Digital rights management (DRM) is a set of access control technologies for restricting the use of proprietary hardware and copyrighted works.[1] DRM technologies try to control the use, modification, and distribution of copyrighted works (such as software and multimedia content), as well as systems within devices that enforce these policies. (From Wiki)
Pon·zi scheme
ˈpänzē ˌskēm
noun
a form of fraud in which belief in the success of a nonexistent enterprise is fostered by the payment of quick returns to the first investors (Bob Stuart and others) from money invested by later investors.
People need licensed software and hardware to use it....How is that not a form of DRM?
And as it being a Ponzi Scheme......People are paying into this by purchasing MQA DAC's, getting MQA content....for no real benefit over existing standards and paying a premium for that right. People at the top will make money, and people at the bottom may one day have a DAC that has MQA laser etched on it as a reminder....but no MQA.
Not the proper place to debate, but according to your definition a Ponzi scheme involves a "nonexistent enterprise", which is not the case here. Plus, a Ponzi scheme includes falsifying records to investors, which is not happening here. People buying MQA DACs know what they are buying and the DACs work as advertised. Your really distorting the original idea of a Ponzi scheme here. But, as I said, not the place to debate that.
As to DRM, the 16/44/48 form can be played on any system that plays normal CDs and be copied without restriction. The DRM considers about MQA are that some think that MQA may implement a DRM scheme like Blu-Ray, which means they could not even be copied.
According to your definition of DRM, then Dolby Digital and DTS are both DRM, yet people do not describe them that way.
Its all a matter of definitions, but MQA does not fit a lot of the traditional measures of DRM.
No need to discuss further, as it is not really germane to how MC handles MQA.