Tracking the tools that decentralize the media. tools process ideas resources eventsav

unmediated

 

August 12, 2005

Tom's Hardware is running a story about proposed new copy protection techniques that could be used in the next generation high definition Blu-ray DVDs. This is incredible:

One part of the announcement that had been anticipated by experts was Blu-ray's embrace of Advanced Access Content System (AACS), one version of which has also been adopted by the HD DVD Forum. This controversial technology would require that disc players maintain permanent connections to content providers via the Internet, making it possible for discs that fail a security check to trigger a notification process, enabling the provider to send the player a sort of "self-destruct code." This code would come in the form of a flash ROM "update" that would actually render the player useless, perhaps unless and until it is taken to a repair shop for reprogramming. The Blu-ray statement noted that certain elements of AACS have yet to be formally approved by the BDA.

When will the studios get it? Make DVDs so affordable and so easy to use that we'll glady give them our money. Instead, it looks like they want to be able to "blow up" a possible pirate's DVD player. This should make for some interesting tech support calls from innocent people: "What? You blew up my DVD player because my copy of Bambi was scratched?" or "I can't watch Star Wars on DVD because my cable connection is down?"

Anything that can be encrypted will be decrypted. When will they realize that? I give the pirates a few weeks to break this (the story mentions how one earlier scheme was defeated by a permanent marker).


Originally posted by mikek from Hacking NetFlix, remediated by yatta on Aug 12, 2005 at 05:12 PM