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."
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RE[4]: As we say in venezuela:
by spinjax on Sun 3rd Aug 2008 20:18 UTC in reply to "RE[3]: As we say in venezuela:"
spinjax
Member since:
2006-12-12

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.


*slides over to wife's Vista laptop that is fairly stock*

WMP play can rip as WMA with various codec options, MP3, and wave. The later two big totally DRM free.

I find it interesting that you pick to side-step the DRM issue by avoiding it's path, but yet you claim in Vista you can't do the same thing.

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.


My main machine is a non-Mac that has a EFI firmware based system with the option to load various EFI images that emulate legacy BIOS environments for Windows and some other old operating systems[read OS/2]. But I use the EFI boot environment to bootstrap without them, and just use elilo to actually boot my system.

All that said, I can not run MacOSX on this system without hacking it, because they do specific checks to see if the system is an Apple branded machine. If I wanted to hack my EFI firmware image and other things to make it appear Apple branded, then yes it would boot. While not a public/private key form of DRM, it is restriction imposed to prevent usage. Thus in most technical people's eyes, it is a crude form of DRM.

When Haiku is mature it will probably meet all my computing needs.


I keep hoping as well. Maybe one day an OS will capture my attention the way BeOS did back in the day.

Regarding activation. Blah, I hate it in every OS that requires it.

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