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by danhor 1330 days ago
It's impossible to get AAA games (and most AA games) without some form of DRM (with some notable exceptions), the same as high(er) budget media productions.

The Kindle was already 8 years old when I got it, isn't it better to re-use it with more current software? The same with router hardware that gets exploited to flash OpenWRT.

It's very hard to get a modern Smartphone (with acceptable cameras, battery life, performance and software availability) with manufacturer-intended root access.

While I agree that people should adopt Rust (and other approaches) for their security porperties, it's not hard to see how it may lead to exploits getting rarer and to more categories of devices & content that can't be reasonably used in a "free" way, even if not intended by the manufacturer. Thus making it much harder to have control over the devices you own (without becoming some kind of luddite).

1 comments

I empathize with this position: there are a lot of people out there who are discovering that they don't really own the content they've paid for, because they're tied to electronic ecosystems they have no control over.

That being said: I don't think the world is necessarily a worse place if (1) everybody's devices are more secure, and (2) consumers are a whole are disincentivized from buying into ecosystems that fundamentally don't respect their rights. At the risk of sounding like the luddite you mentioned: maybe we really could use a little separation between technology and literally every other domain of our lives.