Australians urged to ‘lawfully evade’ unfair prices on digital goods

Australians urged to 'lawfully evade' unfair prices on digital goods

After going through a year-long rigmarole of summonses and interrogations to find out why Australians are being overcharged by as much as 66 percent on digitally-distributed Apple, Microsoft and Adobe products, and how the practice of “geo-blocking” prevents customers from seeking fairer prices elsewhere, an Australian parliamentary committee has finally hit on a solution. In the words of committee chairman Nick Champion, speaking to ABC News:

“What we want to do is make sure that consumers are aware of the extent to which geo-blocking applies to them and the extent to which they can lawfully evade [it].”

Now, if you were hoping that the Australian government would somehow force these companies to drop their prices down to US-equivalent levels, then this quote may admittedly sound a bit weak. It might also seem impractical, since geo-blocking is designed to be difficult to evade, by binding a customer’s IP address, credit card or other details to their home market. Then again, things start to make more sense when we factor in the committee’s other suggestions.

In particular, it proposes that the country’s Copyright Act be amended to make it clear that an Australian won’t be prosecuted just because they annoyed a multinational tech company by circumventing its geographic restrictions — and, indeed, the population as a whole should be taught “tools and techniques” to achieve this wherever possible. The committee even recommends that Australians should have a “right of resale,” such that they could legally remove locks on digital content that limits it to one user or one ecosystem. We have no idea how seriously the government will take these ideas, or how quickly it may implement them, but the committee’s defiant tone makes for some good reading at the source link.

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Via: ABC News, HotHardware

Source: Committee report (PDF download)

Home Pass lets Comcast subscribers watch streaming videos without logging in

Home Pass lets Xfinity subscribers watch TV Everywhere content without logging in

Sure you’d like to watch On Demand content on your computer, but there’s that whole tiresome logging-in thing you have to do first. If you subscribe to both Xfinity TV and Internet services, however, that would no longer be an issue thanks to a new feature called Home Pass. As long as customers access the Xfinity website within their home network, they’ll be automatically logged in, and will be free to access TV Everywhere content from then on, no password required. Xfinity ran a trial of the service during the London Olympics and March Madness 2013, and have decided Home Pass is robust enough to handle Xfinity’s entire video library. While this will initially be available via the web, it sounds like other platforms like iOS, Android and (maybe?) Xbox could get it later as well.

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Source: Comcast

Adobe’s VP of Experience Design Michael Gough on Paper dependency and the omniscient gadget

Adobe's Michael Gough on his dependency on digital Paper and the omniscient gadget

Every week, a new and interesting human being tackles our decidedly geeky take on the Proustian Q&A. This is the Engadget Questionnaire.

In this week’s edition of our regular answer sessions, Adobe’s VP of Experience Design Michael Gough discusses digital sketching and six-fingered spies. Head to the other side of the jump to peruse those and a number of other topics in this coup d’état of queries.

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Source: Distro Issue 97

Adobe’s Creative Cloud Has Already Been Pirated

Adobe's Creative Cloud Has Already Been Pirated

Adobe’s shift to cloud-based software provision for its new Creative Cloud design suite was partly motivated by anti-piracy concerns. Which, of course, means… it’s already been pirated.

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You Can Download Adobe’s Creative Cloud Right Now

You Can Download Adobe's Creative Cloud Right Now

Adobe pulled the covers off its shiny new Creative Cloud earlier this month, but it’s now finally available for you to get your grubby little hands on.

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Adobe releases latest Creative Cloud apps, surveys disgruntled customers about pricing

Adobe's latest Creative Cloud apps now available, upgraders get 40 percent off until July 31st

Love it or hate it, Adobe’s Creative Cloud subscription-based software is now the only way to get your favorite apps like Photoshop, Premiere Pro and the like. The company has just released the latest versions of most of those programs, now dubbed CC, which can be installed alongside the current apps for those afraid to change mid-project. Meanwhile, Adobe’s trying to tempt previous suite or apps owners to transition to the new system for up to 60 percent off for CS6 owners during a 12-month period, or 40 percent off for those on CS3 to CS5.5. According to Photo Rumors, Adobe is also considering a new pricing structure in response to a massive online backlash against the subscription model from existing clients, who feel it’s too expensive. The company sent out a survey asking some of them what they thought about paying $10 per month for three years for Photoshop, or $30 for the entire suite, while being able to keep a permanent CS6 copy of either at the end. Considering the level of vehemence we saw earlier, we’ll have to wait and see if that’ll fly. Meanwhile, check the PR after the break to see what’s new in all the apps.

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Adobe rolls out “major update” for Creative Cloud

Back on December 11, Adobe rolled out a fairly substantial update to Creative Cloud, adding new tools and other such changes that gave it quite the boost. They’re doing this again, with the company announcing the release of a “major update” that we began hearing about back in May at The Creativity Conference. With the

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Adobe Lightroom 5 lands as beta edges to expiration

Adobe Lightroom 5 has been officially released, replacing the free beta with a new, paid version. Available either as part of a Creative Cloud subscription or as a standalone app, Lightroom 5 offers a range of photo-editing tools for making quick changes to shots, including automatic landscape straightening and the ability to add in multiple

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Adobe Lightroom 5 Is Available Now

Adobe Lightroom 5 is now available for download.

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Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5 now available for $149

Adobe Photoshop Lightroom 5 now available for $149 with Smart Previews and more

Adobe teased us with a Photoshop Lightroom 5 beta at the start of the spring, and it’s closing out the season by releasing the finished goods. Mac- and Windows-based shutterbugs can download the completed image management app today, either at no extra charge through a Creative Cloud subscription or $149 for a stand-alone version ($79 for an upgrade). Buyers get the same core updates no matter how much they spend, including an Advanced Healing Brush for removing objects and Smart Previews that let travelers leave their original files at home. Behance publishing is also part of the revision. When Lightroom is free to try for a month, it likely won’t hurt to grab a copy at the source link — especially if your photo collection is growing out of hand.

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Source: Adobe, Richard Curtis’ Blog