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Taiwan Joining Chinese Royalty-free Video Disk Effort

BeardStreet writes "In an attempt to stop the flow of royalties to the various DVD licensing bodies (e.g. DVD6C, MPEG-LA, etc.), 19 Taiwanese companies have come up with a royalty-free DVD format called EVD which is compatible with a similar effort going on in China, called AVD. Capacity is about 1 GB higher. Their goal is to avoid having to shell out US $15 to $20 per-player royalties. EVD/AVD players will still be able to play traditional DVD disks but will not have the official DVD logo on them, thus avoiding the licensing fees. It's a political issue as well, in that China needs to balance the flow of royalty money going out of their country, especially with DVD players falling rapidly in price."

310 comments

  1. It's about time. by pstreck · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Let's get some US and European support in on this one and take over the market! But seriously, this is a really good thing we need to support these open standards to avoid the Information Nazi's.

    --

    Later,
    Phil
    1. Re:It's about time. by lionchild · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I'll be curious to see if it takes off. It certainly -sounds- like a nice idea. However, just as many fuel saving engines may have been quietly put away in dusty little closets in the back of some big-manufacturer's back room, also may these plays get put away until someone starts asking where they went.

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    2. Re:It's about time. by BitHive · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I don't see any mention in the article of this being an open standard. It's likely that this player will go the way of the Apex player here in the US. The article makes reference to their "AVD" player not sporting the DVD logo, and not being a DVD player in a 'technical' sense. . .well, both of these things are true for DeCSS and look what happened.

    3. Re:It's about time. by neocon · · Score: 2, Informative

      However, just as many fuel saving engines may have been quietly put away in dusty little closets in the back of some big-manufacturer's back room,

      Ooh! Ooh! Urban Legend! Urban Legend!

    4. Re:It's about time. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Look what happened to DeCSS, you say? Legal or not, DeCSS was incorporated into a dozen or so free DVD player projects. Would you like to guess what that file named "libdecss.so" is? OpenBSD even has it in the ports collection.

    5. Re:It's about time. by darkonc · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Apex got in trouble because they signed the non-disclosure agreement that, among other things, prevented them from allowing multi-region players, etc.

      If CSS is simply trade-secret, and not patented, then all these newcommers have to do is use DECSS in their players (and possibly include a copy of the source code with every player!!! :-)

      --
      Sometimes boldness is in fashion. Sometimes only the brave will be bold.
    6. Re:It's about time. by lionchild · · Score: 0, Troll

      No, no, no...not an Urban Legend that you get the odd product off the line. I'm talking about something developed to compete against big business, like the Tucker, that gets muscled out, by hook and by crook. Surely you won't try to convince us that Tucker's automobile didn't really exist?

      --
      Awk! Pieces of eight. Pieces of eight. Pieces of seven... ERROR: General Protection Fault. [Paroty Error.]
    7. Re:It's about time. by neocon · · Score: 1

      No, merely that Mr. Coppola's movie about the same was, as they say, `based on a true story' -- i.e. was a work of fantasy. There certainly was a Tucker. He made a car which some people still consider to have been way ahead of its time. His business failed, as he tried to break into a crowded market with a new startup.

      Surely, on a tech bulletin board in the year 2002, I don't have to remind people that sometimes startups fail, even when they have a good product to sell?

    8. Re:It's about time. by TellarHK · · Score: 2

      I like my Apex AD-660. Flashed it a few months ago, no more macrovision and no more region issues. AND it fixed the bug my player had with turning subtitles on every time I put in a disc. Quite nice.

    9. Re:It's about time. by Erasmus+Darwin · · Score: 4, Interesting
      "this is a really good thing we need to support these open standards to avoid the Information Nazi's."

      Open standard? Who said anything about an open standard? The article mentions that the companies involved are trying to secure patents for things related to their new standard. I suspect the "royalty-free" phrase that's being thrown about applies only to the 19 companies that're working on producing the standard. To draw a computer analogy, this isn't like the BSD software developers vs. Microsoft or the GPL software developers vs. Microsoft, but more like Oracle vs. Microsoft.

  2. Good for them! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now, if only someone would do that in the US too

  3. Goooo China! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Err... wait... no... Communism is bad.

    Booooo China!

  4. Well good for them by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 5, Interesting
    When a group of people decide they don't like the legal state of things and decides to come up with their own standard, they are rising above petty legal fights and truly addressing the issues faced by individuals and businessed whose interests are firmly in the hands of patent owners that only care about themselves.

    Way to go! - This belongs in the same ranks at the (Ogg) Vorbis Project.

    1. Re:Well good for them by bricriu · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Maybe these innovations belongs in the same ranks. Hopefully, the success level will be a considerable amount higher. ;-)

      --

      AHHHHHHH! I'm burning with goodness again!
      - Reakk, Sluggy Freelance

    2. Re:Well good for them by stienman · · Score: 5, Interesting
      I bet you only say this when it appears to be in your favor. Try this similar sentence on for size:
      When Microsoft decided they didn't like the legal state of things and decided to come up with their own standards, they were rising above petty legal fights and truly addressing the issues faced by individuals and businessed whose interests are firmly in the hands of patent owners that only care about themselves.
      You are purporting to believe in a value, yet I doubt you believe in the value, just this particular case.

      BTW, since these video disc players are not DVD licensed, do they have the right to use DVD keys to decrypt existing DVDs? These keys, I imagine, are licensed along with the patent and royalty agreements. This will work great in non-DMCA countries, the USA, however, will likely stop them at customs after some mild lobbying from various patent owners and trade groups. It's very likely that these are destined for the huge chinese market, but they are probably hoping to skirt around the law and get these into the US as well.

      -Adam
    3. Re:Well good for them by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 5, Insightful
      "I bet you only say this when it appears to be in your favor. Try this similar sentence on for size: When Microsoft decided they didn't like the legal state of things and decided to come up with their own standards, they were rising above petty legal fights and truly addressing the issues faced by individuals and businessed whose interests are firmly in the hands of patent owners that only care about themselves."

      The difference that the move from MSFT centralises power and control in the hands of a corporation, while the move in Asia hands rights and restriction-free capabilities out to a whide variety of groups.

      Centralisation and disemmination of power are very different things.

    4. Re:Well good for them by Paul+Komarek · · Score: 4, Interesting

      How do you license a key? I don't think one can patent the key itself. You could claim copyright or trademark over it, I suppose, but I doubt that would have much real effect anyway -- how would you tell the difference between a copy of a key and a reverse-engineered key?

      -Paul Komarek

    5. Re:Well good for them by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 1
      "How do you license a key? I don't think one can patent the key itself."

      Never underestimate the stupidity of the US patent office.

    6. Re:Well good for them by zangdesign · · Score: 2

      Really? And who is coming up with this standard? The people? I think not - it's 19 Taiwanese companies.

      So the powerbase is still in corporate hands. Note that is is not apparently an open-source effort - it is a CORPORATE effort.

      Say it with me - CORPORATE.

      Sarcasm aside, good for them. It probably won't make it over here, but it would be a good thing if it did. We could separate video DVD's from data DVD's and finally get Hollywood off the consumer's back. It would also be a good consumer-level format.

      --
      To celebrate the occasion of my 1000th post, I will post no more forever on Slashdot. Goodbye.
    7. Re:Well good for them by hondo77 · · Score: 1

      When a group of people decide they don't like the legal state of things and decides to come up with their own standard, they are rising above petty legal fights and truly addressing the issues faced by individuals and businessed whose interests are firmly in the hands of patent owners that only care about themselves.

      So I guess this means you're all for the copy protection scheme that the major labels are putting on some CDs now?

      --
      I live ze unknown. I love ze unknown. I am ze unknown.
    8. Re:Well good for them by Compuser · · Score: 2

      Standards are only worth while if they are open.
      For one company to create standards will always
      be bad. For a bunch of companies to collude and
      create standards that come with strings attached
      or royalty payments due or any other barrier to
      entry, that too is bad. So bad in fact that it
      should be illegal.

    9. Re:Well good for them by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here I was thinking royalities run at 1-3.5% tops.
      No wonder the golden goose syndrome is in play.
      Heading back to patents, HTF so you patent raw seek/R/W primitatives. All these have been on hard disks from the 60's.
      The laser specs can be programmable - track spacing, speed etc.
      AFAIK, I don't think royalities are being paid on every 80 track pre-formatted floppy sold , so why should it be diffeent with a cd burner?
      Writing your own software to cater for conventional, as well as new formats (perhaps using metadata/XML). The keys and the encryption stuff, dont really apply, as they were never technologically effective in the first place.

      To me, the logo means nothing other than 'it has been tested and it works' ; and I pay a premium for that.
      If a noname/generic comes along, it is at a huge disadvantage, because the drivers an software from that region don't have the polish and reliability of the real stuff.

      Like storebrand cola at the supermarket, I see no reason to ban immitators. Like soap-powder, DVD drives are just another product/commodity, and the law should see it that way.

    10. Re:Well good for them by lurvdrum · · Score: 1

      You seem to be missing the difference that this format is "royalty-free". Microsoft formats may be many things but I
      would hazard a guess that "royalty-free" isn't a term that would be used very often to describe them.

  5. Region free? by Triskaidekaphobia · · Score: 4, Interesting

    If the Chinese and Taiwanese want to bypass the DVD tax then lets hope they don't mind annoying the studios as well and make their players region-free.

    Can the studios detect these players and make sure their disks won't play on them? They did that super-new region coding thing a while back didn't they?

    1. Re:Region free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Really doesn't matter. As long as there are consumers that don't like what these IP nazis are doing, they'll always look for alternatives or assist in creating them. In this case, if I get such a DVD player and I find out a certain DVD I want doesn't play in there, I'll just get an illegal copy. Fuck the studios. You can only push a consumer so far.

    2. Re:Region free? by mickeyreznor · · Score: 2

      I don't believe they can without making some serious changes to the DVD format(which could cause some major headaches like the ones sorrounding copy-protected cds).

      The problem is that the play prevention mechanisms lie with the dvd players and not the dvds themselves. The dvd is encrypted but there's nothing to stop it from being decrypted by, say a region 0 player or decss.

    3. Re:Region free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >If the Chinese and Taiwanese want to bypass the DVD tax then lets hope they don't mind annoying the studios as well and make their players region-free.

      Well the competition is very high and a lot of cheapo DVD players from China already came with region-free feature as a selling point. The price in terms of US$ are $90-100, with aftersales services. It is cheap enough for me not to consider buying a japanese player which costs double.

      The japanese are still too cautious regarding the regional issue in their players. It is very likely the new AVD will be region-free, but it is likely to be UNDOCUMENTED.

      >Can the studios detect these players and make sure their disks won't play on them? They did that super-new region coding thing a while back didn't they?

      Not possible to detect as the video disc is passive. Changing the format or encryption, may be. But then it won't be DVD and will breaks all know players.

    4. Re:Region free? by Spazholio · · Score: 0

      There are DVDs out there that will not play on a DVD player that's set to "region-free". You have to set it to the reion of the DVD you're watching. One DVD (Snatch) comes to mind: I had my Raite 715 set to "region free" and when I put the DVD in, it said "We're sorry but this DVD will not play in a region free player." or something to that effect. I just had to set it to region 1, and it had no problems. Lame and easily defeated, yet irritating.

    5. Re:Region free? by morgajel · · Score: 2

      they better watch out, if they try to get around THAT, it might be considered a copyright-protection circumvention device:)

      wouldn't it be funny if that hardware was illegal in the US, but legal everywhere else? so much for land of the free...

      --
      Looking for Book Reviews? Check out Literary Escapism.
    6. Re:Region free? by BrookHarty · · Score: 2

      Non-region is already legal. Just harder to find.

    7. Re:Region free? by RetroGeek · · Score: 2, Funny

      Can the studios detect these players and make sure their disks won't play on them?

      Probably.

      But all you will need to make it work is a black marker.....

      --

      - - - - - - - - - - -
      I am a programmer. I am paid to produce syntax not grammar. Deal with it.
    8. Re:Region free? by Bartab · · Score: 1

      I don't believe they can without making some serious changes to the DVD format

      Several players are 'hackable' to be region free, or region switch. My current Apex for example. Some of these are obviously left in on purpose, some are hacks to the flashroms in the unit themselves. The only reason that these units don't come with region switch from the manufacturer is that a unit that wishes to display the DVD logo must technically respect region encodings, or they are not allowed to display the logo.

      Obviously, this shouldn't be a problem for these new players since they don't intend to display the logo.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    9. Re:Region free? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's good since the companies in question are the ones making the DVD players. They can make them region free and give a big old middle finger to the MPAA.

    10. Re:Region free? by BrookHarty · · Score: 1

      Older computer DVD's had software on the OS, where you could switch as many times. Now its in the firmware on the drive itself. Seems the hardware vendors buckled under the political pressure. Try to find a RPC-1 (software/os) locked, if you upgrade to a RPC-2 drive, you can only change a 2 times.

      BTW, I hear the Imac's are RPC-1, I dont have one, True?

    11. Re:Region free? by Alkaiser · · Score: 1

      Yeah, they did. I noticed a couple DVDs wouldn't play, but I just set the ol' Apex back to region 1, and it played just fine.

      Speaking of which, Apex is from Taiwan, I don't see why they wouldn't region-free the damn things, they've been doing it all this time anyway.

      Combine this with the fact that if a movie is released anywhere in the world and within 30 days had not been officially releaed in Taiwan, the copyrights don't apply there, and you've got a pretty royal ass-fucking lining up for the MPAA.

      Woo! Go China!

