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August 11, 2006

Hollywood's DVD CCA, in charge of CSS and other forms of DRM, is trying to undo some of the damage it's done.

CSS is a kind of CC mechanism, CC being Consumer Control. And DRM is, of course, Digital Restrictions Management. But No, neither CSS nor DRM are being phased out.

Rather, "Commercial vendors and individual consumers can now look forward to being able to legally create certain types of protected DVDs, the DVD Copy Control Association (DVD CCA) announced today," states a DVD CCA fluff release.

"Under rule changes now in the works, commercial vendors could create protected DVDs on kiosks and in small custom runs. Individual consumers could legally record a variety of selected content. Both would require special blank DVD discs that will use the Content Scramble System (CSS) for encryption and will be compatible with the millions of existing DVD players in the marketplace today."

Enter commercial kiosks, "where consumers could buy entertainment, custom-burned on the special discs" to allow, "unusual, historical or special content that is now unavailable on DVD because existing demand does not warrant the mass reproduction today’s market requires".

So what's it all about, Alfie?

The movie industry, "may be taking a page from their musical cousins, who have seen digital sales grow spectacularly in recent years, while CD sales remain flat," believes Ars Technica. "Most of this growth comes from the iTunes Music Store, which offered consumers the ability to burn music tracks to an unlimited number of CDs.

"Ironically, this was all possible because of the lack of copy protection on CDs in the first place. Given the much more stringent copy protection schemes being delivered with the new Blu-ray and HD DVD players and movies, it appears the movie industry still has some learning to do."


Originally from p2pnet.net, remediated by yatta on Aug 11, 2006 at 10:39 AM