Please don't confuse DRM and the more useful encryption/password system used for general security. The two might share some technical commonalities in that they both use encryption and both are unlocked by keys/passwords, but one is inherently insecure by design. You can guess which.
When someone says there's no place for encryption in DRM, that does not mean they're saying there's no place for encryption in all other walks of life, that's just taking someones viewpoint beyond what was really said to try to discredit what is a valid point about DRM.
Last edited by JoeD; 05-22-2012 at 08:24 AM.
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