Netflix (NFLX -1.64%) is working on new ways to make its streaming experience simpler and more consistent. As part of that drive, the company is abandoning Microsoft 's (MSFT 2.47%) SilverLight technology and focusing on bog-standard HTML5 solutions.

But HTML5 doesn't have support for digital rights management yet, which makes it hard to develop copy-protected media streams. In a perfect world from Netflix's perspective, DRM would be built into every standard Web browser and media box. This DRM support also has backing from technology giants Microsoft and Google (GOOGL 10.10%), which seems to ensure that any DRM-enabled Web standard will get wide backing in several of the market's most popular Web platforms.

Believe it or not, but that's a controversial idea.

Free software proponent Richard Stallman has written a paper explaining why building DRM into the next HTML standard would be tantamount to treason of the Web's open standards. The DRM proposal under consideration would, "for the first time, standardize a feature intended solely and explicitly for mistreatment of users."

Harsh words from an industry veteran. In this video, Fool contributor Anders Bylund talks you through what Stallman's critique might do to Netflix.