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So, what kind of DRM is/isn't reasonable and why?
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Are you being serious? Your "example" is ludicrous. I'm not disputing it's legitimacy but citing it as a widespread belief and also saying it's "no paranoid exaggeration" is contradictory. Maybe it's a widespread belief in Germany, as I don't live there I shall concede that. But it's not in the UK, where I live. I've used Linux for the last 7+ years exclusively whilst at the same time sorting out family and friends Windows computers (regularly!) and I've never once heard anything like that. Not once.
Ok, I understand what you're saying about lending or resale but then again, if there was no Steam on Linux you couldn't anyway as this game, for example, wouldn't exist on Linux! And it's not up to Steam whether you can lend the game, that's up to the developer. If they want you to lend the game they'll do a DRM free version. Even then I'm not sure many would be happy with you lending it! Isn't that unethical if it goes against their wishes?
No one is curtailing your freedom to decide what's happening with your computer - don't use Steam. It's not forced on you. Your distro will exist fine without Steam.
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Someone said in the other thread, that Steam's DRM is OK because you hardly notice it so it's "not intrusive". It reminds me a bizzare idea of one of the NSA surveillance defenders, that if you don't notice that your privacy is violated, then it's not violated. Do you really believe that to be correct? I consider that to be completely opposite. I.e. imagine a hidden camera which you don't notice most of the time so it doesn't bother you because it doesn't register in your mind. Is it "not intrusive" just because it spies on you staying out of your way? Not at all. Hidden camera is even worse precisely because you get comfortable with it.
Same goes for "non intrusive" DRM. It's much worse than "intrusive" one, because users stop paying attention to the fact that their privacy and security is violated. If you pay attention to comfort only, you forget about many other important issues.
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However, we'll have to disagree on Steam. I don't even see it as DRM. The whole point is that it isn't intrusive. Nothing is spying on me. Everything is up front. If a game tried to install "hidden" files or some kind of rootkit then I would be up in arms and wouldn't buy that game. I installed Steam for the functionality it offers, my choice.
I think your analogy is flawed - "imagine a hidden camera which you don't notice most of the time so it doesn't bother you because it doesn't register in your mind. Is it 'not intrusive' just because it spies on you staying out of your way?" - if it's a hidden camera then you wouldn't know it's there in the first place! So in that case it couldn't bother you or register in your mind ;) I am certainly NOT comfortable with the thought of hidden cameras (or hidden anything for that matter).
My privacy and security has not been violated with Steam.
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Hidden camera was used as an analogy of something not bothering you because you don't pay attention. It can be "partially hidden" or whatever. My point is, that "comfortable" DRM does not in any way mean that it doesn't violate your privacy. If anything - it's only worse, you because users relax and don't pay attention.
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Storytelling, both of us, I admit. And please note , that I'm going into 'devil's advocate mode' now.
Anyhow, Ed Robert's and later Bill Gates' accusations thrown at the Homebrew Club are not some stories, it's history.
There the whole narrative started,saying that free software was anti-commercial theft, committed by parasites.
This is the narrative that prevailed to this day and is indeed widespread in the minds of society.
You never heard the terms "freetards" and "communist" coined on Free Software communities in 2013?
Aren't "Hacker" public enemies today, second only to terrorists, jailed for using websites and devices in a way it wasn't intended?
Isn't Linux the OS of those hackers, who will steal your bank account as soon as you install it, because it is open?
Never assume that you and your personal surrounding has anything to do with what has been planted into the hearts and minds of society as a whole.
With accepting DRM you're not legitimizing all that but you add credibility to it.
You admit that taking away fundamental freedoms is ok for the cause of protection against said thieves and parasites.
It was, if they wouldn't call it "buying" and, more important, if it wasn't software.
Call it "lending" and reduce the price you're willing to pay accordingly and the first point is done.
The second point is by far more important.
Software by its very nature is nothing but the usage of the natural language of logic to describe the optimal path from an input to an output.
"If you smash a hammer on a nail, it will force it into the wall".
Now please respect my terms under which I allow your carpenter to do that or let him use a screwdriver instead, because I have written down the hammer method.
I buy a hammer, I pay for a carpenter, but that's not what DRM is all about.
DRM prohibits me from learning the method, or lending the product to a friend. They freaking jail people for opening a phone case.
Any wonder a geek with strong ethics cries foul?
Again, as with lying, there are good reasons to decide against strict ethics, but you should never be inconsiderate about it.
Or let Monsanto and BASF tell you what to do in your garden and then tell the people, that's just alright and nothing to worry about.
It's convenient after all.
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I'm with you on most of what you say, no customer actually likes DRM.
But you say "How do you know that Steam DRM is not spying on you, for example when you run the Steam client?". Well the answer, of course, is that I don't know. So by the same token, you don't know that your "DRM free" binary game isn't spying on you! Do you see where this is going?
A healthy dose of paranoia is good but if you take your argument to a logical conclusion then you should never run a single binary, ever. You can't pick and choose which binaries you don't trust, without evidence, to suit your argument. It's none or all.
I take great issue with DRM and I have no issue with running Steam as things stand now. That could change in the future but as it stands now I'm not that paranoid.
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I actually don't like DRM, really, never have. I'm certainly not trying to defend DRM in any way. See my last reply to Shmerl, above - I don't understand the phobia regarding Steam, that is all, which is where all this started.
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That's my point. Comparing DRM and just closed binary is not proper, since DRM is built on the insulting premise of considering you a potential criminal by default. Closed binary doesn't imply anything like that (at least by default).
So attitude towards DRM should be symmetrically more distrustful by default. That was my main point. Since the whole logic behind DRM is always not even economical, but some kind of perverted thirst for control, violation of your privacy and security should be always expected to a higher degree than simply not trusting a closed code.
But that's about opposing DRM on pragmatic grounds (security and so on). Even more so it should be opposed on ethical grounds as being overreaching preemptive policing. It's like opposing abusive practices of a police state in essence. Also, since DRM is a direct cause for sick DMCA 1201 like laws, I see a point in opposing all forms of it, and not picking "comfortable" vs "not comfortable" ones, which doesn't send the right message at all.
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