      --
      Netjak.com independent reviews of domestic & import video ga
    12. Re:Region free? by mickeyreznor · · Score: 2

      i wasn't talking about the china players, but rather, to the parent's comment about making dvds not play on the unlicensed AVD/DVD players

    13. Re:Region free? by morbid · · Score: 0

      Maybe the real point is it might give us a new, reliable, inexpensive, _compatible_ data storage medium, and higer capacity to boot. How many different DVD "standards" are there?

      Anyway, I'm sure this development is "evil, communist, unamerican, only for pirates and terrorists etc."

      Let's see what the RIAA and MPAA have to say...

      --
      I'm out of my tree just now but please feel free to leave a banana.
    14. Re:Region free? by Bowdie · · Score: 1

      Dunno, I had a Creative Dxr2 in an early home made DVD PC, and that could only be changed 5 times until it locked. Good old remote selector saw to that tho.

      That Dxr2 drive must be knocking on for 4 years old now.

      --
      yes, www.dotcomforwardslash.com is my real URL.
  6. Will they really avoid license fees? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If there are patents on the DVD format and these EVD players can read DVDs, it's hard to imagine how they wouldn't infringe those patents.

    OTOH, if the royalties are for a trademark license, they may be able to escape by not using the DVD logo.

    1. Re:Will they really avoid license fees? by Unknown+Relic · · Score: 1

      Their plan in this case is most likely to continue to pay the royalties for the time being, while building market share for their new players. Once this market share is established they will be able to drop DVD support, and thus avoid paying the royalties.

    2. Re:Will they really avoid license fees? by Dimensio · · Score: 2

      I thought that the DVD playback method wasn't covered by a patent. I thought that MPEG-2 decoding wasn't covered under any patents and that the MPAA wanted the CSS method to be a trade secret and thus never had it patented (because patents must be disclosed)...that was what the lawsuit in California over DeCSS was all about (the MPAA wanted to have a "trade secret" and then claim infringement when someone reverse-engineered and implemented it, even though that's perfectly legal.

      I could be wrong. I usually am.

    3. Re:Will they really avoid license fees? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >>>I thought that the DVD playback method wasn't covered by a patent. I thought that MPEG-2 decoding wasn't covered under any patents ....

      It doesn't matter whether the actual DVD playback method or the actual MPEG-2 specs have been patented or not. The technology BEHIND them are patented and pooled under the DVD and MPEG-LA consortiums.

    4. Re:Will they really avoid license fees? by Wesley+Felter · · Score: 3, Insightful

      MPEG-2 is practically encrusted with patents.

      CSS is a (former?) trade secret as you noted.

      What about the other parts like UDF, IFO, etc.? Many patents could be lurking in there.

    5. Re:Will they really avoid license fees? by bobKali · · Score: 1

      It could be that the patent fees they are avoiding by doing this are not for the DVD players, but rather for the discs themselves.

  7. Balance the royalty flow? by GMontag · · Score: 2

    It's a political issue as well, in that China needs to balance the flow of royalty money going out of their country...

    You mean *true* piracy (vs. the MPAA accusations against coders) does not curb the flow of royalties enough already? Wow, these Commies are pretty crafty!

  8. Only in China by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 4, Insightful

    China said it was developing a format called Advanced Versatile Disc (AVD) that would be used only in the Greater China region

    This format would only be used in China. Makes sense, since there's no way they could sell these players in the US or Europe because it would infringe patents. Even if it doesn't display the logo it still decodes CSS, MPEG, AC3, all of which are patented.

    They'll still get exported, from stores like Lik Sang.. but who knows, customs will probably seize them at the border.

    1. Re:Only in China by Triskaidekaphobia · · Score: 1

      AVD, the Chinese one, is only in China. Who knows where the Taiwanese one, TVD, will be sold.

    2. Re:Only in China by mocm · · Score: 1

      CSS is certainly not patented and many of the others are software patents which only exist in the US.
      The license is not for the patents, but for CSS and the DVD Specs, i.e. the informatin the .ifo file contains.

      --
      ***Quis custodiet ipsos custodes***
    3. Re:Only in China by Liquor · · Score: 1

      No, it shouldn't be stopped at the border for patent infringement. CSS was never patented (it's a no-longer-secret trade secret), and I believe MPEG playback can be accomplished without breaking any patents (DVDs don't use MPEG-4).

      But I have no doubt that it WOULD be stopped as an 'illegal circumvention device' for DMCA purposes.

      --

      Liquor
      Sanity is a highly overrated commodity.
    4. Re:Only in China by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 5, Funny

      This format would only be used in China.

      Quick! The MPAA needs to lobby Congress to make it illegal for China to do this!

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    5. Re:Only in China by Herr_Nightingale · · Score: 1

      Hey buddy guess what - every DVD I've got is from Chinatown, and they're ALL "pirated" which means that I pay about 8 bucks a piece. That includes Spiderman, Scorpion King, and everything else except Attack of the Clones (hardly worth the eight until Jarjar is gone). Who cares if the format is intended for China only?? It'll inevitably come to where I live, and I'll pay half-rate for both player and DVD (sorry, I meant EVD)
      Good show China! Bring on the Hollywood fat cats!

  9. Can't play standard DVD media by crow · · Score: 4, Informative

    Despite what the article says, these players will either owe royalties, or they won't be able to play the standard DVD media.

    The royalties aren't for the use of the DVD trademark (well, the bulk of them, anyway). They're for the use of patents.

    Now if they're really clever, they might be able to implement alternative techniques that, while producing the same results, don't use the means that the patents cover. Considering the number of DVD patents involved, this seems unlikely. (Sure, you could avoid the Macrovision and region-coding patents easily enough--don't include those "features.")

    1. Re:Can't play standard DVD media by Unknown+Relic · · Score: 1

      I would imagine that their plan is looking more at the long term rather than an immediate stop of royalty payments. The only way they can get any market share for their player is if it also plays standard DVDs, and so they'll have to bite the bullet for now and accept that. As these players begin to emerge in the market they will most likely attempt to get distributers to release products on the new media. Only once this has happened will they be able to cut DVD support, and thus the royalties. Also, if they could implement alternative techniques to avoid licencing as you suggest there would be no reason at all for this new format!

    2. Re:Can't play standard DVD media by Royster · · Score: 3, Offtopic

      The royalties aren't for the use of the DVD trademark (well, the bulk of them, anyway). They're for the use of patents.

      What patents? CSS? Not patented, a trade secret. MPEG? Playback isn't patented, encoding is. Dolby Digital Sound is patented, but they don't have to implement the DDS parts to play DVDs.

      --
      I have discovered a truly marvelous sig, unfortunately the sig limit is too small to contain i
    3. Re:Can't play standard DVD media by geekoid · · Score: 2

      there not making DVD's only dvd "players".The only patent they would come close to is the actuall technology used to get the data from the disk.
      The big question is, will the studios take it to court as a circumvention device? I hpe so, because they would lose.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
  10. This sounds bad by forgoil · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Pirated cheaper EVD/AVDs being sold around the world, making the movie industry see even more red than before.

    If I were the guys who own DVD (Phillips and friends), I would demand that the fee is paid in the store, when someone buys the player.

    This doesn't sound like a step towards a better movie format for everyone, this sounds like VHS/Betamax all over again.

    I could be wrong though;) We'll just have to see what happens.

    1. Re:This sounds bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Pirated cheaper EVD/AVDs being sold around the world, making the movie industry see even more red than before.

      How does a AVD "player" relate to piracy? DVD is still the same format.

    2. Re:This sounds bad by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1
      I would demand that the fee is paid in the store, when someone buys the player.

      Sorry, but that wouldn't work. Enforcement is too tough. It is easy enough for Phillips to stop the things in Customs... without pissing off the consumers!

    3. Re:This sounds bad by Bartab · · Score: 1

      This doesn't sound like a step towards a better movie format for everyone, this sounds like VHS/Betamax all over again.

      Except a VHS machine couldn't play a betamax tape, etc...

      This machine will play it's format plus the DVD format. Either it's format will take off and other manufacturers will need to start supporting the new format as well as DVD, or it won't take off. If it becomes the new standard, new machines could very easily drop DVD support and still have a market. However, since it can play DVD's to begin with, it is not a VHS/Betamax situation.

      --
      Any sufficiently advanced technology is indistinguishable from a rigged demo.
    4. Re:This sounds bad by drinkypoo · · Score: 2

      This is nothing like VHS/Betamax. First, EVD players are supposed to play DVDs. Second, this is almost the opposite issue from DVD. Betamax was superior to VHS technically - While it remains to be seen if this will be true of EVD, it is at least superior from a licensing standpoint. Also Betamax was aggressively licensed, representing nothing more than Sony's attempt to grab a bigger piece of the pie. EVD is an attempt to stop other people from making big money off of licensing, so it really is the inverse issue.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  11. Unfortunate... by grokBoy · · Score: 1

    Well, a great idea from the Chinese and Taiwanese inventors. Maybe they should email someone and tell them about it. Oh wait, they can't, because we've all blocked them for spamming us...

  12. 19 Companies! by havaloc · · Score: 1

    With the support of 19 companies, this will get very interesting very fast. The only reason I own a DVD player is that I was able to get one of those APEX deals that are free of regions and macrovision and those other insane measures that take away from the consumer's ability to enjoy what they purchase.

    1. Re:19 Companies! by Tom+Finch · · Score: 0

      Please use hexadecimal. Thus 16 is 10h. This is news for nerds, and nerds hate to see decimal. You'll likely be moderated down using decimal like you do.

    2. Re:19 Companies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >You'll likely be moderated down using decimal like you do.

      And you'll be moderated down for quoting hexadecimal like you do.

      Stop using MASM and quote it in C style, 0x10 is much cooler.

    3. Re:19 Companies! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      0x10 is preferable

  13. This hill hurt by smnolde · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ... the DVDCCA. And I hope it does.

    If EVD is open and unlicensed then it will do one of two things, if not both: A) Expose the region coding for distribution control, or B) isolate the US (and possibly Canada) from getting any of these devices by legislating them illegal.

    While we USians may not like the isolation, those who have the gold make the rules. This kind of open format will only help to spread the distribution of films made in other parts of the world, eventually hurting the DVDCCA and MPAA.

    There's nothing like having inferior entertainment channels forced upon us by law and greed when we could all share and share alike the distribution method (like PAL and GSM).

    1. Re:This hill hurt by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who's going to make media for this? A company in the MPAA? I can have the most open format in the world (Ogg) and if nobody produces anything for it, nobody will care about it. As in nobody, I mean anyone who is not a geek.
      In order for this to work, the Taiwan companies need to become distributers and create the media / distribution, and try to get licenses to reproduce the things that people want to see.
      I'd love to see the MPAA sign that contract..

      Whatever..

  14. sing it with me by paradesign · · Score: 1
    cue NWA "fuck the police"(preferably in stolen mp3 format) and sing it with me now!

    fuck the DVD6C, MPEG-LA, etc, fuck the DVD6C, MPEG-LA, etc, fuckem.

    --
    I want 2D games back.
  15. Negating their life's work? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You'd think people who devote their lives to developing digital media technologies (DVD, HDTV, etc.) would care enough not to let greed and politics get in the way of the standards necessary to making these technologies truly useful.

  16. The only problem by asavage · · Score: 1

    is it won't play in all the current DVD players and will take a while before DVD players will be able to play them. How useful will this be if almost no DVD players can play them? Microsoft will have the same problem as they are trying to get DVD players to use windows media video format.

    1. Re:The only problem by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

      But, if they are targetting the bottom end of the market (presumably unlike MS), and if they make content available... there is a reasonable incentive for the consumer to spend extra money "upgrading."

      The real (obvious) market is domestic distribution in China, where you need to keep the costs minimal...

    2. Re:The only problem by MrResistor · · Score: 2

      It's the player that's important, not the format. If you had the choice between a DVD drive that won't play EVDs and an EVD player that will play DVDs and is $20 cheaper, which would you buy? I thought so. WMF is a straw man. Only Microsoft is trying to get DVDs to use it.

      --
      Under capitalism man exploits man. Under communism it's the other way around.
  17. whoohoo!!! by chef_raekwon · · Score: 1

    its about time!
    lets get it here in NA...then we'll watch those mpaa bastards squirm.....

    --
    We're like rats, in some experiment! -- George Costanza
  18. Patent # for CSS please? by Rupert · · Score: 2

    After all, if it was patented, there wouldn't be any need to reverse engineer it, since the spec would be public. And it also wouldn't be covered by trade secret legislation in California.

    --

    --
    E_NOSIG
    1. Re:Patent # for CSS please? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      CSS might not be patented (security through obscurity), but there's other patents on the DVD spec. see here

    2. Re:Patent # for CSS please? by pod · · Score: 1

      The spec would be published, yeah. The keys, no.

      --
      "Hot lesbian witches! It's fucking genius!"
  19. Hope this works by quantaman · · Score: 2

    My only concern would be that MPAA & Fiends would try to block this. I don't think the DMCA can touch this but would the CBTBA (something like that) if it ever gets passed do something to this? If they arn't able to make up a legal obstacle my guess is they will just put something readable only in the new format on their DVDs that will crash the new players (though could they still cal them DVDs then?). Anyone else have any ideas on what the MPAA might try to pull to kill this technology, I'm sure they're not just going to take it lying down.

    --
    I stole this Sig
    1. Re:Hope this works by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1
      My only concern would be that MPAA & Fiends would try to block this.

      No problem... get India involved. Get all of Asia involved for that matter! The US would have no clout in the matter if the justification is simple economics! India produces how many times the content of Hollywood? Even Thailand has a little film industry... The US has no authority to dictate the entertainment content or format for other countries.

