CPRM Voted Down 135
CBNobi writes: "The National Committee on Information Technology Standards (NCITS)
has rejected 4C Entity's proposal of the CPRM, a copy-protection that can be placed on future hard drives. While this may be a win for us, many other organizations are attempting the same thing. Full article at ZDNet." This is only a very temporary victory - there is nothing to prevent this addition to the ATA standard from being proposed again, or to prevent Intel, IBM, Toshiba and Matsushita from figuring out another way to implement it. Another submitter notes: "According to The Register, Apple, Adaptec, ST Micro, Western Digital, Maxtor, LSI Logic and Hale Landis voted against "Generic Functionality" in ATA devices for content control. Voting in favor of content control were IBM, Toshiba (4C members), Hitachi, Iomega, Microsoft, Phoenix, Absolute Software, and Circuit Assembly."
Re:Apple against MS (Score:1)
Above contains GOAT SEX link; do not click (Score:1)
Note that Slashdot does not authenticate identity. The above user chose the nickname of "rms" and identifies himself as Richard Stallman. However, there is no reason to think this really is Richard Stallman.
Re:Optimism (Score:1)
NO NO NO COPYRIGHT PROTECTION IS WRONG WE DESERVE TO HAVE EVERYTHING FREE, AND NOBODY HAS THE RIGHT TO CHARGE FOR SOFTWARE!! WAH!!
You see, that's where you lose. This is a game where each side has its wants and needs; you need to buy a hard drive. A bunch of corporations need to sell you that hard drive, but they also want to offer a means for software makers to protect their IP rights. You don't want this. The bunch of corporations make the hard drives, so they win. If you don't like it, make your own hard drive out of tinkertoys.
Or, you could stop being such a big fucking baby and meet them in the middle. Admit that corporations (and individuals) are allowed to expect fair compensation for their work, and are allowed to use technology to try to enforce that expectation. The benefit to you is that you get to buy that nifty new 20,000 RPM 500GB hard drive and use it as you wish, as long as you aren't violating copyright laws (the same copyright laws that keep MS et al. from stealing GPL code, you dumb fuck)
That is all.
Another winning touchdown STOPPED (Score:1)
WOOHOO! Way to go Apple!!!
Re:Thank you VERY fucking much, IBM (Score:1)
Re:Nader is a borderline criminal (Score:1)
What a load of rubbish. I am no fan of Ralph Nader, but he has as much right to seek the presidency as anyone else. If it hurt Gore, too bad.
Re:Apple against MS (Score:1)
Steve Jobs is not your friend, hes not even Apples friend, do some research. He's a flamming Meglomaniac, with dilusion of being Microsoft. Apple is suing over Themes from OS X. Give me a break, the only thing that motivates them is Money, not devotion to the customers.
Re:Apple against MS (Score:1)
Re:Apple against MS (Score:1)
Oh give it up! this is bunk. Apple has done a great deal to adopt and popularize standards from outside its own domain. Both PCI and USB were created in the Intel camp, but showed no real commercial life until Apple adopted them. The Intel camp is _very_ conservative about adopting new technologies, while Apple, in general, has been rather adventuresome and willing to (somewhat forcibly) sell new technologies. They are mostly sufficiently picky about the quality of the ones they try that many of them do end up popular (again, PCI and USB have finally made a large dent in EISA and RS-232/parallel port/SCSI etc. chains), but they will happily adopt from the outside.
Re:You mean to say... (Score:1)
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
Re:WinXP CD ripper (Score:1)
I don't get your point. Mac OS QuickTime has had a basic CD audio import feature since, what, version 2.0 or so, which dates back to the early-/mid-1990s. Are you sure a CD ripper is all that exciting to find in a modern OS?
< tofuhead >
--
Re:Jeffrey B. Lotspiech at Stanford Tommorrow! (Score:1)
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:1)
<rimshot>
Not only will spending a few million bucks on implementing CPRM be easier than that, it'll probably be cheaper, too.
</rimshot>
Another option is... (Score:1)
Either way this thing is going towards closed hardware specs.
With open hardware specs and copyprotected hardware they would know that some people would write drivers that circomvent this. So they have to close the specs. (And then still.. some people will write drivers that circomvent this).
With open hardware specs and copyprotected drivers, they will know that some people will rewrite the drivers without copyprotect stuff.
