finally proven wrong?
look at the graphic in the spec at w3.org. The module is allowed to display the graphics by itself, bypassing the browser.
Why does everyone need to be a programmer? Why does someone imply, programming is a pain?
Todays tools are okay, and who can't be a programmer, doesn't need to. We do not need to simplify laws, so everyone can be a lawyer, so we do not need to change programming just to have everyone as a programmer.
http://www.w3.org/TR/encrypted...
sandbox? i do not think so. lets talk about DMA and other holes to get system access.
So what?
People are pirating. People are pirating despite DRM.
People are willing to pay a certain price, which is more than they pay, when they are pirating. So try to find the price people are willing to pay, that's the best you can get.
The whole DRM is just blaming the piracy to another company. The publisher blames google, google blames adobe, just to have another scapegoat. If one of the companys doesn't act, the content provider will blame this company. This does not mean, that there is no piracy, if every link in the chain implements the DRM as good as possible, it just means nobody can tell "hey, i am not playing along".
its for google play video.
you can just consume no (online) content at all. And maybe lend the dvd in your video library.
the masses want content, the publishers want DRM. As long as drm content works for both, nothing will change.
> Pale Moon has a 64-bit version. Firefox doesn't.
still wrong. Why is everybody still telling this?
$ file firefox
firefox: ELF 64-bit LSB executable, x86-64, version 1 (SYSV), dynamically linked (uses shared libs), for GNU/Linux 2.6.18, BuildID[sha1]=e06519b9e2b09c1b4e56b7ad11afc0d84e1b5aad, stripped
the loophole of a sandbox around the drm.
The problem: As long as other big players support DRM, the browser where "i can watch videos" will get more users, the others less.
One good thing would be to say: Fuck DRM, we are making a browser as we like it, if we're the only users thats no problem for open source software.
On the other hand, this would mean for users, who want to consume content, that they need to use other possibly even non-free browsers to do so. If mozilla supports this DRM, they may be able to influence it, i.e. force companies to accept a sandbox around the DRM. So they might help to keep the problem small.
So of course you can fork, but you will gain nothing. The sandbox for DRM does not hurt, if you do not use it. What hurts is, that all major browser support DRM now, so that the publishers can use it. Assume i.e. 75% of the browser market would not support DRM, then we might get a free web. But if 30% do not support it, the 30% will shrink as users will use other browsers, at least to watch videos.
So mozilla may be right about this. But they are wrong, as they should be a good example. But the next big opensource browser is chromium, which will support DRM, because google wants to use DRM (i.e. for play videos)
what about the cleanup?
Nilfs2 is quite cool, but the cleaner-daemon causes a lot of disk io, which is not only annoying, but makes me think about disk lifetime as well.
Is it there in reallife?
A right to be forgotten means, means by negation, there is no law, which forces people to remember you.
So, there IS NO such law, not online not in "real life".
You will be forgotten, online and offline. As long as you're not interesting. If you are, you will not be forgotten. Do you really think, snowden will ever be forgotten offline? You do not need to go to a newspaper archive in 20 years to remember snowden, this name will remain for long in our society, if not even in history books.
Was Barbara Streisand forgotten?
Just forget it. If you want to be forgotten, keep quiet. People may or may not forget you, but if you insist on being forgotten, you will be remembered.
1) Shouldn't we expect, there will be enough growth in bandwidth, that the cap could be 30.000 in 5 years?
2) Do they expect, the content will be that small in 5 years, that 300 gb is enough? 4K streaming anyone?
The moon is made of green cheese. -- John Heywood