] BERKELEY, Calif.--Attempts to protect copyrighted ] material have strayed from their original purpose, say ] lawyers, technologists and academics, but few can agree ] on the solution. ] ] Speaking Friday at a University of California at Berkeley ] conference on the law and policy of digital rights ] management, experts from all circles seem to agree that ] more is going wrong than right with the current approach ] to protecting digital content. Moreover, they argue that ] current laws such as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act ] (DMCA)--which makes cracking copyright protections ] illegal, even when otherwise acceptable under other ] laws--are serving the extremes, not the mainstream ] populace. Some comments from Microsoft: ] "We have a clear focus that we don't want to restrict what ] people can use their computers for," said John Manferdelli, ] general manager for Microsoft's Windows Trusted Platform ] Technologies group. "We have found out in talking to ] customers that whatever the methods that you use, they ] cannot impose policy. It should be under the nuser's control." They are currently not singing that song in regard to XBox hacking. Experts: Copyright law hurts technology | CNET News.com |