EFF claims Flash DRM to squash creativity

YouTube is generally credited with helping to establish Flash Video as an online standard

The Electronic Frontier Foundation has warned that Adobe’s decision to embed DRM technology in Version 9 of its Flash Player and Version 3 of its Flash Media Server software could “give Adobe and its customers a powerful new legal weapon against competitors and ordinary users through the Digital Millennium Copyright Act”.

The EFF claims that clauses within the DMCA that outlaw any tools that could be used to “circumvent” DRM system could be used to shut down any users who try to break the encryption of DRM protected Flash Video content. Users of such tools will not be able to defend themselves by claiming fair use, and neither will Adobe be required to prove that it was infringing copyright.