Mozilla Firefox 38 has been released. It adds the <picture> element, Ruby annotation support, and Encrypted Media Extensions (EME), a form of digital rights management for HTML5 video. It also automatically downloads Adobe's Primetime Content Decryption Module (CDM) on 32-bit versions of Firefox on Windows Vista and newer Windows systems. The Register reports:
The nonprofit grudgingly agreed to add EME support to Firefox last year, despite the vocal objections of both Mozilla's then-CTO Brendan Eich and the Free Software Foundation. "Nearly everyone who implements DRM says they are forced to do it" the FSF said at the time, "and this lack of accountability is how the practice sustains itself."
Nonetheless, Mozilla promoted Firefox 38 to the Release channel on Tuesday, complete with EME enabled – although it said it's still doing so reluctantly. "We don't believe DRM is a desirable market solution, but it's currently the only way to watch a sought-after segment of content," Mozilla senior veep of legal affairs Danielle Dixon-Thayer said in a blog post.
The first firm to leap at the chance to shovel its DRM into Firefox was Adobe, whose Primetime Content Delivery Module for decoding encrypted content shipped with Firefox 38 on Tuesday. Thayer said various companies, including Netflix, are already evaluating Adobe's tech to see if it meets their requirements. Mozilla says that because Adobe's CDM is proprietary "black box" software, it has made certain to wrap it in a sandbox within Firefox so that its code can't interfere with the rest of the browser. (Maybe that's why it took a year to get it integrated.)
The CDM will issue an alert when it's on a site that uses DRM-wrapped content, so people who don't want to use it will have the option of bowing out. If you don't want your browser tainted by DRM at all, you still have options. You can disable the Adobe Primetime CDM so it never activates. If that's not good enough, there's a menu option in Firefox that lets you opt out of DRM altogether, after which you can delete the Primetime CDM (or any future CDMs from other vendors) from your hard drive. Finally, if you don't want DRM in your browser and you don't want to bother with any of the above, Mozilla has made available a separate download that doesn't include the Primetime CDM and has DRM disabled by default.
(Score: 2) by MichaelDavidCrawford on Thursday May 14 2015, @04:40AM
"Open Source" is a "Term of Art". Look "Term of Art" up in a legal dictionary.
If open source and free software were the same thing, then Linux would not have gone apeshit when someone on the lkml happened to mention that Linux was free software.
The reason I am being so pedantic about this is precisely because the distinction is poorly understood. Yes I readily agree that the words "open", "free", "source" and "software" are confusing in this discussion. Perhaps we could define new terms; "Foocode" is what the Open Source Initiative promotes, while "Barcode" is backed by the FSF.
The list of Foocode and Barcode licenses, to the best of my knowledge, are precisely identical, all the licenses in one way or another provide source. Yet Foocode and Barcode are completely different things.
The distinction is the reason one chooses the license, not the license itself, nor it is the simple availability of source code.
If you don't believe me, you can ask the experts, they'll confirm it: rms@gnu.org and esr@catb.org
Yes I Have No Bananas. [gofundme.com]
(Score: 2) by khedoros on Friday May 15 2015, @07:19AM
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Monday May 18 2015, @03:32AM
Some open source licenses are quite restrictive. Free software licenses guarantee you four fundamental freedoms.
(Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 19 2015, @06:15AM
Ask another expert (Bruce Perens), and he'd agree with my position.
Sounds like you missed this https://lists.debian.org/debian-devel/1999/02/msg01641.html [debian.org]
( Perens: It's Time to Talk about Free Software Again )
(Score: 2) by khedoros on Thursday May 21 2015, @08:02AM