4C May Back Down On Hard-Disk Copy Protection 173
ArghBlarg writes: "As reported on the Mercury News' siliconvalley.com website, the 4C group, consisting of IBM, Intel, Matsushita and Toshiba, responsible for the dreaded CPRM rights-management standard for PC storage media,
may be backing down on mandatory implementation of the standard in PC hard disks.
A Linux consultant by the name of Andre Hedrick, who sits on the T.13 protocol committee, apparently confronted them during a recent meeting and got them to consider making an 'opt-out' mechanism if the standard is ever implemented in hard disks.
However, the EFF says that's not good enough, and says that CPRM should never besmirch a PC hard disk's firmware, in any form. The 4C group has been eerily silent about the issue, according to the article, so this isn't over yet.
(According to the Mercury article, the 4C entity promised to release a formal statement here about the 'opt-out' possibility, but no new releases were up at the time of writing.)"
Re:The response is simple... (Score:1)
//rdj
Re:Guerilla Actions? (Score:1)
From what I hear programs already exist to do this. The Hard-drive serial numbers are often used as the seed for licence keys. Crackers often just change the number by a few and watch how the resulting licence changes. Once they've worked it out they'll write a key generator.
At least that's what I hear.
Tell the large customers. (Score:1)
Re:SFPCC (Score:1)
Do you have any suggestions for how we can improve our compensation system to serve you better?
Thank you for your time.
Cracked easily and pisses people of anyways (Score:1)
Beside that the serialnumber of the P3 showed what gets acceptated by customers. Beeing forces to accept accessprotection doesnt qualify as customerservice.
Re:Does a product/technology deathwatch exist? (Score:1)
And yes the facts are available to people like us. But not to people in general, that would be the purpose of the website. To make that one website, replete with information about and reasons to avoid dangerous technology like this -- one central and focussed source of information, not approval.
Maybe you could make it kuro5hin-ish so that everyone can rant about what they think is a POS device. The how is a secondary issue.
The point is, shouldn't someone do this? The companies already do it themselves, it's called marketing. And we know all to well how truthfull that side of the camp tends to be.
If no one does anything then the general populace are stuck with the most common source of information, ads, press releases, & Wired. Even god won't be able to save that future.
t.
Re:How _could_ it be implemented? (Score:1)
The whole idea behide it is to make it so that the data/program if coppied off to another hard drive is non functional by some means. The main way this would be accomplished would be for the application it's self to check the hidden data or the OS to verify it with the hidden data and possibly decrypt the application as it's loaded. For media files it would be the player or the OS that would verify the file was from this hard drive and decript it at play time from information stored in the hidden sectors.
The chipset has absolutely nothing to do with this scheme from what I can tell and just deals with the HD and software. So the best place to stop this BS is with the HD vendors.
- subsolar
Re:Perfect Business Opportunity (Score:2)
More to the point, why wouldn't they? What do IBM (or any other drive maker) have to gain from CPRM? Sure, CPRM is great for the big content providers, but how does it help sell hard drives? That's the bit that I'm failing to understand. Of the three interested parties (consumers, drive makers and content providers), the only one that will benefit from CPRM is the only one that has no impact on drive sales. I just don't get why this scenario ever got off the drawing board. Can anyone shed any light on this?
Re:EFF is right, not good enough (Score:1)
Where it will be useful for Hollywood, now, is in pocket MP3 players and TiVo-like devices and so on. (Imagine consumer-grade digital music 'decks' and so on.)
Re:flash disks my ass (Score:3)
Hats off to TheRegister (Score:2)
--
Re:Here's what I submitted as feedback on IBM webs (Score:2)
Need some big names with big mouths smacking them down, and a petition or two signed by a few thousand folks using the word "boycott". That _is_ the way to make a difference.
Re:OS dependent (Score:2)
However, as I pointed out in the original
1. First off, it is doubtful that CPRM could be implimented in Linux, in such a way as to be compatible with the GPL (which means whatever it is that makes CPRM work would have to be open source).
2. Rogue judges like Judge "MPAA stooge" Kaplan could rule Linux an illegal cirvumvention device. I know the DMCA says that tools intended for other uses CAN circumvent. BUT, Kaplan ruled DeCSS illegal even though the AUTHOR and many others stated on the record that it was intended to allow the creation of a Linux DVD player.
Re:4C? (Score:2)
Re:Who cares about the 4c? (Score:1)
The can do the same thing M$ did years ago and say, "If you want your drive to communicate with ATA, you must implement the whole standard."
Heck...They might require controller manufacturers to perform a check on the hard drive to make sure it complies with the whole standard. May break compatability, but I wouldn't know.
If requiring CPRM became an option in BIOS, 4C could prohibit mixed-systems...Disallow non-CPRM drives when you have a CPRM drive, and vice-versa.
Just my $.02US
Re:How will media conglomerates report this? (Score:1)
https://www.eff.org/support/joineff.html [eff.org]
Its $65 membership. Considering most people reading this are well paid 'IT professionals', $65 is hardly a lot to ask. I've often considered joining the EFF, every time I see this sort of story. And this time I've done it. How many hours work is $65 ? Think about it. think what the EFF could do if 1 person in 10 reading this joined. So do it, before its too late.
