>zAP wrote:
> If you're using chrome or safari, the video won't be delivered in Flash :)
>> Apple below $200 on NASDAQ today....

SAN FRANCISCO, California, USA -- Wednesday, January 27, 2010 -- As
Steve Jobs and Apple prepared to announce their new tablet device,
activists opposed to Digital Restrictions Management (DRM) from the
group Defective by Design were on hand to draw the media's attention
to the increasing restrictions that Apple is placing on general
purpose computers. The group set up "Apple Restriction Zones" along
the approaches to the Yerba Buena Center for the Arts in San
Francisco, informing journalists of the rights they would have to give
up to Apple before proceeding inside.

DRM is used by Apple to restrict users' freedom in a variety of ways,
including blocking installation of software that comes from anywhere
except the official Application Store, and regulating every use of
movies downloaded from iTunes. Apple furthermore claims that
circumventing these restrictions is a criminal offense, even for
purposes that are permitted by copyright law.

Organizing the protest, Free Software Foundation (FSF) operations
manager John Sullivan said, "Our Defective by Design campaign has a
successful history of targeting Apple over its DRM policies. We
organized actions and protests targeting iTunes music DRM outside
Apple stores, and under the pressure Steve Jobs dropped DRM on music.
We're here today to send the same message about the other restrictions
Apple is imposing on software, ebooks, and movies. If Jobs and Apple
are actually committed to creativity, freedom, and individuality, they
should prove it by eliminating the restrictions that make creativity
and freedom illegal."

The group is asking citizens to sign a petition calling on Steve Jobs
to remove DRM from Apple devices. The petition can be found at:
http://www.defectivebydesign.org/ipad

"Attention needs to be paid to the computing infrastructure our
society is becoming dependent upon. This past year, we have seen how
human rights and democracy protesters can have the technology they use
turned against them by the corporations who supply the products and
services they rely on. Your computer should be yours to control. By
imposing such restrictions on users, Steve Jobs is building a legacy
that endangers our freedom for his profits," said FSF executive
director Peter Brown.

Other critics of DRM have asserted that Apple is not responsible, and
it is the publishers insisting on the restrictions. However, on the
iPhone and its new tablet, Apple does not provide publishers any way
to opt out of the restrictions -- even free software and free culture
authors who want to give legal permission for users to share their
works.

"This is a huge step backward in the history of computing," said FSF's
Holmes Wilson, "If the first personal computers required permission
from the manufacturer for each new program or new feature, the history
of computing would be as dismally totalitarian as the milieu in
Apple's famous Super Bowl ad."

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