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221 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
221 lines
13 KiB
Plaintext
Episode: 490
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Title: HPR0490: TIT Radio Ep 13.1ec
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Source: https://hub.hackerpublicradio.org/ccdn.php?filename=/eps/hpr0490/hpr0490.mp3
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Transcribed: 2025-10-07 21:37:53
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---
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Yeah, you're listening to WBAI New York 99.5 FM. It is now 8 p.m. exactly, and it is July the 22nd,
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2009, and this is the personal computer shoe.
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And good evening, this is Joe King. Here in the studio with me tonight is Hank Kear, my co-host,
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and from the sky box, high above downtown Perkisee, PA, the Dalcitan dancing melodies of Dr. Alfred Poor. Good evening, Alfred.
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Good evening, gentlemen.
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We're going to have an interesting show tonight. We have a special guest coming to us from deep in the heart of Venezuela,
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Dr. Richard Stoeman.
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That is opposed to the founder and head of the Free Software Foundation.
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And he is in the forefront of Gnu, and yes, they are the people who did Gnu.
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You know, a lot of people say they use Linux, but really they're using Gnu and the Linux kernel.
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We're not going to talk about that tonight, though. We're going to talk about literature. Richard, are you there?
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Stevie is our, Richard, are you there to show me? Sure, I'm here.
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Here you go. Good. Here we go. Here we go. Hank, Richard has been talking about some of the difficulties with the,
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not with the Kindle as such, but with the things that the Kindle causes in essence. Richard, why don't you tell us a little bit about your position on the Kindle?
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Well, the reason I condemn the Amazon Swindle, which is the only name I'm willing to call it,
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is that it's an attempt to take away the traditional freedoms of readers of books.
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Traditionally, we are free to do things such as borrow a book from the Public Library,
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lend it to a friend, sew it to a used bookstore, buy it anonymously by paying cash,
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which is the way I normally will buy a book, and to keep the book for as long as we like,
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and then read it as many times as we like, and we can even pass it on to our heirs,
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who can then read it and keep it and do all those other things with it.
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The Swindle Impliments DRM, Digital Restrictions Management,
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that is the malicious feature of refusing to let you do things,
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it's designed to restrict the user. Specifically, I'm not talking about bugs now,
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I'm talking about intentionally programmed restrictions,
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and DRM in general is an attack on the user, and you should never accept any product with DRM,
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unless you have the means to break the DRM, unless you personally have access to those things.
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Wait a minute, Richard, stop, you're not really suggesting that people should violate
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the Digital Millennium Copyright Act by breaking DRM, are you?
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Of course, of course I am, and unjust laws don't deserve to be obeyed.
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The DMCA, at least that part of the DMCA, is clearly unjust.
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It just shows the power of the copyright megacorporations over the U.S. Congress.
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I don't believe that just because corporations pay money to Congress to get a law,
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changes what's right or wrong.
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Well, let me ask you, has this been constitutionally tested?
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I don't know, not that I ever heard of, but I'm not an expert on that.
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I couldn't tell you if there's any reason to expect the Supreme Court to reject the DMCA.
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They don't seem to have been very inclined to be to apply strict limits to copyright
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was in other areas, and other questions.
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So, I would, if I had to guess, I would guess that they wouldn't care, but I really don't know.
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Let me ask, is there anything about, let's skip the phrase Kindle as such,
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and just talk about an e-book reader.
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Is there anything about the e-book reader concept that you're in favor of?
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Well, I wouldn't mind an e-book reader if it didn't impose digital restrictions management.
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All right, because the DRM is what attacks our freedom.
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Exactly.
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The reader book on a screen isn't necessarily good, but if that's accompanied by DRM,
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it means it will be a lot worse off.
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I mean, right now if you visit your friend's house, you'll see a shelf of books,
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and you can look at them, and you could ask, could I borrow this one?
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But that'll be impossible if your friend's books are inside of an e-book reader with DRM.
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Unless he's willing to give you his book reader.
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His whole library, he could lend you.
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But that's a problem with the e-book.
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But that's a problem with Congress and not the product, though.
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Well, it's a problem with both.
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And just because there's an unjust law that makes a certain thing legally possible,
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that doesn't mean that those who do it are excused of all blame for what they're doing.
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Amazon is totally responsible for what it's doing, and the U.S. Congress is responsible for the DMCA.
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There's a line of reasoning which says, if what a company is doing is lawful,
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you can't blame it at all.
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I reject that line of political thinking completely.
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I know that you're out of the country right now.
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You're done in Venezuela.
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But some news came out yesterday about Barnes & Noble entering the e-book fray
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with a very much larger library, even than Amazon,
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but a great part of their library will be coming from the Google library of public domain books.
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And it will be not locked down to a single mechanical reader,
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but will be in a more open format.
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I think the PDF format, but I'm not sure about that.
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Well, if they're really just PDFs and not PDFs encapsulated in DRM,
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I have nothing against that.
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I don't mind reading PDF files.
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There's free software to read PDF files.
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The secondary consequence of DRM is that the only software you can use to do the job
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that's not censored is proprietary software and proprietary software is injustice itself.
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But if these are really unencrypted PDFs that you can read with free software
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and read on any sort of computer, I don't have any criticism of that.
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Does Adobe have one of those?
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And you say, can I borrow it? He'll just make you a copy.
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To the best of your knowledge, does the Adobe e-book reader have DRM built into it?
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I don't know.
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I would expect it does because I think actually, isn't that what occasioned the arrest
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of Dmitriy Skryanov, the Russian computer scientist when he visited the U.S. to give a talk at a conference?
