Mhyst [2013-08-21T15:05]:
> I mean...
> when you own a book you can read and lend it to a friend. The "free"
> market is been trying to give magic things (like digital copies) some
> characteristics of physical things while denying others. 

Be careful, it works both ways :)

* When you lend your physical book, you do not keep your physical copy. The 
other person has it. So if you want to reproduce what the physical world do. 
Someone from the industry could argue that you should remove it from your hard 
drive until the person gives it back to you. :)

* Lending to another person is also a matter of regulations with specificities 
depending on countries. Some countries will forbid lending outside your family 
circle (not really enforceable but still…). Someone from the industry could 
argue, that by allowing DRM you could be more in line with what legal systems 
prescribe. 

Physical and digital worlds have their own properties. Things will change. The 
matter of exchanging content in the bigger scheme of our cultural world should 
be driven by improving the situation for everyone with a priority of 
constituencies. DRM as used in the world now have a tendency to damage some of 
the rights of these constituencies.


-- 
Karl Dubost
http://www.la-grange.net/karl/

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