Challenge to David Wagner on TCPA
Eric Murray
ericm at lne.com
Thu Aug 1 18:06:38 EDT 2002
On Thu, Aug 01, 2002 at 02:33:43PM -0700, James A. Donald wrote:
> According to Microsoft, the end user can turn the palladium
> hardware off, and the computer will still boot. As long as that
> is true, it is an end user option and no one can object.
>
> But this is not what the content providers want. They want that
> if you disable the Fritz chip, the computer does not boot. What
> they want is that it shall be illegal to sell a computer capable
> of booting if the Fritz chip is disabled.
Nope. They care that the Fritz chip is enabled whenever
their content is played. There's no need to make it a legal
requirement if the market makes it a practical requirement.
The Linux folks just won't be able to watch the latest
Maria Lopez or Jennifer Carey DVDs. But who cares about a few
geeks? Only weirdos install alternative OSs anyhow, they can be
ignored. Most of them will probably have second systems
with the Fritz chip enabled anyhow.
Eric
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