No More Geeks (Score:2)
Not to mention all the artsy geeks (e.g., animators) that greatly contribute to the corporate profits of the "content owners."
I wonder how attached to CPRM IBM, Matsushita, Toshiba and Intel would be if all of their Software Engineers, Hardware Engineers, System Administrators, Project Managers, and Helpdesk folk ditched work for a month or two (or even a couple of weeks).
It always surprises me how "of one voice" we can be as a demographic about issues such as this, and yet our actions (or suggestions of action) are so ineffectual compared to those of other segments of the labor force who learned around a century ago how to get large companies to respect their wishes.
GASP!! The commie bastard [slashdot.org] is talking about <shudder> UNIONS .
I know it probably goes against the capatalist, libertarian grain of my fellow slashdot readers to even suggest such a thing as a geek general strike, but look at it this way: you can talk all you want about boycotts, but though we might like to think otherwise, geeks probably represent a relative minority of technology consumers. Our power & value in this society derive from our being a significant majority of the labor force required to produce technology.
Anyone who thinks that geeks stand an iota of a chance fighting attacks on our liberty from Mega-Corps by appealing to a majority of tech consumers who could't care less if Sony & Time Warner control their hard drive is kidding themselves. We already agree that the bastards need to be forced to grow a clue, why not take advantage of the means of influence of which we are most uniquely capable?
Name (Score:1)
Okay, I'm baffled. Not a single one of these manufacturers has even one "C" in their name. What does "4C" stand for?!
Re:OS dependent (Score:1)
Later, the authorities in Norway admitted that they had been duped.
I am an American, but I don't belive American law is world law... Especially unconstitutional statutory laws like the DMCA.
4C? (Score:2)
Re:What's the big deal? (Score:2)
I have no problem with you wanting to getting enslaved - but I will fight with my teeths if you want me to go the same way.
Re:Non Issue ?? - See Comp.Risks 21.18 (Score:2)
Put together, this means that Intel is being blatantly dishonest. Again.
So in fighting CPRM, it is not enough to use logic, reasonableness, or sense. Intel, and others, don't care about such things. They have to be shown that CPRM is not in their best interests. With IBM, this might not be too difficult: IBM just committed a gigadallar to Linux--and they won't want that wasted.
A business model (Score:1)
The NOLIMITS-PC
As in "non limits to usage, no controls from external entities"
The "Industry" is creating an empty space in thei're product range, and somebody will fill it
The best way to kill limitation/control moves from external entities is to turn them into market gains for those who don't go with it (and losses for those who do go with it).
In the current market (i.e. decrease in PC sales) if a move by any hardware company turns out to be a market loosing action ... well, shareholders won't be very happy (except the ones that stick with the other companies)
I sugest the creation of an identifying brand-like marking (NOLIMITS) to be placed on control-free product (ie NOLIMITS-videos: no MACROVISION; NOLIMITS-tv: no MACROVISION; NOLIMITS-dvd: no MACROVISION, no Region Coding; NOLIMITS-pc: no CPRM) - this can increase sales of otherwise nameless products from nameless companies by creating brand around a concept ...
A Linux *consultant*? (Score:3)
Re:They'll buy whatever we make! - NOPE (Score:1)
The BIG drives (the ones with so much Gigs that my mind hurts when thinking of it) are the ones where the REALY BIG MARGINS are - the smallish stuff can be manufacture by any no-name factory in half-way-to-the-end-of-the-world, so there's a lot of competition (and thus small profit) in that area.
Big manufacturers (like IBM), who spend loads of money in HD research need the premium price sales to pay for that research.
The thing is - it's not John Doe who buys that stuff - those things are bought by companies, and it's John Techie Doe (IBM sales people can call him "Sir") who chooses them (as in: "If i cannot backup this we're not gonna have it here")
So maybe the market will bring us some surprises ... (like IBM giving a profit warning)
Re:It should not even be allowed in the standard. (Score:2)
W
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Hopefully we can (Score:2)
Re:A Linux *consultant*? (Score:1)
Dude, you just got a prime spot in my Jon Katz analysis page (to be released soon).;-)
(Really, I meant it as a joke.)
Re:It should not even be allowed in the standard. (Score:2)
Plus, would such a driver, even though it doesn't use any actual decryption, be "circumventing" an encryption method which the software company would argue is used to protect their copyrighted material (ie, whatever it is the software is using CPRM for, even if it's just to store its own terms of service, documentation, or something else it can claim copyright over). If so, it's arguably an illegal driver under the DMCA.
W
-------------------
flash disks my ass (Score:2)
www.4Centity.com run Apache under FreeBSD (Score:1)
Thought slashdotter's might be interested to note
that www.4Centity.com runs Apache 1.3.12 under FreeBSD, according to www.netcraft.com
-Vairon
Even if it does go through... (Score:1)
Because I'm sure I'm not alone on this, I would venture to guess that those companies that do choose to implement this copy-protection crap on their disks would lose and lose big, because the few companies that don't will be making a killing on the market. Even if the "good" disks have to be produced by third-party manufacturers and imported from random countries throughout the world, I can't see this copy-protection business taking over.
