Microsoft Responds to Xbox One Petition to bring back DRM
“I think it’s pretty simple. We’ve got to just talk more, get people understanding what our system is,” Whitten told IGN. “The thing that’s really gratifying is that people are excited about the types of features that are possible, and it’s sort of shame on us that we haven’t done as good of a job as we can to make people feel like that’s where we’re headed.”
“The number one thing I want to do is I want to get the product out, because people are going to use it and obviously a lot of this is more evident, but certainly what I want to do right is now is talk more about how we thought about these features,” he continued. “How we thought about how Xbox Live works, how digital works. I see people feeling like we’ve moved away from digital, when certainly I don’t believe that’s the case. I believe we’ve added on choice for people. It was an addition of a feature onto Xbox One, not a removal of a feature. And I understand people see things like Family Sharing and they’re like, ‘Wow, I was really looking forward to that,’ which is more of an engineering reality time frame type-thing.”
As far as the petition, Whitten believes that kind of response is directly related to Microsoft’s recent ability to communicate its policies.
“What it tells me is we need to do more work to talk about what we’re doing because I think that we did something different than maybe how people are perceiving it,” he said. “When I read some of the things like that petition, from my perspective we took a lot of the feedback and, while Xbox One is built to be digital native, to have this amazing online experience, we realized people wanted some choice. They wanted what I like to call a bridge, sort of how they think about the world today using more digital stuff. What we did, we added to what the console can do by providing physical and offline modes in the console. It isn’t about moving away from what that digital vision is for the platform. It’s about adding that choice. Frankly, I think we need to just do more to let people see how the console works, what they’re going to be able to do for it. I think a lot of the things they’re wishing for are frankly there.”
“What it tells me is we need to do more work to talk about what we’re doing because I think that we did something different than maybe how people are perceiving it,” he said. “When I read some of the things like that petition, from my perspective we took a lot of the feedback and, while Xbox One is built to be digital native, to have this amazing online experience, we realized people wanted some choice. They wanted what I like to call a bridge, sort of how they think about the world today using more digital stuff. What we did, we added to what the console can do by providing physical and offline modes in the console. It isn’t about moving away from what that digital vision is for the platform. It’s about adding that choice. Frankly, I think we need to just do more to let people see how the console works, what they’re going to be able to do for it. I think a lot of the things they’re wishing for are frankly there.”
On the subject of the removed Family Sharing feature, we asked Whitten if any kind of road map is in place to restore the ability to share your digital library with family and friends.
“If it’s something that people are really excited about and want, we’re going to make sure that we find the right way to bring it back,” Whitten said. “A ‘road map’ sort of implies more like ‘on date X it’s back’ than I think exists, but we believe really strongly in how you build a great experience on Xbox One for me as an individual, but also for my family. Family Sharing is a great example of how you do that with content. I think you’re going to see us, both with examples like that and with other things, keep pushing on how that’s something great. An example is some of the stuff we’re doing with what we announced around Gold, where other people in the house get the advantages of Gold when I’m a Gold member. You’re going to see us continue to push in those areas.”
Posted:
Related Forum: Xbox Forum
Source: http://uk.ign.com/articles/2013/07/12/microsoft-shame-on-us-for-xbox-one-messaging
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Comments
F22Posted:
Think about the benefits for just having inter once a day. Brings Internet into homes, you can play games without a disc, beneficial for people who don't want to get up and go for hardcore gaming. Yes their are a few downsides but Microsoft cant satify everyone. Just let them be
DJMarkyMarkPosted:
I really wouldn't mind if they brought it back.
But from the way he was talking it seemed like he was pretty confident in the decision which took away the DRM.
But from the way he was talking it seemed like he was pretty confident in the decision which took away the DRM.
BeetPosted:
TTGJhonoThisIs50 Why not just have an option to have the DRM or no DRM?
Same thing i was thinking.
How stupid are you guys? Please explain how that would work?
shadow1Posted:
ShadowBoltDashie Wasn't the whole petition mostly signed by Sony fanboys who did it to make the Xbox One seem terrible or something like that?
No, there are plenty of people who wanted the DRM just so they don't have to buy games and just jew off their friends with the family share option.
ErisPosted:
ThisIs50 Why not just have an option to have the DRM or no DRM?
Same thing i was thinking.
Scared_of_WaterPosted:
DisastressThisIs50 Why not just have an option to have the DRM or no DRM?
im thinking the same thing.
They can do it because theres a day 1 update to remove the DRM.
XNesPosted:
Cool I hope they do go back to DRM not just because of family share
But because of being able install game disk to hard drive and don't need to take the disks everywhere you go with your Xbox
But because of being able install game disk to hard drive and don't need to take the disks everywhere you go with your Xbox
MarluxiaPosted:
ThisIs50 Why not just have an option to have the DRM or no DRM?
im thinking the same thing.
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