Digital Rights Management (DRM), in general, is a much scorned technology. Both people with and without a continence lament the loss of control of their own computer. In general, DRM hurts people who obey the law more than those who break it by applying somewhat arbitrary limitations on purchased and properly licensed software, music and video content, while those who obtain content illegally are afforded a much more control.
According to
Tom Yager at
Info World, in a big stride backwards AMD are planning to introduce
DRM for your framebuffer, meaning that the author of DRM protected content is able to prevent you from even taking a image captures. Lets say for example, you're a great fan of the Matrix. Maybe you'd like to take a image capture of Neo doing some bullet time kung fu. Well kiddies, depending on the whims of Warner Bros, that could be classified as stealing.
One presumes this little nugget of technology will debut with the
R6xx-series graphics chips, but such a technology could easily be applied retroactively with a driver release. What's next on the agenda? DRM eye implants? Sub-cranial pain simulators that trigger when you describe something you've seen in DRM protected content? Where there's a profit to be had, anything is justifiable.