Yale Daily News

Updated: Saturday, November 22, 2008 at 3:25pm

Xu: How and why DRM has failed

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Contributing Reporter
Published Wednesday, October 1, 2008
I download music illegally. I tried to be legal, to buy my CDs and use the online music stores legally. I want to support the bands whose music I enjoy. But the very thing the music companies use to protect themselves from piracy — Digital Rights Management — pushed me into the murky waters of the black market.
#1 By (Anonymous) 8:41am on October 1, 2008

Agreed that DRM is a flawed, unsustainable, and nigh unethical business practice. It's good that this is being recognized in public discourse.

Ultimately, though, the most effective response is probably to vote with your wallet: refuse to "buy" any DRM-tainted data. For music, try shifting loyalties to a company like amazon, which offers its songs as simple mp3's.

#2 By Anon (Unregistered User) 10:37am on October 1, 2008

You aren't getting your music on the "black market." You're stealing it. (But you're not paying someone else for it.)

#3 By I CANNOT AGREE MORE! (Unregistered User) 3:44pm on October 1, 2008

Personal Experience:

I have purchased about $150 worth of music from iTunes. One day I log into iTunes and for whatever reason it requires me to activate the music (even though it should already have been activated). However, even though I kept on activating the "locked" music with my account (and it kept on displaying the "music activated" message), I couldn't access my music. iTunes Customer Service took 10 Weeks to determine the bug and fix my access, and I couldn't listen to any of my songs for that length of time.

Although I already knew DRM was terrible, after that firsthand experience I'm never going to legally download a song and not remove the DRM again. I recommend programs like M4P Converter, which will remove DRM from a computer without the hassel of actually burning a cd (it virtually burns the cd on your computer).

I'm not "stealing" anything Anon!!! DRM does not keep people from stealing -- individuals who want to steal will use BitTorrent sites. I'm merely opening up access for my own PERSONAL USE.

People who want to steal will find a way to steal but DRM merely keeps honest people like myself from being able to access their music.

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