(And so with closed specs).
I hope they don't choose a hardware option. I think that would be a BAD thing. Don't like the idea of a company commanding what I can and cannot have on my harddrive.
On another note: How the **** would they implement a thing like this on hardware? Sounds pretty impossible. And I don't mind upgrading software every now and then... But letting people mess with firmware upgrades just to keep up with the latest copyright protection thing that has just been thought of by company XYZ just sounds plain stupid. A bad driver is not as bad as messed up harddrive
Just my thoughts on this... don't have any technical knowledge about these things.. so maybe I'm just babbling
MarsDude
Re:Crackhead Moderation (Score:1)
Cryptography Hooks instead of Content Protection (Score:1)
Wouldn't that be possible, if there were 'hooks' in the hard-disk firmware, which would allow the use of various crypto algorithms?
I'd like to have that especially in my notebook
Re:Optimism (Score:1)
Re:Just The First Shot (Score:1)
- Steeltoe
Re:Optimism (Score:1)
Re:yhbt (Score:1)
YMMV
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:1)
Call it what it really is: CRIM - Consumer Rights Infringement Mechanism. If I buy a nice shiny new IBM HDD, I own the damn thing - every last little sector. If I want to read or write a given sector, that's my business and mine alone: nobody has the right to tell me what I may or may not do with that data.
Copyright just isn't relevant here: it shouldn't be enforced this way.
Re:Please, remotely monitor my license!! (Score:1)
Shame. (Score:1)
Rich
Err, hardware (Score:1)
ATA standard? So what? (Score:1)
Another excellent reason to plug for SCSI here...
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:1)
Peace,
Amit
ICQ 77863057
Re:What if thats all there are? (Score:1)
Re:Optimism (Score:1)
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:1)
-Aaron
Re:Free (as in free speech) hardware (Score:1)
I kind of agree that 'Open' would be a better way of describing the hardware than 'Free' however.
Intelligence? (Score:1)
Iomega voted??? (Score:1)
God, they should use their time to create something innovative like JAZ was many years ago, cuz with their Click! flop and their BUZ flop and their overpriced/underperforming JAZ stuff nowadays (oh and those 250MB zip disks? maybe they should can the zip and sell the 2GB cardrige to the zip price point, that'd sell), what, they want to add content control? and sell even less of their overpriced stuff? way to go Iomega.
Re:Another option is... (Score:1)
Re:Really doesn't get it... (Score:1)
Re:If there is a will, there is a way (to prison) (Score:1)
Re:Jeffrey B. Lotspiech at Stanford Tommorrow! (Score:1)
Re:Jeffrey B. Lotspiech at Stanford Tommorrow! (Score:1)
Vote with your wallets (Score:1)
Re:Buycott!!! (Score:1)
Getting a new hard drive. (Score:1)
Wait just a second... (Score:1)
Re:Optimism (Score:1)
This is based on my experience with the NCITS L3.2 committee, which is responsible for the US side of standards like JPEG. Its sister committee, L3.1, is responsible for the US side of MPEG. If T13 (the committee where CPRM was proposed) works anything like L3.2, then membership is open to any organisation willing to pay the membership dues (hundreds of dollars per year) and come to the meetings (three per year, scattered around the US). In order to become a voting member, your company or organisation has to have paid its dues and show up at at least two consecutive meetings. Each organisation gets one vote, even if they have several representatives in attendance.
It's not cheap - dues plus attending the meetings will take several thousand dollars per year, plus three weeks of work. It's mostly boring work, discussing tiny details of standards, making nit-picking changes to the wording, and so on. But don't complain that you're shut out - it's quite possible for a few people to pool together and form their own organisation and get just as much voting power as Apple, IBM, Microsoft, and so on. Three people sharing the dues and each going to one meeting per year wouldn't be a huge drain on money or time.
For the organisations like L3.2 and L3.1 that send delegates to international groups like JPEG and MPEG, you can also become a delegate. This is done on an individual, not organisation, basis: the individual delegate must have attended two out of the last three NCITS meetings (plus their organisation must be a member in good standing). Then you can attend three more international meeting a year, doing even more boring work, but often in interesting destinations, though as far as I could tell, all of the places I went looked like the inside of a conference room.
So it is a commitment of time and money, but anyone who wants to put in the effort can have a say on what standards are formed.
