How About An Anonymous Olympics Video Mirror?
"Normally with video, the problems are that it has to be really well handled in terms of latency, is delivered using UDP (ie, lossy) transfer, and can be traced easily through the ports used to deliver it. What if the live or close to live video was encoded by a party in Australia or any area served by satellite or whatnot, automagically broken into 5 minute pieces (to pick a reasonable small chunk) of realvideo (to pick a random but popular video codec), encrypted, dispersed to any number of mirror sites over any normal TCP form (SMTP/FTP/HTTP/POP whatever), re-assembled, and then broadcast in its normal form with the resulting say 15 minute delay meaning the video would still be over 12 hours ahead of whatever the IOC is allowing to be broadcast?
Now, there are some technical issues that whoever pursuing this path would have to overcome: how to distribute the material from the mirrors, how to anonymize any connections, how to handle similar streams from mutiple sources, and after the recent rashes of gnutella 'spamming' and such, how to distinguish 'legitimate' incoming data from 'trojan' data meant to disrupt any system.
Now, I'm not a programmer by any means, so I certainly have no way of testing this theory even in a closed network (although it doesn't seem like the technical hurdles are insurmountable, or even serious hurdles at all) and I honestly don't care much about the Olympics (I'd be happy getting the data the next day, since I don't watch much video on my computer; I happen to think TV belongs on a 32" screen, and I can't afford a monitor that large). I *do* wonder about just how often laws are being used to enforce practices that the internet has made a bit archaic, and think that a few more discussions into the matter are needed. Hopefully, this will promote just such a discussion, especially considering how quickly new laws are being discussed concerning digital copyright."
0 of 10 comments (clear)
No comments match the current filter.