Slashdot Mirror


"Squishy" DRM?

lhouk281 writes "There's an article on Wired about squishy DRM. Apparently some companies are trying to find a happy medium in implementing DRM between the consumer and the RIAA. Good luck..."

3 of 309 comments (clear)

  1. More like mp3PRO by yerricde · · Score: 3, Informative

    SuperMP3 is already here. It's called Ogg Vorbis.

    From the brief description in the article (MP3 based, Thomson Multimedia involved), SuperMP3 seems to be an mp3PRO file with a watermark embedded in the sound. The mp3PRO technology uses MP3 coding of low frequencies and then spectral band replication followed by dynamic re-equalization of high frequencies to provide a subjective quality at 64 kbps to 80 kbps similar to MP3 at about 112 to 144 kbps. The similar competing mp3+v technology replaces spectral band replication with a simple white-noise generator to achieve similar gains.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  2. Re:Too late. The cat is out of the bag. by rknop · · Score: 4, Informative

    Mozart died nearly penniless, without even the money for a private grave. (He was buried in a mass grave, so we don't know exactly where to go to pay respects.) Yeah, that's a great incentive.

    Myth.

    http://europeanhistory.about.com/library/bldyk11 .htm

    -Rob

  3. Not True. Stop Spreading Microsoft Hype. by FreeUser · · Score: 4, Informative

    Except that the virus, by definition, cannot run on a DRM machine, so fat chance getting it propagated.

    You are echoing Microsoft marketing hype which is simply untrue. Palladium will only allow "signed" or authorized software to run, which sounds good until you realize that many worms and viruses run as a subprocess of an authorized process. That is one of the reasons wbhy ActiveX was such a dismal failure at preventing malicious code from being executed.

    Palladium will do nothing to stop viruses or worms from spreading or running on systems, as the worms and viruses will simply insinuate themselves into authorized code and run anyway. Microsoft's claim to the contrary is simply untrue and deceitful (what else is new?), designed to leverage their incompetently designed systems and their notorious reputation for being unable to design a secure system into a selling point for a new product designed to kill the commercial viability of free software, not viruses.

    DRM isn't the same thing as Palladium, though the two are certainly akin to one another in some respects, and doesn't address authorization of software at all, merely of access to data, something that is also orthogonal to virus and worm prevention.

    --
    The Future of Human Evolution: Autonomy