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What if the bad guys win?

Think DRM multiplied by ten. Sharing is impossible, BitTorrent useless and forbidden. Every step you take is monitored, and even thinking about copyrighted material is not done.

Tarmle vividly describes what kind of world we would live in if the bad guys win:

Going to the movies is not what it used to be. Security at the studio-owned theatres is heavy, it’s not a trip to be taken lightly. But if you want to see the film everyone is talking about without waiting a year for the home release, you have little choice. When you enter the lobby the first thing you see are long ranks of tiny, thumbprint activated lockers. This is where you must leave all of your electronics, your personal server and peripherals, even your watch, and you had better not be wearing smart spectacles or contacts. As you enter the security zone you’re scanned for anything you may have forgotten. Cochlea and optical implants must be capable of responding with a coded RF identification signal to indicate their systems are secure and cannot record. People with older models, or models implanted abroad where such interrogation is illegal, are turned away. Perhaps they would like to see one of the older releases? Once through the scanner you must submit to a biometric ID test – this is where the known bloggers, hackers and spoilers are ejected. Finally there is the non-disclosure agreement to be signed – these days most moviegoers choose to sign via the MPAAs annual subscription, just trying to take some of the hassle out of visiting the cinema. Finally you get to see the film. In the auditorium the audience is constantly scanned by an AI looking for suspicious activity, so don’t rummage in your pockets for too long. It’s strange that all this effort to protect the movie industry has done so little to improve the movies.

You don’t really own your home computer, or even the data you keep on it. Oh, you paid for it, just like you paid for the fibre-optic Internet connection that it can’t function without, but now it squats under your TV using your electricity and does more work for the content industry than for you. The nightly security patches it downloads for itself don’t secure your computer against attackers, they secure the system and software against you. TV-on-demand seemed like a dream come true when you first opted in and upgraded all your hardware, but the slowly encroaching charges are becoming a disincentive to turn on at all. Sometimes the last episode of a series makes up 50% of the cost of the whole season.

The Internet is not what it used to be. It’s expanded, naturally, the technology giving everyone mobile PCs with vast ad-hoc networking capabilities, it’s faster, more efficient, and more available, but it’s also more restrictive. Since the ISPs were made responsible for the content they deliver their filtering has become neurotic. Anti-terror, piracy, plagiarism and libel filters search every request and response for signs of illegal activity, always erring on the side of caution. Wikipedia’s index has been decimated. Popular blogs like Boing Boing now have more lawyers involved than contributors (the one’s that have survived that is). Even if you managed to get something illegal through the filters your operating system’s regularly updated self-check mechanisms would eventually root it out, or report you to the authorities, usually both.

These days it seems like every time you turn on one of your gadgets you have to fight with its DRM to get it to do what you want. The home movie of your daughter opening her birthday presents is ruined by a patch of grey fog that shifts with every movement of the camera, tracking sluggishly to keep the TV screen in the background obscured. From the codes embedded in TV’s update pattern your camera had decided the show was not licensed for this form of reproduction and blocked it. You wish you had thought to turn it off at the time, but squinting into the camera’s tiny screen it hadn’t looked so bad.

Even once recorded, your own media is not safe. Everything is stored on your home PC, trapped in the solid-state drive’s proprietary filing system. Once there, the only reasonable way to transfer it is to another trusted drive from the same vendor – the DRM won’t recognise any other brand of mass storage device. In the meantime the PC constantly searches your files looking for illegal material. A recent security patch has destroyed the last video of your father. According to the email report you received that same morning the latest video and photographic scanning protocols had decided something seen in the footage resembled a new government building, the appearance of which is now classified. You know for sure that there is no such building in the footage, it was all filmed in the old man’s living room. But there’s no way for you to prove that with the offending shots turned to grey fog.

You just don’t see physical media anymore. Too easily duplicated, their security too easily cracked, they’ve been dropped in favour of heavily encrypted and vendor-locked streaming media. You don’t ‘own’ copies of any music or movies these days, instead your monthly subscriptions grant you only the right to temporarily buffer a few seconds of the distributor’s authorised files while you watch or listen. Ultimately, that was the reason ad-hoc networking protocols and mobile PC technologies were pushed so hard, not because the customers wanted them but because the music and movie industries needed them to replace the vulnerable duplication method normally needed for such mobile media.

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  • Keyser Söze

    Braaaazilll, nanana na na naaa nanananaaa

  • moop

    Oh noes! This will surely happen, because people are willing to be subjected to gross invasions of privacy (which aren’t illegal). They are going to go to a theater where they get raped to make sure there aren’t any cameras on them, and pay for things they can’t keep. Yep.

  • zbu

    moop : You think so? There’s something like a black market too. It’ll only work for (and bug) people that don’t have any bad intentions. Napster closed down, kazaa arose, it’ll vanish, p2p will rise more, this will flop, anonymous and encrypted p2p will exist..

  • Ian

    It will never happen. Movie theaters are already nearly a thing of the past. Sticky floors, uncomfortable seats, no leg/shoulder/arm room, obnoxious little shits kicking the back of your seat or putting their feet up on them, people yelling at the screen or talking on cell phones, people with irritable bowel syndrome climbing over you a dozen times an hour, the repugnant smell of popcorn, nachos, and little hoochies that have no idea how much perfume they are wearing. Not to mention rising ticket prices of up to and over $12/person and you’re limited to viewing the movie whenever the theater sees fit. If you live in a major city it’s even worse with outrageous prices for nearly non-existent parking or you’re forced to use unsanitary and unsafe public transportation. No, movie theaters are definitely on the way out. Why some people still subject themselves to these cattle call events is beyond me.

