Nice artcile, has comments from 2D Boy and Stardock.
A bit about GOO:
However, Stardock has developed a relaxed version of DRM, called Goo (no relation to
World of Goo), that it licenses to interested parties. The first company to make use of it was THQ on its
Tales of Valor, the recently-released stand-alone expansion of
Company of Heroes.
Stardock didn't use it in its just-released Demigod but Wardell plans to include it in future updates, but not in-store retail versions. When gamers use online resources, such as multiplayer, he says, that becomes costly to the developer which is when keeping track of legitimate purchases becomes important.
The difference between Goo and more-typical DRM technology, according to Wardell, is that the developer's computer recognizes the gamer, not the game.
"When you install the game," he explains, "you enter your e-mail address, then the serial number, and the game is now tied to you. It's your account, it's your game, and you can install it in as many machines as you'd like. I don't know if that is technically DRM or not; the term has become so vague that everything is considered DRM these days."
Some predictions for the future:
Stardock's Wardell believes that, in the next year or two, the industry will adopt a system similar to Goo -- on installation, a game will need to be activated online at which time it will be linked to the gamer's e-mail address.
But 2D Boy's Carmel expects that game makers will learn to live with piracy rather than fight it -- as he has.
"We will see lots more free-to-play games," he predicts, "with companies making their money through micro-transactions and such. When you tell gamers ‘take my games and don't pay me,' there's no reason for them to hack what you've built. All you need to do is come up with some other way to earn your money."
And some stupid from the ESA:
"Just because some users circumvent DRM protections to gain unauthorized access to game software does not mean that the technologies don't serve their intended purpose. No security technology is 100% effective."