Defective By Design is a joint effort by the Free Software Foundation and CivicActions, a company that develops online advocacy campaigns. The chief organizers are Gregory Heller of CivicActions,
Peter T. Brown, executive director of the FSF, and
Henry Poole, a CivicActions member who is also a director of the FSF. The campaign was launched in May 2006, with an anti-DRM protest at
WinHEC. The protest featured FSF members in yellow hazmat suits "handing out pamphlets explaining that
Microsoft products are – in the words of the key slogan for the campaign – 'defective by design' because of the DRM technologies included in them". Since then, the campaign has launched a number of actions with varying degrees of success. The campaign claims that its phone-in campaign against the
Recording Industry Association of America and related organizations around the world resulted in thousands of calls from people questioning the industry's position on DRM. On the other hand, efforts to meet with
Bono of
U2, a prominent supporter of Apple's DRM-regulated
iTunes, have so far met with no success. However, four major record labels dropped their pending lawsuits and joined with Apple and Microsoft to eliminate DRM from music sales. DBD proclaimed October 3, 2006, to be a "
Day Against DRM", and organized several events outside key
Apple stores in the US and the UK. Hazmat suits were again worn by protesters and leaflets were handed out to the public explaining Apple's use of DRM in their iTunes music store and on their
iPod media players. On January 30, 2007, the campaign organized along with the
BadVista campaign at the
Times Square. Protesters in hazmat suits then handed literature to attendants about the dangers of
Windows Vista's DRM and Trusted Computing features, as well as handing out CDs containing a
free software replacement for Windows Vista. == Campaigns ==