Not really. That's more outright censorship, and many times at odds with the law. Some companies are fairly notorious for not just allowing gameplay footage to be used (not to mention showcasing unauthorized mods and such). Like Nintendo.
Back when...this kind of thing made enough sense at a glance if you had any digital library, the joke needed no justification or explanation: http://mafiaa.org/press_room/
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RIAA eventually removed DRM from CDs and even a lot of mainstream music is available DRM-free and legal, without serious fears of being prosecuted for a modern version of the mixtape.
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MPAA did not stop so easily. DVDs kept being region locked with added DRM, blue ray's no better, from my understanding. You can get legal digital copies of movies these days, but those are almost always locked down as well, and you could still find yourself in trouble if you
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Wow that's some powerful white collar shit.
Thanks. Twitter will use this to make your timeline better. UndoUndo
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