drmGearBookshop.org Now Sells EbooksBy Boone AshworthSecurityHP CEO Says They Brick Printers That Use Third-Party Ink Because of … HackersBy Scharon Harding, Ars TechnicaSecurityBlind People Have Won the Right to Break Ebook DRM—for NowBy Damon BeresSecurityThe Woman Bulldozing Video Games’ Toughest DRMBy Cecilia D'AnastasioGearA Costly Reminder That You Don't Own Those EbooksBy Brian BarrettGearHP Has Added DRM to Its Ink Cartridges. Not Even Kidding (Updated)By Brian BarrettSecurityA Bug in Chrome Makes It Easy to Pirate MoviesBy Kim ZetterGearKeurig’s My K-Cup Retreat Shows We Can Beat DRMBy Brian BarrettGearWTF! It Should Not Be Illegal to Hack Your Own Car's ComputerBy Kyle WiensBusinessWhy Copyrighted Coffee May Cripple the Internet of ThingsBy Marcus WohlsenScienceNASA's Mars Design Reference Mission Goes Nuclear (2001)By David S F PortreeCultureFor the First Time, You Can Actually Own the Digital Comics You BuyBy Laura HudsonGearNew DRM Will Change the Words in Your E-BookBy Roberto BaldwinDRM for the Web? Say It Ain't SoBy Scott GilbertsonGearRemote Wipe of Customer's Kindle Highlights Perils of DRM (Updated)By Mat HonanGearApple Fixes 'Appageddon' DRM Issue, Re-Updates Affected AppsBy Christina BonningtonGearAppageddon! Apple Botches DRM Update, Crashes Dozens of AppsBy Christina BonningtonBusinessAmazon's Kindle Gets a Library CardBy Tim CarmodyGearGoogle Blocks Rooted Android Devices From Renting MoviesBy Mike IsaacGearHow To Strip DRM from Kindle E-Books and OthersBy Charlie SorrelCultureVuvuzelas Blare on Pirated Copies of Michael Jackson: The Experience for DSBy Jason SchreierThe Age of Music Piracy Is Officially OverBy Paul BoutinCultureGood Old Games Offers Planescape: TormentBy Gus MastrapaGearMandatory FM Radios in Phones? No Way, Says CEABy Ars TechnicaMore Stories