I find the thread title inflammatory and inaccurate.
I have to disagree. In the text of the article it is clearly stated that an exemption for breaking DRM was proposed for situations where active DRM would endanger lives and it was opposed on the grounds that interpretting when that should be allowed would be confusing. That to me clearly states that to certain copyright holders lives are less important than their copyrights.
To more clearly state it would take longer than the allowed subject line. If you can propose a subject that would fit and still clearly indicate that stance I would happily edit my subject to match.
Not to defend DRM, but:
Mission critical applications should not be run on windows systems period. (Show me a QNX rootkit... ) For that matter, show me a proper implementation of the POSIX extensions on the windows platform...
If a mission critical application must run on a windows system, then certainly no one should be listening to audio CDs or playing games on said system.
I would agree on mission crititical services should not be on Windows. Most mission critical software these days operates on a server (and should be on a
dedicated server with no other apps). What such server software needs a GUI on the server? On the client side I could see it being useful but rarely on the server side.
However what do you do when your mission critical system is
itself protected by DRM that could fail and endanger lives? Should you be able to break the DRM to protect the critical system (thereby protecting lives) or should you have to leave lives at risk? What about DRM built into the hardware of the server (hardware DRM in computers is beginning to show)? Should you be allowed to deactivate hardware DRM? Microsoft doesn't want you to be able to deactivate hardware DRM because if you can't then you can only boot an OS that is recognized and allowed by the hardware (a commercial OS not the Linux distribution du jour).
DRM is being pushed by software companies, the RIAA and the MPAA. DRM allows those who control copyrights to restrict you from using rights that were granted to you by copyright law. Laws like the DMCA allow those coporate restrictions to have the force of law themselves. I don't think that companies should be allowed to rewrite copyright laws to suit themselves by putting DRM on their copywritten products. At present relatively few people are aware of DRM or have been bitten by it. Right now DRM is just beginning. Right now is the time to fight it.