What is the real reason behind all the recent anti-piracy activity?
By Mangone
- 1194 reads
I suggest that America has finally realized that it can’t compete with China on manufacturing but it can compete on innovation, be it artistic or technological, and so strengthening copyright and anti-piracy legislation is imperative for the US to keep its financial head above water.
"There has been criticism of Apple's portable devices, whether iOS-based (i.e. iPhone, iPod Touch, iPad), or other non-iOS-based (i.e. iPod Classic, iPod Nano, iPod Shuffle), being locked into iTunes and creating an iTunes Store monopoly for these devices...
Because of this, Steve Jobs was ordered to attend a court hearing regarding antitrust violations specifically with iPods and iTunes.
Similarly, Apple has not licensed its FairPlay DRM, or its proprietary lossless format codec Apple Lossless (ALAC), to any other company, thus preventing content —either purchased from the iTunes store, or Apple Lossless encoded in the iTunes computer application or bought from non-iTunes sources— from being used on other manufacturers' devices."
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Criticism_of_Apple_Inc.
All music on the iTunes Store became DRM-free as of April 2009... quite possibly due to the wide spread use of the free MP3 format on other platforms. How long can Apple withstand the pressure on other media fronts?
Even Fox has repeated reports that Apple co founder, Steve Wozniak, said earlier this month "I Wish my iPhone did everything my android does."
It seems that Wozniak claimed that Android "...offered more features than the iPhone and that the built-in satellite navigation in Android phones is another advantage."
http://www.foxbusiness.com/technology/2012/01/17/steve-wozniak-wish-ipho...
Essentially, I see the attempt to strengthen copyright legislation as a desperate attempt by companies like Apple to fend off foreign competition while sticking to their propriety ethos which (in the case of Apple) locks users in and does all it can to lock everybody else out.
So why the desperation?
Because user get sick of all the restrictions that come with such an ethos and I have talked to many people who have come close to throwing their Apple gadget against the wall in sheer frustration.
Remember the, almost, worldwide attempt by Apple to prevent the sale of Samsung’s Galaxy?
In a way, ironically, it is a war between Apple and Google - and we, are caught in the middle...
Support one and you get locked in to getting more or less everything from the hardware supplier but support the other and, it is alleged, lose your online privacy.
So what is it to be?
Well, I suggest that the Apple cult will quickly fade. You can't keep people 'locked' in forever.
Since so many high tech products are now built in China how long will it before they are designed there too?
"Back at the factory, where the buildings are swathed in nets after 12 workers committed suicides in a single year, a young girl emerges from the gates. Her job is to clean the iPhone screens before they are packaged.
She says she is 13." http://www.guardian.co.uk/technology/2012/jan/24/apple-factories-china-i...
How can US manufacturers hope to compete with Chinese factories without subsidies?
"Foxconn clients include American, European and Japanese companies wishing to reduce labor costs without sacrificing quality.
Notable products which the company manufactures include the Amazon Kindle, iPad, iPhone, PlayStation 3, Xbox 360 and Wii.
Foxconn is the largest exporter in Greater China.
It seems that, according to figures released today, Samsung Galaxy's are already outselling iphones...
"Samsung shipped more smartphones last year than Apple did iPhones, with the popularity of its Galaxy models helping the Korean company sell a record 300 million handsets."
http://washpost.bloomberg.com/Story?docId=1376-LYFJA36KLVR401-3TPTOLBT77...
So, how could the computer playing field be leveled to make PC’s a less attractive home for pirated software?
Well, I’d say that Microsoft is in the best position to stop piracy if it were to be ‘persuaded’ to do so by fresh legislation. How?
Well, most people use Windows Update…
How hard would it be to add some code to the next version of the Window OS that searched for dubious software and alerted a newly created Official Anti-piracy site?
Then, one day you’re downloading the latest updates and you get a warning that you will be liable for prosecution if certain dubious programs are still on your computer after a certain time limit…
Don’t get me wrong - I don’t think that such a development is remotely likely but it does give a hint of the terrors that future Internet computing could hold for the children of the extended electronic community if we do not remain united, vigilant and ready to fight to protect our privacy and our online freedoms.
Comments welcome.
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