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Transcript of SFP#1 on Day Against DRM with Cory Doctorow

Back to the episode SFP#1

This is a transcript created with the Free Software tool Whisper. For more information and feedback reach out to podcast@fsfe.org

WEBVTT

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Welcome to the first episode of the Software Freedom Podcast.

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Starting with this episode, we will talk once a month with people who have inspiring

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ideas about software freedom.

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This podcast is presented to you by the Free Software Foundation Europe.

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We are a charity that empowers users to control technology.

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My name is Matthias Kirschner, and I'm the president of the FSFE.

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And my name is Katharina Okun.

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I am a writer and digital rights activist, bass, and Berlin.

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When we were planning the first episode, we exchanged some ideas for possible guests.

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And when I heard that the day against DRM will this year take place in October, I directly

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thought we have to get Cory Doctoro as our first guest, and we have to talk with him

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about digital restriction management.

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I think they are just very few people that inspired so many people from our community like

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Cory did.

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For those listeners who don't know him, Cory Doctoro is a British-Canadian writer and

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political activist, and he is the co-editor of Boeing Boeing Net.

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He is a prominent supporter of the idea of software freedom, and he is fighting for a less restrictive

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copyright law.

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His books are published under Creative Commons licenses.

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These science fiction novels of Cory are all strongly connected to the debates on technology

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and regulation.

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What I like about his books is that they address complex issues such as software freedom,

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copyright, digital restriction management, or privacy in an unconventional way.

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So even someone who has never thought about these topics before, they can follow him.

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And at the same time as someone who is active in those fields for a long time, you always

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find interesting ways how to explain these topics better to others.

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As a privacy activist, my favorite book of Cory is, of course, Little Brother.

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The book was published in 2008 and tells the story of four teenagers from San Francisco

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who experience how society is more and more transformed into a surveillance state after

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a terrorist attack.

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Together with our friends, these teenagers start an underground campaign for defending

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civil liberties against the Department of Homeland Security.

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I don't want to spoil you, but I like the end very much.

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What do you like most about the book?

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Definitely the way how Cory described how the protagonists of a story circumvent surveillance

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technology were very simple hacks.

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For example, right in the beginning, there is a passage where they explain how to trick

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an intelligent surveillance camera that can recognize people based on how they walk.

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They simply put small stones in their shoes in order to change their walking patterns.

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And by the way, did you know that at what's known, had a copy of Little Brother prominently

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placed in his hotel room in Hong Kong when he did his first interviews for the documentary

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Citizen Four?

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I guess this was his way of telling the world.

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If you want to understand why I did this, please read this book.

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And you definitely should read this book if you haven't read it already.

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It's a fantastic book.

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What's your favorite book?

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I like Little Brother.

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I like Homeland, but at the moment, it's unauthorized spread his new book.

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And in this book, Salima, who's a refugee, she lives in the U.S. and she's in the situation

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that her toaster refuses to toast her bread for her one morning.

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She finds out that the company, the manufacturer of the toaster, they went bankrupt and their

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servers are down.

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So the toaster, which before always checked if you can toast this bread or not, which is

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authorized or not, those others aren't there anymore.

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So she's not able to toast the bread, which is authorized as well as any other toast.

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Oh my God.

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She doesn't stop there.

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So she continues to investigate and finds out that there are others with the same problem

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and that they fleshed other software on those toasters and then they could toast any

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bread they want.

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So she also does that and enjoys this new freedom.

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And she helps other people in this building and shows them how they can modify their devices

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and they all enjoy buying bread they want or baking bread and toasting it.

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So she's very happy about this development, how she can help others around her to also

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benefit from modifications there.

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Later, it turns out that well, what she did was illegal.

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They are not allowed to make changes to the software there on those devices in the building

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and there are legal threats about this.

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And I don't want to spoil you too much.

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So read the book, but this part it reminded me about when we at the FSFE helped others

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in our free Android campaign to flesh software on their mobile phones.

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So use free software there and get rid of some restrictions they had on their mobile phones

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before.

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Seeing how people react towards that and how happy they are with those devices, but on

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the same hand also seeing that modifying software on devices is getting harder and harder

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in some areas.

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What do you think makes Corrie's story so special?

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For me, it's that he has those role models in his books like in Little Brother, you have

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Marcus and Angela who don't accept that technology just restricts them.

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They get active themselves and they make changes to technology and defend civil liberties.