      In the end... it just might be good for the US in damaging the MPAA stranglehold... but that part will take time. (Watch what happens when other countries produce content targeted at Americans..!)

    2. Re:Hope this works by rworne · · Score: 1
      In the end... it just might be good for the US in damaging the MPAA stranglehold... but that part will take time. (Watch what happens when other countries produce content targeted at Americans..!)
      You're kidding, right? When will Joe Six-pack go rent or buy a video featuring Hindu (or other ethnicity) actors subtitled in English? Recent breakthrough films like Crouching Tiger are an anomaly, possibly banking on old "chop-sockey" formula films of the 70's.

      Add that these films will most likely be "unrated" by the MPAA, and various popular stores like Blockbuster and Wal-Mart won't carry them.

      It will however be a great time for those of us that like foreign or "art" films.

      --
      I tried every decent and legal way I could think of to resolve the issue w/the business before I rented the chicken suit
  20. YeAH Yeah Yeah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Lets get kernel support for these things damn quick!!!

  21. Excellent - a trade war is just what we need... by vkg · · Score: 5, Funny

    Bunch of different, theoretically compatible standards - international patent law called into play, with those Damned Communists trying to avoid paying their patent fees....

    You know, if they keep this shit up, they might just distract the MPAA from the Internet long enough for me to finish building my archive :-)

    1. Re:Excellent - a trade war is just what we need... by swordboy · · Score: 4, Funny

      Yes - I can't wait for the various different recordable formats that come out for this new technology. Lesee:

      - AVD+RW
      - AVD-R
      - AVD-RAM
      - EVD+RW
      - EVD-RAM
      - EVD-R
      - EVD+AVD+RAM
      - Etc...

      Wonderful!

      --

      Life is the leading cause of death in America.
  22. Re:Hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Care to provide a cite for your sig? Or can't you?

  23. Not so fast... by GMontag · · Score: 2

    Despite what the article says, these players will either owe royalties, or they won't be able to play the standard DVD media.

    Yea, they can owe all you and I wish for them to, but payments would not exactly fit into their "royalty avoidance" scheme.

  24. Re:You can't make this stuff up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Der Spiegel can and does make anything up - like the diaries of Adolf Hitler.

    You dumbfuck moronic waste of protoplasm.

  25. Will this be legal? by shaldannon · · Score: 2

    I like the sounds of this, but I wonder about the legality of selling these players in the US. If the player is capable of playing DVDs, then the technology inside will necessarily involve either unlicensed or reverse-engineered decoding software. The former would be piracy/IP theft, and the latter (legitimate IMHO) would run afoul of the DMCA.

    --


    What is your Slash Rating?
  26. not replacement by wmacgyver · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I don't think this will replace DVD format, however I hope this become the replacement for VCD format. VCD has always been nice in that, a lot of DVD players support it, plus you can make VCD yourself. No region lock out. If in the future, most DVD players also support this much like they support VCD playback, this will allow consumers to be able to make their own media that plays back in standard DVD players

    1. Re:not replacement by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      I don't think this will replace DVD format, however I hope this become the replacement for VCD format.

      SVCD is already a decent replacement for VCD. The quality is much better (2/3 D1 VBR MPEG-2 vs. CIF CBR MPEG-1), and you can make 'em yourself with any CD burner. I rip video from my TiVo and convert it to SVCD all the time (info here). Player support isn't widespread, but many of the less-expensive DVD players support it (it's the expensive players from bigger companies that are least likely to support SVCD...hell, there are still DVD players on the market that won't even play CDDA burned to CD-R or CD-RW).

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
    2. Re:not replacement by wmacgyver · · Score: 1

      I was under the impression that EVD will have higher resolution compare to SVCD? Also, judging by the way the article was written, it sounds like they are not doing EVD on CDR, which will have the nice benefit of increased storage.

    3. Re:not replacement by ncc74656 · · Score: 2
      I was under the impression that EVD will have higher resolution compare to SVCD?

      True...if it'll deliver DVD quality, EVD would be a nice upgrade from SVCD as well as VCD. (SVCD was developed as an alternative to DVD that sacrificed some quality for lower cost and fewer encumbrances.)

      The trick will be burning your own. DVD burners have only recently gotten even somewhat affordable, and determining what burner will produce discs that work with your players is a bit of a crapshoot. If EVD uses (or can use) the same physical media as DVD, burning your own becomes subject to these limitations. If it's a completely new medium (and the article makes it sound like it will be), you can forget about making your own EVDs for a while.

      (As an aside, some DVD players can play video formatted to the DVD-Video spec that's burned on CD-R or CD-RW. You get only a few minutes' storage, but it's in full DVD quality. It's known informally as "mini-DVD.")

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  27. Re:You can't make this stuff up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Hahahaha! Whatta moron.

    Thanks. I'll be mailing that to all my friends and to a couple of die-hard Republicans I know.

  28. Too many formats? by Tidan · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Is it just me, or is the industry generating too many different media formats in too short a time? I know from a profit standpoint, corporations stand to benefit from releasing newer technologies forcing customers to replace their old technology with newer. And this is to be expected - to a certain degree. It seems, at least to me, that recently the rate at which new media standards are being produced is far higher than it was a few years ago. Not too far back, VHS reigned supreme, and it has been virtually the> standard format for decades. Now DVD technology is in the process of phasing out VHS, but it seems we are bombarded with new and improved formats (like this new extra 1-Gig capacity) that won't benefit the customers to a great extent. It doesn't seem that these new EVD's are going to replace DVD's because it is not a substantial breakthrough in technology. Big deal.. an extra 30 min. of "behind the scenes" on your typical DVD movie. Is it worth introducting new media formats to simply avoid licencing fees?

    --
    free ipod? yeah.
    1. Re:Too many formats? by matthewd · · Score: 1

      It seems to me that one more format is needed, what I understand is the blue laser technology that will allow higher capacity discs that deliver high definition video. In fact it's a shame that this technology wasn't used for DVDs in the first place. Maybe it's just taken longer to get ready?

      No doubt having high definition movies available on disc would have made high definition TVs more attractive to consumers, increasing adoption rates. Right now, you've only got HD broadcasts, if you live in the right place. And the HD content could surely be scaled down to the NTSC format, making it compatible with existing TVs.

      Sometimes to solve the chicken and egg problem, it helps to have more eggs (or chickens for that matter).

  29. What a difference geography makes by GuyMannDude · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Several industry sources confirmed that emerging EVD or AVD players will be capable of playing back both EVD/AVD disks and DVD disks.

    But other industry sources in Japan acknowledged that if players bear no official DVD logo, it would be difficult for the 6C or 3C groups to go after them.

    It's sad that some companies in Asia are going to get away with making their own DVD players for the sole purpose of cheating the DVD patent holders while some poor European kid who writes DeCSS so that he can play his legally purchased DVDs on Linux gets crucified to the fullest extent of the law.

    GMD

    1. Re:What a difference geography makes by sporty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      19 companies combined can afford many lawyers. A teenager prolly can't. Doesn't excuse any actions, but that is the case.

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    2. Re:What a difference geography makes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's even more of a shame is that socialist countries are more lax than our "free" republic.

    3. Re:What a difference geography makes by Nept · · Score: 1

      the only reason they're so lax is it gives them a chance to screw over the rich countries they hate

      --
      "Teachers leave us kids alone ..." - Roger Waters, Pink Floyd
    4. Re:What a difference geography makes by Nicolas+MONNET · · Score: 1

      Taïwan turned commie? Odd, I didn't notice it in the news.

  30. not so good? by tps12 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Okay, now I am as much a supporter of "free as in freedom" as any other good slashbot. But while reading this story more carefully, and discussing it with some of the "regulars", I believe I have reconsidered.

    All of the innovation that we have seen, from the triumph of the Wright brothers, to the soaring skyscrapers that make this country beautiful, has been due to the drive of a few precious individuals. Their motivation? Money.

    Take away the royalties that protect them and urge them to develop new things, and we're back in the Dark Ages. Like it or not, intellectual property rights is the hot-button issue that sculpts the political landscape.

    Where would we be without it?

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:not so good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      How many times has that myth proven wrong? I can't find an online version of "manufacturing consent", but a lot of the points chomsky makes against mass media can be applied to this particular case. Here's a link to some chomsky stuff

    2. Re:not so good? by neocon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      `proven' wrong? Haven't read too many economics textbooks, have you? Never mind actual work in the field...

      Of course, you give the game away when you quote Chomsky, who is a holocaust-denier, a general anti-American bigot, and a blithering ideologue whose fantastic claims (7 million dead in Afghanistan? Really? Even the anti-war left only claims a few thousand...) have caused him to lose credibility even on the left. Even his work on linguistics (as opposed to abstract syntax) is generally considered way off base in the field.

      For more on Mr. Chomsky, see here or here. For more on his absurd claims about Afghanistan, see here.

      Now, to refer to your original claim, why do you think America leads the world in invention, while the old Soviet Union couldn't even keep up with manufacturing stolen technology, never mind inventing new technologies?

    3. Re:not so good? by Shelled · · Score: 2

      I'd say we've seen a little too much innovation in this particular area, to the point where a couple of thousand producers of essentially disposable content are trying to control the dissemination of information between billions in order to protect the money from a cartoon mouse. Not everyone's greed should be give safe harbour or encouraged.

    4. Re:not so good? by geekoid · · Score: 2

      "All of the innovation that we have seen, from the triumph of the Wright brothers, to the soaring skyscrapers that make this country beautiful, has been due to the drive of a few precious individuals. Their motivation? Money."
      false. Many of the great inventions were created from the joy of creation, rather then money.
      Money is made by people who hire creative thinkers, then patent there ideas.
      Without IP, I gues people could only make money with the intial concept, as opposed to wrining ot every last penny from there customers.

      Truth be told, I'm not against reasonable IP protection. I am against people using it as a means to stiffle innovation, control markets, and arrest children for building there own device to lay a legally purchased DVD.

      If it comes down to letting corprations have complete control, or no IP, I'll choose no IP.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    5. Re:not so good? by dudeX · · Score: 1

      Those articles are so full of right wing rhetoric that I learn nothing substantial about the claims you have against Chomsky.

    6. Re:not so good? by neocon · · Score: 1

      Typically leftist. Believe it or not, calling someone `right wing' is not an argument in and of itself. If you have a rational point to make civilly about the articles or about my post, go ahead. I'd suggest you read them first, though.

    7. Re:not so good? by technos · · Score: 2

      The Wright brothers didn't do anything new; It was a glider design gleefuly snagged from somewhere else, and someone elses motor, and you'd be betting safely if you said their props weren't their own invention. The only bit of the plane that was actually covered by a patent was the control system. It was weird, and people did different things. Modern aviation, even though spawned by the Wrights, wouldn't infringe the patent, because it was a wacky way of handling it. Sure, the Wright brothers made a pile of money, but they hampered the advance of the airplane through insane business proceedures, such as the 'Buy before we even let you see it works' trick that caused the Europeans to do things differently and the US government to laugh at them.

      As for skyscrapers, they're ugly. Also, there is no IP involved in them, save simple copyright. You can't copy someone elses building word for word and beam for beam, but you better bet you can drive down to the local municipal office and see every inch of the building down to the spacing of rivets and copy every innovative idea.

      And the skyscrapers weren't about money; They were a dick-size war among a few wealthy individuals and corporations.

      --
      .sig: Now legally binding!
    8. Re:not so good? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn that greedy bastard that invented the wheel!

    9. Re:not so good? by Mikkel_bob · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure Chomsky was refering to the expected death toll through famine in Afghanistan because of the disruption to aid services caused by the bombing.

      --
      Mmmm. Sig.
    10. Re:not so good? by neocon · · Score: 1

      Right, but the problem with that argument is that there was no disruption in aid services (or rather, the war served to reverse the disruption in aid services caused by the Taliban seizing aid shipments), and had Chomsky done any research at all, he would have known this (honestly, I would argue he did know this, but it didn't suit his argument).

      Even in the first weeks of the bombing, before the Taliban began to lose control on the ground, more aid was getting to Afghanistan then had at any point since the Taliban grabbed power. Once Kabul fell, opening the roads from the north, the amount of aid reaching the Afghan countryside skyrocketed again, yet Chomsky continued to make his absurd claim.

      For more on this, see here.

    11. Re:not so good? by ahfoo · · Score: 2

      Who needs Chomsky when you've got Ahfoo.
      That sob story is dismissed quite easily by simply understanding the history of this great nation we call the USA.
      Patents create monopolies plain and simple. That's what they're all about. In the past century, the US allowed monopolies to grow to the extent that the entire economy collapsed in what is known as the Great Depression.
      Because of the lessons learned during the 1930's, tight controls were put on patents and for the great period of growth that followed World War II, these limitations on patent rights allowed such wonders as the GUI to become freely available for use by the entire public of the United States.
      However, partly because of the over-dependence upon a bloated and inefficient auto industry which was, in turn, dependent on cheap oil that evaporated for political reasons, the nation's economy saw serious troubles in the 1970s.
      So, in the 80's. these very cynical people called the GOP came up with this idea to change the patent laws back to how they were before the Depression --rewind the tape. Play it again Sam. AFter all, they represented the people who would get rich off of this arrangement --the already wealthy. Just like the last depression.
      They created something called the CAFC and stacked it with judges who essentially had a mission to beef up patent laws which they have done quite dutifully.
      And, we're seeing the first big corporate failures from gross mismanagement coming down the pipes already. Looks like the GOP got their rewind.
      So, before you go crying about the poor inventors, perhaps you should consider what really made America great, a harmonious pluralism based on a sense of shared community and not this winner-take-all, fuck thy neighbor bullshit.