The art of cloning (Score:2)
Re:Apple against MS (Score:2)
So if you're using iTunes to illegally copy copyrighted materials, STOP RIGHT NOW! You are violating Apple's license agreement!
Of course, if you are copying copyrighted works for noncommercial purposes, under your fair-use rights, copy away man. It's your legal, American, Apple-pie right.
Re:Optimism (Score:2)
you're british, aren't you?
pantywaist.
you probably believe in gun control too.
Re:hypocrites? (Score:2)
Microsoft is all for SOFTWARE-based copy protection, of course.
Neither are going to be 100% effective even in Hilary Rosen's wildest and wettest lezbo dreams.
Re:Apple against MS (Score:2)
Re:They'll do it anyway, but... (Score:2)
My DISH network DISHPlayer got a software update a couple of weeks ago. Yesterday, when I was watching a live broadcast (a rarity), I clicked on MUTE during a commercial, and the fucking subtitles for hearing impaired turned on. So even though I turned on MUTE to get the commercial noise out of my ears, those oh-so-thoughtful engineers decided to put the text of the commercial dialog on my screen anyways.
Good thing I still have that 30-second skip forward button. (UNlike TiVo)
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:2)
They have an agenda, and Linux right now fits into that agenda.
IBM isn't an underdog by any means, they still have higher revenues and profits than Microsoft.
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:2)
> just like it happenned to IBM.
Wasn't it Microsoft DOS and Microsoft Windows that hapened to them?
Another large hole they dug for themselvs was the PS/2 machine with the horrible MCA.
IBM has actualy gotten a lot better from being a underdog and it might just be what Microsoft need to get stratight.
// yendor
--
It could be coffe.... or it could just be some warm brown liquid containing lots of caffeen.
Re:Thank you VERY fucking much, IBM (Score:2)
Its sad, really, because for every person at IBM that "gets it" theres so many more that don't, and probably never will, because all the evangelism in the world won't change that.
Re:If there is a will, there is a way (to prison) (Score:2)
--
Re:If there is a will, there is a way (to prison) (Score:2)
Er, this does applies ONLY to american citizens. Fortunately, 95% of the earth population are NOT american citizens.
--
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:2)
I wonder if somehow, something bad will eventually happen to Microsoft and cause it to shrink into underdog status, just like it happenned to IBM.
But, to do that, it's gonna have to be FRIGHTFULLY bad, and whatever does it will have to be EVEN MORE frightful than Microsoft nowadays...
--
Re:Buycott!!! (Score:2)
But perhaps you need to be a bit less ambiguous.
Caution: Now approaching the (technological) singularity.
Re:Optimism (Score:2)
We're free only because there are so many of us that if we grab weapons and revolt, we will win.
Life is about threats. People pay a traffic ticket because their car will be 'boot'ed if they don't, and at some point down the line, the national guard will be called in to stop them if they keep resisting. Law is enforced by power, and as Mao said, power comes from the barrel of a gun.
Luckily, veiled threats are almost always enough, but it all depends on the eventual willingness of each side to go to desperate ends.
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:2)
Re:Optimism (Score:2)
--
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:2)
Methinks there will be more time to ponder this. They will not stop with these schemes until the last dog dies. I loved the line in the article about how "this wasn't the most consumer-friendly of proposals, but there are others." That's the smartest reason to fire any employee of any technology company supporting such schemes is that they are ALL unfriendly to consumers. If they are worth a nickel, they depend on end-to-end control, or else they are trivial to avoid, in varying degrees. If they are end to end, they can't reasonably tell the difference between my home movie and a copy of Crouching Tiger, unless they depend on registering, say, md5s of my home movies automatically, which is unwieldly and the unfriendliest, most privacy invading assault ever wielded by corporations against their CUSTOMERS, who are unlikely to go along.
It won't be easy to cram this down people's throats. Their best hope is to get it built into all hard drives, and over the course of 20 years or more, get all input/output technologies to cooperate. That's a tall task.