I mean come on... Napster is still alive and well...
Re:A Linux *consultant*? (Score:1)
Andre Hedrick
CTO Timpanogas Research Group
EVP Linux Development, TRG
Linux ATA Development
The Register has the best coverage of CPRM (Score:5)
Everything you ever wanted to know about CPRM, but ZDNet wouldn't tell you... [theregister.co.uk]
CNet suckered by CPRM spin [theregister.co.uk]
Linux lead slams 'pay per read' disk drive plan [theregister.co.uk]
Stealth plan puts copy protection into every hard drive [theregister.co.uk]
4C retreats in Copy Protection storm [theregister.co.uk]
EFF's Gilmore calls for CPRM hardware boycott [theregister.co.uk]
Re:Perfect Business Opportunity (Score:1)
How will media conglomerates report this? (Score:5)
When drive manufacturers build hard disks, who are they working for? The owners of intellectual property, or us, the people who buy them? It seems to me that they're working for us. Why don't they act like it? What's going on here?
I don't want to encourage strident or peurile pseudo-political action. And I'm not sure what to do about it. But this just can't be allowed to go through. This is the sort of thing that ought to make us all consider writing checks to the EFF, at the very least.
All of the conventional wisdom about concentrating press power into a few hands, as has been the trend lately, suggests that this story won't get much play. The same dynamic exists in the debate over the giveaway of new HDTV frequencies to the broadcasters. You don't hear much about that, because the people getting the giveaway are the ones who are supposed to be protecting us from such scams.
The bad news is that all of the people who are suppsoed to be protecting us from scams like this current one are also the same people who own all of the intellectual property. Will Time/Warner allow its journalists to talk about this issue?
We have to stay focused on this. We have to tell people we know about it. We have to make noise. And we have to make sure that our lobbyists are well funded.
This is simply totally and utterly unacceptable.
Re:No way (Score:5)
From what I've read, its not that simple and if Alan Cox is worried about it, it will not be easy to defeat. This ain't no MP3 watermarking scheme.
The fact that this has gotten this far pisses me off a great deal, if I buy a HD I should be able to do as I please with it. Its bad enough with DeCSS bullshit, if this gets anywhere near HDs we'll have the same battle: "Sorry Linux, you don't have a licence to read the new HDs and even if a benevolent stranger were to donate a license, you can not write drivers and open the source".
What's that you say? It's only for selective content such as films and music, for now maybe but once the spread of the technology is wide enough, who knows? This is fat cat corporate heaven.
We are no longer living in interesting times but very worrying times. George Orwell seems to have only missed the date by 20 years, maybe he misjudged human nature and thought we would rollover quicker but regardless if "inititives" like this HD shit get implimented I'd say we're half way on our backs already.
A possible solution... (Score:2)
--
Digital Millennium Copyright Act (Score:1)
This is what happens when the US Congress lets Hollywood write Copyright Laws instead of balancing the rights of copyright holders with those using the materials.
Re:Remember the winmodem (Score:1)
Re:No way (Score:1)
I am really starting to dispair of people trying to tell me what I can and cannot do with my life. Already today we've had the War On Drugs and now the "War on Piracy." Both of these seem to look to outlaw people who do not have the traditional, Conservative, "Old Ways" of doing things. Both seem to really be a war on people who are open to new ideas. And both seem to be unstoppable.
I always remember a quote from George Orwell's Animal Farm:-
The film "The Beach", whilst being pretty awful, probably aimed to explore the same idea: Given total freedom, a tropical paradise, and a bunch of people all with the idea of escaping from current society, social interactions with other people always seem to destroy paradise. It seems to be a recurring theme throughout history - is this just a natural consequence of the way we are, or is it possible to actually ever build a truly free state?
Culled from comp.risks (Score:1)
Date: Tue, 26 Dec 2000 06:35:10 -0500
From: "Gelsinger, Patrick P"
Subject: Re: IBM and Intel push copy protection
[Received via Dave Farber, whom Patrick had requested to post a correction.]
Content protection technology misinformation generates negative web-press
coverage:
An article on *The Register* website "Stealth plan puts copy protection into
every hard drive" contains false information that the 4C's (Intel, IBM, MEI,
Toshiba) Content Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM) is to be applied to
all PC hard drives. It is misinterpreting a specification for use of CPRM
with the Compact Flash media format (which supports either semiconductor
flash memory or IBM microdrives) probably because Compact Flash uses the
same command protocol interface as standard PC harddrives. The technology
is neither intended nor licensed for use with PC harddrives and is optional
even for the supported media types (flash memory and microdrives). John
Gilmore, a noted privacy and consumer advocate, has picked up the article
and further propagated the erroneous information and mentioned Intel
"IBM&Intel push copy protection into ordinary disk drives". I have alerted
public relations at Intel and are disseminating accurate information within
Intel and among our industry contacts.
Pat
Re:How will media conglomerates report this? (Score:1)
And the only way to reach these average consumers is via mass media, such as news programs in LARGE markets.
