Originally posted by: ryanv12
I lived in Pacifica for my first year of University. The Presidio is also a very very nice place, I love going there whenever I'm back at home. Wait, we're talking about processors here?? 😛
If this "Presidio" is hardware copyright protection, you have to give AMD credit for romanticizing the name! Better than "DRM" - that's something an engineer would come up with. Anyways, if Intel and AMD go with "DRM" chips, who would we go to now?? XBox360? 😉
DRM is an acronym for Digital Rights Management, which is a euphamism of the general concept of copyright protection. It is a possible (read: probable) application of a concept called "trusted computing" (read: "treacherous computing"), of which the specific implementation we are discussing is called TCPA (vendor-wise, AMD's is "Presidio" and Intel's is "LaGrande").
FAQ (against)
Wikipedia article (neutrality disputed)
Finding sources in favor is left as an exercise (an easy one) to the reader.
Mind you, some of us have been trying to tell people this was coming years in advance, but of course nobody bothered to help us put more pressure on the industries involved (they're way behind schedule). Some have been flat-out dismissive (I have one person in mind on this forum, whose username---fortunately for him---I have forgotten), and I hope those people eat their words.
But that's neither here nor there. :disgust:
As an addendum, I was very recently shown the ideas of
Theodor Adorno. From the little information presented in the article, it appears that he called what appears to be playing itself out right before our eyes: in the cultural sense, culture is increasingly controlled by corporations, and everything and everyone participating therein is treated as an object. And DRM is the latest in the control toolset. (I won't cover the sociopolitical angle, because I would have to drop the political F-bomb, and that would be better covered in ATOT.)