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Digital TV flags 'will not stop piracy'
The US "broadcast flag" system aiming to prevent online piracy of digital TV programming will not work, say computer experts. On Tuesday, the US Federal Communications Commission (FCC) announced that all hardware digital TV receivers built after 2005 must be capable of responding to a copyright protection mechanism embedded in digital broadcasts. But computer scientists say that injecting a string of bits called a broadcast flag into the signal will not stop widespread redistribution of TV shows on the internet. "Is this going to do what the movie industry is looking for? No. This will not have the desired effect," says Drew Dean of the Computer Science Laboratory at the SRI Institute in Menlo Park, California. The Moving Picture Association of America (MPAA) fears that the advent of digital TV could boost the number of movies being freely and illegally shared online, and had demanded the FCC respond to the threat. "By taking preventative action, we can forestall the development of a problem in the future similar to that currently being experienced by the music industry," states the FCC report. The new regulations will apply to TVs specifically made to receive digital signals, as well as add-ons for PCs and ordinary TVs. But many computer experts agree that the distribution of digital information is unstoppable. "These technologies will get defeated - there are always work-arounds," says Dan Wallach, a computer scientist at Rice University in Texas.
Posted by: cybershoplifter   Posted on: 11/07/03 You are currently: a Guest | Members login | Terms of Use

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M$ is stalling media distribution!  screaming silence | 11/06/03
yep then they regreat it  lmaxwell | 11/06/03
Actually:  ickusslime@... | 11/07/03
Happens all the time  voska | 11/07/03
Consumers don't want it  Nigel Johnstone | 11/06/03
DRM NOT WORKABLE  Robert Rice | 11/06/03
DRM plainly doesn't work  voska | 11/07/03
Sounds Like Communism?  Robert Rice | 11/07/03
Kind of like SSL certificates  voska | 11/07/03
The Music Industry...  BitTwiddler | 11/07/03
De Facto Standards  tic swayback | 11/07/03
Was trying to burn a cd and this happened  cybershoplifter | 11/07/03
Simple solution, let Microsoft set the standards.  No_Ax_to_Grind | 11/07/03
default to MS  cybershoplifter | 11/07/03
Exactly  tic swayback | 11/07/03
A solution to what?  voska | 11/07/03
shifting sands  tic swayback | 11/07/03
Digital TV flags 'will not stop piracy'  cybershoplifter | 11/07/03
To play on iPod could you just burn as .wav  cybershoplifter | 11/07/03
Or as .aiff  tic swayback | 11/07/03

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