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Is The Public Stuck With The Broadcast Flag?

peeping_Thomist writes "The only company that sells HDTV tuner cards for Linux has run out of cards to sell, and they are now missing deadlines for new getting new cards. Linux users who want to view and record HDTV face an uphill battle. Meanwhile, the dreaded July 1, 2005 deadline for manufacturing DRM-free HDTV tuners is fast approaching. MythTV supports HDTV tuner cards, but so far no one has made a move to, as the EFF puts it, "buy, build, and sell fully-capable, non-flag-compliant HDTV receivers" prior to the July 1 deadline. The current combination of MythTV and pcHDTV (assuming pcHDTV cards become available again) may, as the EFF says, be "great for geeks," but it is a far cry from the TIVO-esque simplicity a mass market demands. Unless someone can get bring a DRM-free hdtv recorder to market before the deadline, it seems the general public will have no chance to avoid the broadcast flag."

13 of 302 comments (clear)

  1. What about Windows? by glrotate · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Since most of us on /. use Windows, are there any flag-free HDTV cards for it?

    1. Re:What about Windows? by YetAnotherName · · Score: 5, Informative

      Yes. Get 'em while you can.

  2. Linux-only company by mcelrath · · Score: 5, Insightful
    I am extemely encouraged that a linux-only hardware company has sold out of their product and is having difficulty meeting demand. While I'm worried that I won't be able to get my hands on one, this bodes very well for future hardware that is linux-aware and/or linux-only.

    -- Bob

    --
    1^2=1; (-1)^2=1; 1^2=(-1)^2; 1=-1; 1=0.
  3. Re:How about just not watching TV? by neiffer · · Score: 5, Funny

    This from someone who has the second post on a /. story... :)

  4. How to make criminals of the market.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    These cards are going to same way as DVD's.
    The market will demand DRM free cards to access media that is not copyrighted yet fails to play because of DRM restrictions.

    We will see cards that can be reflashed, making us all criminals that do such, to be DRM free.

    Go that market pressure.

  5. Tune out - and unplug. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why act like this is the end of the world? Just stop 'consuming' the 'product' if you do not like the 'terms' the 'product' is offering.

    In short - screw 'em. They make their money from advertisers and if the advertisers don't get eyeballs, they can't make money.

    I'm not planning on buying any HDTV gear until I hear what way the broadcast flag useage is trending. And if PBS is using the broadcast flag, my donations will go away there also.

  6. I felt some anxiety.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    I felt some anxiety over that July 1, 2005 deadline, but then I realised that I don't even watch TV.

  7. Wrong way by hawkbug · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is the wrong way to get around this problem. I say a boycott after the deadline would be far more effective. If nobody purchased a tv tuner after the deadline, that would speak volumes. It would have be a very organized protest, but with enough attention, it could work.

  8. Re:What about Europe? by k98sven · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You mean in active use right? Because most DVDs I run into are region encoded. You know that most people don't know what region encoding is right? You know that most people don't give a shit either right?

    That's the situation in the USA, that's right. Because the USA has decently cheap DVDs, and it's the primary release market.

    In Europe, it's not like that, because the DVDs are more expensive, and they hit the stores much later than in the USA. So there's a market there for import-DVDs.

    The result of this is that most europeans buying a DVD player do know what region-encoding is, and they do give a shit. DVD players are marketed as "Region free!". It's almost difficult to find one which does have region encoding.
    (Not quite true, they're usually sold with region-encoding, and they'll tell you at the store how to disable it.)

    Right here is an example for you, a UK DVD player merchandiser. The region-free ones are clearly marked.

    So yes, I do think that if the USA enforces this broadcast flag, and Europe does not, that you might end up with the same situation, except reversed.

  9. Re:How about just not watching TV? by enrico_suave · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "agreed. TV is just boring. the only good thing is news and bbc.co.uk has that covered. anything else that's decent can be bought on DVD and watched when you want.

    the benefit/cost of TV has been plummeting sharply for some time now."

    Ah, but you are missing the point... what if DVD's go away and you are only "allowed" to watch DRM'd discs or downloads on a "per viewing" fee structure... and you couldn't make backups of the content (ok the DMCA ships already sailed, but still why let another one sail)

    Right now PVRs/DVRs etc give you the advantage of watchign what you want, when you want... furthermore the problem isn't there's nothing worth watching, is that there's sooo much crap, on sooo many channels is that you need a willing guide (PVR) to help you sort through it... so when YOU are done mounting climbing for the day you can kick back, fire up your PVR and see all sorts of stuff that will interest you (no doubt Outdoor life network rugged how to "climb better shows" )and oh by the way zoom pass the commercials to nearly halve your coma couch time.

