Xbox One Fans Petition For The Return Of DRM

Earnest Cavalli

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Jun 19, 2008
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Xbox One Fans Petition For The Return Of DRM



Microsoft's DRM backlash now has backlash of its own, as a group of Xbox One devotees have created an online petition to reverse Microsoft's new anti-DRM stance.

When the Xbox One first debuted at E3 2013, the majority reaction was one of stunned anger. The new games look good, and the new console seems as serviceable as Sony's next device, but then Microsoft got around to discussing the system's digital rights management scheme. Had Microsoft stuck with its initial plan, the Xbox One would refuse to play used games and players would need to maintain an active internet connection simply to play the titles they do own.

The outrage over this announcement was immediate and overwhelming. Within mere days of its Xbox One press conference, Microsoft decided to drop its DRM scheme and instead fall back on roughly the same anti-piracy measures seen in the Xbox 360. Hearing this, the Internet rejoiced (then immediately went back to hating everything save for pornography and pictures of adorable kittens).

All of this occurred weeks ago, and we'd assumed that it would be last anyone would hear of the Xbox One's draconian DRM. Turns out we were wrong. At this very moment an online petition is collecting signatures in an effort to convince Microsoft to return to its cast-off DRM scheme.

Why? We'll let the official description seen on the petition's Change.org page explain:

This was to be the future of entertainment. A new wave of gaming where you could buy games digitally, then trade, share or sell those digital licenses. Essentially, it was Steam for Xbox. But consumers were uninformed, and railed against it, and it was taken away because Sony took advantage of consumers uncertainty.

We want this back. It can't be all or nothing, there must be a compromise.

The petition then asks people to digitally sign a short message to Microsoft, which reads, "Give us back the Xbox One we were promised at E3[.]" Please note that we added the period at the end of that sentence, because that's how our language works.

As of this moment, the petition has attracted 3,143 signatures. It needs just 1,856 more before ... well, we don't really know. Do the people behind this campaign intend to send all of this to Microsoft? I can't see a few thousand signatures affecting the company to any real degree, particularly given that the petition looks like it was written by barely-literate teenagers. I'm not saying that to slam the people behind this movement, but there's just no way Microsoft can take a petition seriously if it lacks simple elements like proper punctuation or any sort of compelling argument beyond "we want this, you're jerks for taking it from us." It all seems very entitled, doesn't it?

Still, to each their own. If you're with this group, please take a moment to visit Change.org to toss your name into the swelling ranks of petition supporters. Or you could sit at home and revel in apathy while eating Otter Pops. If history's any indication, that's usually the best way to deal with online petitions.

Source: Change.org [http://www.change.org/petitions/microsoft-give-us-back-the-xbox-one-we-were-promised-at-e3-2]

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Legion

Were it so easy
Oct 2, 2008
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I can understand to an extent their irritation. I imagine when most people were against the DRM it was purely against the negative aspects of it. I don't think many assumed they'd just take away all of the good parts as well if they reversed their decisions.

I do think if Microsoft had managed to actually point out the benefits then people might have been more tolerant of the negative aspects, but to be honest they only have themselves to blame for all of this. The fact that they pissed people off with the DRM and then pissed off more people by removing it is not doing themselves any favours.

Now they just have two groups that dislike them. Those who haven't forgotten what they tried to add to the console, and those annoyed they took it away after announcing it.

Idiots, complete and utter idiots.
 

kajinking

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Aug 12, 2009
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Well here comes a LV 5 shitstorm also known as a septic cyclone. It should arrive in the comments section anytime now.
 

Gizmo1990

Insert funny title here
Oct 19, 2010
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This is really odd. The same thing I thought when reading the original E3 info on the Xbone was the first think I thought when reading about this petition. And that thought was this:

 

sirjeffofshort

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Oct 2, 2012
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I never really had a problem with what Microsoft was trying to do in transferring to a digital sales system. It's just the insanely anti-consumer restrictions that come with it that are bothersome to most. I don't think that makes the consuer base that rallied against it "Uninformed," but rather insulted by the policies of a company that are punishing the legitimate consumer of a product as a blanketed practice.