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
To myself: RTFA (Score:2)
Time to send an email to Dave Emory (listen to WFMU [wfmu.org]). ;-)
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
What if thats all there are? (Score:2)
SuperID
Free Database Hosting [freesql.org]
Re:Jeffrey B. Lotspiech at Stanford Tommorrow! (Score:2)
Re:WinXP CD ripper (Score:2)
WinXP (Score:2)
Re:I for one will never buy a copy protected HD (Score:2)
For general-purpose computing, right. But for homebrew entertainment use, which is the only use threatened by CPRM, mistaken:
My worst-case scenario: MP3 at 320kpbs. 2.5M per minute of music. 60G IDE drive. 24,000 minutes, or 400 hours - the equivalent of 320 74-minute CDs.
Hardware? A friggin' P166, 32M of RAM, and an old SoundBlaster will do the trick.
For any conceivable audio application, $1000 (the price of a good stereo) worth of 60G IDE hard drives purchased this summer, along with a couple of surplus PCs (to be bought a couple of years from now) will last a lifetime.
If you wanna do video, that's another story. Yeah, we probably will have to wait for optical holo-cubes or whatever, before we can store a few hundred DVDs on a single chunk of data, and yeah, CPRM will be an issue then.
But if your ears can't hear the difference between a CD and a 320k MP3, grab a drive.
"Nobody will ever need more than 640 gigs for home audio".
Re:Yay. (Score:2)
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:2)
Bzzt.. Why? Software companies biggest interest is selling more copies. The more secure the format, the more that can go wrong, and the less satisfied your customers are..
Another reason. I'm just using Microsoft because they're handy..
The skript kiddy that snags unprotected ME off of alt.binaries.whatever isn't gonna magically pay for a legal copy of XP when it's distributed in a secure format that can't be copied. When he can no longer warez it, he'll switch to an unencumbered, warezable, or free OS. That means less sales of the new Windows versions of games and applications, and more demand for other OS and older Windows versions users already have. Less dependance on Windows for the applications and games that you desire means fewer legitimate copies sold. Retail sales of both MS OS and MS apps drop like a rock as the upgrade path is pushed. Retail and channel sales are down dramatically, and Microsoft raises the OEM price to offset the losses. OEMs don't like that, higher prices mean less units shipped, they buy fewer copies and offer alternatives. The alternatives are quickly gaining applications, remember?
Optimism (Score:2)
Think about the recent USA elections. Ralph Nader had some promising campaign goals, and a few good court battles that helped him get onto the ballot in many states. However, in the end, fighting for him was futile. There's no point in trying to overthrow the current political/corporational regime. The only thing that can be done is to sit back and try to make the best out of our terrible situation.
DeCSS has taught us that the American corporations know no national bounds in their attempt to gain more profits for themselves.
I could go on and on, but I think my point is made. There is no reason to fight against the status quo. I know, it would be good to fight it, because it's moral, blah blah blah. But it's futile. Just live with it already.
------
That's just the way it is
Re:Apple against MS (Score:2)
Meanwhile, Microsoft is further entrenching itself in the camp of "we're the only game in town, so we don't have to attract users; they're stuck with us. Now we can attract record companies."
I can only hope that this'll backfire on Microsoft when it turns out that the general public DOES indeed care about fair use.
Thank you VERY fucking much, IBM (Score:2)
hypocrites? (Score:2)
Correct me if I'm wrong, but wasn't Microsoft strongly *against* copy control in hard drives? I seem to remember them publicly stating that they would not build in the neccesary changes to Windows to support it...
But here, they've voted FOR it? What gives? For good or evil, Windows is pretty damn big. If it ends up in Windows, especially if it's required to use new versions of Windows...well...we'd be forced to eat it.
argh
Re:hypocrites? (Score:2)
Molog
So Linus, what are we doing tonight?
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Really doesn't get it... (Score:2)
51.
--
If there is a will, there is a way (to prison) (Score:2)
Umm, how about five years [cornell.edu] in federal prison?
Re:Buycott!!! (Score:2)
That aside, it's a good idea. As long as we have big, profitable companies on our side, making money selling us the products we want-- well, what do we have to fear if IBM and MS pass this content control BS, if we can still buy non-content controlled products from such a prestigious list?
Re:The point is not to win the tech war (Score:2)
Agreed, but I don't think we have to get the government involved. A few companies may manage to get some random standards body to pass CPRM, sure. And then MS and IBM will make content-controlled crap, but there will still be the companies that voted against it offering non-CPRM stuff for some time. Then there are two possible outcomes:
1) Joe Consumer doesn't understand this "geek issue", and buys the CPRM stuff, puzzled as to why his computer is more of a pain in the ass to use than ever, and nothing works. Solution? Spend more money. Western Digital, Maxtor, et. al. see that no one cares about CPRM, stop making non-CPRM drives.