  31. Re:Hardly surprising by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's Jackie-white, American artist- Chan to you.

    And Chinese (actully copied from old Scoobie Doo Episodes and digitally recolored) Ghost Story.

    Jet (I'm a white boy in make up) Li.

    Yuen drop-it-chink-boy Biao.

    Sammo Hung is really Samuel Jackson in disguise.

  32. U R TEH GAY!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i agree with this post.

  33. Even so... by foo+fighter · · Score: 3, Interesting

    We'll never see these players in the US.

    The MPAA will see to it that customs holds these at the border, and the parties hoping to receive the shipment will be tossed in the slammer.

    Basically, these will be considered controlled substances like drugs and whoever's trying to get ahold of one will be treated as a narcotics dealer/user.

    --
    obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
    1. Re:Even so... by ReelOddeeo · · Score: 3, Funny

      Basically, these will be considered controlled substances like drugs and whoever's trying to get ahold of one will be treated as a narcotics dealer/user.

      I disagree.

      Whoever's trying to get ahold of these will be considered terrorists. Get with the times.

      --

      Those who would give up liberty in exchange for security and DRM should switch to Microsoft Palladium!
    2. Re:Even so... by acoustiq · · Score: 1

      Sorry, but the word "terrorists" is too long for most Americans to grasp. Try evil doers.

      --

      --
      I romp with joy in the bookish dark
  34. They DID, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Look on this site for players that can defeat the new Regional Code Enhancement (RCE) protection. Also, apparently all Shinco DVD players can defeat RCE protection with a few steps.

  35. Narrow Reading of Patents Rejected by bihoy · · Score: 2

    I wonder if this is the type of thing that could be impacted by the recent overturning of a ruling by the special federal appeals court. Apparently the U.S. Supreme Court felt that the ruling went too far by allowing competitors to make minor changes and then applying for new patents. At a minimum it could open the door for existing patent holders to delay things by filing lawsuits against the new technology on the grounds that it is similar and not sufficiently different.

  36. DVD is an illegal trust by bigpat · · Score: 2, Interesting

    "Both of those groups are prepared to stop imports of unlicensed DVD players and to bring lawsuits against companies that ship them."

    Anything that plays the DVD format will still be considered as infringing on the DVD patents.

    Once again, we here in the freedom loving west will be protected from having to decide if we want cheaper and better technology. After all it is much better when a group of companies work together and decide to impose a standard on the world and then charge us extra for the privilege.

    Why don't people go after these companies for Anti-trust violations? When standards are used by an exclusive group of companies to impose market control at the expense of consumers, it is illegal under US law. Companies are supposed to compete with eachother, otherwise it isn't a free market.

    1. Re:DVD is an illegal trust by Tazzy531 · · Score: 2

      but you also have to consider the patents/royalty system. Without such patent and royalties, companies would no longer have any incentive to research and develop. Why should they plop down $xx million if they can just "steal" or "use" the technology that another company researches for free.

      --


      _______________________________
      "I'm not Conceited...I'm just a realist..."
    2. Re:DVD is an illegal trust by geekoid · · Score: 2

      because they'll gain initial market share and "beach head" after that they will have to compete, which is the only way the consumer gets options.

      So they will still make money, as much money? hard to say.

      --
      The Kruger Dunning explains most post on /. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dunning%E2%80%93Kruger_effect
    3. Re:DVD is an illegal trust by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The first post to hit the nail on the head. The various companies involved have used the excuse of patent infringement to impose market control and be selective as to sales pricing, volumes and timing. The disgusting aspect of the whole deal is the use of the State and taxpayer funds to shore up a colluded market structure and to foil open competition. By controlling the market through any means including the practice of getting legislation passed to turn everyone into potential criminals, these corporations have misused their market position to the detriment of government and the buying public. The fact that the Federal Govt has agreed with their position and enacted laws such as the DMCA etc puts the US in exactly the same light as the very Governments its spin doctors accuse of various market and human rights violations. The US of A today is acting on the same level as Germany and USSR in the 1930's. It won't be long now before the place is a complete police state.

      cheers

    4. Re:DVD is an illegal trust by CaseStudy · · Score: 2

      Then the only people able to make money off an invention are large corporations that can quickly capitalize on the invention. The guy with a great idea but no means to produce it is screwed.

  37. This cuts out the middleman for piracy profit by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 1

    Not trying to be a troll, but I believe such DVD disks if proved to be popular, would lend themselves nicely to a black market of DVD movies in China.

    DVD media companies would have to pay no royalties, which in turn increases their profits by selling these DVDs to the black market.

    No offence, but this is China, it has a thriving black market. One of the reasons why you don't see Console manufacturers selling their consoles and games in this country.

    1. Re:This cuts out the middleman for piracy profit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >One of the reasons why you don't see Console manufacturers selling their consoles and games in this country.

      but they sure like the backdrop of the car crash scene in Hong Kong in the Xbox commerical.

  38. not all movies by tps12 · · Score: 4, Funny

    The following movies will not be released for EVD or AVD:

    Elizabeth

    The Last Emperor

    The Madness of King George

    Get it? Royalty-free? Get it?

    --

    Karma: Good (despite my invention of the Karma: sig)
    1. Re:not all movies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was so funny I forgot to laugh.

    2. Re:not all movies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      's OK, I laughed.

    3. Re:not all movies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That was so bad, I sustained actual physical injury. I ought to sue you.

  39. Taiwan IS China by benh57 · · Score: 1

    Whatever happened to the US's "one china" policy? This article would surely piss off the govt of china, who claim that Taiwan is part of China.
    I believe the official US line is still "one china".

    1. Re:Taiwan IS China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I take it they don't have newspapers where you live. That policy ended during the Carter administration.

    2. Re:Taiwan IS China by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The "One China" policy is still very much on the books. Although the US now considers mainland China to be the real one, at least in the official sense. That doesn't stop us from telling them not to invade Taiwan.

  40. Taiwan and China? by intermodal · · Score: 1

    Now there's a pair i didn't expect to see playing together...

    --
    In SOVIET RUSSIA... erm...NSA AMERICA, the Internet logs onto YOU!
  41. Re:What a difference money makes by Telastyn · · Score: 5, Insightful
    It's sad that some rich companies in Asia are going to get away with making their own DVD players for the sole purpose of cheating the DVD patent holders while some poor European kid who writes DeCSS so that he can play his legally purchased DVDs on Linux gets crucified to the fullest extent of the law.


    Emphasis mine.
  42. What about CSS? by sterno · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Okay well that's all well and good, but are they going to be able to support CSS decryption? Seems to me that their ability to play DVD's is almost useless if they can't decrypt CSS, seeing as most discs require it. So they still end up having to pay royalties and having to enforce region encoding.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:What about CSS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      CSS isn't patented -- it is (was) a trade secret. And thanks to DeCSS, now everyone who wants to can decrypt CSS. So the only legal barrier is the DMCA, which only means that these players will be gray market items in the US.

  43. What was that SciFi book? by swb · · Score: 2

    There was a scifi book and part of the backstory was that the Chinese had crushed the US economy by basically pirating EVERYTHING and making it available on some global satellite net.

    Maybe this is the beginning?

  44. I love it by unicron · · Score: 3, Funny

    And the fact that all DVD players sold in China come bundled with Episode 2 just goes to show you the level of dedication the Chinese market brings to the consumer. They go that extra mile you just don't see in larger American stores like BestBuy.

    --
    Finally, math books without any of that base 6 crap in them.
  45. what about EVD-RW? by Splork · · Score: 2

    we already have dvd-r, dvd-ram, dvd-rw, dvd+rw... why not add a lower cost higher storage capacity alternative?

    1. Re:what about EVD-RW? by hawkline · · Score: 1

      I've been hard at work creating DVD-Cowboyneal. The only problem is it only writes to pork rinds and can only playback Vivid DVD's with the multiple angles feature.

    2. Re:what about EVD-RW? by SWTP · · Score: 1

      If they had a higher feature player/recorder for EVD-R & RW then it would sell like hotcakes! Wont play them but would sell like them!

  46. excuse me by Jacer · · Score: 2, Interesting

    i'm against intelectuall property, but legally can they do this? if it plays dvd's, it supports the format, how can they get around not paying the royalties? sounds like the communist state is just flexing their muscles, not that there's anything wrong with communism, just the leaders!

    --
    --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    1. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Not that there's anything wrong with communism? You mean aside from the millions killed, the mass starvations, and so forth?

    2. Re:excuse me by Jacer · · Score: 1

      well, if you would have bothered reading my post, that would be the fault of the leader! and not especially communism, but you're probably also referring to a dictatorship, communism creates a utopia for its citizens, and as you clearly pointed out the millions killed doesn't facilitate paradise, now does it? man's greed is the only thing keeping communism from being a perfect system

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    3. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hehe ... it doesn't matter. Everytime people tried to implement communism it always degenerated into some sort of brutal dictatoriship.
      Obviously, a political and social system cannot exists without humans and therefore it is pointless to argue that communism would work if it weren't for man's greed.
      It doesn't and it is all that matters.

    4. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Heh, what AC said. We've all heard many times about what a utopia communism creates, and yet like all systems which aim to force men to be virtuous, it has always ended in tyranny. How many more tens of millions would have to die before you admit that Communism doesn't work?

      If I told you that capitalism in real life creates a perfect utopia for its citizens, and if it fails, that is the fault of the leaders, I don't think you'd buy it. So let's admit that we have to compare each system as they actually exist, and as they actually exist, capitalism has produced liberty, prosperity, and happiness for more people than any other system.

    5. Re:excuse me by Jacer · · Score: 1

      tens of millions die because of racial biggotry, if you're going to blame a system of government on a dictator's prejudices, just blame it on procreation in general, and let this be the last generation of the human race

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    6. Re:excuse me by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      not that there's anything wrong with communism, just the leaders!

      Despite all evidence, you are a True Believer! Keep the faith--in America, people have a short memory, and will soon forget all the evidence!

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    7. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignorant git. Systems of government don't kill people. Starvation is caused by lack of food, not the reds. Has the Chinese government, through it's action or inaction caused deaths? Yes, only an idiot would disagree. Has the U.S. governement, thought it's action or inaction caused deaths? Of course.

      Under Stalin many Russians were killed for 'political' reasons. The U.S. commited genocide on the American Indians. How many entire tribes have been exterminated in a brief few hundred years?

      You can condemn communism. It's your right to make any claim you wish. But realize that systems of government only change the who and the how of systematic slaughter; and you'll be one of the first to go when the revolution comes.

      History teaches us many lessons, one of which is that governments don't last. The U.S. is a powerhouse not unlike Rome and it's not easy to imagine its decline.

      Odds are good none of us will see a whisper of the inevitable in our lifetimes. But the great-great-great grandsons of our children will curse us for our hubris and our ignorance.

    8. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      OK, let's go through your claims:

      • Systems of government don't kill people. Starvation is caused by lack of food, not the reds -- which is why everywhere Communism has been tried it has resulted in shortages, starvation, and misery? Remember that at the start of the twentieth century, Russia was known as the `breadbasket of europe' due to its grain exports, yet within a generation of the revolution, it was forced to import massive amounts of wheat just to survive.
      • But realize that systems of government only change the who and the how of systematic slaughter -- nope. No one is being `slaughtered' in America today. No one is oppressed in America today. In China, tens of millions are dead or in prison or in the laogai (forced labor camps for political dissidents) for practicing their own religion, or for wanting democracy, or for any number of other failures to be model Communist citizens.
      • You can condemn communism -- I certainly can, and I do. If the deaths of tens or hundreds of millions in the last century is not enough to make you condemn communism too, what would?
      • and you'll be one of the first to go when the revolution comes -- cute. And you want us to believe that you're pushing a system which is not murderous?
      • History teaches us many lessons, one of which is that governments don't last. The U.S. is a powerhouse not unlike Rome and it's not easy to imagine its decline... -- great. You sit at home and wait for that, but don't forget that Rome lasted for 600 years. Also keep in mind that change is not always for the bettter. Here in the US we have the most free, the most democratic, and the most prosperous system in the world's history. If you want us to believe that it should be replaced, the onus is on you to say why.
    9. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "everywhere Communism has been tried it has resulted in shortages, starvation, and misery?"

      Has Communism ever been tried? Not Stalinism or Maoism or Leninism; Communism. It's an honest question, most 'communist' governments in world history are thinly veiled dictatorships. It's generally acknowledged that a dictatorship is only as 'good' as the dictator.

      "No one is being `slaughtered' in America today"

      Waco, Ruby Ridge, Columbine, WTC... we've plenty of bodies piled up. We've had our bloodly little hands all over Vietnam, Libya, Kuwait/Iraq, Afghanistan, Panama... more than I'd ever want to list and that's all relativly recent. Take a peek at death row. How many corpses is texas up to?

      "Here in the US we have the most free, the most democratic, and the most prosperous system in the world's history."

      First; the U.S. is not a democracy. It's a republic. Huge difference. The citizens don't vote on national laws or policies. They don't vote for president, vice president or supreme court positions.

      We have laws governing what we are permitted to do inside our own homes. There are tens of thousands of things we arn't allowed to own. There are areas we arn't allowed to research. There are subjects we arn't allowed to discuss.

      That is your "most free, most democratic" government in world history?

      Change is not always for the better. I've made no such claim. Change is inevitable. Better or worse depends on the choices we make. If we blindly ignore the changes in the world around us we will loose our prosperity. It's an unavoidable and predictable paradigm shift.

      How many socialist countries place fewer restrictions upon their citizens? Your claim seems to be that the answer is 0. Do you have the balls to try and back that up?

