Linked by Amjith Ramanujam on Sun 3rd Aug 2008 15:56 UTC, submitted by netpython
Apple "Apple Inc. has pulled its security engineering team out of a planned public discussion on the company's security practices, which had been set for next week's Black Hat security conference in Las Vegas."
Permalink for comment 325445
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
RE[3]: As we say in venezuela:
by Morgan on Sun 3rd Aug 2008 19:21 UTC in reply to "RE[2]: As we say in venezuela:"
Morgan
Member since:
2005-06-29

Well, I don't buy music from iTunes, just rip my own CDs to MP3 format. Said MP3 format is DRM-free. Try that in WMP without the DRM, it doesn't happen. I don't have a BD player in my eMac, and I wouldn't put one in if it were supported. A 17-inch CRT is not sufficient to watch said content. As for DVDs, at least Apple actually includes DVD playback without a separate software purchase. And DRM has nothing to do with running OS X on generic x86 hardware; it's called EFI firmware and it's less than trivial to bypass it.

Speaking of OSx86, they won't sue me, the consumer; they'll sue the people selling hardware with OS X preinstalled. Nice try though.

I'll put up with clicking "activate now" in Windows, waiting 30 seconds and then getting on with my life. Activation is not such a big deal, especially if you actually have EXPERIENCE with the process.

Oh believe me, I've got experience with it, starting with Windows XP deauthenticating every time I upgraded my video card or added a second hard drive. After about the tenth phone call to Redmond in two years' time just so I could f--king log in to my computer, I said no thanks. I won't be assumed to be a thief just because I want to upgrade my computer. If I wanted to be guilty until proven innocent I'd move to China.

Sorry to ruin your little fantasy, but I'm not a zealot or fanboy of any OS or software/hardware company. I use what works for me. Windows has never really worked well or efficiently so I stopped using it long ago. Linux worked fairly well in the past and still does. OS X works very well but various little things annoy me making me want to switch back to Linux for most needs. When Haiku is mature it will probably meet all my computing needs.

Now please, take your own Microsoft-worship to someone who actually cares to hear it.

Reply Parent Score: 4