As 2012 draws to a close we look back on the year's biggest news events, trends and recurring themes. Mark Zuckerberg, Carly Rae Jepsen and PSY all make an appearance in our year-end infographic.
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As 2012 draws to a close we look back on the year's biggest news events, trends and recurring themes. Mark Zuckerberg, Carly Rae Jepsen and PSY all make an appearance in our year-end infographic.
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A few days ago, a new proposal was put forward in the HTML Working Group (HTML WG) by Microsoft, Netflix, and Google to take DRM in HTML5 to the next stage of standardization at W3C. This triggered another uproar about the morality and ethics behind DRM and building it into the Web. There are good arguments about morality/ethics on both sides of the debate but ultimately, the HTML WG will decide whether or not to pursue the specification based on technical merit. I am a member of the HTML WG. I was also the founder of a start-up that focused on building a legal, peer-to-peer, content distribution network for music and movies. It employed DRM much like the current DRM in HTML5 proposal. During the course of 8 years of technical development, we had talks with many of the major record labels. I have first-hand knowledge of the problem, and building a technical solution to address the problem.
The Encrypted Media Extensions (DRM in HTML5) specification does not solve the problem the authors are attempting to solve, which is the protection of content from opportunistic or professional piracy. The HTML WG should not publish First Public Working Drafts that do not effectively address the primary goal of a specification. Via Nicolas Weil Delete the scoop?
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