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by rvz
1332 days ago
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Yes. Mozilla didn't do anything and failed to stop it and just watched Google introduce it and Mozilla also followed suit at adding DRM into Firefox. This 'free internet' is yet another myth and DRM is here to stay with the web being dominated by Chrome's widespread usage as it was previously done by Microsoft Internet Explorer. |
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There was a strong and long debate about the pros and cons. One of the strongest argument against was this here, including interoperability. I believe Cory Doctorow has also written multiple articles against DRM. I agree that DRM is generally bad.
However, the arguments for implementing it were the following: at least two other browsers will adopt the tech and that will allow it (per W3C process) to graduate from a Candidate Recommendation to a full Recommendation, making it part of the web platform.
On top, what would it mean for marketshare if people had to install a second browser just for watching movies? Would the non technical users accept and understand this without switching to a browser that they’d consider "actually feature complete"?