What is DRM? Digital Restrictions Management. DefectiveByDesign.org is a broad-based anti-DRM campaign that is targeting Big Media, unhelpful manufacturers and DRM distributors. The campaign aims to make all manufacturers wary about bringing their DRM-enabled products to market. DRM products have features built-in that restrict what jobs they can do. These products have been intentionally crippled from the users' perspective, and are therefore "defective by design". Learn more about our campaign

Write to us, info@defectivebydesign.org with news, ideas, feedback and your event photographs.

Day Against DRM: Sign-up Now to Help the Effort!

Posted On: Tue, 2010-03-09 15:22 by PeterB

Tuesday May 4, 2010 will be the international Day Against DRM.

The FSF will be working with other anti-DRM groups and anti-DRM activists from all over the world to raise awareness and mobilize the public. So spread the word by sharing this announcement, and putting the buttons below on your site.

Get ready for the action by signing up here.

These banners link to our article Decade in DRM, that tells the story of the fight against digital restrictions:


When Ubisoft takes a break, your games break

Posted On: Mon, 2010-03-08 08:18 by JohnSullivan

Many of you have written to us about Ubisoft's outrageous form of DRM, where players have to be constantly connected to the Internet in order to play the company's games -- not because the games are multiplayer, but for the sole purpose of the company being able to authenticate and keep an eye on you. Well, everyone who purchased the games using this system became painfully aware of this deliberate defect yesterday. Ubisoft's DRM authentication servers went down, and were reportedly down for at least ten hours.

Since the games are also proprietary software, there's no legal way for users to work around this problem, since they aren't allowed to modify the code themselves. When Ubisoft takes a break, the game breaks. What happens when Ubisoft goes out of business (as is likely to happen if they keep this up), or just decides to take these DRM servers down for good? That's just the way DRM proponents think things are supposed to work. As a lawyer for the RIAA and MPAA said last year, don't expect to still be able to use your DRMed media for long.

If you have an Amazon account, sounds like it's time to tag new Ubisoft games like Assassin's Creed II with "defectivebydesign" and "drm," to make sure everyone finds out about this.