Felix Stalder on Fri, 2 Jul 2004 13:03:35 +0200 (CEST) |
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<nettime> EU sponsors pro-DRM PR |
This is an excerpt from the excellent EDRi (European Digital Rights) newsletter. <...> ============================================================ 4. EU initiative to make DRM more acceptable ============================================================ The European Commission has funded a new project to make Digital Rights Management more acceptable to consumers. INDICARE (the Informed Dialogue about Consumer Acceptability of DRM Solutions in Europe) is distributing its first e-mail newsletter this week. The newsletter includes links to articles on the INDICARE website that are conceived as the starting point for online discussions. Under the E-Content programme 2003-2004 1 million euro is allocated for 'accompanying measures' like community building. DRM-technology is seen by both the Commission and the (multi-)national entertainment industry as the best solution to control copyrights in a digital environment. Civil rights organisations, data protection authorities and consumer unions however are not very keen on giving complete control over their reading, listening and watching habits to industrial parties. Initiatives to integrate DRM in both hard- and software, like the TCPA initiative, have strongly been criticised for violating fundamental freedoms of computer and internet usage. Apparently, the Commission believes there is nothing fundamentally wrong with the idea, it only needs some better public relations. The first few articles on the website painfully illustrate how arrogant the industry is currently thinking about citizens as passive consumers. The report 'A bite from the apple' about a DRM-conference in New York in April 2004, describes how DRM was re-defined as 'Digital Richness Management' by a representative from RightsCom, leaving no doubt about the destination of that wealth. The report continues: "It was interesting to note that no representatives of consumer organisations or other institutions representing the consumer side were present at the conference. Invisible also were interest groups representing the interests of consumers as citizens in access to information services and infrastructure under affordable, reasonable conditions, and under conditions that respect further public interest objectives. (...) It was even more interesting to note that some of the conference participants clearly welcomed this situation. As Josh Hug, Development Manager at RealNetworks Inc. put it: "Consumers are not represented here, perhaps that is good. They do not have to be. They have already enough power." Indicare website http://www.indicare.org Ross Anderson Trusted Computing FAQ (august 2003) http://www.cl.cam.ac.uk/~rja14/tcpa-faq.html European Commission Communication on the Management of Copyright and Related Rights (16.04.2004) http://www.europa.eu.int/comm/internal_market/en/intprop/docs/com-2004-261_en.pdf <...> ============================================================ 15. About ============================================================ EDRI-gram is a bi-weekly newsletter about digital civil rights in Europe. Currently EDRI has 16 members from 11 European countries. European Digital Rights takes an active interest in developments in the EU accession countries and wants to share knowledge and awareness through the EDRI-grams. All contributions, suggestions for content or agenda-tips are most welcome. Except where otherwise noted, this newsletter is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution 2.0 License. See the full text at http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ Newsletter editor: Sjoera Nas <edrigram@edri.org> Information about EDRI and its members: http://www.edri.org/ - EDRI-gram subscription information subscribe by e-mail To: edri-news-request@edri.org Subject: subscribe You will receive an automated e-mail asking to confirm your request. unsubscribe by e-mail To: edri-news-request@edri.org Subject: unsubscribe - EDRI-gram in Russian, Ukrainian and Italian EDRI-gram is also available in Russian, Ukrainian and Italian, a few days after the English edition. The contents are the same. Translations are provided by Sergei Smirnov, Human Rights Network, Russia; Privacy Ukraine and autistici.org, Italy The EDRI-gram in Russian can be read on-line via http://www.hro.org/editions/edri/ The EDRI-gram in Ukrainian can be read on-line via http://www.internetrights.org.ua/index.php?page=edri-gram The EDRI-gram in Italian can be read on-line via http://www.autistici.org/edrigram/ - Newsletter archive Back issues are available at: http://www.edri.org/cgi-bin/index?funktion=edrigram - Help Please ask <admin@edri.org> if you have any problems with subscribing or unsubscribing. ============================================================ Publication of this newsletter is made possible by a grant from the Open Society Institute (OSI). ============================================================ ----+-------+---------+--- http://felix.openflows.org # distributed via <nettime>: no commercial use without permission # <nettime> is a moderated mailing list for net criticism, # collaborative text filtering and cultural politics of the nets # more info: majordomo@bbs.thing.net and "info nettime-l" in the msg body # archive: http://www.nettime.org contact: nettime@bbs.thing.net