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And now with an authorized bread, the special part there is that Salima is a refugee.

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She's in a bad situation there, but she doesn't accept that.

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She changes things and tries to improve her situation for herself and for others.

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It's very important that you have such role models for younger people in our society,

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for underprivileged people in our societies.

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So that's why I like this book a lot and the characters in there.

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So I hope you all understand now why we instantly agreed on Corrie Dockro as the perfect guest

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for the first episode of the software freedom podcast.

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We are very excited to have them with us today and talk with them about this new book

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and digital restriction management.

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Welcome, Corrie.

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Thank you very much for being with us today.

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So you want said that the idea for your book, an authorized bread was based on an article

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you wrote back in 2015 for the Guardian.

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The title was, if dishwasher were iPhones.

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Can you explain what this article was about?

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For many years, I'd heard from people to say that it was no real imposition for Apple

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to have created this world garden business model where in order to use a device they sold

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you, you had to also let them decide which software you could use.

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And they made all kinds of arguments about why this was legitimate.

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They said it kept you safe.

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They said it protected software authors from copyright infringement.

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They said that it simplified the paradox of choice and so on.

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And it seemed to me that if all of that was actually true, then they could have just

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had a little tick box that said, actually, I'd prefer to choose my own software rather

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than relying on Apple to make that choice for me.

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And it also seemed to be belied by the fact that Apple had tightened the screws many

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times.

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They had changed the guidelines about what kind of apps you could have.

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So they had unilaterally decided that some software authors expression was not lawful

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for inclusion in the app store.

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We had most notoriously someone who'd made an app that kept track of drone strikes that

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the US government launched and specifically the civilian death count from those drone strikes.

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And Apple had repeatedly excluded that from the app store.

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And so it seemed to me that if this was something people really liked, they would have just

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opted for it.

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But instead, you know, between the drone strikes and the people who kept trying to create

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independent software stores and the users who kept trying to drill jailbreak their phones,

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it was pretty clear that actually software vendors and software authors and iPhone owners

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were many of them not very happy with this at all.

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And the common rejoinder was, well, then why are they in the iPhone ecosystem?

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They should be choosing a different platform.

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And that argument all seemed very inadequate to me.

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And so I thought, you know, there are plenty of other appliances that you could make this

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argument about.

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And specifically, dishwashers are a really good example because the most dangerous thing

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you can do really is eat bad food.

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Foodborne illness has killed more people than anything else in the history of the world.

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And certainly there's a lot of people who make their living from coming up with independent

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dishware designs who then have to contend with copycats who clone their dishes and so

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on.

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And I thought every one of these arguments would apply equally well to dishwashers.

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And so I wrote this little fake letter from Steve Jobs like CEO to his customers explaining

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why they should stop trying to put non authorized dishes in their special fancy dishwashers.

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And how these special fancy dishwashers had been exquisitely calibrated to reduce water

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wastage and ensure that foodborne illnesses were eliminated and to reward people who made

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dishes and to give them, you know, the incentives they needed to continue to innovate in flatware

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and dishes and so on.

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And I wrote this essay and what was interesting to me about it at the in the moment was just

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how many iOS users failed to get the joke and instead acted like an affronted religious

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minority whose sacred texts had just been mocked.

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And then subsequently, how close that rhetoric ended up hewing to internet of things device

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companies.

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So, you know, if you listen to the rhetoric from the likes of the, you know, the founder

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of juice, Sarah, which is the company that made the juice squeezers that use DRM to fruit

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or the rhetoric from other IoT companies, you know, they all made essentially those arguments.

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You know, this is pose law that satire is indistinguishable from reality and in undermodern

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conditions.

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And so, you know, that turned into unauthorized bread or at least the proximate instigation

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for writing unauthorized bread.

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This idea that there really wasn't any reason given the internet of things not to turn

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everything into an iOS style app store for the clothes that a wash in your washing machine

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and the dishes that a wash in your dishwasher and the bread that will toast in your toaster.

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This month's stay against the RM focuses on ebooks.

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What does the difference between a book and an ebook with DRM?

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Well, a book is something that actually has a somewhat nebulous definition.

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If you think back on the history of books, all of the things that we might say would be,

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you know, critical to defining a book actually are not present in some pretty important examples.

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So for example, we might say that a book has to have a spine.

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It has to be a codex that is to say shaped like a book as we know it today.

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But you know, the Torah, which is one of the first and most widely published books in the

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history of the world, originally was a scroll that didn't have a spine and we still call

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it a book.