    10. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "No one is oppressed in America today"

      unless you're female, black, middle-eastern, an ex-convict, muslim or mexican.

    11. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      unless you're female, black, middle-eastern, an ex-convict, muslim or mexican.

      Nope, even if. Care to provide evidence to contest that (not hysterical claims ripped from the pages of The Nation)?

    12. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It *could*. That's the only thing that's important. In answer to the question "Do you agree with communism _in_principal_?" only the ignorant and the foolish say "no". When asked "should we become a communist state" only the ignorant and the foolish say "yes".

      That makes communism an intellectual exercise. Which is really all it's good for right now. Somewhere down the road, perhaps. I suspect if the infrastructure was completely automated (a feat that's technically possible but politically impossible) you could avoid the otherwise inevitable corruption. Not today, not tomorrow.

    13. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      To respond to a few points:

      • Has Communism ever been tried? Not Stalinism or Maoism or Leninism; Communism. It's an honest question, most 'communist' governments in world history are thinly veiled dictatorships. It's generally acknowledged that a dictatorship is only as 'good' as the dictator -- and I would argue that Communism has led directly to dictatorship in every place it has been tried. How many more tens of millions would have to die before you would acknowledge that this is the norm, not the exception? Put differently: if I were to claim to you that Capitalism in theory, not as practiced now leads to heaven on earth, you would say `yes, but look at it in practice'. So I say the same: it is only fair to compare systems as they actually exist, not as some claim the could exist in theory. And compared as they actually exist, capitalism results in the most liberty and prosperity for the most people of any system.
      • Waco, Ruby Ridge (your inclusion of Columbine and 9/11 is nonsense) -- yes, these are terrible abuses. And unlike the massacres in communist systems, they are common knowledge, and are known as outrages (I would add Elian Gonzalez to the list, by the way, but I guess you'd disagree). `Most free' does not mean `perfectly free', nor does it mean that we do not need to be eternally vigilant. It does mean `Most free'.
      • First; the U.S. is not a democracy. It's a republic. Huge difference. -- the US is indeed not a direct democracy, it is a democratic republic. This doesn't change the fact that it is more democratic than systems such as the EU, where decisions are made solely by faceless bureaucrats who are, in effect, appointed for life. And that is what I said.
      • We have laws governing what we are permitted to do inside our own homes. -- surely, it is not the `inside our own homes' part which you are objecting to (we're not allowed to commit murder inside our own homes either, remember), it's the types of things which are banned (I assume you mean drug use) which you are objecting to. Now this is fine, and we are probably in some degree of agreement here, but you should look at laws in other countries if you think we're worse off.
      • There are areas we aren't allowed to research. -- care to name one?
      • There are subjects we aren't allowed to discuss. -- again, care to name one?
      • That is your "most free, most democratic" government in world history? -- yup. That it is. Though I welcome you to provide an example of anywhere you consider to be better...
      • How many socialist countries place fewer restrictions upon their citizens? Your claim seems to be that the answer is 0. -- yes, that would be my exact answer. Care to provide a counterexample?
      • Do you have the balls to try and back that up? -- I would argue that brains have much more place in this discussion than balls. Do you disagree?
    14. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well little white boy...

      http://odur.let.rug.nl/~usa/P/lj36/speeches/su66 lb j.htm

      That's LBJ's third state of the union address in which he clearly states "Yet, slowly, painfully, on the edge of victory, has come the knowledge that shared prosperity is not enough. In the midst of abundance modern man walks oppressed by forces which menace and confine the quality of his life, and which individual abundance alone will not overcome."

      Here's a nice little piece by Noam Chomsky

      Domestic Terrorism: Notes on the State System of Oppression

      http://pages.britishlibrary.net/blwww3/3way/chom st ateoppression.htm

      Lots more of course.. I wasted a minute or two on google to find those.

    15. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      That's LBJ's third state of the union address in which he clearly states "Yet, slowly, painfully, on the edge of victory, has come the knowledge that shared prosperity is not enough. In the midst of abundance modern man walks oppressed by forces which menace and confine the quality of his life, and which individual abundance alone will not overcome."

      Um, okay, what is your point exactly? That LBJ said that some people were oppressed in 1966? Were you even born then? Were many of the other people you claim are oppressed?

      Here's a nice little piece by Noam Chomsky

      Ah yes, Noam Chomsky. Whether it's holocaust denial or just general nutty anti-American raving (also here), Mr. Chomsky can always be counted on to come out with something inane. Do you have a reputable source for your claims? Remember that Mr. Chomsky isn't even taken seriously on the left anymore.

    16. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it could be a hidden feature - just don't advertise it on the packaging, but leaks it out so that everybody know that it works.

    17. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do not condemn communism for the slaughter of innocents and violation of basic human rights. I condemn people for being so greedy and power-hungry.
      Those draconian anti-dissident laws were the result of corrupt leaders, not the system of government itself.

      By the same token, I do not condemn capitalism for the hugely disproportionate variance in quality of life (a minority practically own the majority like some backwards feudalism) and the loss of people's rights. I blame people for being so greedy and apathetic.
      A few huge corporations are turning everyone into their slaves. Because of the greed of people in power and because so many people are so apathetic, the few who do care enough to take action have no hope of keeping the system in check.

    18. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, but thanks for playing.

    19. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wrong, but thanks for coming out.

    20. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Which is all very well, except for one thing: communism, every single time it was tried, not only led to greedy and corrupt leaders, but gave them absolute power, while Capitalism, even in the face of greedy participants (some would say especially given greedy participants) produces prosperity for all levels of society.

      You speak of disparities between the top and bottom of society, but is this relevant? If (as it has) capitalism has produced so much wealth that even the bottom 20% of society in 1990 lived better than the middle 20% did in 1950, while communism bankrupted even economies which had been thriving before communism was tried (such as Russia), are such relative comparisons really the issue?

      Which is better for the poor to have? A proportionally smaller slice of a much bigger pie, or an `equal' slice of a smaller pie?

    21. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      And while we're on the subject, you say

      A few huge corporations are turning everyone into their slaves.
      but as far as I can tell this just isn't happening -- most people have more financial and personal liberty than at any time in the past.

      So maybe you can explain that bit?

    22. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Can I assume from your response that you don't actually have any rational objections to my post, so you are resorting to insults?

    23. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Likewise, should I assume that, in typical liberal style, you don't actually have an argument against these points, and are thus resorting to quips such as this one?

    24. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      most people have more financial and personal liberty than at any time in the past.

      You first.

    25. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Which is better for the poor to have?

      Freedom.

    26. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1. I'm not a liberal, but in typical fuckwit style, you assumed I'm a member of a group of people you've selected as your nemesis.

      2. You've put forth statements without proof and expected everyone to take them as fact, in typical fuckwit style.

      3. You so completely belong to me.

    27. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ask a stupid question...

      Or in your case, provide no rational objections and then expect anything better than ridicule in return.

      Slap a bar code on your ass so I can get you sold off to a taiwanese sweatshop. I need a pair of new wing-tips.

    28. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      omfg owned, lol

    29. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      And that is something no communist system has ever provided, while ours provides it to every citizen. But the point is that communism doesn't even live up to its own claims of providing for the worker...

    30. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      So, again, do you actually have a single rational point, or are you just shooting your mouth off?

    31. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Or, in other words, `yes'. Thanks for clearing that up...

    32. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's probably because no "communism" has ever actually been a communism. They've all been thinly veiled dictatorships or oligarchies, which tend to really suck since the leaders just become corrupt.

      Calling it a communism is just propoganda to make the citizens think it's all for their own good.

    33. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You realize you just posted this as a reply to your own post, right? The irony is poetic.

      But I'll still humour you. Of course I have a rational point.

      Point:
      You are a complete fucktard.

      Proof:
      You demand that others back up their arguments with facts while you do nothing of the sort, preferring instead to grandstand.

    34. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      Now you say that, but the fact remains that every attempt to create communism here on earth has resulted in tyranny and misery. How many more tens of millions of people have to die before we acknowledge that that's what happens when communism is tried? I mean, it's not like we're short on examples, and it's not like any such attempt has ever resulted in anything else...

    35. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That wasn't my mouth. You might want a towel to clean yourself up, and a birth control pill just in case.

    36. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't be silly. Communism can never actually be implimented because it relies on ethics and honesty, which people on the whole are completely incapable of. The fact remains that what has been called communism simply never was.

      Communism itself is no more at fault for the failure of humanity to impliment it than is capitalism for the slow, cancerous degradation it is seen to undergo because of the failure of humanity to properly maintain it.

      Capitalism is the best distributor of wealth we currently have, but like all systems designed by humans, it requires maintenance to continue functioning properly.
      Laisser-faire capitalism is no better than a social anarchy. Those who can violate others, will. Big business is even more dangerous in that regard because it is by definition amoral and doesn't have inhibitions.

    37. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's a +1 for Damn Straight.

    38. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "if I were to claim to you that Capitalism in theory, not as practiced now leads to heaven on earth, you would say `yes"

      Wrong. I would say 'no' because a capitalistic state is inherently combative. Just as an object designed at an atomic scale has properties far superior to it's evolutionary counterpart so a system of government inherently designed to serve the people going to outpace a system in which waste (in the form of profit and competition) is a required element. In order for a non-competitive society to exist it must be designed (competition provides the economy with growth oriented evolutionary social processes.) Clearly the ultimate end of a capitalistic society is to aquire the capital. Is that the kind of goal we should have? What are we, Ferrengi?

    39. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      OK, let's look at what you're saying here. If we can agree that while communism may be great in theory, in real life it will always result in the same type of tyranny and misery that resulted every other time it was tried, then we're more or less in agreement.

    40. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      No, capitalism is not inherently `combative', it is inherently competitive, and this serves as a far greater engine of human achievement than empty rhetoric about the brotherhood of man ever has.

      However, granting that we disagree on this does nothing to blunt the important point here, which is the comparison of what these systems actually produce in practice, and the recognition that the typical rhetorical trick of comparing communism as it `should be' to capitalism as it is now is just that -- an empty trick

    41. Re:excuse me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you illiterate? I'm comparing Communism as it 'should be' with Capitalism as it 'should be'. You've got some real reading-comprehension work to do.

    42. Re:excuse me by neocon · · Score: 1

      No, you are not.

      You are comparing a theoretical but never realized ideal state of communism with your own views of what `total' capitalism would be. This is as pointless a political exercise as it would be for me to compare a theoretical but never realized ideal state of capitalism with the poverty and tyranny which I believe would result from a state of `total' communism.

      We won't get anywhere with such hypotheticals, so we have to look at what actually happens when each system is tried. Example after example show us that when Communism is actually tried, tyranny and mass murder result. Likewise, example after example show us that capitalism provides liberty and prosperity. So I'd say the choice is clear...

  47. Maybe not. by bstadil · · Score: 5, Interesting

    The MPAA will see to it that customs holds these at the border

    If they try to do this the logical counter move is to file a complaint with the World Trade Organization stating the case that the Regional Settings is a deliberate and unlawful inpediment to free trade. The risk of this being declared illegal combined with suits for Punitive damages subsequently filed in the US courts is high.
    MPAA will give in long before that as the down side grossly outweighs the alternative.


    NB: Write your representative in the country you are in and complain about Regional Settings. Its amazing it has survived so long.

    --
    Help fight continental drift.
    1. Re:Maybe not. by foo+fighter · · Score: 2

      Who would file that complaint to the WTO?

      You? I don't know you, but if you aren't a US Senator or CEO of a Fortune 500 company your complaint will be ignored and/or tossed in the trash before it's read.

      The US? Why wouldn't they back up one of their major industries?

      China and Taiwan? They are on thin ground in the WTO as it is. They know the risk of the US throwing its weight around is more dangerous than some lost profits to licensing fees.

      So I just don't see a complaint being filed let alone having any effect on the issue.

      --
      obviously no deficiencies vs. no obvious deficiencies
  48. New Economic Heavyweight Flexing some Muscle by ackthpt · · Score: 2, Interesting
    this is a really good thing we need to support these open standards to avoid the Information Nazi's.

    Well, not so much in those words, but I do like the principle of the thing. Chinese, particularly rural don't have a lot of cash to swing and eliminating Itellectual Property tax is the next logical step, as pretty much everything else has been shaved to mass produce electronics. (It's still a big deal to the PRC to keep up/improve the standard of living for their base of support (i.e. the majority of chinese who don't wear western suits and talk on cell phones). I was pretty stunned to see 5" B/W TV sets in the grocery store for $12.99 (yeah, that cheap!)

    I imagine the powers that be (Hollywood lobbyists, lawyers, etc.) will push something forbidding any of these open technologies from reaching US shores (because it doesn't kowtow to their wishes, of course.)

    --

    A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
    1. Re:New Economic Heavyweight Flexing some Muscle by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Basically what are you saying is that Chinesse people like our DVDs and want to listen/play/watch them but they don't want to pay for it so they just gonna start stealing.

    2. Re:New Economic Heavyweight Flexing some Muscle by ackthpt · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Basically what are you saying is that Chinesse people like our DVDs and want to listen/play/watch them but they don't want to pay for it so they just gonna start stealing.