  • sjaak

    Don’t you guys see this? On the internet everyone should be free to do as he wants, but the governments see that the people are becoming too free and will do everything they can to prevent people from actually being free. They do this by making laws so that people can not do what they want to do. This is true for all kinds of things.
    This has happened several times in history.

    We are becoming like one of the dictatorships. Like the dictatorship of the sovjet’s in the USSR. Those people had no privacy, and we are going to have no privacy too.

  • GraphicArtist2k5

    Personally, the only movie theater I go to is the one that costs 1.75, because I don’t see the point in chunking down all kinds of money just to see a movie that will either appear at the 1.75 theater, or will inevitably end up online for everyone to download. Case in point: Star Wars Episode III
    That movie was online literally a day after it had come out, or it could have been sooner, I can’t recall now.

  • Dreen

    Offcourse this will happen…
    The press would have to undergo the same censorring, and we know they would embrace it :)
    and we all love to undergo this huge loss of privacy, no one would object.
    and no party, would go against this to get a load of voters
    and let’s face history… what happen when people loses their freedom (Ussr – revoulution. France – the french revoulution Usa – got their independence etc. The only reason slavery could exist was because the where the minority.
    you have to give something for something, if they takes some freedom, they have to offer something in return,

    even in the middle ages when things got pushed to far people revolted, or another king gained the power because the people embraced him.

  • Zmay

    THEY invented terrorism, so that THEY(the same THEY) can ripp off our privacy!!! And we would be begging for that to happen! I just don’t get it how blind people are! And they are going to screw my life too…

  • Bomis

    I feel sick…

  • Psylon

    This is the best piece of sci-fi i have ever read, even though the thought of it may come to be reality. There will always be someone who slips under the radar and will punch through to release their latest bag of tricks.
    I’d preferably rather kik bak at home and enjoy my entertainment without a bunch of screaming brats running around, and 6th grade girls who look like they should be hookn the red light district.
    LONG LIVE TORRENT

  • penizman

    hah, thats not gonna happen. if it does, we’ll all be dead by then. at any rate, there’s always gonna be rebels and theyll take down this so called EMpire. Torrent Rocks.

  • frank shaw

    in which case it might be a good idea to turn off the machine and go for a nice walk in the woods.

  • BAZZA

    Fuck u all if we copy stuff the hole economy is going to fall because of dipshits wanting sum cheap shit quality movie and music . There wont be music anymore because nobody wants a job u dont get paid for . I hope the bad guys win because everybody nows the worlds not free and that forget ur fucken downloads and think about how many people will lose there jobs just for ur fucking entertainment.Yeah u want entertainment balance it out do the right thing because if we keep on going the way where going entertainment wont exist .Stop thinking with ur ass and look ahead.1 more thing if the bad guys do win and we have to be searched for electronics remember who put us in this fucking position.

  • kim

    Time for a change when recorded media is so expensive thast it cant be supported by the3 fans. This is not the fans fault and the mmpa does not have the industry self intrest at heart or that of the fans. It only has its (The MMPA only) selfish intrest at heart and has promised what it cannot deliver it is only going to get worse while the industry at large is eating shit w2hen it thinks MMPA is evergoing to put a $ in their pockets WAHAHA. LOL dont come close. Some one has to pay the bills for the MMPA and their the ones that dont understand fact that they have ignored reality and funded ignorance.

  • Barry

    In a free society this cannot become reality. The EU now has laws that allow the free flow of information, Freedom of information act. The only people that may make this a reality is America, which is why the EU was formed, to balance the power a bit. At the moment America has more stringent laws on bittorrent use than europe, where bittorrents are not illegal in themselves, just using what you download is. In short, America is going down the same route as China, and I thought they didn’t like communism?

  • StatiK

    You “everything should be free” zealots really are silly. You shouldn’t really blame the corporations that distribute entertainment (music & movies) for limiting culture exposure. The artists are the people who sign contracts with those companies. The RIAA doesn’t just automatically own rights to every piece of music ever produced. The artist must sign some kind of contract which gives up some of his or her rights. If he/she/they do not understand these rights, they should not sign these contracts and work with these companies.
    If there is any artist out there that doesn’t mind people downloading/sharing his or her work, then that artist should have skipped the record company alltogether and released their work to the internet and asked for donations.

  • rofler

    I like all the comments posted by people who think they know what they’re talking. Let me single someone out real quick:

    MOOP, you’re an idiot.

    “Oh noes! This will surely happen, because people are willing to be subjected to gross invasions of privacy (which aren’t illegal). They are going to go to a theater where they get raped to make sure there aren’t any cameras on them, and pay for things they can’t keep. Yep.”

    Wow, if you’d made that post like 10 years ago, I would have forgiven you. Or did you come out of a coma yesterday?

    You think people don’t subject themselves to invasion of privacy? Been to an airport recently? Ever tried to get a loan for a house? Do you think you KEEP your internet connection when you pay for it, or your digital cable, or your car insurance, or you X-Box Live subscription?

    MOOP, you’re a goddamn fool.

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