If it is evolutionary, hopefully the "evolution" stops here - hopefully business and consumer will buy (vote) wisely.
I'm sure it will. Hollywood/RIAA are greedy bastards, that's a known fact. They however, are not stupid. If the majority of people really voice this discontent with DRM, then they will have to do something about it.
I would hope not ... but this may have grown out of control as it stands.
Again and again, Microsoft has influence on the PC hardware market. By supporting DRM in hardware, Microsoft is ensuring, no matter who invented HDCP, that future hardware will also have DRM features.
If Microsoft DIDN'T implement the HDCP standard, the consumer would miss out on (what's mostly DRMed Media at the moment) in the form of Blu-Ray and HD-DVD. Then their competitor would implement such a feature and recieve next to no bad press.
Microsoft is influential, but not nearly on the scale you're making them out to be.
Hollywood has substantial influence on the computer industry? That doesn't even make sense! No, media is moving over to computers more and more and if Microsoft chose not to propogate the monster called DRM, I am almost positive it would not be a reality for hollywood (Look Apple and others even offer non-DRM media even now). No hardware vendor sides with you on the issue of DRM in hardware - NOT ONE! Why do you think they are producing hardware with these standards in mind? Hollywood? Hell no! Microsoft will not allow these drivers and devices on Windows unless they implement the standards.
Microsoft is the most influential computer company on the computer industry,
not hollywood.
Again, and again, experiencing Vista or even DRM, does not make you kowledgeable of technical details or consequences of DRM. If you want to really learn the technical details you have to read the documentation or reverse engineer the details - none of this amounts to your claim that you must actually use Vista to understand technical details of DRM (that doesn't even make sense). We're not discussing how annoying DRM is to the user, we're discussing DRM on hardware ... no where does the article state anything about user perspectives of DRM; that wasn't the point of the article.
Of course it does, it goes into great detail on how content is degraded. What he fails to provide is the documentation from Microsoft from which he drew these conclusions.
He doesn't have to. I keep saying it...I've said it three times now! Understanding technical details of DRM does not entail experiencing DRM! Keep in mind, Peter Gutmann is world renowned cryptographer, he's more credible about DRM than anybody else from other fields because DRM is a cryptographic application - not a user experience!
In any case, I'd like to show you a 321 page document, from Microsoft, on
Windows Logo Devices and their requirements (which is cited in his original article!).
Look at the domain! It's from Microsoft.com highlighting everything he's claimed! And not only that, no one, as in NOBODY, from the cryptography field will side with you on DRM, even if you percieve it in a twisted way. It's threatening cryptography research.
Coupling this with the fact he's never booted Vista, how the hell does he expect people to believe him? He just uses loaded language and buzz words to get the headlines of gullible tech sites and blogs.
Because he's an expert in cryptography! Why do you think so many have published his claims! (which are all substantiated, and even cited, from an article he wrote called
"A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection")
This guy is being disproved all over the Internet. He had traces of truth in his article, but it is also ridden with a bunch of lies and rants.
If you say so. It seems a majority, in exception to Microsoft zealots, do not agree with you.
You may want to consider looking into this link: http://blogs.zdnet.com/Bott/?p=284
It contains rebuttals to small parts of his article and links to other articles which rip apart even more parts of his article.
I suggest you read the entire article Peter Gutmann wrote.
And you know what, he's so biased that he even describes ways for Microsoft to
improve DRM for the user!
If you take time to read the entire thing, you'll see that one by one his arguments and outrageous claims fall apart one by one.
Ed Bott is an award-winning technology writer with more than two decades' experience writing for mainstream media outlets and online publications. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.
Awesome, so he's credible about DRM because? How does being a technology writer make him an expert about cryptography and their applications in DRM, hardware, and performance/monetary costs? I'll read it with an open mind. Either way, you could be right and Gutmann wrong, but I'd sooner put my money down on him than some blogger. Over a span of time, I will personally read each and every page of that 321 page document.