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Home Blog All Party Internet Group and the rise of Digital Rights Management
All Party Internet Group and the rise of Digital Rights Management
Written by Alex Singleton   
Thursday, 12 January 2006

I was encouraged to make a submission to the UK Parliament's All Party Internet Group which is conducting an inquiry into "digital rights management" (DRM). DRM is, in theory, a way of protecting digital content like music and movies, preventing it from being shared over the internet.

The problem with DRM, as I explain in my brief submission, is that it does not work. All it does is annoy ordinary consumers who find themselves being locked into a particular vendor's products.

I conclude by saying:

As consumers get hurt by DRM, they will be increasingly vocal against it. There will be TV programmes featuring consumers who have spent £2000 on music from the iTunes Music Store and lost it all when their hard disk crashed. Consumers will ultimately rebel. There will be boycotts of DRM-protected music. DRM will be removed.

Download the submission (PDF)

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