2) Joe Consumer finds out that there's a select group of companies out to screw him out of his hard-earned money, but there are other companies that will sell him much better stuff that doesn't break all of his old software. Maxtor, Western Digital, other non-CPRM stuff becomes quite popular, and CPRM goes the way of DivX.
We need to make sure #2 happens.
Whats in it for them? (Score:2)
I can see why a software company like Micro$oft would vote for copyright protection, but why would companies like IBM and Iomega want copyright (copywrite?) protection?
It doesn't seem that free, fair or illicit use of harddrives or zip disks would be that bad for their business, it would actually be good. The more mp3s I can distribute fairly or not, the more 250 Meg Zip disks people will be buying, it would seem.
Are they just doing it out of the goodness of their hearts for all the poor software distributors? Or are they being pressured from somewhere? Or do they own sizable software subsidies?
Parallel File Systems (Score:2)
if you are into Beowulf clusters, there is the Parallel Virtual File System [clemson.edu]. Basically it is something that allows you to configuration the drives from many machines into one large drive.
You can find added information here [google.com] on other similar systems
Check out the Vinny the Vampire [eplugz.com] comic strip
Re:Apple against MS (Score:2)
Owning this large a block of ANY stock means that the merly registering their *INTENT* to sell (a requirment if you own certain levels of stock is that you disclose your purchases and sales) would cause the stock to plummit.
If you think that the Board of Directors arent aware that if MS were to *THINK* about registering, or heaven forbid actually sell, that they wouldnt all end up loosing millions in options (and their jobs because the shareholders would be pissed) you are very sadly mistaken.
I often hear that the stock is 'non-voting' as argument that MS dosnt dominate Apple - but I think your getting caught up in the smoke and mirrors of the 'regulations'... Apple is very definately working in 'conjunction' with M$, or at least understand that M$ holds a very big hammer (their stock value) in case Apple was to propose something M$ wouldnt like - you can be sure that Apple is under a virtual non-competition rule 'in-house' to keep from stepping on the wrong toes at M$.
The pattern (Score:2)
I can't be karma whoring - I've already hit 50!
Re:Optimism (Score:2)
Yes, I am supposed to follow somebody who sayz there is a limit on how much money I can earn--Right
Green Party [greenparty.org]Crippeling finical motivations is not adequate to fix the problem. Companies and the people are trying to protect their way of doing business. this has happened everytime there has been a technological breakthrough that changes the way people live.
They need to learn to take advantage of things and re-align to do business rather than wasted billions of dollars trying to fight innovation and change.
Be, Inc. agrees with MS (Score:2)
They are in company with Be, Inc. [be.com]
Their CEO, Jean-Louis Gassée desperately wants the BeOS to be used as an internet appliance, and he is trying to sell his internet appliance as the perfect platfrom for content-controlled media.
JLG calls this mis-feature a "secure digital music" platform, but a computer does not know the difference between a music file, a movie file or a text file. So Be, Inc. is attempting to become the favored distributor of all content controlled media.
Perhaps it is best that they go out of business now, so we only have one OS vendor to worry about: MS.
Just The First Shot (Score:2)
They (thankfully) didnt penetrate the pc standards but that won't keep them from tying leashes to your media in the new (portabke) formats either.
My karma is too high so I'll add this: Stop calling for friggin boycotts already. Slashdot barely controls a million people. If it happened it would be on oprah's tv show, not
Free (as in free speech) hardware (Score:2)
Re:Yay. (Score:2)
Us 1. Corporate 0.
A bunch of hardware and software companies get together to decide whether or not we get to keep control over our own property and benevolently ordain that yes, we do get to maintain our own control over what's on our computers (for now) and somehow this is a win for us?
If this is the status of our opposition to CPRM, we're doomed. The customer badly needs a voice in these discussions.
They'll do it anyway, but... (Score:2)
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:3)
On the one hand we have cool stuff coming from them such as the Linux watch, and then on the other hand they lobby for lame ducks like European software patents and CPRM.
The legal guys see something like CPRM and start drooling about how many $$$ they can make for the company out of it, whilst at the same time it's obviously going to impact their good standing amongst open source advocates.