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Or we might say that a book needs to have writing or pictures in it, but we have blank

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books.

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So we might say that a book has to cost something, but you know, the most widely available

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books in the world are free, you know, Bibles and copies of the little red book and so on.

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So book is a pretty expansive category.

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Certainly electronically, we've expanded the definition of books by blowing up some

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of the physical constraints that were associated with them, you know, Wikipedia I think qualifies

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as an electronic book.

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And so do, you know, I just downloaded a PDF last week for Dungeons and Dragons, Game Masters

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who want to ensure that they have consent from their players for situations that might

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be emotionally difficult for them.

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And that book was eight pages long.

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And it's hard to imagine a printed book that's eight pages long.

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And so we've eliminated the length constraints, we've eliminated some of the media constraints,

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we have books with moving images and audio and so on.

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But once you add DRM, something really changes, because although books are very ancient

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and although books are seriously something that is part of our cultural heritage and how

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we identify as a culture, you know, when when you want to show a civilization that's

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falling apart, you just show pictures of books on fire, you know, anytime someone piles

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up a bunch of books and sets them on fire, you can be pretty sure that nothing good is

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going to come of that.

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But a lot of that covenant that goes around books, that is that is critical to what we think

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of when we think of a book, is not present in an ebook.

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So books are older than copyright and they're also older than commerce.

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And they're certainly older than the idea of the unitary author.

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The first books were conglomerates of text by multiple authors bound up together.

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And the way that you would contribute to authorship was by, you know, copying out some of those

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passages and then adding some of your own or finding other passages that seem relevant

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to you and so on.

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All of those things are part of the ancient compact that makes books so valuable, so important,

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so so enduring.

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But once you add DRM to a book, those things that were historically part of the natural

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life of a book, whether that's having the book read aloud or being able to give away

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the book or being able to lend the book or being able to tear passages out of a book

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that offend you, all of those things just disappear.

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And instead, what you end up with is a book that is regulated first by legal code, usually

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by a license agreement that sometimes even longer than the book itself, especially when

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you factor in the sub license agreements associated with the e-reader and the operating

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system and so on, you might end up with 100,000 words of legal use that you're expected

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to understand in order to operate the book within the confines of the law.

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And then you have technical strictures that actually prevent you from deciding which

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e-reader you're going to read the book on, from deciding whether or not you're going

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to transfer the ownership of that book to your children or give it away to a local school.

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All of those things that are part of the bargain of the book just go up in smoke as soon

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as you add DRM to the book.

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My feeling is that people would often never accept the same restrictions, they accept

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with their e-books for their normal books. Why do you think this is the case?

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That was kind of the point of the, if dishwasher's were iPhones and an authorized bread,

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that we have been put in very slowly boiling water, like the analogy of the frogs and boiling

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water. And we haven't noticed, it's kind of crept up on us that the rights that we value

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in our books have been taken away from us one at a time very slowly.

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And you know, this isn't just because we weren't paying attention, it's also because a lot of

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these problems are a long way away, right? Like what you do with the book at the end of your life

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is for the average book owner a long way off. And it's also hard to learn from that lesson

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once you're dead. And so you kind of have to witness say your beloved parents beautifully,

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curated library being vanished in a puff of smoke, thanks to a license agreement,

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or because the company that made the DRM server for it decided to take that server down

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in order for you to learn the lesson and revisit your own choices about what you buy.

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And you know, in general, we rely not on people learning lessons the hard way, a long way off.

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In order to keep us safe, we often ask states to intervene by say declaring certain business

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practices illegal or certain contractual terms to be unenforceable. And neither of those are

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on our horizon at the moment when it comes to DRM. When Microsoft closed their bookstore,

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users could not access the books anymore they had bought. Do you know other examples?

