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Blu-ray adopts DRM

9 August 2005 10:53 by Lasse "cd-rw.org" Penttinen | 40 comments

Blu-ray adopts DRM The Blu-ray Association has adopted a copy protection and content management scheme that it described to be "comprehensive". It is immediately speculated that this DRM scheme would provide security to prevent the piracy of the future PS3 console.
The Blu-ray content management system include three components: Advanced Access Content System (AACS), a Blu-ray specific enhancement for content protection renewability called BD+, and a ROM Mark unique to Blu-ray Disc to prevent mass production piracy and sale of unauthorized copies.

AACS will enable content providers to manage copies with network functionality and internet connectivity in a secure manner. The ROM Mark will be a unique and undetectable identifier embedded into movies, music, and games. BD+ will be a programmable enhancement that will let content providers respond to organized attacks and update compromised code.
But will any protection be enough to prevent piracy? I personally doubt it. For decades more and more advanced protections have been developed, and later cracked. MOD chips circumvented PS1, PS2 and Xbox protections, so why couldn't they do it in the future as well? On the other hand the Blu-ray format itself may slow down piracy at first, until the recorders get more popular and cheaper.

Source: Punchjump

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    Discuss this article!  There are more user comments available, read them here
    deep0r (Junior Member) 10 August 2005 14:06 Send private message to this user   
    i dont think it will take "years" to crack as previously mentioned. the difference is when dvds first came out the tech and piracy demand was small. with todays pirates and the constant races to be first and get their name in pirate history forever....you cant seriously think its going to take very long
    Clearmoon (Newbie) 10 August 2005 17:30 Send private message to this user   
    I agree, Deep0r - when DVDs came out, who even had a CD burner, let alone DVD? I also have a bigger question -- with all this focus on DRM (Digital RIGHTS Mgmt.) who is looking out for OUR rights? Namely, the Right to Privacy -- esp. in the post-9/11 US, with things like the Patriot Act in play, I don't think I care to have anyone having information such as what DVDs I view, music I listen to, etc. being broadcast to someplace every time I pop in a disc. Not that I'm the Unabomber or something, but records that are stored become records that can be subpoenaed (sp?) and used against you! With ID theft on the rise, and as we become more wired in our daily lives, mistakes are bound to be made with all of this info floating around on everyone! Maybe I'm paranoid, but I would like to keep SOME appliances in my house not attached to the internet!!
    Buik (Member) 10 August 2005 18:25 Send private message to this user   
    Might be time to dust off the abucus, the M-1 Garand and the loin cloth.
    geestar20 (AfterDawn Addict) 10 August 2005 19:44 Send private message to this user   
    Quote:
    If it takes a team of humans to make a protection scheme, it can take a team of pirates to crack it ;-)
    I agree 100% with that statement!

    nonoitall (Member) 10 August 2005 20:17 Send private message to this user   
    Heh, anyone know where someone with programming as a hobby and some free time can find info about DRM...?
    >8-)
    Katzhuu (Junior Member) 11 August 2005 1:11 Send private message to this user   
    No company is going to put any disc drives into their system if it requires a contact to the net. I am ofcourse talking about disc drives for computers.

    I bet that DRM-legality check will be hacked and used in some attempt to steal info from companies.
    santy (Junior Member) 11 August 2005 10:43 Send private message to this user   
    "If it takes a team of humans to make a protection scheme, it can take a team of pirates to crack it ;-) "

    I also agree 100% with the statement
    ritam2001 (Newbie) 11 August 2005 10:55 Send private message to this user   
    Why all the bi!ching. If something is too expensive, just dont buy it.

    Most of the people posting seem to be saying -- "man! games and movies are just getting too expensive, hence I am justfied in pirating."

    Klezmorim (Newbie) 11 August 2005 11:17 Send private message to this user   
    ritam2001:
    If we were only speaking of a few malcontents, you might have a point, but when *millions* of people are doing this, it is a legitimate form of protest. The leaders of the recording and motion picture industries need to listen up. 'We're mad as hell and we're not going to take it anymore!'

    Here in the US we're having an increasing problem with "gas-pump drive-offs" because of the rising cost of fuel. When it's a handful of people doing it, they're rightly considered criminals. If *millions* of drivers were to do this, I'd say we'd have a powerful tool for economic reform in the petroleum industry!
    runner121 (Inactive) 11 August 2005 12:25 Send private message to this user   
    AHOY MATEYS! They're own remarks should be ringing some bells already :)
    runner121 (Inactive) 11 August 2005 12:47 Send private message to this user   
    Quote on quote "BD+ will be a programmable enhancement that will let content providers respond to organized attacks and update compromised code".Need anything else be said?
    runner121 (Inactive) 11 August 2005 12:49 Send private message to this user   
    It is as if a compromise is a pre-requisite to the new protection model.
    seleena (Inactive) 11 August 2005 17:45 Send private message to this user   
    These are the guys that are working for our rights BTW.

    Check out our current alerts and take action today!
    http://action.eff.org/

    This is the Electronic Frontier Foundation. They have a news letter. When something big is going down that will limit our Electronic freedoms. They let us know, and make it easy for us to complain to the pertinant parties. We all have the responsibility to stand up and be heard.

    Otherwise as Plato said: "Apathy towards public affairs, leads to rule by evil men."

    I won't buy DVD's since Jack Valenti's comment " You have a copy, if you need another one go out and buy another disk" That is PURE GREED.

