drothgery said:However, in priniciple, I'm strongly in favor of some sort of digital rights management. It's becoming more and more clear that most people don't regard copying commercial music, software, movies, and books without paying for them as immoral (and here I'm talking about obtaining a first copy, not moving a copy you've already paid for to a secondary device that you own). Greater availability of fast internet access and cheaper storage are making it incredibly easy to share illegally obtained IP. So I'm very concerned that without workable rights management technologies, it will become difficult to make a profit selling digital works in the near future. I shouldn't have to explain why this would be bad.
I think your overestimating the impact seeing a poll like this will (or should) have on publishers or a vendor.epochrpg said:ROTFLMAO! I cannot believe how many people took the time to vote on this just to say they would NOT buy stuff from DTRPG! I am going to email them the link to this message board. 388 nos vs. 59 yeses! 85% of people polled said they would not buy it!
Maybe then the will see how out of touch they are with potential customers!
I think this analysis pretty sums up my view as well.Dimwhit said:1. You can do that with DTRPG
2. Well, if you backup the pdf purchased from DTRPG on another drive or disk, you're not screwed. (Not counting any possible limits to number of machines that can be registered--I'll concede that's a possible issue.)
3. I've been to both sites. DTRPG is slow, but it's not bad. I've never thought RPGNow's website was all that great, personally. All a matter of opinion, though.
4. Your facts are wrong. With DTRPG, you register with them (as you do with RPGNow). You have an extra reg with Adobe. That's it. PayPal is not required. Regular credit cards can be used, just as with RPGNow.
5. First-time registration with DTRPG takes about 10 minutes. Not like it takes a huge amount of time, as you imply.
6. Can't argue that.
Don't get me wrong, you have good arguments. But I heard a lot of gripes with DTRPG that don't seem to be accurate (like having to use MS Passport, PayPal, not being able to print--a whole lot of stuff). Just want to help get all the right facts straight.
Of course, that doesn't deal with those having technical difficulties, but that's not surprising with any new venture like this.
johnsemlak said:I think a lot of mainstream customers aren't that bothered, and DTRPG seems to be going after a more mainstream crowd. So, the business sence of the operation may not be as bad as some believe.
JediSoth said:If they can make it easier for vendors to print them for customers like me, I won't have a problem with the additional copy protection.
JediSoth
Exactly. Why in the world would I give anyone access to the contents of my hard drive? If I were ok with that, I'd use p2p software. (Well, no I wouldn't. There is also the theft issue. But you get my drift.) I am far from a techno-goddess. But I know enough to be extremely suspicious of the "safety" of Microsoft passport. Sure, I could register with Adobe instead, but why should I trust them either?Pravus said:So you want to track my use of your product on my PC, or say get a list of all activated DRM PDFs on my machine. I don't think so.
Buttercup said:The above questions leave aside the other major issue, which is that I'm being sold a product with crippled features becasuse someone else is dishonest. This isn't a business model designed to make your customers feel valued.