Network Security Essentials: Applications and Standards
Network Security Essentials: Applications and Standards
Fair use, DRM, and trusted computing
Communications of the ACM - Digital rights management
Communications of the ACM - Digital rights management
Communications of the ACM - Digital rights management
Fair use by design in the European copyright directive of 2001
Communications of the ACM - Digital rights management
A skeptical view of DRM and fair use
Communications of the ACM - Digital rights management
Security architectures for controlled digital information dissemination
ACSAC '00 Proceedings of the 16th Annual Computer Security Applications Conference
How DRM-based content delivery systems disrupt expectations of "personal use"
Proceedings of the 3rd ACM workshop on Digital rights management
Proceedings of the 4th ACM workshop on Digital rights management
The problem with rights expression languages
Proceedings of the ACM workshop on Digital rights management
Persistent access control: a formal model for drm
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM workshop on Digital Rights Management
Proceedings of the 2007 ACM workshop on Digital Rights Management
Problem Analyses and Recommendations in DRM Security Policies
EuroISI '08 Proceedings of the 1st European Conference on Intelligence and Security Informatics
Digital rights management architectures
Computers and Electrical Engineering
Pricing schemes for digital content with DRM mechanisms
Decision Support Systems
Efficient license validation in MPML DRM architecture
Proceedings of the nineth ACM workshop on Digital rights management
DRM architecture for mobile VOD services
MRCS'06 Proceedings of the 2006 international conference on Multimedia Content Representation, Classification and Security
Aggregate licenses validation for digital rights violation detection
ACM Transactions on Multimedia Computing, Communications, and Applications (TOMCCAP) - Special Issue on Multimedia Security
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DRM has been widely promoted as a means to enforce copyright. In many previous papers, it has been argued that DRM gives too much power to rights holders and actually goes beyond the restrictions provided by copyright laws. In this paper we argue that DRM does not actually implement the fundamentals of copyright law, and is rather a mechanism for enforcing licence and contract restrictions on digital data. However, we believe that DRM does have a place in the digital distribution of copyrighted works and present two mechanisms that would allow users to get a more balanced deal from the rights holders. The mechanisms we present also allow for newer business models that cannot be easily implemented with current DRM systems.