Re:Whole thing a hoax? (Score:1)
The proposed changes are to the ATA, not the ATAPI spec.
The two specs are closely related, but ATA is generally used for hard drives while ATAPI is used for most removable media (Zip, CD, DVD, etc).
Hard drives are ATA devices. CompactFlash and
a few other are ATA devices with certain device-specific extentions.
If they wanted CPRM support for non-hard drive ATA devices, the sensible approach would be to add a device-specific extention. Instead they try to make it an optional part of the general ATA spec, which makes no sense unless they want it to apply to hard drives.
Hard Drive Black Market (Score:1)
Secondly I wonder if this will create a black market for older "noncompliant" hard drives?
I'd go out of my way to prevent those bastard from getting access to my hard drive.
Re:Culled from comp.risks (Score:1)
_____
Re:How will media conglomerates report this? (Score:1)
Single issue politics can work, but you need to have a lot of money to push competitive candidates and make your "targeted" congresscritters feel the heat. The NRA has the advantage of being able to make their opponents seem "soft on crime" and posessing other undesirable weaknesses. How do you target supporters of Jack Valenti? As "soft on MP3?"
See, that is just the point. (Score:2)
Re:A Linux *consultant*? (Score:2)
Semantics. When I hear that someone is a "Windsurfing champion" I don't think they represent Windsurfing Incorporated.
When I read "Linux Consultant" it looked the same as "Legal Consultant", "IT Consultant", or even "Unix Consultant". I think most people understood that he is a "consultant who specializes in Linux" which just doesn't roll off the tounge quite as easily as "Linux consultant" or "burger flipper". Imagine if you had to say "man who flips hamburgers". Writers are sometimes forced to choose between precision and brevity.
A lot of times, especially on the internet, people critique journalists regarding the fact that they weren't precise about such-n-such. The problem with most of these critiques is that if the writer took the pains to precisely describe everything, their style would come off as tedious, long winded, pedantic, and perhaps under confident.
As far as the phrase "Linux consultant" is concerned, I don't think there is a problem. If he worked for a company they might say "Linux consultant from Acme Inc" or something like that. If he is independant, then "Independant Linux consultant" is perhaps clearer, but I don't think anybody with a clue had trouble understanding what "Linux consultant" meant, neither do I think /.'s editorial policy should play to the clueless.
Re:Does a product/technology deathwatch exist? (Score:2)
According to whom?? The EFF, the FSF? RMS? ESR? Bruce Perens? Alan Cox? Linus? CmdrTaco? You? Me?
The thing about boycotting anyone/anything is that it is very subjective to the morals and ethics of any given individual. What I find objectionable, you find perfectly acceptable, and vice-versa. And what criteria are used? That it violates your privacy, your freedom, your sense of fair play? Or does it simply have to be 'too expensive' or maybe even the wrong colour. And what about crossover issues? I quite like the UI on Macintosh, but I object to the lack of freedom the OS offers. Is Macintosh on the 'good' list or the 'bad' list? DVD's employ an objectionable region-coding scheme, but I have a region-free player. Is it ok for me to buy Anime? I happen to agree with the EFF - opt-out on CPRM is not enough, but what if the maintainer of the 'good/bad' site doesn't agree?
If I'm going to avoid, say, buying DVDs because I think the MPAA is evil, then I don't need the approval of popular opinion to help me make that decision. The facts are quite sufficient, and those are already available in abundance.
Re:Perfect Business Opportunity (Score:2)
Common sense lesson number one: Who's making the specs? Well, IBM for one and they have quite a vested interest in HD sales, do you think they'd leave the door open like this?
Problem number one is that to make hard disks that are compatible with the new specs you will have to license the technology. In that License there will be a little clause that states the whole spec must be implimented which will of course mean you have to include all of the digital rights managements features.
Put this another way: When the price of DVD burners falls there will be a market for blank DVDs that don't have the key code portion of the disk already written, this will enable backups of films. However to produce blank DVDs you need to license the technology, I'll give you one guess on what the license says you're not allowed to do.
Re:Name (Score:2)
Re:Perfect Business Opportunity (Score:2)
The perfect business opportunity would be to sell disks that comply with the spec, but all of your disks have identical serial info. So if you buy two SloppyDisks, you can install copy-protected software on them, but if you image copy one SloppyDisk to another SloppyDisk, the software doesn't know that it has been moved/copied. SloppyDisks will fly off the shelves. :-)
---
Re:This scheme isn't going to work anyway (Score:2)
(note: I am simplifying - it is not clear that DeCSS is actually "illegal". Whatever.)
Just like the MPAA have and will sue anyone who distributes software that allows you to fully control and use a DVD drive, the RIAA and MPAA would like to sue you for distributing software that allows people to fully control and use a hard drive.
So, you are correct - there will be technical ways around this - but it's a hollow victory, because they will all count as "circumvention" to the DMCA. If someone writes a hard disk driver that "emulates" CPRM to software, but disables it, and they put it on a web page, they will probably be sued.
The content industries want to have total control over everything they sell^H^H^H^H license, for all time. They never had that right before, but the combination of weak technological protection and a crappy law to back it up is close to giving it to them.