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Yeah, well Walmart did the same thing I think in 2007, but the Federal Trade Commission actually

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intervened at that point and ordered them to keep the DRM servers running. I don't know if they're

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still up and going, but you know, Amazon is what, 20 years old. And I'm literally sitting next to

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a bookshelf full of books that are four, five, and six times older than that. So the idea that we're

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going to just rely on Amazon to never get bored of running its DRM servers or never be say financially

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engineered into bankruptcy as so many companies have in recent years, including companies that are

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hundreds of years old, seems completely unrealistic. I mean, one of the arguments is often that

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artists cannot make any money with our digital restriction management. Now as an author yourself,

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what do we say about this argument? Well, it's very hard to parse that argument out. So one of the

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things that makes DRM so pernicious is that it's protected under the law in the EU article 6 of the

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2001 copyright directive. And in the US section 1201 of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act,

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both prohibit bypassing DRM even for a lawful purpose. And whenever, you know, I've been in

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policy forums, whether that's at Weipo or in Brussels or in Washington, DC or in standards bodies

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like DVBCPCM or the broadcast flag body, the broadcast protection discussion group. And I've

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proposed that we make it lawful to bypass DRM for lawful purposes. The answer has been that if we

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don't maintain the illegality of bypassing DRM, that DRM will be defeated by users. And then I say,

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but isn't DRM the technical countermeasure that stops people from copying it? And when you dig

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into it, what you find out is that nobody who makes DRM believes that DRM stops users from

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making copies. What they think is that it allows firms to invoke the law to prohibit otherwise

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lawful conduct, right? It doesn't stop pirates in other words, but it stops competitors. You know,

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if you want to pirate DVDs and watch them on your computer, it's not hard to rip them. But if you

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want to make a gadget that allows you to say, watch out of region DVDs or to rip them to put them

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on your computer and you want to sell them in a store, right? If you want to sell a product that

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does lawful things, the fact that you have to bypass the DRM to do it allows the company to invoke

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the law to shut you down. So if you're an author and you think that what DRM is going to do is stop

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the people who don't want to pay from your books from getting copies them for free, the very people

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who make the DRM for those books will tell you that it has no connection with doing that. If you

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kind of pin them down, you have to wrestle them for a bit. But then they'll admit it. And sometimes,

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you know, they'll fall back on this argument that, oh, well, it's a speed bump. But nobody pretends

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that speed bumps stop racers, boy racers from racing down the street. Or they'll say that it keeps

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the honest users honest that when you encounter the DRM and it tells you, I'm sorry, you're not allowed

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to do that. That if you're honest, you'll go, oh, well, I didn't realize that that was prohibited.

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But of course, if you're honest, doing things that are lawful is not dishonest, you know, buying a DVD

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or an ebook from one supplier and then watching it on a device made by another supplier is neither

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dishonest nor unlawful. It's just bypassing the DRM that's unlawful. So this is how Ed Felton,

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who's now, I believe with the Federal Trade Commission, used to be a Princeton came to coin the

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memorable phrase that keeping an honest user honest is like keeping a tall user tall. That what

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the honest user is doing is by definition honest. That's what makes them an honest user. And so if your

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DRM gets in their way, you are prohibiting them from doing something honest. So really, what it ends

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up doing is it ends up locking you the rights holder, the creator, into the platform of the company.

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And the company is not on your side, right? Amazon does not exist to enrich creators. Amazon's

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goal is to minimize its costs everywhere that it's possible to do so and maximize its profits.

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And you see them doing this relentlessly in every business that they enter. And so while it may be

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true that Amazon offers some kind of teaser rate for you to do a Kindle original or to allow them

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to put Kindle DRM on your books or to go into Audible, which is their audiobook platform, which controls

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90% of the market and doesn't allow you to opt out of their DRM. That once they have control over

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that market, they're going to do what every other firm does when they gain control over their

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suppliers. They're going to squeeze the supplier. And that's you. And so, you know, if you decide

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later on that you don't want to be an audible author because someone else like Google Play or

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Libro.fm or downpour is offering you a better price. You have to not only pull your books from Amazon.

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You also have to bet that your listeners or your readers will throw away the books that they've bought

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and buy them again on the new platform or maintain two separate non-interoperable libraries of books.

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So you effectively increase the switching costs for your customers to follow you to any platform

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that offers you a better deal. So, you know, it's like if you were a musician and you released all

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of your records in a format that only Sony devices could play. And then later on Universal offered

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you a better deal, you would have to trust that your listeners were willing to throw away all the

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records you sold them. Well, that is not a good bet. And not many musicians would be in a position

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to make that demand on their customers. And so, over time, you're just making yourself more and more

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indebted to these big, rapacious corporations that only everyone to figure out how to get more

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money for themselves and less money for you from the creative labor that you do. You know, if someone,

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as I've said before, someone puts a lock on something that belongs to you and then won't give you

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the key, that lock is not there for you. That lock is there for them. And you know, if you go to

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Amazon and say, I don't want to sell my audiobooks with your DRM anymore, they'll say go find someone

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else to carry your audiobooks because we only sell audiobooks that are locked to our platform

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so that every customer that you bring to us becomes our customer instead of yours.