      I don't suppose it has occured to you that China (Hong Kong included) has a thriving film and entertainment industry if its own and people there would like to watch their own country's films and see no point in having to pay a technology tax if they can develop their own standard. China *is* a big market and growing rapidly (~6.5% in Q1 2002)

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  49. It's Distraction by Bruce Sterling by LazyGun · · Score: 3, Interesting

    It's Distraction by Bruce Sterling:

    It's the year 2044, and America has gone to hell. A disenfranchised U.S. Air Force base has turned to highway robbery in order to pay the bills. Vast chunks of the population live nomadic lives fueled by cheap transportation and even cheaper computer power. Warfare has shifted from the battlefield to the global networks, and China holds the information edge over all comers. Global warming is raising sea level, which in turn is drowning coastal cities. And the U.S. government has become nearly meaningless. This is the world that Oscar Valparaiso would have been born into, if he'd actually been born instead of being grown in vitro by black market baby dealers. Oscar's bizarre genetic history (even he's not sure how much of him is actually human) hasn't prevented him from running one of the most successful senatorial races in history, getting his man elected by a whopping majority. But Oscar has put himself out of a job, since he'd only be a liability to his boss in Washington due to his problematic background. Instead, Oscar finds himself shuffled off to the Collaboratory, a Big Science pork barrel project that's run half by corruption and half by scientific breakthroughs. At first it seems to be a lose-lose proposition for Oscar, but soon he has his "krewe" whipped into shape and ready to take control of events. Now if only he can straighten out his love life and solve a worldwide crisis that no one else knows exists

  50. Re:Hardly surprising by ComaVN · · Score: 1

    George Bush, Made to Robert Sherman of American Atheist Press at the Chicago airport, August 27 1988. The exchange appeared in the Boulder Daily Camera on Monday February 27, 1989. It can also be found in "Free Enquiry" magazine, Fall 1988 issue, Volume 8, Number 4, page 16.: "I don't know that atheists should be considered citizens, nor should they be considered patriots. This is one nation under God."
    from a quick yahoo search. (google seems to be down.)
    And, since it's on the internet, it must be true. :P

    --
    Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
  51. Actually we can use more capacity by cryptochrome · · Score: 4, Informative

    DVD has always been light on capacity (and certain features could have been implemented better). In particular, one of the big advantages to DVD over VHS is being able to use multiple scriptable audio and text tracks, thus allowing you to subtitle and/or overdub for multiple languages. Not something we think of much here in the US, but in China/Taiwan, pretty much every release should have Mandarin, Cantonese, English, and if necessary whatever language it was originally recorded in. At least. The problem is even worse in Europe because with so many languages to cover, they're forced to skimp on audio and video quality, to say nothing of the bells and whistles we're accustomed to here. The "subtitle" tracks are not text but actually pictures of text to accomodate any font, but are limited to only four colors (two of which are are black and clear) and only to a certain sector of the screen. And there's no way to use post-press modifications(such as fan translations not available on the original).

    Beyond that, DVD quality is way below that of HDTV (not that there's much of that yet). So, we really could use more space - a LOT more (FMDs and FMCs sounded promising). And a much more flexible format (allowing simple outside scripting and track replacement/overlays as well as modern compression algorithms and file formats like MPEG-4) with smarter options (like a real UTF-8 text track coupled to an on-disk vector-type font library, and full-color compressed RGB-alpha sprite/video overlay tracks). But even a 10% or so increase in capacity could make a big difference in much of the world.

    --

    ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

    1. Re:Actually we can use more capacity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hey, you seem knowledgable about DVDs. I've got two questions that you may know the answer to.

      1. Where is the spec for the language or format they use for menus, captions etc. I'm just curious about what it does and doesn't do. Some of the weird behaviours you get on DVDs indicates it must be pretty stulted. (e.g. "you can have this feature or that feature, but not both at the same time")

      2. Is it true that today's DVD ripping software rips the mpeg bits but not the menus, captions etc.? If so, why is that?

      Wait, let me guess. The DVD standard defines a particular compression algorithm alongside the definition of how menus, captions, etc. work. You can rip all of the information off of the DVD but there is no standard way to combine advanced DVD features with the compression algorithms that are more appropriate for storing the data on expensive hard drives instead of cheap plastic disks. Hmmm, what about something like SMIL?

    2. Re:Actually we can use more capacity by cryptochrome · · Score: 2

      I don't know that much about it. Audio and Video are constrained to use only a few different compression algorithms (the decompressors on most DVD players are hardware not software). As for the menu format, I'm not sure what it is, but most likely nobody's bothered to make a "ripping" program for it because then what would you do with it? With the possible exceptions of Quicktime/MPEG 4 or flash or maybe SMIL, there's no standard multimedia format that can handle that kind of functionality, at least not exactly. But you could do something like it. I think MPEG4 will be sufficiently flexible.

      Data on a disk is of course no different from data on a drive (Apple's DVD player software can play DVDs stored on the drive, for one).

      --

      ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

  52. Politics, heh. by autopr0n · · Score: 2

    I wouldn't really call this 'joining', Taiwan is comming up with their own incompatable (I would assume) standard from china.

    Which is not very supprizing, but pretty silly given the fact that they speak the same language and the PRCs format is royalty free (or is it just royalty free for companies inside china?)

    --
    autopr0n is like, down and stuff.
    1. Re:Politics, heh. by DeionXxX · · Score: 1

      Wanna try to read the post atleast... I know its asking for too much to read the actual article but please... please.. read the post.

      -- D3X

  53. But can they get away with this legally in the US? by Neutropia_1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is the question! If China and others decide that they want to do this, they may not be able to import these units into the US because of the CSS. If they have CSS installed, than they must pay roylty fees since this is part of the legitimate standard. So.....The question still stands - can they import them legally into the US? If the DCMA stands, the US gov't may consider this an infringement of "reverse engineering" since they aren't paying any licensing fees!

    Quite possibly they are trying to create a seperate standard for Europe or just the far east?

  54. Thank god for market power by WillSeattle · · Score: 1

    Billions of Taiwanese and Chinese mean that they can pull a MSFT on RIAA.

    When they look back on this period, I wonder if any of the RIAA apologists will realize that they signed their own death warrants by their actions?

    -

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
    1. Re:Thank god for market power by karmawarrior · · Score: 3

      What, exactly, does the RIAA have to do with any of this? Other than a few DVD Audio discs (both of them) and DVD Music Videos, the honoured members of the RIAA have little or no involvement in DVDs, and almost certainly don't care what the Chinese and Taiwanese do to the format.

      --
      KMSMA (WWBD?)
  55. Taiwan and China: The Odd Couple by GuyMannDude · · Score: 2

    Now there's a pair i didn't expect to see playing together...

    Nothing brings mortal enemies together like a chance to make some bucks at the expense of the evil capitalist American dogs...

    GMD

  56. Re:But can they get away with this legally in the by WillSeattle · · Score: 1

    If China and others decide that they want to do this, they may not be able to import these units into the US because of the CSS. If they have CSS installed, than they must pay roylty fees since this is part of the legitimate standard.

    Like they're worried. Face it, the market in China, Taiwan, and the asian markets is so much larger than the US market that it's scary.

    I'm sure they'll weep over missing out on sales of a few million when they're not paying for many billions in new sales. NOT.

    -

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  57. Bye bye DVD by mmynsted · · Score: 1

    Hmmm. As a consumer, the only power I have that the corporations care
    about is my power of choice. If these become available in the
    U.S. then I wonder which product I will purchase:

    A. A product specifically designed to violate my fair use rights.

    or

    B. A cheaper, better product that does not violate my fair use rights.

    Go EVD!

    1. Re:Bye bye DVD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hum, cheaper and better.. I guess you haven't see any of those cheap "better" player's. They have 90 day warrenties.. most have problems with dual layer disks.

      You pay for what you get.

    2. Re:Bye bye DVD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're wrong, unfortunately.

      Corporations no longer care about the customer. The only thing that matters now is their stock price. They make more by having high stock than they do by selling you things. The customer is at best supplimentary income.

      If they can rape and violate you to make their stock more attractive, they'll do it.

    3. Re:Bye bye DVD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      True.. it might have something to do with the fact that corps are CONTROLLED by the stockholders, who have a vested interest in stock prices and the customer be damned.

  58. Nah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They're including Ep 2 to show how much they love democracy... ;)

  59. Red Lasers?! by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    From the article, the thing that bothers me is that they are proposing to use red laser technology still. It would seem to make (a lot) more sense to use the blue lasers and go for a dramatic increase in capacity, and not just an extra 1GB.

    Am I missing something? I thought thet blue lasers could still be used for the same DVD media...

    1. Re:Red Lasers?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      May be they also try to be realistic and try to do it with cheaper technology that can be mass produced that 90+% of the market wants perhaps ?

      Blue laser might be nice, but it might suffers the same fate as Sony's Beta...

    2. Re:Red Lasers?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cost of construction and energy consumption.
      Both are signifigantly higher for blue lasers.

  60. OT but related to your point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What about the 100 mpg carbeurettor? (sp?) While the patents are held by whoever, dubya [read: Unocal ] wants to dig for more oil in alaska...

  61. Re:Hardly surprising by neocon · · Score: 1

    You say it is from a conversation in an airport in Chicago. Another site claims it is from a Republican fundraiser, and plenty of other sites provide no cite or provide other theories.

    Now going with your version of where the quote is from, are we to assume that a small Boulder-area newspaper actually had a reporter present, or is it not more likely that the newspaper got the quote from the (Boulder-area) atheism activist who alleges that Bush said that?

    And if so doesn't that tend to undermine the quote's credibility, just as it undermines the quote's credibility that it bears no relation to anything else George H. W. Bush ever said?

  62. The video disc is active by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Not possible to detect as the video disc is passive.

    No. Each title in the DVD format contains a menu program. This menu program can call the libdvd function GetPlayerManufacturer() (I'm making up a name) and die if the player manufacturer is known to be easily moddable.

    Even with a passive system, the RCE discs have some valid content for all regions. An error message for the "wrong" regions is placed first on the disc before the content for the "correct" regions.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:The video disc is active by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >This menu program can call the libdvd function GetPlayerManufacturer() (I'm making up a name) and die if the player manufacturer is known to be easily moddable.

      I'm certain these new DVD players will have a menu option to return a random string for the Manufacturer name, or perhaps a "Write In" space where you can rename your player to "Matsushita/Panasonic".

    2. Re:The video disc is active by Salsaman · · Score: 2
      "No. Each title in the DVD format contains a menu program. This menu program can call the libdvd function GetPlayerManufacturer() (I'm making up a name) and die if the player manufacturer is known to be easily moddable."

      What do you mean 'contains a menu program' ? The program has to run on some hardware (i.e. the dvd player). All these companies have to do is hack the dvd program so that it ignores the 'die' command, and then there will be no problem playing discs. Likewise, they can send back any region code they want until the contents are viewable.

  63. Why the fuss ? by billcopc · · Score: 1

    If they can circumvent the per-player fee by not displaying a DVD logo on the box, why don't they just stick to that and forego the whole EVD/AVD bullshit ?

    Why not just call it a VCD player with unofficial DVD support ? The way I see it, if it can play DVDs it's going to be stuck to the licensing fees no matter what. If they're not bound by law, then the Powers That Be (tm) will buy new laws that will make it happen.

    --
    -Billco, Fnarg.com
  64. Wha? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this sounds like VHS/Betamax all over again

    Granted, there are some similarities (the DVD royalties are too high - like the Beta royalties were.)

    Pirated cheaper EVD/AVDs being sold around the world

    Yeah, just like VHS allowed all those pirated videotapes, while beta didn't..

    oh, wait.. THAT NEVER HAPPENED

  65. Re:You can't make this stuff up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The Brazilian media also covered the story..

    http://www.estado.estadao.com.br/colunistas/pedr ei ra/2002/04/pedreira020428.html

  66. except the WTO is in the US's pocket by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Trust me, the World Trade Organization enables sleazy American business practices. It's quick to move on countries that impede American exports but slow to move on the US when it imposes tarrifs on import goods. It's a bloody farce.

  67. A question by beleg777 · · Score: 1

    I'm not too well informed on this topic, but I think this is a valid question. If they are just trying to get away from the standards fees couldn't they just make DVD players without the DVD logo? And if it's more than that then doesn't making machines that play DVDs pretty much catch them up no matter what other factors are involved?

    --

    Science may someday discover what faith has always known.
  68. DVD encryption by gunnk · · Score: 1

    To play existing DVD's the units have to decrypt the DVD's. Several people have made comments on the legality of this and compared it to DeCSS. However, the DeCSS code has been in big trouble because the courts see it as a means to copy DVD's rather than to play them. However, these are STRICTLY PLAYBACK UNITS. The MPAA is going to have a HARD time claiming that they are devices meant to allow ripping of DVD's to share on the net. Seems to me that using code similar to DeCSS for these players is simply a case of reverse engineering the technology -- and that's protected by law as well.

    --
    Life is short: void the warranty.
  69. Open Source BVD: MS Stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I applaud the fact that Microsoft is standing firmly behind the concept. I wish more corporations would learn from the generous approach that Bill Gates showed towards BVD.

    Once we have BVD for the Open Source community then the sky is the limit.

    1. Re:Open Source BVD: MS Stance by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      BTW, WTF is BVD? LOL?

  70. CSS Used to be a Trade Secret, Not Anymore :-) by FreeUser · · Score: 3, Informative

    CSS used to be a trade secret. It is not and never was patented, and if they try to get a patent on it now there is plenty of "prior art," include deCSS itself. :-)

    Then some rather intelligent youths in Europe figured out how to break the profoundly weak algorithm used to encrypt DVDs and restrict their playback (but not bit-for-bit copies, as most DVD-Rs were capable of doing back then, before the deCSS case and their wholesale redesign).

    CSS isn't a secret anymore, indeed there are T-Shirts, songs, and 7 line perl scripts that can algorithmicly crack the code without any keys whatsoever.

    The Taiwainese or Chinese can use any of this widely and publicly available information to make DVD playback devices capable of decrypting and playing DVDs and, I suspect, under the rules of the WTO, there is absolutely nothing the Copyright and Media Cartels can do about it.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
    1. Re:CSS Used to be a Trade Secret, Not Anymore :-) by jonnythan · · Score: 2

      How is it so weak? Seems to me no one broke it until a company accidentally forgot to hide the key and someone used it.