Torrey Hoffman (Azog)
How about Plan B? (Score:2)
I don't know much about US law (IANAL and IANAA (An American), but are they not a cabel, or something?)
It should not even be allowed in the standard. (Score:4)
"This software requires
32 MB RAM
Such-and-such Processor
CPRM-enabled Hard Disk"
it's embrace and extend. If the only way to run the software is w/a CPRM drive, and the software is mission-critical, then you've got no choice.
Of course, it COULD backfire and people would just stop using that software... but a potential (and likely) collaboration between software and hardware designers makes it all the more important that CPRM never get finalized as a standard.
W
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Non Issue ?? - See Comp.Risks 21.18 (Score:4)
There is a message in the 21.18 Risks digest [ncl.ac.uk] which claims that the 4C's CPRM was solely for Compact Flash media, and that John Gilmore over-reacted, that the technology is "neither intended nor licensed for use with PC hard drives", and that this 'issue' is being blown all out of proportion. It was in directly reply to John Gilmore's own Risks submission [ncl.ac.uk] about the 'issue'.
So, can someone without a flaming streak of extremism or a conflicting interest and with some detailed technical knowledge of the facts please speak up. Is this Risks submission (from a guy from Intel) accurate?
I don't like it when zealots create a big wave and brou-ha-ha over nothing. It wouldn't be the first time.
Guerilla Actions? (Score:3)
1. Older ATA controllers will not have this built into their BIOS. Maybe there will be a run on them.
2. How much of the controller code is in flash, and can be updated? What happens if the updates get hacked? "oh, look, now it always returns 00h".
3. From what I could find of the specs, The drive serial number is on the magnetic media somewhere. How long before a "utility" is developed to overwrite/change this? A side note: Wrap this up in an email virus. Send to fifty of your ex-friends. Better than a reformat, and takes less time. I bet drive manufacturer's tech support will love this.
4. The specs also mentioned "Encrypted key space" Are parts of keys stored there? Is there a limit? Generate small encrypted random files. Register and repeat until overflowing. Tech support will love this, too.
5. How about releasing a bunch or really cool freeware, stuff the masses will want to run. Only it won't work on CPRM activated systems, and gives a short message about why not, and then suggests that the consumer return his computer for one that isn't broken.
The list goes on. You just have to think about it creatively. The best arrangement is going to be education, though. Make sure that joe consumer knows he's getting screwed, and that other folks around him aren't.
Oh, and what about Firewire and SCSI? (info?) (Score:3)
W
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Slap them with some legalese! (Score:2)
Likely as not, the only thing to get these ideas out of their heads is to use their own favourite means; a law-suit. Simply(?) find a few applications (at least more than one, preferably from different, non-opensource manufactors) that breaks so heavily on a CPRM-disk that it corrupts your on-disk data. Best would be if these programs are backup-utilities, scandisk or similar.
However powerful the MPAA/RIAA are, they still won't be as threatening as a class-action law-suit against all the Hard-Disc manufactors...
Then again, I'm not a lawyer...
They'll buy whatever we make! (Score:2)
The Corporate World think that they will buy whatever we make, and will like it. We are the nitch users in the market, us geeks and gurus. Its John Doe that big business is after, and as far as the Corporate World is concerned John Doe doesn't know his arse from him elbow and will buy whatever is advertised as been the next big think that all the in-people must have.
Its not until us the geeks and gurus start to talk in the language of John Doe will we have any power to stop the Corporate World from controlling all things. John Doe is a sheep being lead to the slaughter, and he has bought the farm his slaughtering knife, he just doesn't realise it yet.
Because in the end us geeks and gurus will know where to turn to get by this copy protection, but John Doe will be the one fuelling the Corporate World. While we salvage parts from are old 468s and Pentiums.
Only when Copy Protection equals Loss of Sales, then 4C will start to think about removing it. So the only way to stop this, is by not buy new products that us CPRM. We just need to stick to your old walk-mans and disk-mans and we'll all be fine. Then the 4C will get the message! And if not, then we should us some C4 on 4C!
Wizartar.
I don't think that's what he meant (Score:2)
Re:No way (Score:2)
At school, I asked a professor to borrow a CD of Jazz music. He asked why, because I am not in any of his jazz classes, and I replied that I wanted to put it on Napster (because I did). Eventually, I went through his sizable collection of rare CDs, creating redundant copies so that the recording will be less likely to disappear.
The point is, distributing information to reduce the likelihood of its disappearance is generally good, as it reduces redundant research and creation, which takes more time than simple duplication. The modern study of Science depends on research being shared and experiments repeated. Nobody is trying to figure out how to clone sheep, because it is already done. They may be trying to figure out how to clone humans, but that's an entirely different topic.
Tell me what makes you so afraid
Of all those people you say you hate
If implemented, boycott and stock up on old drives (Score:2)
What's the cost of a drive now? $100? I could buy a few that would last a while...
(off topic opinion) Given how the music industry killed consumer DAT with copy protection in the hardware, the PC will probably go the same way. The PC market as it exists has reached saturation point and has one foot in the grave already. CPRM will put the consumer multimedia PC market totally into the grave.