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I don't recall what occasion.
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It was Adobe that had him arrested.
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And then Adobe turned around and said, oh, we didn't mean for him to be arrested,
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but they didn't pay his defense costs.
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You know, if you spilled soup on somebody's jacket and you said, oh, I didn't mean to do that.
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The next thing to do would be to make up for the harm you did.
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But Adobe didn't really want him to be freed.
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They just wanted to pretend they weren't to blame.
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Well, what about the use of this unit outside the United States because they are not such DRM laws?
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Well, if somebody managed to break the DRM, whether it's in the United States,
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that would go a long way to solving the problem of people there to use the free software
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that could then give them full unrestricted access to their own files.
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Richard, is this your position or is this the official position of the free software foundation?
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The free software foundation is against DRM because DRM mandates the use of non-free software.
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And non-free software already tramples your freedom of users deserve to have control of their computing.
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The users deserve to be free to share the software they use, and that means it's got to be free software.
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It's interesting because if this is a slight takeoff beyond that,
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but I'm sure it's something that concerns you as well,
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I listen to a great many audiobooks.
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That's one of the pleasures I have in life.
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And if I take an audiobook, if I download an audiobook from the library,
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it comes down in a format with DRM on it that precludes my using it on my iPod.
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I have to use it on a Windows-based listening machine.
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Well, this is an example of the injustice of DRM.
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In order to forward an audio round that, I had to go over to Germany
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where a lovely company named Audils has come up with a program called Tombite,
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which they claim does not violate the Digital Millennium Copyright Act,
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but it's an extra two or three steps for me to listen to the book.
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You know, I'm concerned with things that are more than just a couple of extra steps.
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There's more at stake here.
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I suspect that that program is proprietary software from the way you described it.
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I thought it really is.
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Well, that's not a solution.
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It doesn't enable people who live in freedom.
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But yeah, we had a protest outside the Boston Public Library
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because they are distributing files with DRM.
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They shouldn't do that. They should stop.
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The reason that this happens is because a company set out to use the public libraries
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to turn them basically into its outlets.
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And the outlaw libraries went along with it.
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If they all said no, then they would end up distributing it without DRM.
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But because a lot of them said yes, essentially they lay down and...
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Richard didn't that also have something to do with the publishers
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who said they wanted some sort of control before they would allow them.
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Publishers would probably give in.
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After all, the publishers will sell lots of paper books that don't have DRM.
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And if a library said,
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we'll take the audio books on CDs, and that's it.
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It'd probably be available.
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I suppose probably some are available in that way.
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Well, Richard, let me see if I can wrap this up and just ask a question.
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A very simple question, but probably very complex is,
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how can we go about changing the law?
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Well, the first step is we have to build public discussed and denunciation for DRM,
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which means don't look at it in terms of how many steps do I have to go through to listen.
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And instead say, this was designed to attack my freedom,
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and I won't stand for it.
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I won't judge it purely in the shortest possible term.
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But instead I'll say this is a trend, a systematic way of attacking my freedom,
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and it's going to get worse if I don't fight it.
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And then visit defectivebydesign.org and sign up and participate in our protests.
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And you have a product.
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You don't have a protest going right now that you're organizing,
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and do you have a website that people can go to to find out about this?
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It's defectivebydesign.org.
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Can you spell that out?
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D-E-S-E-C-T-I-V-E.
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Oh, defective.
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D-E-S-R-H-E-N.org.
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Do I win the spelling bee now?
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You do, and I hope that Michael is listening,
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because he will post that on our website as soon as he gets a chance.
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By the way, I apologize if I asked him for the spelling bee,
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because sometimes it's difficult to hear it over the year.
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That's why.
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Yeah, it's surprisingly hard to spell it vocally, although the type it, of course, is totally easy.
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Well, the thing is, we're going to put on a website and direct people to it,
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and those will have questions on it.
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Well, thank you very much for bringing us up to date on the DRM situation.
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You did not use the phrase digital rights management when you referred to DRM.
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You used a different one.
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Of course, because, well, you see, from the point of view of the people trying to impose it on it,
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on us, they call it digital rights management,
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from our point of view, these are restrictions.
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So you choose one term or the other, and you choose your side.
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Right, we've been calling it here on the air, digitally restricted media.
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DRM.
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That's a good term too.
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But we'll take yours as well.
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Thank you very much for joining us, Richard Salman, of the free software foundation.
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Why do I have trouble saying free software foundation?
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Because I don't get much free software, that's why.
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And Richard, please join us again one day soon.
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I'll be happy to.
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We'll talk about this again, have a pleasant trip back from Venezuela.
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Thank you for joining us. Good night.
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Thank you.
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Feel free to give us a call or follow up or to send us email at PCRadio at PCRadioShow.org.
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Remind us that you are on the air and we'll try and answer more quickly.
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For the rest of you, if you write into us, Gold card members get answers first.
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Everybody gets an answer eventually.
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This is Joe King.
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I want to thank you all for listening.
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Hanky and Alfred.
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Poor will be joining Stevie and me again next week, I think.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from Stevie's board.
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Mm-hmm.
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And that effectively concludes the personal computer show here at WBAI, New York 99.5,
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also streaming on the web at WBAI.org and pick up the stream at the PCRadioShow.org.
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All right, have a good evening out there in Redidio Land, like Joe said.
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And listen to this.
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For the rest of you, if you write into us, Gold card members get answers first.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org and pick up the stream at PCRadio.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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And until then, we'll be hearing various noises coming out from the web at WBAI.org.
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Thank you very much.
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