This Week In Techdirt History: November 5th – 11th
from the always-with-the-DRM dept
Five Years Ago
This week in 2012, while Twitter was improving its DMCA policy, YouTube copyright claims managed to take down a viral video of a 9-year-old football star and, of course, a video all about fair use and remix culture, just as noted asshole Craig Brittain was launching his DMCA abuse strategy with Popehat in the crosshairs. And the Harry Fox Agency somehow managed to claim copyright over 164-year-old Johann Strauss music, while shortsighted publishers managed to extract a hefty ruling against lyric websites.
Ten Years Ago
This week in 2007, the huge Writers’ Guild strike began, causing all kinds of ripple effects in Hollywood, though not interfering with the Senate’s attempts to turn the DOJ into Hollywood’s police force. The entertainment industry was really figuring out how to use DRM and the DMCA to stifle innovation by shutting down a DVD jukebox, even as Blu-Ray DRM was being rapidly cracked and other DRM was turning up security holes — not to mention MLB screwing over a bunch of fans who purchased content by changing their DRM scheme and making that content disappear.
Fifteen Years Ago
This week in 2002 was pretty much exactly the same on the DRM front, with BMG striving to copy-protect all CDs sold in Europe and EMI taking a similar attitude, while two of the biggest names in copy protection technology were merging to join forces in the futile fight, I suppose not listening to the computer scientists pointing out that CD copy protection is worthless But what else could the music industry do? Online CD sales were falling, and who could they possibly blame but pirates?
Comments on “This Week In Techdirt History: November 5th – 11th”
Wow... Thanks Techdirt...
Thanks Techdirt. I remember all these events.
And now I feel old as hell.