Guess those greedy record company bastards who give you $18 CDs (remember when those lying bastards said "oh yes, when we ramp up production, CDs will cost the same as LPs"). Now they're playing hardball with file sharing technology to keep their obscenely fat profits.
Re:Non Issue ?? - See Comp.Risks 21.18 (Score:3)
Because anyone with a removable IDE rack and Win9x set to boot to DOS can use any "fixed" ATA drive like a 30 gigabyte floppy with Norton Ghost by yanking it out of one machine and shoving it into another. (Or anyone with a removable IDE rack and a Real OS and /bin/dd for that matter.)
Hell, you can do it without the rack if you're willing to open your case to unplug the drive and remove it. All the rack does is make a 5-minute operation into a 10-second one.
$20 for the drive bay. $10 for the rack. Buy one rack per drive, and one bay per box. (And yes, they exist in SCSI variants too.) Standard equipment on every box I build for myself and friends - backing up boot partitions and 'doze installs is now too easy not to do, and it's a great use for all those ~1G drives we seem to have floating around. (200M for swap and /tmp, the rest is backup for the boot partition)
But instead of our own systems, we could just as easily be replicating TiVo drives, or drives from Nomad jukeboxes. Or 30G drives full of DiVX'd $MOVIEOFTHEWEEKs that the guy down the hall just slurped down through his broadband pipe.
That's what they're scared of.
Of course, I say "fuck 'em". My right to back up my data is a right. MPAA's "right" to protect its content through CPRM isn't a right, it's called "prior restraint", and they can go piss up a rope.
(BTW, am I the only one who read "4CEntity" as "Force Entity" and parsed it as "the entity that imposes the whim of the entertainment industry upon the PC industry by force?")
Piracy hurts Free Software (Score:2)
Maybe this is just a social issue. Maybe the people who say "violating proprietory copyright is wrong" the loudest should be the Free Software community. After all, they have just as much to loose as the commercial software companies. Is this about education? Do people need to be told (again) about network effects? Even if you didn't pay for the (commercial) software, you are contributing to the popularity of the software and the standards and formats that it uses. It is ironic that, even without buying copy controlled harddrives, unauthorized copying gives control to the copyright holder. Just by using the product you are giving the copyright holder a little more control over the market and by not paying for it you are relinquishing your (consumer) control over prices and indeed, quality.
So to go out on a limb. I say that the elimination of piracy would help Free Software. Surely there's a way that it can be done that is fair and not so Orwellian as copy control.
Who cares about the 4c? (Score:2)
We need Open Hardware Standards (Score:2)
If handled correctly, and able to garner sufficient mindshare, a condemnation from such a group could nip bad standards such as these in the bud. Hardware manufacturers whose products were "Open Hardware" compliant would almost certainly sell more than non-compliant products, particularly when it comes to fundamental components such as hard drives, cdroms, CPUs, and memory.
Re:How will media conglomerates report this? (Score:2)
I think we are the ones with intellectual property...the key of the past month or so(or has it been going on longer?) is that they take the intellectual stuffs from us and charge us for using them.
Not good business practice, I must say.
Every politician can be convinced of something. It takes a lot of big petitions, though.
Big businesses throw money at senators, who propose and pass restrictive laws. Then they throw money at lawyers who get the courts to interperate the laws the way the businesses want them to.
On the whole, however, we seriously need to stop chatting and start organizing with a specific goal. Not a 'Open Source Good, Closed Source Bad' type of goal...I can't see we're getting anywhere with that, other than convincing some large-capital companies to give away some of there work. (I'd like to see a big company take part in developing the Linux kernel, or some other such large project.
Special interest groups like the NRA are what make politics happen. Anyone getting my drift?
This scheme isn't going to work anyway (Score:2)
This is similar, but more complex scheme than that that was used with the DVD. But as we've seen with DVD players, it doesn't work their either. You can copy DVD discs and play them.
The big problem with all these kinds of scheme is that they are only as good as the protection on the keys. You are trying to protect keys when the owner of the machine is able to take it to pieces and has the incentive to do so.
You can make it very difficult to do this, but given enough time it's usually possible to get at the keys.
And all it needs is ONE hard-drive anywhere in the world to be subverted (i.e. have a way to read the keys off of it) and then it is possible to mass produce copies of it. Then you can copy the software between these clones as much as you want.
The thing is the hard-drive manufacture that makes cloneable drives will produce them because they sell nicely
Finally, in order for the data to be used on the PC it must be the case that the data has had the cryptography removed. At that point the data is wide open.
Re:EFF is right, not good enough (Score:2)
Oh no, software vendors may only release to systems they feel are secure!
Okay, I'm not exactly a fan of CPRM, but as long as software vendors make it clear that their software will not work without CPRM, I wouldn't call it unscrupulous. Stupid, given how many people won't have the drives, but not unscrupulous.
On top of which, the main purpose for this appears to be protecting digital music/video from being copied; even if they are only made available to people with CPRM hard-drives, it's not exactly as if you can buy legal MP3s of your favourite group, at the moment, is it (I know there are exceptions, I'm talking about the majority of cases).
