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media.april.org/.../20150506-ebookDRM.webm

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    This is a bookseller...
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    And this is a book.
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    When the bookseller sells a book to a customer,
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    he leaves the book shop with it
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    and does what he wants with it.
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    Normally, it looks something like this...
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    When he is done reading it, he usually does this.
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    But he could also do that.
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    He can either lend it, give it,
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    or sell it.
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    And he has the right to do whatever he wants with it.
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    It's his book.
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    More precisely, it is his own copy of the text,
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    the paper is his. He owns it.
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    This is an e-reader.
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    It is a device that makes it possible to read e-books.
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    Properly speaking, we should say, electonic books.
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    It isn't really possible
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    to show an electronic book to you
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    It neither has shape.
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    It is a digital file,
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    data that can travel on many different storage devices.
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    That's why we talk of intangibles
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    when it comes to the digital world.
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    Contrary to a book, a digital file can easily be duplicated,
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    without any loss of quality and at insignificant cost.
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    This means sharing it is really easy
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    When one is used to selling books,
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    this ease with which e-books can be shared raises a ton of questions.
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    A wrong answer was given to these questions.
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    It is called DRM, for Digital Rights Management
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    supposedly methods to protection.
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    What is protected from what or from whom is open to question.
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    DRM is also intangible.
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    If one wanted to represent it anyway,
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    it would look something like that.
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    The justification for DRM is
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    to make e-books behave like books.
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    DRM is supposed to prevent them
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    from being massively copied and shared,
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    without every single copy being bought.
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    That could seem right, but it isn't.
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    The first reason is that it simply goes against
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    how things work the natural order of things.
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    So it's complicated. And when things are complicated,
    they don't work well.
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    So you have to buy a certain kind of e-reader,
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    and not others,
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    and you need to have the right software
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    and the right computer to make it all work.
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    Compatibility is not DRM's strong suit.
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    And once you have an e-reader,
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    for the hardware you bought
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    you still need the e-book you want to read
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    to be published specifically
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    And the day you want to change your e-reader or publisher,
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    your e-books won't work.
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    The second reason why DRM is a bad solution
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    is that it does more than prevent users from copying.
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    When you purchase an e-book with DRM,
    you do not own the file.
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    Therefore, you can neither give it, nor lend it, nor resell it.
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    And there are tons of other terms of use
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    that do not exist for a real book.
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    You don't actually buy an e-book; at most you only rent a reading service.
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    The third reason is that DRM tracks you.
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    To know what you read, when,
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    at what speed, how many times,
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    what passages in particular and in what order.
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    When you read an e-book,
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    there is you, the text, and DRM monitoring your actions.
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    The fourth and last reason is probably the best.
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    DRM can remotely erase your e-books.
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    Yes, erase them. This isn't just theory.
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    Amazon has already done this several times with its Kindle.
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    E-books with DRM are not books.
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    The goal of DRM isn't to reestablish a balance
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    lost with the advent of the digital age
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    but to hoard all of its benefits
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    DRM purports to be a protection measure,
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    but it's actually digital handcuffs.
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    It takes from you, exploits you,
    and treats you with contempt.
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    What is happening today with e-books can also be seen elsewhere,
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    in particular with video on demand or video games.
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    The law states that the consumers
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    states that the consumers must be informed
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    of the compatibility of what they are buying,
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    and this includes technological measures such as DRM.
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    Demand this information when you shop.
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    Learn to make the right choice.
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    Ban DRM from your life.
Title:
media.april.org/.../20150506-ebookDRM.webm
Video Language:
French

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