The State of Massachusetts is moving its workers away from Microsoft Office toward open source tools.
Daily Archives: September 2, 2005
Ray Kurzweil
Glenn Reynolds interviews Kurzweil, with some interesting charts on US science and technology education.
The Customer is Always Wrong: EFF’s Guide to DRM and Online Music
Electronic Frontier Foundation:
Many digital music services employ digital rights management (DRM) — also known as “copy protection” — that prevents you from doing things like using the portable player of your choice or creating remixes. Forget about breaking the DRM to make traditional uses like CD burning and so forth. Breaking the DRM or distributing the tools to break DRM may expose you to liability under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) even if you’re not making any illegal uses.
In other words, in this brave new world of “authorized music services,” law-abiding music fans often get less for their money than they did in the old world of CDs (or at least, the world before record companies started crippling CDs with DRM, too). Unfortunately, in an effort to attract customers, these music services try to obscure the restrictions they impose on you with clever marketing.