know what you think about their new HDCP support:

    http://www.apple.com/feedback/macbook.html
  • Reply 80 of 246
    Quote:
    Originally Posted by Marvin View Post


    This move to HDCP will not change my future Mac purchases, it will just mean I don't buy from itunes, which I don't do now - I rent DVDs - and I won't feel the urgency to buy Blu-Ray discs, new displays etc. In 5 years when movies start being HD-only, then I'll see what options they have then and pick what is most convenient for me.



    I'm with you 100%.
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