DRM
Digital Rights Management and Copy Protection Schemes
Major entertainment companies are using "digital rights management," or DRM (aka content or copy protection), to lock up your digital media. These DRM technologies do nothing to stop copyright pirates, but instead end up interfering with fans' lawful use of music, movies, and other copyrighted works. DRM can prevent you from making back ups of your DVDs and music downloaded from online stores, recording your favorite TV programs, using the portable media player of your choice, remixing clips of movies into your own home movies, and much more.
To the extent DRM interferes with perfectly legal uses of digital media, it's plenty bad enough. But thanks to the lobbying of the major media companies, DRM is now backed up by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA). If you circumvent DRM locks or create the tools to do so, even to enable noninfringing fair uses, you might be on the receiving end of a lawsuit. The DMCA has been a disaster for innovation, free speech, fair use, and competition.
And Congress is now considering new laws that go beyond the DMCA, mandating DRM in a wide array of digital media devices and personal computers, giving entertainment industry lawyers and federal bureaucrats veto power over new gadgets.
Hollywood and the music industry have always attacked new technologies that help you get more from your media—these industries brought lawsuits against the VCR, DAT recorder, the MP3 player, and the PVR. Today, these media giants want to use DRM to take away your legitimate fair use and home recording rights, hoping to sell those rights back to you later. Worse still, recent DRM has invaded users' privacy and created severe security vulnerabilities in computers.
Fans shouldn’t be treated like criminals, and neither should the innovators who build the gadgets on which they rely. EFF has fought against many DMCA suits, including defending the makers of DVD backup software, and sued Sony-BMG for their "rootkit" CD copy protection scheme. Learn more about our efforts through the links below, and consider donating to support efforts.
DRM Cases
In The News
- WIRED NEWS | January 11, 2008 DRM Is Dead, But Watermarks Rise From Its Ashes
- E-COMMERCE TIMES | December 28, 2007 Amazon Wrangles Warner Into No-DRM Club
- PC WORLD | December 02, 2007 The Most Anti-Tech Organizations in America
- SEATTLE TIMES | October 08, 2007 Amazon's Unlocked Music Still Might Get You Sued
Other Resources
- The Customer Is Always Wrong: A User's Guide to DRM in Online Music
- Consumer Success: It Comes Down To Innovation, by Fred von Lohmann[eetimes.com]
- Cory Doctorow's Microsoft Research DRM Talk - June 18, 2004
- Death by DMCA, by Fred von Lohmann and Wendy Seltzer, IEEE Spectrum Magazine[spectrum.ieee.org]
- How Hollywood Has Been Trying to Disrupt Innovation, by Fred von Lohmann[eet.com]
Related Issues
- Analog HoleHollywood Versus The Analog Hole
- Digital RadioRIAA's Attempt to Control Recording From the Radio
- Broadcast FlagA mandate would force all future digital televisiontuners to include "content protection" (aka DRM) technologies.
- Digital VideoDigital Video Restrictions
Whitepapers
Deeplinks Posts
- August 18, 2008 What If the Kindle Succeeds?
- August 15, 2008 DRM for Streaming Music Dies a Quiet Death
- July 29, 2008 In Memoriam: Ed Foster, 1949-2008
- July 29, 2008 Yahoo! Offers Refunds to Customers Who Bought DRM-Crippled Tunes
- July 24, 2008 Here We Go Again: Yahoo! Music Throws Away the DRM Keys
- May 05, 2008 MSN Music Debacle Highlights EULA Dangers
- April 29, 2008 MSN Music Pulls the Plug on Customers
- February 19, 2008 Adobe Pushes DRM for Flash
Press Releases
- April 29, 2008 Betrayed MSN Music Customers Deserve More from Microsoft
- June 16, 2004 RIAA Asks FCC to Lock Down Digital Radio Broadcasts