IBM needs to decide their overall strategy much better - are they going to be long term supporters of open source, or are they out to make quick bucks from the first company that comes along and says "vote for this !" whilst pissing in the open source well. They can't have it both ways for long.
Really doesn't get it... (Score:3)
Very nice...
Re:Optimism (Score:3)
Even if I agree that it is futile to fight, I'd rather put off the inevitable.
To expand on this -- Iomega is in it up to here (Score:3)
"The HipZip player recognizes MP3 format and Microsoft Windows Media(TM) Format (WMA) actively and is upgradeable to additional formats. It supports digital rights management (DRM) technology to secure commercial music content to PocketZip disks, offering artists and publishers protection from the unauthorized distribution of commercial content."
This is "phase one" in a larger project. Take a look at a document from InterTrust [intertrust.com] outlining the plan it is implementing along with Iomega.
(Don't know InterTrust? Read what CEO Victor Shear had to say to the US Senate just yesterday in this pressrelease [intertrust.com].)
While the claim is made in that document that "Iomega and InterTrust are removing the roadblocks for consumers," it's clear that they're really just building their own roadblock around the corner: the consumer will download an mp3 or whatever from an InterTrust-enabled service directly to a Zip disk; the consumer is then free to carry that mp3 around from device to device on that disk; the consumer is NOT free to copy the mp3 to any other storage medium. Once all the "good" music is safely stored away behind InterTrust-enabled walls, an Iomega-branded disk then becomes the carrier-medium of choice (the LP or CD of the future!), and Iomega cleans up on the digital-content revolution. That would seem to be the long-term vision anyway.
So: Iomega benefits from increased sales to end users (Bob needs an Iomega disk to store his download of Britney Spears' latest hit and play it in his ZipWalkman, his ZipCarstereo, etc). Iomega benefits from industry kickbacks which reward this kind of stuff, directly or not. Iomega benefits from sales of "solutions" to other companies. Iomega benefits from CPRM adoption because it makes the whole Iomega/InterTrust scheme that much easier to implement.
In short, Iomega wants to position itself as a "key component" in the "civilizing" of digital distribution networks, and CPRM and similar initiatives would seem to be crucial to achieving that end.
I imagine that many of the others in the yay column have similar vested interests.
It's all about control... (Score:3)
W.H.O. (World Health Organisation) - cotrol who lives/dies - keep the world population in check
CPRM - control the lesiure activities of the masses
May God have Mercy!
Re:Where are IBM's priorities? (Score:4)
Boss of nothin. Big deal.
Son, go get daddy's hard plastic eyes.
"Content Control" not "Copy Protection" (Score:4)
"Content Control" is what Microsoft, IBM, et al are trying to achieve. They want be able to control any and all information on programmable computers.
The term "copy protection" simply reflects a symptom of the control; just like a cough is a symptom of a cold. The fact that they want to be able to "protect" certain articles of intellectual property reflects on the deeper truth that they will be controlling this property.
So let's please call CPRM and son-of-CPRM what it is: Content Control.
Apple against MS (Score:4)
Additionally, Apple has that DVD-authoring program, plus of course Final Cut Pro and such. Plus a new OS with an open-source core. That's goood. Apple is rapidly positioning itself as the good guy as much as it can, usually. Although they aren't perfect, suing guys who make Aqua-like skins. And of course they licensed that one click silliness.
My point is: Apple is really forging ahead in a lot of areas, even if it's small, too compromising steps for now. (For example, Mr. Stallman annoyed about the Apple Open Source License: "It's not exactly GPL! AHHHH!")
Microsoft, on the other hand, has sort of locked down pretty strongly. As someone observed, Windows Media Player no longer has a "Capture Stream" function, presumably to put a stop to copyright naughtiness (or fair use). And that new codec which supposedly blows MPEG Audio Layer-3 away has all kinds of copyright protection built in. MS is backsliding, man.
Apple is doing a yummalicious job with this stuff, and going out on a limb by opposing stuff like the CPRM that most people won't even notice. Remember this the next time you're going out to get a computer.
