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P2P, DRM, and Masturbatory Lawsuits

It is almost 5 months since my last blog post, so I’ll just write up this opinion piece here.

First of all, piracy is something Somalians do. I’m not a pirate. I don’t have a pegleg, or a hook hand, or a beat up but still functioning Kalashnikov rifle I got off the black market for some kidneys that I removed from a lost tourist using a plastic butter knife and salad tongs.

I am a user of peer-to-peer networks. I do not care to disclose the sorts of things that I obtain from these, but it is the most efficient way to download large files such as open source operating systems, that’s for sure.

Put on your hypothetical hypothetical thinking caps for a second, and let’s lure the idea that I download copyrighted materials such as TV shows and songs from these P2P networks out of the crapper. I’m not a pirate. I don’t hire wenches, or tell people to walk the plank, or hold white people and their boats for ransom. In the scope of our hypothetical thinking, I procure songs and shows in a way that the RIAA and MPAA do not necessarily approve of.

I’m not a thief. I do not remove anything from anybody’s possession. I do not claim what is not mine. I do not claim credit for any works that are not mine.I support the artists I like. If I were to download an album, and I like it, and their record company isn’t completely evil, I’d pay for it. Example, The Wretch over at Magatune.com. Sometimes a band can be so face-meltingly awesome that I’ll forgive the evil record company for once, so I’d buy one album. Judas Priest, why the hell are you with Sony BMG? I could be a far more loyal customer!

Same goes for movies and shows. NBC’s Life would be on the same shelf as Judas Priest. Still pondering whether or not to buy Season 2 when it comes out, now that the Nude Baboon Commission canceled it. Hey, NBC, stop murdering your good shows!

The formula for winning me over as a loyal customer is this: good material, reasonable price, and a publishing/record/production company that won’t hunt me down with legal guns a-suing if I choose to try before I buy. Also, no DRM.

Oh, yeah DRM. I also put that in the title (the masturbatory lawsuits thing is kind of evenly distributed, like a chocolate chip topping).

I actually fully support a company’s rights to package their products as they see fit, even if that involves some kind of whackjob encryption scheme. I just think it’s a stupid idea, and no legislation should be passed about it. Though I do find it hilarious that any effective DRM scheme requires the use of encryption, and therefore can’t be sold to embargoed countries (and the feds do take it seriously, as I found out working on a project for a client of mine).

Say I buy a song, DRM-encumbered from a company, let’s call them Fun2Play, Inc. Fun2Play sells songs that have DRM on them. I can only play them with the Fun2Play player, which only runs on the Fun2Run operating system. Well bah-bah-blacksheep, I say! I run GNU/Linux! I wanna play the song using VLC!

So I spend a few days with twenty-two pots of coffee, and figure out that the songs are really .OGG files, encrypted using the SHA1 hash of the word “ppppt”. Apparently I cracked SHA1 too. I am now able to play the song I bought anywhere I want!

I blog all about my findings here, and then Fun2Play Inc. comes after me.

“Yo dawg i herd u liek crackin drm schemes so I’LL SEE YOU IN COURT!!!

Now here’s where I take issue with DRM. I’ve still not stolen anything, I just managed to crack your silly DRM scheme. I just wanted to play it on multiple machines.So you companies that use DRM, sure, go right ahead. Just remember two things:

  1. Congrats. You’ve forfeited every customer who understands the meaning of DRM.
  2. Except for the determined few who will crack your DRM scheme. They WILL crack it, they always do. You can’t win.

 I guess that just about covers it. Now what did you learn?

  • Don’t be an asshole.
  • Don’t chase people down for “piracy”, or people like me will “pirate” more.
  • The aforementioned pirates aren’t pirates.
  • Don’t waste your time on DRM.
  • I don’t rob people, and neither should you.

Thanks for reading, and don’t sue me. If you do, then I’ll look at you like this: Enjoying your Cinco Boy?

Oh, yeah, this thing.

Figured I should post an actual update, so here it is.

OSCON was friggin awesome!

Oh, and I went to OSCON.

“But Mr. Tuna, your McAwesomeness, what the cactaur is an OSCON?”

Well, OSCON is a very special event where nerds and geeks and hackers like me from around the world get together in Portland and talk about Open Source Software. I just happened to be a speaker there. My topic was about how FOSS can appeal to teenagers. Here is the O’Reilly page for the talk and here is my talk on Google Video. Yes, I wear that hat everywhere.

Trivial Christmas-themed Item of the Week

So I just had my Visual Basic semester Final. That’s right. I take Visual Basic classes. REALLY wish it was Python. I mean, will Visual Basic be useful to me in 10 years? It’s not even useful to me now.

 Anyway, my teacher (who is pretty awesome, I mean nothing against him) wanted us to create a Christmas-themed program. But not just any Christmas-themed program–it must use EVERY feature of VB 6 in the known world. This means multiple forms, countless controls, and an IF statement that could frighten a child.

 I finished late at night and was like, “This would make a great * of the Week!” Unfortunately, seven days had not passed between that and my last * of the Week.

 So here is the program. That .zip file includes the executable and Visual Basic source code. Chances are that if you read my blog, you don’t need/want the source. But since I am distributing it under the GPL V3, because I am a nice guy, I’ll just include it for those who are curious. :)