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erik

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  • Nov 29, 2012 @ 12:46am

    Re: Re: I don't think this is accurate

    Is the B&N content that incredibly interesting that people will continue to be willing to put up with that? Authors want to get paid and readers want a fair and convenient deal. If B&N likes to shaft the readers, they will succomb to the temptation to shaft the authors too. Sooner or later they will end up alone, with only few authors to sell from and rather few readers to sell to ...

  • Nov 29, 2012 @ 12:45am

    Re: Re: I don't think this is accurate

    Is the B&N content that incredibly interesting that people will continue to be willing to put up with that? Authors want to get paid and readers want a fair and convenient deal. If B&N likes to shaft the readers, they will succomb to the temptation to shaft the authors too. Sooner or later they will end up alone, with only few authors to sell from and rather few readers to sell to ...

  • Nov 29, 2012 @ 12:45am

    Re: Re: I don't think this is accurate

    Is the B&N content that incredibly interesting that people will continue to be willing to put up with that? Authors want to get paid and readers want a fair and convenient deal. If B&N likes to shaft the readers, they will succomb to the temptation to shaft the authors too. Sooner or later they will end up alone, with only few authors to sell from and rather few readers to sell to ...

  • Nov 28, 2012 @ 11:37pm

    Whose property?

    One way or the other, DRM always ends up requiring that a particular piece of viewing equipment takes action against its owner.

    This amounts to a very serious violation of the equipment owner's property rights.

    It goes further than that. Since nobody will keep putting up with that kind of equipment, DRM also requires outlawing alternative devices.

    And even that is not the end of it. DRM eventually introduces the requirement to have full and continuous root-level control over other people's machines.

    DRM not only requires the own citizens to join up but it also requires bullying other countries into signing up to it. And all of this has to be enforced at gunpoint.

    So, eventually, pushed to the extreme, DRM assumes that a sufficient number of people can be found who are willing to die for someone else's profits. That is obviously where the bluff will end.