    2. Re:CSS Used to be a Trade Secret, Not Anymore :-) by William+Tanksley · · Score: 2

      Weaknesses had been discovered before that, IIRC; but the cracking used to take too long to be really practical. The revealed key just was a little shortcut which let some people watch DVDs even though the cracking wasn't complete.

      Now that key is repealed, and fortunately for people wanting to watch DVDs on Linux, the algorithm is also cracked. Every time you put a DVD in your open-source player, the player cracks the key. That's why there's often a pause before the disc starts playing.

      -Billy

  71. Re:What a difference money makes by kwerle · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's sad that some companies in Asia are going to get away with making their own DVD players for the sole purpose of cheating the DVD patent holders while some European kid who writes DeCSS so that he can play his legally purchased DVDs on Linux gets crucified to the fullest extent of the law.

    Edit mine.

    Good grief, cut the crap. The reality is that these companies MAY get away with it, whereas I couldn't get a DVD player for Linux for love or money legally for a long long time.

    Really, though, this is capitalism at its best, IMHO. It can be done cheaper, and in a way consumers actually want - it WILL be done.

  72. Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
    "`proven' wrong? Haven't read too many economics textbooks, have you? Never mind actual work in the field... "

    Neocon, Did you post an inflamatory message as an anonymous coward and then replied to yourself? Chomsky, an holocaust-denier? On the contrary. Tell me, when did he deny the holocaust? Can you point me to an article he has written, or a speech he has made, where he even alludes to this? That's a very serious allegation you're making.

    1. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      While I agree that it's hard to believe that anyone could be as naive as the poster I replied to, no, that's not me.

      And yes, these are very serious allegations. Unfortunately, they are true -- for Chomsky's statements on the Holocaust, see here or here (warning, the latter site is a neo-fascist site which celebrates Mr. Chomsky's holocaust denial).

      Note in particular Chomsky's continuing support of Robert Faurisson, the leading french neo-fascist and holocaust denier. Mr. Chomsky has not only gave Faurisson the French rights to his books, but has written a foreward for Mr. Faurisson's book, and defended him in the press.

      It's things like this that are losing Mr. Chomsky even such support on the left as he has enjoyed in the past.

    2. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is impossible to be slanderous about that idiot after his 9-11 book.

    3. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by GigsVT · · Score: 2

      Also, it's very very hard to produce libel (this is written) about a public figure. There are different standards of libel for public companies and figures, than private individuals.

      --
      I've had enough abrasive sigs. Kittens are cute and fuzzy.
    4. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      Chomsky says: "Some time ago I was asked to sign a petition in defense of Robert Faurisson's 'freedom of speech and expression.' The petition said absolutely nothing about the character, quality or validity of his research, but restricted itself quite explicitly to a defense of elementary rights that are taken for granted in democratic societies, calling upon university and government officials to 'do everything possible to ensure the [Faurisson's] safety and the free exercise of his legal rights.' I signed it without hesitation. "
      http://www.zmag.org/chomsky/articles/8010-free-exp ression.html

      Apparently, Chomsky gave the French translation rights of his work to Serge Thion to publish as he pleased.
      Chomsky denies that he ever intended his work to be published with Faurrisson's and he further claims that he tried to stop it when he found out about it.
      http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/04/BRICMONT/ 15109 (the article is in French)

      So there you have it. I don't know if Chomsky is lying, but his story sounds entirely plausible to me.
      Stephan

    5. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      slander

      1. Law. Oral communication of false statements injurious to a person's reputation.
      2. A false and malicious statement or report about someone.

    6. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      Chomsky doesn't mention that he also wrote the foreward to Mr. Faurisson's book...

    7. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      My bad, perhaps I should put a disclaimer on how bad my French translations can be. The French text mentions that Serge Thion published Chomsky's article defending Faurisson's civil rights as an "avis" for Faurisson's memoire. An "avis" means "opinion". I don't believe it means "foreward" but its akward placement in the front of the book could easily suggest as much. In any case, Chomsky is also against the placement of this article, since that's never what he intended it for.

      "Mais Chomsky commit une erreur, la seule dans cette affaire. Il donna son texte à un ami d'alors, Serge Thion, en lui permettant de l'utiliser à sa guise. Or Thion le fit paraître, comme avis , au début du mémoire publié pour défendre Faurisson. Chomsky n'a cessé de rappeler qu'il n'avait jamais eu l'intention de voir publier son texte à cet endroit et qu'il chercha, mais trop tard, à l'empêcher (5). "
      http://www.monde-diplomatique.fr/2001/04/BRICMONT/ 15109

    8. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      Good, so where you'll get hung up is the `false' part...

    9. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      Now, if we take Mr. Chomsky's statements at face value, we are left with the fact that he is lending his name, his time, and his writing to the defense of one holocaust-denier, and giving permission for his books to be sold to fund another holocaust-denier. IMHO, this is pretty damning even if the problem stops there, but it doesn't -- again, see the links I posted above; there is a lot more to be concerned about when it comes to Chomsky and the holocaust.

    10. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      Chomsky gave away the rights of his work to someone he thought he could trust and then that person betrayed him. It's hardly what you make it sound like. As to the defense of Faurisson's civil rights, I think you would be apalled by what the ACLU has defended in the past. Based on your own reasoning, since the ACLU defended Nazis, then they must be Nazis.

      "The ACLU has often been at the center of controversy for defending the free speech rights of groups that spew hate, such as the Ku Klux Klan and the Nazis. But if only popular ideas were protected, we wouldn't need a First Amendment. History teaches that the first target of government repression is never the last. If we do not come to the defense of the free speech rights of the most unpopular among us, even if their views are antithetical to the very freedom the First Amendment stands for, then no one's liberty will be secure. In that sense, all First Amendment rights are 'indivisible.' "
      http://www.aclu.org/library/pbp10.html

    11. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      I'm all for anyone's right to free speech, and I used to be a big ACLU fan -- until they became much more of a lobbying organization for liberal social projects then a civil rights group (nowadays I prefer the Institute for Justice) -- but I would argue that Chomsky's support (financial and rhetorical) for Faurisson goes far beyond merely defending his rights.

      Now I'm a firm believer in Faurisson's right to say whatever he wants, and of Chomsky's right to do the same. But if what Faurisson is saying is holocaust-denial, and if Chomsky is going to go on record saying that there is nothing unacceptable or ant-semitic about Faurisson's book, then of course I am not going to take either man seriously as thinkers. And that is a fact which has nothing to do with free speech.

      The right to free speech isn't the right to not have people disagree with you, after all.

    12. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by GMontag · · Score: 2

      Chomsky has done for Economics and Political Science what Erich von Daniken has done for Archiology, Astronomy and Engineering.

      Namely not a damn thing except to misinform a bunch of jelly-filled minds.

    13. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      "Chomsky is going to go on record saying that there is nothing unacceptable or ant-semitic about Faurisson's book,"

      Chomsky was quoted as saying that his views were diametrically opposed to those of Faurisson's and that he couldn't say whether Faurisson was an anti-semite or not. The "nothing unacceptable" part, I believe you're making that up.

    14. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1
      So when Chomsky said:
      I see no anti-Semitic implications in denial of the existence of gas chambers, or even denial of the holocaust. ... I see no hint of anti-Semitic implications in Faurisson's work ...
      you do not see this as a defense of Mr. Faurisson's statements?
    15. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1

      And before you say `no', keep in mind that `Faurisson's work', which Mr. Chomsky `see[s] no hint of anti-Semitic implications in' repeatedly claims that belief in the holocaust is a fabrication being pushed by an organized conspiracy of all the world's Jews...

    16. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1
      The quote you're attributing to Chomsky only shows up in Werner Cohn's writings* and Chomsky seems to think that Werner Cohn is a "pathological liar"**.

      *http://www.wernercohn.com/Chomsky.html
      **http://monkeyfist.com:8080/ChomskyArchive/essays / utlook_html

    17. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by neocon · · Score: 1
      Chomsky has a long history of calling people liars when they point out things he would rather he had not said -- for evidence of this, one need only check out his recent debate with Chrisopher Hitchens in the letters section of The Nation.

      As for the quote in question, it is from a letter Chomsky wrote to Bill Rubinstein, which is published in Mr. Rubinstein's ``Chomsky and the Neo-Nazis'', which can be found in the October 1981 issue of the journal Quadrant.

    18. Re:Slanderous about Chomsky by stephanruby · · Score: 1

      I give up. This is going nowhere. I'll just agree to disagree. Have a good week.
      Stephan

  73. subtitle details by bigdavex · · Score: 2

    The "subtitle" tracks are not text but actually pictures of text to accomodate any font, but are limited to only four colors (two of which are are black and clear) and only to a certain sector of the screen.

    The rest of this post I believe is informative, but this snippet is incorrect.

    4 colors, yes. The author often wants clear but there's nothing magic about black and neither are required.

    DVD subtitles can appear on any part of the screen. Like you said, they are achieved through a bitmapped image. This image can be sized up to the full NTSC or PAL resolution.
    --
    -Dave
    1. Re:subtitle details by cryptochrome · · Score: 2

      True. I knew that all 4 colors weren't set, just didn't mention it because pretty much all subtitles should be using the clear, and without a black (or rather high-contrast) border they're usually impossible to read at some point during the show. In any case, it's very limiting, and tends to produce aliased text that clashes with the video.

      I didn't know they could appear anywhere on the screen. I've never seen them outside the bottom strip, myself, even when translating signs. I suppose that just means they don't usually bother.

      --

      ---If you can't trust a nerd, who can you trust?

    2. Re:subtitle details by jweatherley · · Score: 1

      I didn't know they could appear anywhere on the screen. I've never seen them outside the bottom strip, myself, even when translating signs. I suppose that just means they don't usually bother.

      I've got a Dr. Who DVD (Ark in Space) that placed some subtitles on the top of the screen when they would otherwise have obscured the action.

      --

      --
      Reverse outsourcing: it's the future
  74. It's not a secret, however... by sterno · · Score: 2

    The DMCA doesn't care if DeCSS is a secret or not. They can be sued by offering a device that circumvents access control measures on the DVD's. In fact, since they'd be making money from the sale, they could actually face prison terms for releasing such a system.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
    1. Re:It's not a secret, however... by FreeUser · · Score: 2

      The DMCA doesn't care if DeCSS is a secret or not. They can be sued by offering a device that circumvents access control measures on the DVD's.

      Not if their products are, as advertised, solely for sale in the greater China area. Any grey market products offered for sale in the United States aren't officially sanctioned by the manufacturerers, and therefor the only people at risk are the grey market importers. The Chinese and Taiwanese manufacturers can make and sell these devices all over the rest of the world with impunity.

      --
      The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy
  75. Volume Holographic Optical Storage Co. FOR SALE ! by geekster_2000 · · Score: 1


    if they and others are tired of paying royalties,
    then why not control future technology that has
    patents and you can collect royalties and
    sign licensing deals taking control!!!

    3D Volume Holographic Optical Storage Nanotechnology is the future of storage but the
    patents protect others areas of technology
    development covered by the patents.

    http://www.colossalstorage.net

  76. Who needs keys? by metamatic · · Score: 1

    CSS can be cracked without the keys--I forget where the code is, but because the format of MPEG is well known, it's pretty simple to do a known-plaintext attack and compute a set of keys in under a second on a low-powered PC.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  77. The license fee may be for *content* by Jammer@CMH · · Score: 1
    They may be more interested in distributing content without a licensing fee than in distributing players without paying a licensing fee. To produce a DVD, a license fee must be paid per disk. If they produce a disk using their new format, there is no fee. (This is a win for independent producers of content, as well as for countries keen on reducing cash transfersto the DVD consortium).

    To make a player that plays just this new protocol, there is no license fee involved (I presme). The players they'll probably make will be APEX-like, playing DVDs, CDs, MP3s, and will probably pay a DVD licensing fee. At least, auditable units, or units shipped to the west will pay fees. Who knows about grey-market ones.

  78. China, a Future Source of Ilicit Tech? by Catmeat · · Score: 2, Interesting
    It occurred to me a while back that if things like copyright locked hard drives come to pass, then mainland China might become a source of open, alternate components. The capitolism-on-PCP that seems to operate there would jump at the chance of making large amounts of money from the (probably large) demand for such devices.

    Though of course it all depends on how the Chinese government would view it. However I suspect that if a company has the right Communist party connections, it can manufacture for export whatever the hell it likes, especially as the current piracy situation there suggests the Chinese government coulndn't give a flying f*** about the RIAA or MPAA. They're more interested in stamping on political dissent and Falung Gung.

    At the very least, the situation might resemble the current one with DVD player region coding. The makers would pay lip service to hardware copyright enforcement, but quietly make it known that it can be disabled with a jumper in order to boost sales of their hard drives which would otherwise have little to recommend them over ones made by the big, mainstream manufactures.

    1. Re:China, a Future Source of Ilicit Tech? by Anonynnous+Coward · · Score: 1

      Nice idea. However, have you tried getting an order from Lik Sang through Customs lately? (Granted, that's HK and not mainland China, but the same idea nonetheless).

  79. Regions? by tuxlove · · Score: 1

    All I can say is, I hope they don't have region encoding or encrypted data in this new format. If it's truly open, encryption should be unnecessary. And region encoding is totally annoying.

