I wasn't talking out of my ass. Maybe my information is little dated - but from talking to actual legal teams at Turner & Warner Bros., this is what I was told.
Admittedly it was 2 years ago when I last talked to them - but given that it took you 8+2 years to finally get rid of DRM, there is some truth to what I was saying. It'd be helpful if you actually provided some counter reasons as to why content producers are actually holding onto DRM, and enlightening the rest of us, especially the poster who asked the question, rather than just saying "You're wrong because I spent 10 years in the industry".
Admittedly it was 2 years ago when I last talked to them - but given that it took you 8+2 years to finally get rid of DRM, there is some truth to what I was saying. It'd be helpful if you actually provided some counter reasons as to why content producers are actually holding onto DRM, and enlightening the rest of us, especially the poster who asked the question, rather than just saying "You're wrong because I spent 10 years in the industry".