Digital imprimatur
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
Digital imprimatur is a term widely associated with John Walker, due to his article of the same name. Imprimatur refers to the circumstance under a state of official censorship, wherein approval of a publication is necessary. Thus digital imprimatur refers to a system of digital, or internet, censorship.
John Walker argues in his article Digital Imprimatur: How big brother and big media can put the Internet genie back in the bottle, that there is increasingly a crackdown on the ability for internet users to voice their ideas, as well as an upcoming official state of internet censorship on the horizon. Walker claims that the most likely candidate to usher in the digital imprimatur is digital rights management, or DRM.
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