I own a PS3, an Xbox and two gaming-capable PCs. I own 24 AAA titles on the PS3/Xbox and about 4 AAA PC titles, plus a massive amount of DLC, downloadable games and non-AAA PC titles. Of those, about 2-3 were bought used (and one of those led to DLC purchases). Most of my games were bought on release day or pre-ordered. But I can say this much, I will never buy a console that features "anti-used game technology." And I'm someone who rarely even buys used games, and never rents. But I'm firm in my rejection of DRM, particularly when it's meant to circumvent legal behavior.
And frankly, the idea that this is reasonable is ludicrous. The online passes are barely that (I don't consider it entirely unfair to pay a one-time fee of $10 for the use of servers). But if you thought about this in terms of books, movies or physical goods...Come on. A DVD-player that only let's you play movies that are bought brand new? A car that can't be driven except by the original owner? Bull.
For any such console to prevail, it'd have to include some insane pull on gamers. AAA titles that are the fraction of the cost on that console than on any other, loads of free quality DLC for every title, an extensive exclusive catalog, or some new, incredible technology (like virtual reality levels of incredible). I don't see that happening, and without it, any such console would fail when we still have PCs to fall back on. So unless Durall has a way to kill PC gaming, it's not going to happen.