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I mean, this sounds really absurd. If you build DRM systems, you have to treat your customer

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as a potential attacker of your system. What is the impact of DRM on the security of our devices?

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Yeah, so this is the other issue here. One of the things that arises from this law,

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Article 6 of the EUCD and Section 121 of the DMCA, is that because they make it both a civil

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and potentially criminal offense to help people bypass a DRM system, they also have the side

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effect of making it illegal to publish full security analyses of these products. If you find a

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defect in a system with DRM in it and in order to do your proof of concept code and describe the

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defect so thoroughly that the manufacturer can't deny it because manufacturers are very, very prone

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to simply denying it or minimizing it when they're called out on their security mistakes because

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they don't want to be embarrassed in public and they don't want their products, reputations to suffer.

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So if you want to publish the industry standard for a security report, which is to

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enumerate the defect and provide proof of concept code so that other people can replicate your work,

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then you potentially face both criminal and civil liability for revealing those defects.

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So effectively, although DRM starts off as a means to control customers' behavior by controlling

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what products competitors can manufacture, it becomes a means for controlling critics as well,

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for controlling people who discover mistakes that you made in implementing your technology

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and who want to warn your customers that the device that they have, which inevitably does more

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than entertain them, inevitably it has sensors and it has lots of personal identifying information

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and it has ways to access your local network and the other devices on it and so on,

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that if you want to warn people about the defects in that device, you have to be willing to brave

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retribution, legal retribution from the company whose products you are criticizing.

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And you know, I am enough of a free speech purist to think that telling the truth about defects in

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products should always be legal, but even if you disagree with me and you think that there might be

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some legitimate restrictions on when defects in products can be revealed so that manufacturers can

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patch the bugs before the bugs are made public say. I think most reasonable people would agree

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that companies that stand to lose from true reports of defects in their products

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are not good custodians of that bad news. And one of the things that's happened as a consequence

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of the expansion of DRM and to other devices, which is itself a consequence of the expansion

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of software and to other devices. Once you have software and a device, you can add DRM to it.

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Once you add DRM to it, the log gives you the right to stop your competitors from removing that

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DRM or tampering with that DRM to let your customers get more out of their lawfully acquired property

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is that the constellation of devices that are also off limits to full security audits keeps on

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growing keeps getting bigger and bigger. And that means that we are at an ever greater risk

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of the security defects festering in these devices until they're so widely exploited that finally

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the manufacturer can no longer pretend that they don't exist by which point it's far too late.

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So we've already seen this happen. The most notorious example was in 2005 when Sony BMG music

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6 million CDs comprising 51 audio titles that had a secret DRM system on them that maliciously

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and covertly changed your operating system so that it could no longer see certain programs

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and could no longer terminate them when they were running any program that had the string dollar

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sign sys dollar sign at the start of its file name would be invisible to both the file and process

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managers. And then what they did was they wrote anti CD ripping programs to your computer that would

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start automatically at start up time that started with the string dollar sign sys dollar sign so

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that you couldn't run CD ripping programs. The thing is that as soon as this was discovered in the

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wild but before it was reported to the general public as soon as as independent researchers started

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to discover this including independent researchers who made malicious software malicious software

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started to emerge that had the same string at the beginning of a dollar sign sys dollar sign.

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And so now we had malicious software running on computers that couldn't be detected or shut down

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by anti virus software and by the time the researchers who discovered this finally came forward

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because there was a three month delay between the initial discovery and then coming forward by the

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time they finally came forward this malicious software was present on 200,000 government and

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military networks in the U.S. alone. And so all of those computers had been exposed to this risk.

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And all of those use those paid for being attacked. Yeah I mean talk about adding insult to injury.

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I mean we sometimes hear this this cry that you can't compete with free and so you know how can

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a legitimate product compete with the pirate edition. And I think the reality is that however hard

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it might be to compete with free it's much harder to compete with free if your product is much

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worse than the free product. After all when you pirate your ebooks or movies or games you get

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exactly the same game you just don't get the restrictions. And so that is always going to be a

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better product than the product that comes with the DRM on it. And some years of rich vacuum cleaner

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and coffee machine might be connected to the internet. What rules do we need for the so-called

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internet of things to make sure that technology will empower us instead of restricting us?