What I mean is, if CPRM is implemented, and music/video is only made available to those with CPRM harddrives, those without aren't going to actually lose anything.
Copy protection (Score:2)
If people can freely copy this stuff, this putrid cancer of proprietary crock products may very well continue to spread through society.
So, if these copyright industries want to prevent people from accessing their crocks, I'm all for it. It can only accelerate the adoption of free music, free film and free software. In my opinion, pirated content, not proprietary content, is the strongest competitor to free content; and slows the adoption of, for example, Linux, especially in the third world.
That's why I am willing to put up with copy prevention schemes. It can only shield us further from proprietary crocks.
The best way for free software to defeat proprietary software, is to make it impossible to pirate proprietary software.
Re:EFF is right, not good enough (Score:2)
Exactly. So what if the copy protection features are optional? Like the parent post says, the MPAA (or whoever else) can simply release the next popular, ground-breaking movie or media in a form that requires you to turn on the copy-protect features. Then since everyone (read, enough to make a difference) wants to see those movies or hear the music, etc., eventually the opt-out feature will fall out of use and vendors will just stop including it in newer HD's.
No, CPRM must be discarded entirely. No compromises will suffice, because MPAA/RIAA has enough clueless customer base to generate enough demand that any compromising features such as opting-out will fall out of common use, and vendors will stop including them.
OTOH I don't see how this battle can be won, though. The MPAA/RIAA has clearly decided to fight against copy-protection using this (flawed) way. *Sigh* How greed can blind people. Even Micros~1 knows enough to leave places like Taiwan or China alone when it comes to pirating Windows -- they know very well that even a pirate installation of Windows is more to their advantage than a non-pirate, non-Windows installation. Why can't MPAA/RIAA get a clue and just leave things be? It's not like they aren't already making a fortune in spite of the current rampant music/movie piracy.
The only problem with this analogy is that there is no viable alternative to MPAA/RIAA -- nothing comparable to Linux vs. Windows, if you will. Perhaps somebody should get the DoJ to go after the MPAA/RIAA after they're done with MS :-)
---
The response is simple... (Score:2)
...I'm not sure whether or not I'm kidding.
--Lenny
What's the big deal? (Score:2)
No way (Score:3)
Tell me what makes you so afraid
Of all those people you say you hate
Perfect Business Opportunity (Score:4)
Re:A Linux *consultant*? (Score:4)
(No, not Linus either, he doesn't own even 10% of the kernel anymore)
But yes, other than that, Andre rocks (in his own special way sometimes) !
EFF is right, not good enough (Score:5)
It does not need to be in there at all. If it is, even if "optional" that will still give the MPAA/RIAA and unscrupulous software vendors the ability to REQUIRE you have it or enable it for their software/media, that you BOUGHT to work.
I really believe the way to beat CPRM to death is to drive home the point that it breaks the ability to use imaging programs like Ghost. How many enterprises right now are using Ghost to maintain and deploy PC's? Tons. Breaking it with CPRM hard drives will cost firms tons and tons of money spent in needless manual setup/maitenance on individual PC's.
Re:How about Plan B? (Score:2)
Hmmm... (Score:2)
um.. I done, you can stop reading...
Re:They'll buy whatever we make! (Score:2)
ways around it are obvious (Score:3)
Re:Copy protection (Score:2)
Re:The response is simple... (Score:2)
Re:Non Issue ?? - See Comp.Risks 21.18 (Score:3)
IBM and Intel say that The Register's story mistakenly assumes that CPRM is intended for fixed hard disks, whereas it's only intended for removable media. Is this true? Not if you examine the ATA extensions under consideration closely. FACT: The CPRM ATA call interface requires information that standard ATA hard disks need, but that packet based removable ATAPI drives such as Zip and Jaz drives,don't: such as sector start and offset information. If the CPRM proposal under consideration by T.13 was for packet-based ATAPI drives, it wouldn't need this information. FACT: We know of only one removable ATA drive: Castlewood's Orb. All others use ATAPI, or media-specific extensions on top of ATA (as with IBM's Microdrives) - that don't require extensions to the ATA command set. From our conversations with the people behind the proposal, and public documents released by the T.13 committee, we'll agree that their focus to date has been on removable drives, and it's apparent that not all of the consequences of CPRM in fixed-drives have been discussed. But unforeseen or not - and despite public protestations of their good intentions - the 4C Entity is delivering a solution tailor-made for fixed disk ATA drives, and building right into the specification for industry standard fixed drives.
This is indisputable.
Now ask yourself, why is it there?
--
Re:How _could_ it be implemented? (Score:4)
So, if the CPRM were to really go the way of RAMBUS expect to see 4C sue everybody in sight who offers a CPRM-disabled product. You can bet the entertainment industry would be 100% behind such suits too. They killed DAT and Beta, and are trying their hardest to kill anything else useful.
How difficult would a hardware workaround be? (Score:2)
As I understand it, a hard drive is magnetic media on glass, plus support circuitry to translate "high-level" digital signals (i.e. write this block of 1024 bytes to cylinder 27, track 855, sector 27), to "low-level" analog signals (i.e. spin drive, toggle head 5 stepper motors, toggle write head on, now off, etc.)
