shmerl: It's a common example of unacceptable business practice. I.e. something that could be presented as good on the surface, but bad underneath. And that blind usage of it without thinking too much that it's bad only promotes it further. So unethical business practices which are pushed to the market as "good" can be called the "blood diamonds". I don't see anything wrong with the analogy itself. But really I don't care about the analogy, I was pointing to the essence of the issue - i.e. to the DRM. And Crassmaster didn't answer anything on the essence, therefore contributing nothing productive to the discussion.
And so we see the danger of using overheated analogies and comparisons in the first place - they tend to distract from everything else. Unless you're still maintaining that this was a viable analogy in the first place. In that case, I'd LOVE to see you hop a plane to somewhere like Liberia, kneel before a kid working in a mud pit mine under watch by men with assault weapons and pat him on the head while telling him "I know your pain kid. I've been there, too. The Humble Bundle released an all Steam bundle pack."
As to the discussion, I never will see the big deal. It's one bundle. One bundle does not represent a shift of an entire brand. Can it? Sure. Is it likely? Seeing as they've released single publisher bundles and one game 'bundles' and music bundles that had no games in them, yet still returned to their usual format...not so much. Certainly not likely enough to elicit the sort of "The sky is falling!" madness from a couple of people in this thread.