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You know I think we can define this problem as being in two parts. So the first one is

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what do we need to get rid of to help people, companies, cooperatives, researchers and others

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solve the problem. And the other is what rules should we have so that the problems don't come up.

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And the rules that we should have they're kind of hard to pin down because these devices will

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have a wide variety of characteristics and a wide variety of use cases and models.

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But what we shouldn't do is actually a lot easier and also easier to agree on more broadly

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and therefore easier to implement because you know it should be much easier to get consensus on them.

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So I think at like a bare minimum we should say that it should always be lawful to report defects

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in devices under every circumstance. That telling the truth revealing true facts about defects

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in devices or services should 100% of the time be lawful. I think the second one

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is that it should always be lawful or that there should be an absolute defense in law

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for interoperability and for repair which is a subcategory of interoperability. So in other words

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you should be able to defend yourself against any legal claim by showing that you are making a new

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product or service that connected to the old product or service to allow the users of that

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product or service to get more value out of them. So if someone brings a patent claim or

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a terms of service claim or a cybersecurity claim or a torsious interference contractual claim

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against you you should be able to say I made a product that improved the lives of the people who

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used this a grief parties product. I should therefore be immunized from any legal liability and

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courts should be able to assess that defense and if it is a bona fide defense should dismiss

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any case against you civil or criminal. I think that's really really important because it allows

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us to imagine a device that has the positive features of a DRM device and whose negative features

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or whose anti features get removed by users or by the experts that the users nominate to act on

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their behalf whether that's a competing company or an open or free software project or cooperative

31:29.760 --> 31:36.240
or just a repair shop or a neighbor who reconfigures their device for them. So in other words the problem

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with Facebook for example is not that everyone you know has been made easy to find so that you can

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have a conversation with them. The problem is that Facebook has hostages not users and so if we

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made it legal to make a new service that went and got all the messages waiting for you on Facebook

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and filled them in into this new service so that you could reply to them there without having to

31:58.400 --> 32:03.200
be a Facebook user so you could stay in touch with all your old friends and we immunized you against

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all the claims that Facebook might bring against you under patent or terms of service or contractual

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interference or torsious interference or what have you then the people who were on Facebook because

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they liked it could stay there and the people who are on Facebook because the people they wanted to

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talk to were stuck there could leave and still stay in touch with their friends. We wouldn't necessarily

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have to mandate that Facebook follows some kind of interoperability standard although that might be

32:27.200 --> 32:34.000
good too we could in addition to whatever floor we put on Facebook's interoperability make sure that

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Facebook wasn't allowed to put a ceiling on that interoperability make sure that Facebook wasn't allowed

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to say well you know we're adhering to this interoperability standard we let these three companies that

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we don't think of as competitors interoperate with us in ways that we don't view as harmful to our

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bottom line therefore we are interoperable instead you could you could have an unlimited ceiling

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for interoperability provided that it was in the service of helping users get more out of their

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experience and you know this is something that we call adversarial interoperability not just interoperability

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with cooperation from an existing firm or service but interoperability despite the objections

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and bypassing the countermeasures of an existing product or service so adversarial interoperability

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and an absolute defense for adversarial interoperability are both really important as is being able

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to tell the truth about defects now in terms of what rules we might impose on firms there's been a lot

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work around this you know we've seen things like right to repair legislation we've seen rules

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that require firms to hand over clear texts of files for people of disabilities or people who work

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in archival or educational context in order to allow them to make lawful uses that are enshrined

33:51.280 --> 33:56.240
in copyright law to avail themselves the limitations and exceptions of copyright law and I think

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those are important too I just think that in very concentrated industries that it's likely that

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they will figure out ways to game that and so we have to make sure that these affirmative rights

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that we grant to people to have certain interoperability standards in the products that they use or

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consumer rights in the products that they use not become the the maximum but instead that they

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remain the minimum that companies are required to do one question I had this your few about if you

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think that DRM is mainly a problem for poor people you know I think with every technological idea

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with every bad technological idea you can't just roll it out all at once because some people when

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they complain they get listened to right some people's complaints have real social currency so you

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know things that you do to rich powerful people are harder to get away with than things that you do

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to poor people or people who lack power and so when we have a terrible technological idea one of the

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ways that we normalize it and also that we figure out how to make it more palatable to people is we

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start by imposing it on people who don't have social power so we start by imposing it on refugees

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children poor people prisoners mental patients immigrants students blue collar workers gig economy

