UC Berkeley nuked 20,000 Creative Commons lectures, but they're not going away

However, this standard is different from every other one in W3C history, because it is subject to the laws that protect DRM; these laws potentially felonize bypassing DRM, even for lawful purposes like adapting them for accessibility purposes.

Here is a list of accessibility use-cases that the W3C suite doesn’t contemplate:

It doesn’t need to, because for any spec except EME, these cases can be addressed when they arise. But EME, being in a unique realm, requires new test-suites.

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