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Repeat offenders
Amazon's Kindle and Prime video platforms ensnare users with DRM.
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Apple uses DRM to control iOS and OS X users.
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Google has their hands everywhere, including access to your digital content. Whether it promoting DRM restricted content, or lobbying for more DRM-supporting standards on the web, you can find Google there.
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DRM is built into the heart of Windows, and many Microsoft services, like Silverlight, push DRM on users.
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The Motion Picture Association of America wants to put DRM into HTML5 and exploits the DMCA to restrict the user's right to control movies that they've legally purchased.
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Not satisfied with using DRM for their streaming service, Netflix is now trying to weave DRM into the Web.
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Using outrageous legal threats and lawsuits to conduct a War on Sharing, the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) actively violates the freedoms and privacy of Internet users.
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Sony has used legal actions to harass and intimidate individuals who have modified their own PS3 systems.
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Spotify's streaming service is deeply interwoven with DRM.
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The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) imposed DRM as a standard for the Web via Encrypted Media Extensions (EME).
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Quote
...trying to make digital files uncopyable is like trying to make water not wet.
Bruce Schneier
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