Defective by Design Campaign: Foundation Launches DRM-Free Label
By emeadows
August 28, 2012
August 28, 2012
- “Awareness has been spreading among individuals, businesses and other organizations that DRM is a completely unnecessary restriction of freedom, and it drives people away,” claims Defective by Design, a campaign of the Free Software Foundation.
- The post suggests that going “DRM-free” is becoming increasingly valuable for patrons. To address this, the organization has created a logo to be placed on products, making it easier for consumers to locate legitimate DRM-free products.
- The label reads: “DRM-Free: All files are provided without restrictive technologies.”
- “We are excited to already have a list of several first adopters using our DRM-free label,” notes the post. “ClearBits, a BitTorrent distributor of various digital media, much of which is under free culture licenses, is displaying the logo in the footer of each page, and Go Faster Stripe, a distributor of DRM-free DVDs, has the logo on their about page.”
- “Music sharing sites ccMixter and TuneTrack display the label on each track’s download page while independent record label, Magnatune, uses it on an about page,” adds Defective by Design.
- The post also includes a list of DRM-free publishers and distributors including Foboko, Momentum Books, O’Reilly Media, Weightless Books, Obooko, Pragmatic Bookshelf and others.
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