    But back to the point of the article... you lose some of core abilities to manage content how you'd like (in the US) once it's been DRMd...

    Between the broadcast flag, and the INDUCE act (oh and toss the patriot act in for good measure) we will soon (in the US) have less freedoms and transfer all the control to the MPAA/RIAA/etc...

    all our content are belong to them.

    blah

    e.

    --
    Build Your Own PVR/HTPC news, reviews, &
  10. One Possible Solution by Thunderstruck · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Recent supreme court cases such as Morrison and Lopez stop federal regulation of activities that are "non-commercial." This means if nothing commercial is transpiring, the activity cannot be regulated under the commerce power (this is the same authority used to establish the flag in the first place.)

    Open source software that is not sold, is freely available, and freely modifiable is very much non-commercial and therefore not subject to this regulation.

    Thus, and IAAL (I get sworn in TOMOROW) but not a techie anymore, it seems that if there is any way to get a signal to your computer, a free, open source software program could render it - and no laws would be broken.

    --
    Trying to use sarcasm in text-based forums does not work.
  11. Re:What me worry? by DaHat · · Score: 5, Informative

    You mean I have to wait til then to hack it?

    I work for a company that builds systems for use with digital television and when I 1st read of the proposed broadcast flag and it's implementation I had a very easy to do bypass method devised in a matter of minutes. In fact, beating this broadcast flag will be child's play and will not even require 'hacking' a receiver or any modifications to it.

    The OTA digital tv signals you receive in your home contain an ATSC Transport Stream, based on an MPEG-2 Transport Stream, as part of the ATSC standard, (A/53 I think) where the broadcast flag was mandated.

    Within the transport stream, there are packets each of 188 bytes long; the broadcast flag carries a packet PID of 0xA0, (again I could be wrong but it has been a few months since I looked into the specific pid values).

    In order to beat the broadcast flag, one would need a simple box with a pair of 8VSB tuners with a Xilinx (or other FPGA) in the middle. The 1st tuner would demodulate the signal and pass it into the Xilinx whose sole job would be restamping pids, should it come across a packet with the pid denoting that it is carrying a broadcast flag, it could simply change the pid of this packet to 0x1FFF (a null packet). On the other end, the 2nd tuner would modulate the signal back into 8VSB and to what ever you might have receiving. The beauty of this solution is that null packets carry no payload in a transport stream, thus would be ignored by anything down stream.

    All in all, a device like this would cost about $100 (even in mass production) as tuners and FPGA's are generally not cheap.

  12. Nobody will care soon by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I doubt that broadcast television will be around in 20 years as a mass market thing anyway.

    My prediction is that it is going into a death spiral caused by the following :

    1) There are many other things to do that watch tv all evening unlike 20 years ago (dvd, internet, games for example)
    2) The programs they are increasingly producing are aimed at the lowest common denominator to reduce costs and increase audience share for that program. But that's causing an increasing number of people to find *nothing* they want to watch at all.
    3) It takes a few years of inertia for people who on't actually like any of the programs to realise this and turn off.
    4) An older generation from 20-40 years ago who watched the peak of mass market tv are slowly being replaced by a younger audience who don't have that shared culture of watching tv every evening, instead gaming and the internet are important.
    5) There are a lot more channels making it almost impossible to get huge audiences for any particular show.
    6) As audiences drop the amount of money available to TV companies will drop. They'll panic and stop producing more fringe stuff and concentrate *even more* on the lowest common denominator stuff which is turning many people who don't like that stuff away.
    7) As the audience drops more and increasing number of children who already have alternatives will not be "educated" in the culture of watching mass broadcast television.

    I firmly belive that there is a death spiral here which is almost unavoidable. I predict that mass TV will have an audience reduced by at least 25% in 5-10 years time, and will have dropped to below 50% in 15 years time as todays children grow up without the culture of watching all that TV.

    I can see television being a quaint old fashioned thing in 20 years time...

    On the other hand I think that movies and DVDs and perhaps internet broadcast shows have a good future ahead of them. The demand for quality entertainment isn't going away and I believe that it won't be long before we start seeing produced for DVD shows happening that are never broadcast.