zero2dash said:$239 for a bloated DRM infested OS is outrageous.
*cough*FairPlay*cough*
zero2dash said:$239 for a bloated DRM infested OS is outrageous.
Demoman said:And if MS could charge for their Service Packs, by calling them something new, they would.
Evangelion said:*cough*FairPlay*cough*
http://www.appleintelfaq.com/#18.1milo said:Fairplay is an aspect of one application (which you don't have to run if you don't want to). Is there ANY drm in the OS? Windows has drm required to even install and run the damn operating system.
AidenShaw said:http://www.appleintelfaq.com/#18.1
Intel-based Macs use Trusted Computing/Trusted Platform Module (TPM) Digital Rights Management (DRM)?
Yes, but all of the specifics are not known. At this time, it appears TPM is just used to tie Mac OS X to Apple hardware. In the meantime, see this article for a good overview. The shipping Intel-based Macs do include an active kernel extension (kext) called com.apple.Dont_Steal_Mac_OS_X.
Yes, you also need DRM to boot OSX86 !!
Your question was:milo said:And if the DRM is so transparent to the user that they don't even know it's there, how is that a big deal?
Sounds like what happened when I got my new MasterCard - had to read numbers over the phone to activate it. Big whoop.milo said:Especially compared to an OS that requires reading serial numbers over a phone to activate?
AidenShaw said:Your question was:
Is there ANY drm in the OS? Windows has drm required to even install and run the damn operating system.Clearly, OSX86 and WinXP are exactly the same in that both require DRM to run.
But, now you're saying that DRM is OK if you don't see it? I sense a problem with your intellectual honesty - you seem to change the rules so that "Apple can do no wrong" always applies.
Sounds like what happened when I got my new MasterCard - had to read numbers over the phone to activate it. Big whoop.
And, of course, if you have an internet connection there is no need to read numbers at all.
dapodaca said:Yes, some evil genius hacker will introduce something like Windows Vista Ultimate Cracked Edition(tm) complete with secret malware backdoor for use in wielding mighty botnets or other sins of the Internets seedy side!
AidenShaw said:Your question was:
Is there ANY drm in the OS? Windows has drm required to even install and run the damn operating system.Clearly, OSX86 and WinXP are exactly the same in that both require DRM to run.
But, now you're saying that DRM is OK if you don't see it? I sense a problem with your intellectual honesty - you seem to change the rules so that "Apple can do no wrong" always applies.
Sorry, but I interpreted your use of the adjective "damn" to imply an aversion to DRM.milo said:I've never made the argument that all DRM is bad, have I? Don't put words in my mouth.
AidenShaw said:Sorry, but I interpreted your use of the adjective "damn" to imply an aversion to DRM.
If that isn't the case, my apologies.
jaxstate said:Yeah and the DRM that stops people from loading OSX on generic PC boxes is "transparent".
I couldn't see how MS could survive without the activation code key required to install their OS. I don't see how Apple has done it this long.gauchogolfer said:Umm, usage of software outside of the EULA can't exactly be expected to be transparent, can it? If we're comparing use of licensed OSs here then there is obviously a difference.
gauchogolfer said:Umm, usage of software outside of the EULA can't exactly be expected to be transparent, can it? If we're comparing use of licensed OSs here then there is obviously a difference.
gauchogolfer said:Umm, usage of software outside of the EULA can't exactly be expected to be transparent, can it? If we're comparing use of licensed OSs here then there is obviously a difference.
jaxstate said:I couldn't see how MS could survive without the activation code key required to install their OS. I don't see how Apple has done it this long.
IJ Reilly said:Incidentally, possibly the most significant "DRM" barrier to installing OSX on generic PC hardware has nothing to do with Apple's planning. I don't think it's even theoretically possible to boot OSX on a PC without EFI, and due to Microsoft's lack of support for EFI, few (if any) PC-makers are building boxes with EFI boot ROMs.
milo said:Fairplay is an aspect of one application (which you don't have to run if you don't want to). Is there ANY drm in the OS? Windows has drm required to even install and run the damn operating system.
milo said:Exactly. Legal users of XP are faced with the DRM, on OSX only illegal users face it.
Evangelion said:Since OS X only installs on specific hardware, then yes, I would say that there most certainly IS DRM in there. So Windows requires license-numbers and the like. And OS X requires specific hardware. Implementation is different, but reasons are the same.
Evangelion said:Huh? If I try to burn my iTunes-playlists too many times, or I decide to share then with my friends, I'm an "illegal user", even though such actions are legal?
Evangelion said:Huh? If I try to burn my iTunes-playlists too many times, or I decide to share then with my friends, I'm an "illegal user", even though such actions are legal?
milo said:I don't buy into that logic. At least part of the reason OSX only installs on specific hardware is that it's only compatible with specific hardware. You can't run Xbox games on a Playstation, and it's not because of DRM. Not to mention that any DRM in OSX isn't fairplay, as you mentioned.
AidenShaw said:http://www.appleintelfaq.com/#18.1
Intel-based Macs use Trusted Computing/Trusted Platform Module (TPM) Digital Rights Management (DRM)?
Yes, but all of the specifics are not known. At this time, it appears TPM is just used to tie Mac OS X to Apple hardware. In the meantime, see this article for a good overview. The shipping Intel-based Macs do include an active kernel extension (kext) called com.apple.Dont_Steal_Mac_OS_X.
Yes, you also need DRM to boot OSX86 !!
IJ Reilly said:But they are not legal
in that these uses violate the terms you agreed to when you bought the music
and even if you hadn't, "sharing" with your friends is not protected fair use and never has been, DRM or no.
milo said:I don't buy into that logic. At least part of the reason OSX only installs on specific hardware is that it's only compatible with specific hardware. You can't run Xbox games on a Playstation, and it's not because of DRM.
Not to mention that any DRM in OSX isn't fairplay, as you mentioned.
Evangelion said:But you CAN run OS X on other hardware besides Apple's. The hardware itself is more or less identical to PC's, so there is no technical reason for it to not work. So why is it so difficult to do? Could it be.... DRM? No, I'm not advocating pirating OS X for PC's, I'm just disputing the "There is no DRM in OS X"-claim.
Fairplay is a central part of an app that ships with OS X. There is other DRM besides Fairplay in there though.
Evangelion said:Sharing IS in fact legal. Sure, it might be a bit different from one jurisdiction to another, but at least here it's perfectly legal to make copies of your music to your friends and family.
Evangelion said:Sharing IS in fact legal. Sure, it might be a bit different from one jurisdiction to another, but at least here it's perfectly legal to make copies of your music to your friends and family.
IJ Reilly said:I don't know where "here" is for you, but in the United States, it's a violation of copyright law. Fair use covers copies made for your use, not distribution to others. If fair use permitted copying for "friends and family" then obviously copyrights would be meaningless. Which is why it doesn't.
mrgreen4242 said:Err, nope. Perfectly legal to do that here in the US, for now at least. The Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 is (somewhat) clear on this. The RIAA is trying to change that of course, and if you study the language they use when talking about personal/one-of compilations it is clear they KNOW it's legal but they want people to think it is illegal. Apparantly that's working.
mrgreen4242 said:Glad someone pointed that out... making 'mix tapes' and giving them to friends has been held up in court as fair use. It's legal to take your iTMS purchases, burn them to CD and give them away to people you personally know, as long as you don't charge for them.