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Digital Rights Managment Year in Review

zjango writes "DRM Watch is a great source for the ongoing monitoring of Digital Rights Management issues and news. They've put out a useful 2003 year in review for DRM across several categories that Slashdot readers will likely find of interest. It is a look back at the year's significant trends in DRM technology, along with some predictions for 2004 and beyond."

4 of 204 comments (clear)

  1. Re:"Dominated by Microsoft"? by teamhasnoi · · Score: 3, Informative

    Maybe they left it out because it is largely transparent to the user. I would guess that once your three computers are 'authorized', you will rarely see it restrict you under normal circumstances.

  2. Re:"Dominated by Microsoft"? by jeffehobbs · · Score: 4, Informative


    Yeah, seriously. Apple's AAC "protected" files were the only DRM encoded media I bought last year, and probably the only DRM media most people bought last year, and it doesn't even get name-checked? Sloppy.

    For most people, I think the more restrictive DRM schemes will be like the advertising monsters of Springfield -- "just don't look, just don't look". Nobody liked DiVX (the circuit city kind) and it went away.

    ~jeff

  3. Its time for a war on DRM by t_allardyce · · Score: 3, Informative

    The way DRM is going is to the hardware level. Its far too easy for people to break software DRM because all it takes is a few debugging tools. The best thing to do is to start getting into hardware hacking early - play around with PICs and stuff (playstation mod chips are PICs) and get to the point where your as comfortable as if you were with a software debugger. DRM is restricted by the 'if you can see it you can copy it' rule and eventually even the best DRM systems finish with an unencrypted data stream or an enable signal. Law is not going to be on our side so if we want our electronics free from artificial restrictions we are gonna have to fight it ourselves and make a mockary of the DRM industry. Screw them all before they start coming out with DRM chips that call the cops or blow-up in the users face if they are tampered with. And stop them before it becomes illigal to own so much as a multimeter without a license.

    --
    This comment does not represent the views or opinions of the user.
  4. Re:Just accept that by deitel99 · · Score: 3, Informative

    Unfortunately this isn't the case. In future your computer will contain an additional chip (the "fritz" chip) which is able to regulate the flow of information only through "trusted" programs, OSes and hardware. It will recieve encrypted keys from the provider of the media which then allow it to decrypt the media itself. Assuming that you are unable to physically break into the chip, or to break the encrypted connection going from the chip to the media provider, then you will not be able to put the digital signal into a program which isn't trusted, such as a program to save the digital information into another file.

    I also thought it was mathematically, computationally, logically _impossible_ but then I attended a talk explaining how the system would work, and I have to admit there is very little we can do about it. Even if you are able to break into the chip and copy some media you don't have the rights to copy, you will be caught because the version sent to you will have your identity recorded somewhere within it.

    One of the more interesting things is that it is possible to get open source applications "trusted" so you can use DRM under Linux. However, if you modify a program, recompile it and attempt to use it, the fritz chip will notice and refuse to decrypt the media for you. Nasty