The key would be to still implement the innovations that Microsoft was so touting, but to make them optional rather than mandatory. Clearly they don't trust us enough to do that, and therefore we end up in the losing situation we're in... at least that's the way I see it. (Of course, nothing that was said in this post was new or enlightening information, but there you have it. haha)
 

PoolCleaningRobot

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Mar 18, 2012
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If Microsoft just made the cloud gaming thing optional from the start we wouldn't be dealing with this in the first place would we?
 

Andy Shandy

Fucked if I know
Jun 7, 2010
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So they're not actually wanting the return of the DRM, but actually the family sharing and stuff, which were decent enough ideas.
 

james.sponge

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Mar 4, 2013
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Steam for Xbox? That's wishful thinking, I can't imagine MS offering the next iteration of Halo with 50 percent discount.
 
Aug 1, 2010
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To each his own? Yeah, NO.

Maybe we can get shitty DRM policies installed on just THEIR consoles.

The naiveté of these people just astounds me.

Thank fuck the gaming media isn't reversing its stance any time soon.
 

Captain Anon

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Mar 5, 2012
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kajinking said:
Well here comes a LV 5 shitstorm also known as a septic cyclone. It should arrive in the comments section anytime now.
well time to baton the hatches and fire up the old electric fence then, hopefully I've got enough supplies to last it
 

FEichinger

Senior Member
Aug 7, 2011
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And with this, Microsoft has successfully shifted the blame from themselves to "those stupid evil people who complained about it and removed all the goodies from our console". Well played.
 

CardinalPiggles

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Jun 24, 2010
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Some people are gluttons for punishment. Actually I could believe that this petition was a joke.

The trading digital games thing is situational at best, downright lazy at worst. Most people who would trade games with their friends and family live within a reasonable distance of said friends and family.

However, the DRM is always there. It negatively impacts everyone at all times. It's logically a step back for us as consumers.

And don't even get me started on the damn Kinect, ugh.
 

Earnest Cavalli

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Jun 19, 2008
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Sir Thomas Sean Connery said:
Thank fuck the gaming media isn't reversing its stance any time soon.
For the record, I have no stance, I just find all of this drama interesting.

Well, and I find online petitions to be stereotypically, hilariously ineffectual.
 

LordMonty

Badgerlord
Jul 2, 2008
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This can only lead to make microsoft look more stupid... I don't think microsoft are loosing anything doing this DRM free this is a really stupid petition.
 

Zombie_Moogle

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Dec 25, 2008
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Does anyone else get the feeling there might be a hint of Trololololol in this petition?

The sparse details within the petition itself raises my eyebrow a few centimeters
 
Aug 1, 2010
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Earnest Cavalli said:
Sir Thomas Sean Connery said:
Thank fuck the gaming media isn't reversing its stance any time soon.
For the record, I have no stance, I just find all of this drama interesting.

Well, and I find online petitions to be stereotypically, hilariously ineffectual.
Hey, no stance in good stance in my mind.

And yes, after the whole "Let's make the US government build a Death Star" thing got enough signatures, online petitions are kinda hard to take seriously.
 

Vivi22

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Aug 22, 2010
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As far as I'm concerned, anyone actually wanting and campaigning for the return of Microsoft's ridiculous DRM policies is welcome to go fuck themselves. They're idiots and no one should listen to them.
 

WhiteTigerShiro

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Sep 26, 2008
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So basically, EA and Microsoft forced their employees to start and sign this petition to try and make it look like the Xbox One's original DRM plans were a good idea. At least, that's what I got out of this.
 

Bindal

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May 14, 2012
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Andy Shandy said:
So they're not actually wanting the return of the DRM, but actually the family sharing and stuff, which were decent enough ideas.
True - but those people don't seem to realise that the whole "sharing"-stuff wasn't part of the DRM. Removing that was just Microsoft being a-holes and I wouldn't mind if it would come back.
The actual DRM, however, should stay right where it is.