    I will however buy CD's that aren't copy protected. I bought something from over seas because it wasn't released here and I felt bad owning it.

    I also don't use p2p software. I don't steal anything any more than I would if I was using my VCR. According to the sony / betamax decision copying stuff with my VCR wasn't stealing.

    So am I a pirate or not? I don't sell or even loan out my DVD's. They stay in my home. I have no intention of being on the bleeding edge of technology.

    LOL specially since they can't agree on a format.
    runner121 (Inactive) 11 August 2005 18:43 Send private message to this user   
    These companys are filthy rich.They are content that these new implementations will be thier gravy makers again.Maybe they will,
    maybe they won't.You can be sure a lot of dough went into this.All
    we can do is sit back and watch.
    runner121 (Inactive) 11 August 2005 18:48 Send private message to this user   
    I dont think you are thier vision of the common pirate.They
    seem to have a liking for people running servers with massive
    amounts of this and that for the downloading.
    teddirez (Inactive) 11 August 2005 23:24 Send private message to this user   
    Don't forget, DVD Jon was only 15yo when he cracked the original, and that was by himself. Now is the time where more and more people are on the ball. The necessity will come about with the rising popularity of the blu-ray burners.
    kapkirk (Newbie) 12 August 2005 9:02 Send private message to this user   
    Buik,

    quote: Might be time to dust off the abucus, the M-1 Garand and the loin cloth.

    LOL, ha,ha,ha...

    Former technologist turns Luddite

    runner121 (Inactive) 12 August 2005 10:46 Send private message to this user   
    The people who are investing in the technology will more than likely be the ones walking the plank.
    phantasee (Newbie) 12 August 2005 21:53 Send private message to this user   
    Well, now I just wish I hadn't gone and traded in that M1...anyways, what I wanted to comment on was how people seem to think that GREED is the motivator of the companies. It's not. Companies, corporations, businesses, these are made to make money, and this is what they do. It is their responsibility to their shareholders to turn a profit, and if these companies were as keen to share with you all their money, well then they wouldn't be in business for very long. You have to keep in mind that the industry is just that, an industry. It provides jobs for millions of people. If you think that a company is going to Welsh on it's investors and employees to give you what you want for cheap or free, than you're dreaming. Yes, the industry might be overcharging, but that is a problem for the invisible hand to solve. And remember, hands can give a pat on the back, and just as easily turn it into a slap. Piracy is not going to get their attention, what is going to do so is sudden drops in their profits. Corporations aren't greedy, evil entities out to take your soul, they were founded by people who wanted to make it in the world. They did, and if you complain, that's just you complaining your neighbour worked harder than you and got something to show for it.
    nonoitall (Member) 13 August 2005 0:42 Send private message to this user   
    The purpose of a business is to make money. The first priority of a business should be to help the consumer get what they want. That's the way it used to be anyway. Now, their only priority is money, money, and as much money as they can't get.
    nonoitall (Member) 13 August 2005 0:47 Send private message to this user   
    And the movie industry is by no means just people who "want to make it in the world." Many jobs in the movie industry are easier to do than taking orders at a fast food restaurant, but they pay about 100 times more. There's greed there.
    phantasee (Newbie) 13 August 2005 19:25 Send private message to this user   
    I'd actually like to apologize for my previous comment, as it does not reflect my opinion. It was typed after a hard session of reading Atlas Shrugged by Ayn Rand. Almost through the damned book, but you just know it's gonna affect my mental state until I do....
    deep0r (Junior Member) 16 August 2005 13:03 Send private message to this user   
    "Piracy is not going to get their attention, what is going to do so is sudden drops in their profits."

    well if im not mistaken the two go hand in hand dont they? thats the point of all this "protection" as they call it. its not protecting their media...they are protecting their jags, mansions, and fancy suits! the point of piracy isnt to rip off the industry, its to prove that as long as they have personal jets and were being raped of our hard work we (as a GROWING! conglomerate of our own) wont bow to their alligator shoes!
    deep0r (Junior Member) 16 August 2005 13:13 Send private message to this user   
    id also like to say that i laugh at the term "PIRATE".
    pi·rate
    n.
    1.
    1. One who robs at sea or plunders the land from the sea without commission from a sovereign nation.
    2. A ship used for this purpose.
    2. One who preys on others; a plunderer.
    3. One who makes use of or reproduces the work of another without authorization.
    4. One that operates an unlicensed, illegal television or radio station.

    Now i find 2 and 3 the most interesting. so by making a copy (not for profit just to "reproduce" period) is considered a pirate. yet "one who preys on others: a plunderer." seems more like what the industry is trying to do to the publics pockets! so i say lets change the term from "pirates" to "ROBIN" F'n "HOOD". they steal from the rich and give to the poor! am i wrong here? give me the ability to AFFORDABLY watch FIRST RUN movies online, ill pay for it. give me music at an AFFORDABLY rate (both off and online), ill pay for it. give me an economy/company that gives raises to their employees as quickly as they raise the price of their merchandise and WE WILL BUY IT! however you keep taking and taking and taking and give nothing in return, you better believe someone or something will eventually start taking back!
    kabukijo (Newbie) 5 September 2005 1:06 Send private message to this user   
    Quote:
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------
    If it takes a team of humans to make a protection scheme, it can take a team of pirates to crack it ;-)
    --------------------------------------------------------------------------------

    I agree 100% with that statement!


    Amen to that hahahah.
    Persbian (Junior Member) 11 October 2005 16:04 Send private message to this user   
    Deep0r:
    Word.
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