4 14 min 2 yrs

Hollywood and Co are using its influence at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) to lobby for weaving Digital Restrictions Management (DRM) into HTML5 – in other words, into the very fabric of the Web. Millions of Internet users came together to defeat SOPA/PIPA, but now Big Media moguls are going through non-governmental channels to try to sneak digital restrictions into every interaction we have online. Giants like Netflix, Google, Godaddy, Hollywood, Microsoft, BBC, Facebook, Twitter and many the other (local) social networks, apps and media sites etc.. always rally behind such disastrous and monopolistic proposals, which this time flies in the face of the W3C’s mission to “lead the WWW to its full potential.” People are increasingly becoming aware of the emerging ‘internet monopoly’ by the gangs of oligarchies.

The W3C has a duty to send the DRM peddlers and corporate lobbyists packing, just as the US courts did in the case of digital TV. There is no market for DRM, no public purpose served by granting a veto to unaccountable, shortsighted corporate giants who dream of a world where your finger-tip or mouse rings a cash-register with every click or tap and disruption is something that happens to other people, not them.

There’s a new front in the battle against digital rights management (DRM) technologies. These technologies, which supposedly exist to enforce copyright, have never done anything to get creative people paid. Instead, by design or by accident, their real effect is to interfere with innovation, fair use, competition, interoperability, and our right to own things. We need your signature as much as ever. We’re hoping to have a deepening conversation with the W3C and the more concerned Internet users supporting our position, the better. Sign the petition at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/no-drm-in-html5

Predators can dictate the use of their services in such a way that people lose control over their own information and their participation in these networks. Another element that worries the European Union, and countries such as China, India, Russia and Brazil in particular, is that all of these services are controlled from one country – the USA and its covert armies like NSA. Privacy laws in the United States are among the most relaxed in the world and commercial organisations there have the freedom to use personal information as described above. Though govt officials in India rarely wish to understand privacy, but most of India’s popular and highly advertised sites,, apps and portals are controlled or owned by desi NRIs shooting from US+, direct or via proxies while netas here are happy with development FDI & bonded commissions.

Pressure is being put on international organisations (UN) to take a greater role in this, a move that is fiercely opposed by the USA. Organisations such as the OECD and UNESCO have also flagged these problems, calling for action before too much political pressure results in the imposition of severe restrictions – something that these organisations, plus many others, do not want. – 10 Feb 2014

But we are mostly people with some life experience and discipline, based on lessons learned over the years. The majority of the social network site users, however, are young people and rather naïve, and teenagers, in particular, are inclined to place information on the net or fancy verses that can easily be misused by others. Similarly teenage girls can put unkind, sometimes vindictive, messages on these sites that they will probably regret if they read them five or ten years later.

With billions of people now using mobile apps, networks and social media it is clear that these services are benefiting societies and economies around the world. However, now that more and more people are becoming familiar with them and beginning to understand how they work, concerns are being raised about privacy and governance. We have no doubt that unless permission-based concepts are introduced heavy-handed regulation will be implemented, and that will seriously affect the whole concept of the Internet. Which will lead to more divisions including global and ideological wars involving armed forces, no just cyber!

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4 thoughts on “Relentless ploys to take over Internet by gangs of Oligarchies / Cronies?

  1. In a bid to become the “Netflix of textbooks,” and like many other publishers, Pearson is doing the opposite of what anyone committed to education should do: severely restricting a student’s access to the materials they need for their courses through arbitrary page limits, “rented” books that disappear, and many which require a constant Internet connection.

    Publishers like Pearson should not be allowed to decide the rigidly specific conditions under which a student can learn. No book should spy on your reading habits or simply “disappear” after you have had it for too long. In the digital age, it is unacceptable for a publisher to impose the same principles of scarcity that would apply to a physical product to a digital file. The computing revolution was caused by files being shared, not merely rented. Imposing these limitations on digital media is an attack on user freedom, no matter how much corporate PR may spin the story. It’s our aim to let the world know that we support the rights of readers. You could say that for IDAD 2019, Defective by Design has you covered.. more at https://www.fsf.org/bulletin/2010/fall/lending-a-solved-problem

  2. It has never been more critical for businesses and societies to understand the availability and performance of Internet and key application delivery networks, including those of public cloud, Virtual services, Personalization, Home-based experiences, CDN, and DNS providers, as the world is tactically forced to lean on to Internet more than ever before for work, schooling, and entertainment. The predictions and reports of last decades are coming more closer to truth now, post-pandemic. Its clear how macro traffic has systematically shifted impacting Internet-related infrastructure, availability and performance differences across ISP and cloud networks worldwide.

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