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workers and then once it's been normalized and once the roughest edges have been sanded down

35:19.760 --> 35:25.280
then we roll it out to everybody I call it the bad technology adoption curve and you know you

35:25.280 --> 35:30.720
can see it at work for example with with home automation so you know 20 years ago if you were

35:30.720 --> 35:35.760
eating your dinner and there was a camera over the table watching you eat it was because you were

35:35.760 --> 35:40.640
in a super max prison but today it's because you bought Google Home or Apple Home or Amazon

35:40.640 --> 35:47.520
home automation systems and so we've gone from the most powerless people in our society to the

35:47.520 --> 35:52.080
most powerful people in our society in less than a generation and so I don't think science

35:52.080 --> 35:55.280
fiction is a great predictive literature I think science fiction is a great way to understand

35:55.280 --> 36:00.640
the present but not the future but if you do want to get a glimpse at what the future likely holds

36:00.640 --> 36:06.160
for you should everything else go on in terms of your technology use just look at what we're doing

36:06.160 --> 36:12.960
to poor people and then that's what we're going to do to you in 10 or 15 years science fiction literature

36:13.040 --> 36:20.080
always had a strong impact on how society sees technology yet the most successful science fiction

36:20.080 --> 36:26.640
books that connect to present developments are dystopian stories do we maybe need more positive

36:26.640 --> 36:33.360
stories about how technology could improve our lives you know I am neither a dystopian nor a

36:33.360 --> 36:40.320
utopian I'm which is to say I'm neither a pessimist nor an optimist I think that in the words of

36:40.320 --> 36:46.960
Michael Weinberger when he wrote this classic white paper on copyrights patents and 3D printing

36:46.960 --> 36:52.000
this will all be so great if we don't screw it up I often say that that's what I want written

36:52.000 --> 36:58.400
on my tombstone you know although my wife and I have actually secretly agreed that my tombstone

36:58.400 --> 37:04.480
is going to say if a man lies six feet underground rotting and dead and his wife isn't there to tell

37:04.480 --> 37:10.240
him he's doing it wrong is he still wrong and her tombstone is going to say yes he is but but

37:10.240 --> 37:16.240
failing that my tombstone is going to say this will all be so great if we don't screw it up and I

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think that it is important in science fiction to write about how terrible it will be if we screw it

37:22.800 --> 37:27.920
up and it's also important to write about how great it can be if we if we seize the means of

37:27.920 --> 37:33.440
computation so you know you ask me about my my new book radicalize which has the story on authorized

37:33.440 --> 37:41.040
bread in it and you know those are stories for the most part not just about the dystopian notion

37:41.040 --> 37:48.960
of having your technology do to you instead of doing for you but they're also about the real

37:48.960 --> 37:54.800
marveling glory of being in charge of your own technology of being able to decide what the

37:54.800 --> 38:01.920
technology does of being able to reconfigure it to do what you want when you want it to and you know

38:02.000 --> 38:07.440
I think that both of those are really important and I think that it's a mistake to say that just

38:07.440 --> 38:15.760
because just because a story has dystopian themes or depicts the dystopian nature of having the

38:15.760 --> 38:21.440
technology work against you instead of on your behalf that therefore the story is dystopian what

38:21.440 --> 38:27.200
really matters is what the characters do in the face of that if they go on to seize control then

38:27.200 --> 38:33.360
that's rather a utopian story and so I I'm of the view that there's nothing wrong with having a

38:33.360 --> 38:40.160
story who's starting premise is that the technology's control is taken away from us particularly if

38:40.160 --> 38:47.200
it's also a story about how wonderful it is once you reverse that situation thank you very much

38:47.200 --> 38:54.320
Corey for being with us today for this first episode okay thank you feeling drunk give my

38:54.320 --> 39:01.200
love to everybody there thanks for the work you're doing thank you for your time all right bye bye

39:02.400 --> 39:07.120
if you want to get active on this topic you can support the day against DRM which takes place

39:07.120 --> 39:12.080
every year this campaign is organized by the free software foundation or assist organization

39:12.080 --> 39:18.480
based in the US if you want to receive more information please visit defectivebydesign.org

39:18.480 --> 39:23.840
on this website you'll also find a list of DRM free platforms for books videos and audio files

39:24.720 --> 39:30.560
this was the first episode of the software freedom podcast if you like this episode please

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39:51.920 --> 39:57.040
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