A fab to make magnetic media in the Foul Year of Our Lord 2001 is a major project in terms of cost and technical expertise required, probably comparable in size and scope to a silicon fab. How hard is it to make the support circuitry though? I suspect it's a little more than an undergraduate EE project, but certainly within the realm of a garage in Hsinchu (or Santa Clara for that matter).
Retrofitted copy-protection-free drives anyone?
j.
Re:bullshit (Score:2)
You too could benefit from the research you advocate. There is quite a difference between what their spin doctors try to persuade ("optional"), and what is really in the actual spec itself. The Register reporter seemed to get quite pissed off at their blatent distortions.
"Mandatory" is a more accurate description. It's "Optional" in the same sense that Microsoft is "Innovative"
Here's what I submitted as feedback on IBM website (Score:5)
Hello,
I am writing to you as an owner of several IBM disk drives and as an IBM investor.
I've been following recent media reports about CPRM with alarm. The proposed standard for control over information would present problems for many applications (such as free software, which I use almost exclusively) while having dubious benefits.
Please consider retracting support for CPRM. If IBM continues to support it, I'll likely boycott IBM products -- and I don't want to do that (my Deskstars and Ultrastars are working great). Also I'll divest my IBM stock.
IBM made great contributions to open source community recently, and I'd hate to see that relationship affected by the policy of the storage division.
I wonder if more feedback like this will influence their actions...
How _could_ it be implemented? (Score:3)
Hence for it to be required in hardware (and for all those sneaky sector-based things they want to do), it must be implemented in the chipset with the ATA interface.
Sure, Intel's in 4C, but they don't make the only chipsets out there. What about AMD? What about VIA? What about Apple, whose machines also use ATA?
I see no reason, if CPRM were ever to be enforced, that these other chipset manufacturers would refrain from splintering off and making their own standard, which would prove much more popular to consumer demand. After all, what happened with RAMBUS?
Fross
Re:No More Geeks (Score:2)
Re:Have they failed? (Score:2)
Re:It should not even be allowed in the standard. (Score:3)
Re:Does a product/technology deathwatch exist? (Score:2)
Of course any website will be the product of the mind(s) behind it. Of course some boycots will be suggested that you or I or Linux or Dubya or someone won't agree with. Of course boycots are the products of personal ethical choices. And of course there is always the possibility that some dumbfuck really will take seriously the straw men you threw up: MacOS UI vs. MacOS limitatations, for example, or expensive or tackily coloured equipment.
But what I found valuable in the original post was the idea that one website, replete with information about and reasons to avoid dangerous technology like this -- one central and focussed source of information, not approval (another straw man) -- would be a good and useful and potentially very valuable thing.
Re:Hmmm... (Score:2)
True, and this is exactly what Intel ended up doing. They made it optional, and you could disable it in the BIOS. Much to the marketers chagrin, it ended up disabled mostly by default, and ceased to be an issue.
However, had the AMD Athlon (which doesn't have the P3 serial number "feature") not become so popular, I could have seen companies like Microsoft REQUIRING you to enable it (or worse, their installers enabling it for you) to run their applications.
Intel dropped the serial number in the Pentium 4, BTW.
It makes me wonder... (Score:2)
It is nice to see that they *may* be backing down, but it is a wonder that someone actually thought this might be a good idea to begin with. I can understand the fears about piracy (though many of them are unfounded), but it should be up to the user to decide what to use a device for, be it a hard drive or a steak knife. It is up to the user to break the law with it.
[sarcasm]Of course, anyone could be a criminal, so the big industries should treat everyone as if they are.[/sarcasm]
I'm sorry, but this kind of logic really gets me angry. Logic like this just takes the world (or at least the US) one step closer to 1984.
Not to mention taking the Massive Money Makers one step closer to making users pay per use and gouge even more money out of our pockets. GRRRRR!!!!
ok...enough from me...out.
Subject? What subject? (Score:2)
The reason it failed is simply that other companies would have made non-protected drives. Given the choice between protected and non-protected drives, I'd take the non-protected - even if all else wasn't exactly equal. I can't think of anyone who wouldn't. Guess they must have realized that.
CAP THAT KARMA!
Moderators: -1, nested, oldest first!
Does a product/technology deathwatch exist? (Score:4)
t.
Re:Here's what I submitted as feedback on IBM webs (Score:3)
I don't know if it would. You wrote a very reasoned response, though it may be better to mail it to them, since I doubt anyone above level F marketdrones ever read website feedback forms.
That sort of feedback IS what we need to give IBM and every HD mandufacturer. All it will take to break CPRM is to convince one company to not play the game, or to sell non-defective (CPRM free) hard drives.
This really is a case where the whole industry HAS to play ball for this to succeed. If only one or two manufacturers impliment CPRM, they could find themselves out on the proverbial ledge, while their competition is busy taking over their market share.
I shudder to think what will happen in a year or two, at the rate things are merging, when we only have 2-3 hard drive makers, instead of 6-7 like we have now... Competition is how you keep this kind of anti-consumer crap from suceeding in the market.