9 comments
@blakeyrat @chiraag @rcombs @blakeyrat @chiraag @rcombs @ascott @chiraag @rcombs If computer security folks are really concerned about this thing, a good first step would be to figure out how the fuck to explain it to people using brief, concrete examples that don't rely on guesswork or conspiracy theories. I'll hold off on panicking over it now. I just wanted to point out it's dumb to say "Google is adding DRM to the web!" when it's had DRM for decades, that was the main thing I had to say, haha. @blakeyrat @chiraag @rcombs @ascott @blakeyrat @chiraag @rcombs It's instead a way more direct anti-competitive setup and I expect it to result in litigation for exactly those reasons. That doesn't prevent it from causing damages in the meantime. |
@blakeyrat @chiraag @rcombs
In plain English, it reallocates control from the many (i.e. users) to the few (Google) which is a direct threat to the open web. You're correct that it isn't DRM in the same way as widevine, it's more like the Play Store - if your device/client doesn't play by Google's rules it's not going to work right.