• IDAD, and where to get DRM-free files from

    From Ivan Shmakov@21:1/5 to All on Fri Dec 20 18:42:38 2024
    For some reason, I've never acquired any taste for anything
    "protected" with DRM, be that video games, music, books, -
    anything at all. As such, I hardly can recommend any
    alternatives to resources that /do/ use DRM: I simply have no
    familiarity with any of them whatsoever. Still, I guess
    International Day Against DRM, http://dayagainstdrm.org/ , is
    as good reason as any for sharing pointers to resources to
    obtain DRM-free files from, so here I go.

    (I suppose part of the reason is that back in the 1990s when
    I was learning computing, DRM hardly existed, or at least hardly
    mattered at large; and when it began to spread in the 2000s,
    after I was already introduced to the concept of free software
    - and found it much to my liking - I decided that I have better
    things to do with my time than to deal with anything that,
    after a fashion, requires me to prove my good intentions.)


    Two things I became interested in the 1990s are music and video
    games (and video games with good music in them; for an example,
    Electro Man, otherwise leaning towards being an unremarkable
    platformer, was pretty well done in that regard IMO.)

    By the time http://gog.com/ started in 2008, my interest in
    video games largely waned, but I felt like supporting them
    regardless; and if $ lgogdownloader --list-details output is
    to be believed, I now have some 286 titles in my GOG collection
    - aside of a few, all Dosbox- or ScuumVM-based (or Z-machine
    based, though still with a Dosbox-based interpreter bundled in.)

    Some of those games I've first /downloaded/ a full decade
    after purchase. (Like I've said, I have little interest in
    video games these days.) I think there's still select few
    that I'm yet to download for the first time, as well as other
    select few that I've downloaded and have yet to actually play.

    There's also http://classicdosgames.com/ for shareware and
    freeware titles (and playable demos, such as in the case of
    id's Spear of Destiny.) Might also come handy for those
    curious about what DOS gaming was like back in the day, but
    unwilling to spend actual money on that.

    Of course, I appreciate fully free games just as well, such
    as OpenTTD, http://packages.debian.org/bookworm/openttd .
    Sure, /quantitatively,/ the simulation makes little sense
    (a bus to the suburbs taking a week or two for a trip around),
    yet /qualitatively,/ the game is surprisingly insightful.


    As to music, I've been relying on CDDA for bigger names (such
    as Iron Maiden), and http://magnatune.com/ and http://bandcamp.com/
    for not-so-big ones (and /lots/ of them in the first case, given
    that I've paid for my Magnatune lifetime membership back in 2011,
    and thus get any updates from there I want essentially for free.)

    Say, as I was starting to write this article, (a local copy
    of) this track was playing in the background:

    http://download.magnatune.com/all/03-Wires-One%20Sock%20Thief_nospeech.ogg
    (paywalled), http://he3.magnatune.com/all/03-Wires-One%20Sock%20Thief.mp3
    ("free as in free beer" copy with an ad.)

    As to free (as in "free software") and freeware (as in "free
    beer") music, I suppose I need to prepare a comprehensive
    list at some point, but an obvious possible choice is
    http://commons.wikimedia.org/ . Somewhat less obvious IMO
    are http://imslp.org/ and http://opengameart.org/ . Say, I've
    recently stumbled upon http://opengameart.org/content/arrival-1 ,
    and unless I miss some deep flaw in it, it feels on par with
    the works of http://sekondprime.bandcamp.com/ . (Then again,
    it's not like I'm an expert music critic myself, so take that
    with a grain of salt.)


    For non-fiction, http://en.wikipedia.org/ IME provides a good
    enough summary for a sheer variety of topics that I've rarely
    felt a need to go for a proper textbook at all. For things
    like programming languages, standards / manuals are often
    enough available (as in: downloadable) for free (e. g.,
    http://ecma-international.org/ ); and for the examples of
    actual usage, the existing corpus of free software /and/
    http://duckduckgo.com/ searches (that in this case tend to
    mostly point to the Stack Exchange pages these days) hardly
    leave any ground uncovered.

    When that's not enough (and that's /rare/ IME), I've been
    either buying a dead tree edition, asking a friend who has
    one, or going to a local library.

    For fiction, I've bought a few ebooks from http://kobo.com/ -
    though a caution is needed to read the fine print stating
    whether any particular item does or does not use DRM. Mostly,
    though, I've been relying on http://wikisource.org/ (for the
    old, out-of-copyright works, such as those of H. P. Lovecraft),
    or the likes of http://fanfiction.net/ . My recent pick there
    is the "Darth Vader: Hero of Naboo" novel. Sure, it could use
    a proofreader or two (for comparison, I've only spotted a
    /single/ typo, 'quit' vs. 'quite', in my copy of "Princess Holy
    Aura" from Baen Books via Kobo), but I /am/ able to overlook
    minor spelling and grammar flaws and enjoy a good narrative still.

    Also, if you're into Russian language (or are asking for a
    friend), there's http://lib.ru/ . Can't say I'm too familiar
    with the site myself, though.


    Yet another resource to mention is http://archive.org/ : it has
    books, music, newspapers, radio shows, video games, - pretty
    much anything. Yet again, like with Kobo, some caution is needed
    as it /does/ include "streaming-only" content as well.

    One thing I barely mentioned are movies, and the reason is that
    I'm inclined to consider them a lost cause: some of the titles
    seem to have bigger budgets than some countries, at which point
    it as well might be seen as surprising that the stakeholders
    resort to merely uncivil behavior (such as DRM), rather than
    outright criminal (such as honest-to-goodness bloody murder.)

    Feel free to check http://gog.com/ and http://archive.org/ for
    DRM-free movies, but personally, I've decided for the time being
    to rely on written prose instead. If anything, it makes up in
    variety what it lacks in visuals (and my imagination seems to
    do a better job covering holes in presentation rather than holes
    in the plot.)

    ... And that'd be all for now. Thoughts?

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