--
Re:Optimism (Score:5)
Bill - aka taniwha
--
Re:Whats in it for them? (Score:5)
You are not their customer in the proper sense. Perhaps you buy a few drives. That's nothing. The commodity PC hardware market is not lucrative enough for HDD manufacturers right now. Prices are rock bottom. They want to sell boatloads of drives to appliance makers(*), and they need an edge in the market. The value add is the feature alot of hardware+software companies are asking for: copy-protection. This is why you see alot of OEMs in the against column, and software vendors in the for column. I'm suprised to see maxtor in the against column, as their website along with quantum's website menition being able to provide this in the future. They must be holding out for a more flexable solution.
(*) - I'm not necissarily talking consumer appliances when I say appliances either. Think routers, arcade games, groupware servers, server apliances in general... All these manufacturers have a vested intrest in preventing people/competitors from seeing how their device works. That's hard to do with a device made from general purpose components.
The more mp3s I can distribute fairly or not, the more 250 Meg Zip disks people will be buying, it would seem.
The less secure your media the less software vendors will distribute on it. Even with these features, you'll still be able to use the disk as you please if you have access to the content you want to put on it.
Or do they own sizable software subsidies?
Last I checked IBM had one of the worlds largest...
Jeffrey B. Lotspiech at Stanford Tommorrow! (Score:5)
> Computer Systems Laboratory Colloquium
> 4:15PM, Wednesday, April 4, 2001
> NEC Auditorium, Gates Computer Science Building B03
>
> Title: Content Protection for Recordable Media
>
> Speaker: Jeffrey B. Lotspiech
> IBM Almaden Research Center
>
> About the talk:
> Content Protection for Recordable Media, or CPRM, is a technology
> developed by IBM, Intel, Matsushita, and Toshiba to provide copy
> protection on portable media. The technology allows a recorder to
> record encrypted content, and a player to play it back, without
> having any keys in common. The media acts as a passive oracle to
> allow the different boxes to come to the same cryptographic key.
> In contrast, previous copy protection technologies like the one
> used for DVD video, depended on shared keys between the mastering
> studio and the players, with predictable results. As soon as a
> 16-year-old in Norway found one shared key, the system was
> effectively broken: there was no way to exclude the broken key
> from the system without hurting too many innocent consumers. In
> contrast, CPRM can survive thousands of independent attacks, and
> exclude millions of circumvention devices, without any chance of
> innocent consumers being affected.
>
> Recently, articles have appeared in the press that CPRM will be
> standardized on all PC hard drives. This has fueled Orwellian
> mages of a Big Brother chip on your PC that will decide whether
> your files are worthy of being copied. This is complete nonsense.
> CPRM would never be standardized, nor have we ever proposed such
> a thing. CPRM strength is portability and interchangeability and
> it is mismatch for fixed hard drive. It is completely passive,
> requires no hardware, and can only be exploited by newly-designed
> applications. It cannot possibly affect existing files or
> applications. How these myths came about, and persist, was an
> object lesson for a media-naive researcher.
>
> About the speaker:
>
> Jeff Lotspiech is the manager of the Content Protection
> Technology Group at the IBM Almaden Research Center. He has a BS
> and MS in Computer Science from MIT, 1972. He has been working on
> content protection technologies, both the Internet and media, for
> the last six years.
>
> Contact information:
>
> Jeffrey B. Lotspiech
> IBM Almaden Research Center DPEM/B3
> 650 Harry Road
> San Jose, CA 95120
> 408-927-1851
> 408-927-3497
> lotspiech@almaden.ibm.com
See you there!
The point is not to win the tech war (Score:5)
You're right that we can't win a technological arms race with big business. CPRM will probably get implemented.
What we can do is win the PR war. It's interesting that you bring up Ralph Nader. He won the PR war against businesses years ago. He turned enough people against companies producing consumer products which play fast-and-loose with people's safety that in the end, the government and business had to stand up and take notice.
That's where we need to concentrate our efforts, IMO. We can't win the technology in the short term, but if we do it right, we can win the hearts and minds.
Buycott!!! (Score:5)
This is where we send letters to targeted companies, stating why we are going to single them out to purchase, not avoid, their products. In this case it is because they voted down CPRM.
DO IT, folks! There is more to be gained from honey and sugar than vim and vigor.
The companies on my Buycott list:
Apple, Adaptec, ST Micro, Western Digital, Maxtor, LSI Logic and Hale Landis (who is this??).
========================
63,000 bugs in the code, 63,000 bugs,
ya get 1 whacked with a service pack,