DRM and Me

On September 24, 2008, in Computers, by psu

I’ve had some bad luck with hardware this year. For the first time ever I had a disk fail in one of my computers. And then after getting my laptop rebuilt my iMac’s power supply went south and I had to get that machine rebuilt as well. When the laptop came back, I had to install all my old tools one by one, something I haven’t had to do for three or four years thanks to the wonderful Apple magic brain transfer function which makes imaging old machines into new machines easy and painless. For some reason, in doing all this work I didn’t reinstall Photoshop… until this weekend when I wanted to do some panoramas. Therein lies my story.

The install on my laptop went fine. I went to Adobe’s web site, downloaded the binary again and ran the installer. After all of that the app came up, asked me for my various keys and then made me hit a big blue Activate button and everyone was happy. However, I found working with the panoramas to be a bit painful, so I thought I’d fire the whole thing up on my iMac to take advantage of the 4GB of RAM and big screen. This time, I got to the big blue Activate button, and instead of warm happiness I got a message about how I had too many activations of the software.

No problem, I thought. I’ll just go to the web site and deactivate my previous installs the same way you can do at the iTunes Music store. Unfortunately, there is no such facility. Apparently Adobe expects you do know when your hardware is going to fail so you can preemptively make room for more installs on your Photoshop license.

I had only one recourse, I had to call Adobe on the phone, explain what happened, and get another key that allowed me to use Photoshop on the iMac. This all took only 10 minutes and went very smoothly, which just goes to show that Adobe at least does not hire the same incompetent drooling monkeys that Microsoft or EA do. Still, I don’t think this is good enough.

And this brings me to my philosophy about DRM. At my core, I don’t really care about Fair use, deep legal philosophy, or my inalienable consumer right to do what I want with a product that I have bought with my hard earned cash. Software piracy is a problem and people that work hard to deliver expensive applications and content have a right to try and control that content as they see fit. I think that there is a much more pragmatic ideal to be pursued here. And it is this:

If I have to call you on the phone in order to be able to use your software, then you have failed in a fundamental way to provide a decent out of the box user experience.

That’s all I have to say. Do whatever you want, just don’t make me call you on the phone.

 

6 Responses to “DRM and Me”

  1. peterb says:

    Worked perfectly for me — two registrations, two computers. You must have a bad internet connection or outdated drivers.

    ducking!

  2. Pavitra says:

    From a pragmatic perspective, it’s worth pointing out that a lot of applications exist with *no* DRM whatsoever. You don’t have to be an anticopyright political activist to use (for example) the GIMP and *never* have to worry about these annoyances again.

    A list of some major DRM-free products and services is at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/guide.

  3. psu says:

    The last time I checked GIMP did not do what I needed and does not run on the platforms I want to use.

  4. Pavitra says:

    Er, on closer examination that list is mostly web-based services. A better link might be http://directory.fsf.org/ .

  5. Pavitra says:

    (Sorry, didn’t refresh the page before re-posting.)

    I’m sorry to hear that the GIMP didn’t work out for you. The only thing I can think of to say is that you probably should look at it again every few years, since free software applications tend to improve rather suddenly.

  6. Joshua Jacobsen says:

    I use cracked copies of most software I use. I have 3 legal licenses to NewTek Lightwave (~$800 each), and a retail copy of Adobe CS3 Web Premium all for my personal use. However, I download and run cracked versions of these. I hate the Dongle that Newtek products require me to use (mostly because I broke one while using it on my laptop, and found the dongle exchange process to be obnoxious). I also have more personal computers than I have licenses for Adobe software, and don’t think that it’s cheap enough to buy for each machine, even though I may want to use it on any of the machines at a particular moment.