> We've had a couple decades for angry nerds ranting on the Internet to show results and it's hard to say that we've done anything.
I'd actually argue that we have. Sure, a lot of the mp3 stuff was Jobs, but I'd argue that the game was changed so that we can't do the same with mp3s. We downloaded mp3s, but we stream movies. Now, I think streaming is superior in many ways, and I'm not bashing it, but it did change the game.
Free software is becoming more and more common. Sure, it moves slower than proprietary software, but I'd argue that's a feature, not a bug. We now have MS open-sourcing a lot of stuff, and including bash in their stack. Apple is trying to become more open, and focus more on privacy. Linux is getting more games than ever.
I really view this new DRM scheme as a desperate attempt from a dying industry. And I do think eventually we'll look back, thinking it was absurd.
I'd actually argue that we have. Sure, a lot of the mp3 stuff was Jobs, but I'd argue that the game was changed so that we can't do the same with mp3s. We downloaded mp3s, but we stream movies. Now, I think streaming is superior in many ways, and I'm not bashing it, but it did change the game.
Free software is becoming more and more common. Sure, it moves slower than proprietary software, but I'd argue that's a feature, not a bug. We now have MS open-sourcing a lot of stuff, and including bash in their stack. Apple is trying to become more open, and focus more on privacy. Linux is getting more games than ever.
I really view this new DRM scheme as a desperate attempt from a dying industry. And I do think eventually we'll look back, thinking it was absurd.