  80. HOWTO Avoid DVD License ... by vovin · · Score: 1

    Build EVD/AVD player that is DVD 'compatable' but is missing a chip for CSS/MPEG. Just build [ea]VD around ogg voribis/tarkin. Since the 'base' player doesn't do CSS/MPEG2 there isn't any reason to license the patents for it. If the 'missing chip' is a ZIF-socket pay license fees just on that chip. If the 'missing chip' is a firmware upgrade then we all know how easily software is to keep sekrit. This will allow the Eastern market to save a bundle while pushing a replacement for DVDs. It's still an up-hill battle for adoption by EU/US/Japan, unless it is significanly better. But how to get the movie studios to support the newer format?

    Of course the main idea is to create some Eastern IP to compete with the Western IP .. shooting for HD-xVD around the 2008 Olympics in Bejing.

    Good luck.

  81. Ah... by sterno · · Score: 1

    Well... nevermind then :)

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  82. Multi-region DVD player by cokecola · · Score: 1

    Multi-region DVD/VCD players are already available in NYC Chinatown for a while now. They play all DVDs, even those badly pirated ones. And for $50, they will modify your existing DVD player to play all regions. Like they do to U.S DreamCast/PS2 consoles so they can play Japanese games.

  83. Wow, so many splinter formats (3 now) by nedron · · Score: 2

    Hmm, now we'll have three non-DVD high-density optical media formats:

    DVD+RW (and DVD+R)
    AVD
    EVD

    Maybe I should come up with one as it seems to be all the rage.

    Actually, the funny part of this are some of the same people who support DVD+RW (a non-DVD format) are now saying that the Asians should not be allowed to come up with their own competing technology as it will confuse the market!

    -David

    --


    * As is generally the case, my opinions do not reflect those of my employer.
  84. Re:What a difference money makes by Ogerman · · Score: 2

    Further correction..

    Is it really that sad that some mildly rich companies in Asia are going to get away with making their own DVD players for the sole purpose of avoiding the filthy rich DVD patent holders?

    Heck no! This is a great thing to see! The more countries that fight our backwards software patents, the better. You do realize that's what we're talking about, right? Software. Not optical drive mechanics or other such technology. We're talking about MPEG-2, which is locked up with so many software (ie. mathematical) patents it's disgusting.

    These same bad patents could also cause problems in the future for open source software--or at least its use in the US.

    Kinda ironic when it's the communists fighting for a free market solution, eh? Crazy world we live in..

  85. subtitles will = region encoding soon by Lysander+Luddite · · Score: 2

    If the MPAA can't stop people from buying/selling from different regions expect them to drop subtitle and multiple language support outside the US market very soon.

    By ensuring only one language per DVD you'll see fewer people from the US buying Japanese and HK DVDs. You'll also see people in France no longer hopping to the UK or ordering from US online stores. Ironic since many French versions of HK and Japanese DVDs are better quality (more features/languages and better print quality) than those in the US or HK.

    The MPAA members will be able to return to controlling releases among different countries and can then ensure better adherence to their price structures.

    The reason this won't happen in the US is the variety of languages spoken in the US and the fact that the US market is currently the one with the most DVD titles available.

  86. Turing killed that idea in 1936 by yerricde · · Score: 2

    What do you mean 'contains a menu program' ?

    The menus on a DVD title are written in a nearly Turing-complete programming language. ("Nearly" meaning memory is bounded.)

    All these companies have to do is hack the dvd program so that it ignores the 'die' command

    Impossible. Detecting an inlined version of the 'die' command reliably on a Turing-complete system will solve the halting problem, which Turing proved undecidable way back in 1936.

    Likewise, they can send back any region code they want until the contents are viewable.

    This still doesn't solve the problem of not being able to import the player into countries that have passed DMCA, EUCD, or other laws prohibiting such circumvention.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Turing killed that idea in 1936 by Captn+Pepe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As you say, Turing proved that the halting problem is undecidable; to be more precise, there is no general algorithm to decide whether a program will halt, that will provide an answer in finite time for any program.

      That's okay. Detecting whether a DVD menu program is trying to die, the vast majority of the time, only involves special cases about which the halting theorem is silent. For instance, if the program halts by exuting the HALT machine instruction, you simply search for that instruction and replace it with your own code. If you don't trust the program not to modify its own code, you can run it in an emulator that constantly checks whether it is about to execute a HALT instruction. Consider that this is roughly what any modern CPU does in order to enforce memory protection.

      Detecting infinite loops is a bit harder, and while you can search for trivial LOOP: GOTO LOOP constructs, you really need to run the program in emulation to get anywhere. You can, for instance, take a snapshot of the code and virtual machine state from time to time; if both ever return to the exact same state, you must be in an infinite loop (assuming you don't have interrupt-driven code to worry about -- if you do, expand the code under analysis to include the interrupt handlers, and repeat).

      Moral of the story: not allowing the menu to die doesn't require knowing whether the menu program will ever halt, only whether it is about to. And that, far from being a theoretical impossibility, is a fundamental technique of virtual machine design.

      --

      Quantum mechanics: the dreams that stuff is made of.
  87. Out of the frying pan and into the fire by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this is a really good thing we need to support these open standards to avoid the Information Nazi's.

    You're out of the frying pan, and into the fire.

    You got away from the Information Nazis, but now you're nabbed by the Punctuation Nazis. In English, one does not use apostrophe-s to indicate plurality.

  88. America is not a continent by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    While we USians may not like the isolation

    People from North America are called North Americans
    People from South America are called South Americans
    People from The United States of America are called Americans

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
    1. Re:America is not a continent by Lemmy+Caution · · Score: 2

      I've taken to calling them Untied Stationaries.

  89. that's nice, but.... by crhylove · · Score: 2, Insightful

    when can i get a royalty free burner? when can i get a component that'll play divx? when can i get blue ray capacity on an optical disk? when are white LED's gonna be put in LCD projectors lowering the price to under $100? when can i then replace every tv and crt in my house?

    when are corporations going to do ANYTHING good for humanity at their own expense?

    when is our government going to be run for by and of the people instead of said corporations?

    my guess the answer to all of these is NEVER. because somebody somewhere would "loose" money that they had never MADE yet.

    rhy

    --
    I hold very few opinions. I hold information based on observation and fact. If you wish to disagree, please use facts.
  90. Re:Couldn't they release a firmware on the net? by zero2k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What would happen if their approach was to release empty hardware overseas with not DVD support whatsoever and only support for AVD? And even not support for MPEG/AC3/etc? Then they can put up a Firmware (unofficially ;-) on the net in China and people (uh... resellers) can flash the systems to enable the DVD capability?

  91. Re:Hardly surprising by ComaVN · · Score: 1

    just comparing a search for the (alleged) GB qoute with a search for another misqoute, it seems the latter returns mostly pages explaining it's not an exact qoute, and has been taken out of context and such, while the first hardly shows anyone doubting the validity of the quote.

    Besides, The source of all information about bullshit doesn't even mention this quote.

    All in all, I wasn't there, I can't be sure, but my money is on true

    --
    Be wary of any facts that confirm your opinion.
  92. Re:Hardly surprising by neocon · · Score: 1

    As much as I respect snopes.com, it can hardly cover every misquote, now can it? :-)

    The problem with your comparison of quotes is that the Gore quote in question got much, much more coverage, exactly because it was made on the record, while your George H. W. Bush quote appears to have no source except reports from a pro-atheism activist.

    So, I guess I'm going to have to see a better source for that quote, especially as it is so out of line with anything else Mr. Bush has ever said...

  93. The Fast Forward Feature by lanner · · Score: 2


    I will buy any damn player that will play a DVD and allow me to fast forward through the damn Disney previews that they force you to watch.

    They need a "Just play the f***ing movie" button on their remote controls.

    1. Re:The Fast Forward Feature by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Once in the preview, usually pressing stop then menu gets you direct to the menu.

  94. Why Asian countries want to sidestep royalties.... by DigitalHammer · · Score: 2, Informative

    As a person of Chinese descent, I observe that many Chinese, if not other Asians living in Asia, will only pay what is neccesary to obtain the material object. Reason why is because they simply don't have enough cash to pay for royalties that entertainment and technology companies want them to pay. The a lawyer in China only makes about $141. The GDP per capita in China is about $3,600. Ever since the Communist takeover in the 20th century, many Chinese have become thirfty, budget-minded consumers.

    Believe me, many Chinese are hardcore bargain-hunters (Ive observed this in Hong Kong) and usually do not purchase something without getting the lowest possible price.

    As a result, Chinese usually spend their money on neccessities such as food, health care products, etc...they also would like other commodities sold in the Western world, but cannot afford them. One of these much-wanted commodities is entertainment such as DVDs, software etc...Anyway, they usually buy pirated products because the legal ones typically cost 5 times more.

    The Chinese and Taiwanese governments really don't care about royalty payments demanded from companies in foreign countries...simply because they want to save money. As a result, Taiwan and China rank among the largest pirated software and home video markets in the world, just below Brazil.

    Software and entertainment companies should really take a look at how much the average person makes in the country they release theire products in...

  95. Re:What a difference money makes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Kinda ironic when it's the communists fighting for a free market solution, eh? Crazy world we live in..

    -Touché!!

    Peter

    (Freedom should never include the 'freedom' to restrict the freedom of others.. -But, heck-anything goes with money. It's the American way..;-) )

  96. Re:Why Asian countries want to sidestep royalties. by vidarh · · Score: 2
    "Ever since the communist takeover"? Excuse me, but China was a poor country before Mao took control, and continued to be a poor country afterwards, but at the moment has one of the fastest growth rates in the world. You can blame the regime in China for a lot, including millions dead, but pretending that poverty in China started with the "communist takeover" shows a blatant disregard for history.

    If you want to blame them for making life worse for people in many ways, and making some people poorer, sure. But considering large parts of Chinas population had been living at the brink of starvation under colonial rule until the emperor was overthrown, and things hardly got better during the civil war, things were hardly in great shape before they took over either.

    Also, trying to present this as something thats unique to China, as opposed to common to poor people everywhere is pretty interesting. Of course poor people will try to avoid spending money on anything but neccessities - everyone generally see avoiding starvation as more critical in their life than the latest Hollywood blockbuster.

  97. Re:But can they get away with this legally in the by CaseStudy · · Score: 2

    The size of a market is not simply a function of the number of people; it's also dependent on the amount of wealth in the market.

    America and Europe are huge markets, combined possibly larger than the Asian market. Or do you think a farmer in rural China will pay as much for a DVD player as some geek in the U.S. will?

  98. Re:Why Asian countries want to sidestep royalties. by DigitalHammer · · Score: 1

    It wasn't my intention to blame communism for the begginnings of poverty in China, but rather it instigated the start of "product piracy". In the early 1950's, the product piracy market began with knockoffs of popular products (toothpastes, board games, etc...) in sold in the western world. About 30 years later, piracy of music recordings began to proliferate. Now, its software and as well as other digital media.

    And no, it was not my intention to present this as a "problem" unique to China. I did mention that Brazil ranked above China in the size of their pirated media markets.

    I would like to mention that impoverished countries are not the only ones that may have sizable piracy markets. Italy has the one of the largest pirated media/software markets in the Europe, believe it or not. See this for yourself at the flea markets.

  99. Re:But can they get away with this legally in the by WillSeattle · · Score: 2

    America and Europe are huge markets, combined possibly larger than the Asian market. Or do you think a farmer in rural China will pay as much for a DVD player as some geek in the U.S. will?


    No, and that's why the patent license fees of $15 to $20 per DVD player are so much of an issue. In fact, it's the same reason why Linux is winning in many areas.

    Look at it this way:
    Person A lives in Rich Market USA - pays $300 to $500 for a highend DVD player - $15 to $20 fee on top of cost to make of $50 is ok price.

    Person B lives in Middle Market Taiwan - pays $100 to $150 for a nice DVD player - $15 to $20 fee starts to become a very big issue, when manufacture is $50.

    Person C lives in Poor Market China - pays $85 (a lot of money there) for a DVD player - $15 to $20 is major issue, if reduced to $50 manufacture than could sell at $70 to $75 and market would expand as more could afford.

    Rich Market USA reaches saturation when everyone has a DVD player.

    Middle Market Taiwan still has growth if price drops further.

    Poor Market China has massive growth left if price drops further.

    Basic economics.

    --
    --- Will in Seattle - What are you doing to fight the War?
  100. sidestepping royalties...a continuation by DigitalHammer · · Score: 1

    I will add that the Chinese have always been hardcore bargain hunters perhaps since the beggining of the Tang dynasty. Lower class civilians usually learned to get obtain the best deal first. Yes, China started to become a poor country towards the end of the Qing Dyansty as a result of attempted colonialism and poor descisions on the part of the Qing. After the Nationalist-Communist wars, communist takeover, Cultural Revolution (where extreme amounts of money were taken away from businesspeople and middle-class citizens), many Chinese have learned to manage their cash, and *reenforce* their bargaining skills as they do not have an abundance of cash.

    If you don't see my point, you may have to go to cities such as Shanghai or Hong Kong to see this bargain-hunting behaviour in action. Better yet, if you have one, ask a Chinese friend if they've observed their family members (usually the parents or grand-parents) if they push market vendors for a good deal. Then ask them why.

    In conclusion, the driving force of the pirated media/software market in China, as well as the will of the Taiwanese and Chinese companies to sidestep royalties is the combination of the bargain-hunting mentality that begun in the early dynasties, and the wars and revolutions that drained many of their cash reserves which re-enforced the bargain hunting mentality and the habit of managing money.

  101. Re:Volume Holographic Optical Storage Co. FOR SALE by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Buttcunt crapflooder! Snort a Jew, you asstard tulipmonger! Suck a duck and choke on anuslicking cocksnot in reverse, you monkeyfuck assclown.