Building the AACS Next-Gen Copy Protection Scheme
Anonymous Slashdotter writes "The IEEE Spectrum has a piece that discusses the proposed encryption scheme for the upcoming HD-DVD standard. 'The key to the spirit of compromise is an agreement that the AACS specification will allow consumers to move the data on an optical disc to the various devices they own, including video servers and portable video players, either directly or via a home network.' AACS will use a so-called strong key, the 128-bit Advanced Encryption Standard approved by the U.S. National Institute of Standards and Technology."
I can see the ads in the theaters already. "I'm John Weiner and I design ciphers for the movie industry. Downloading movies hurts me."
Trolling is a art,
I was wondering how they industry would know what player it was that was compromised. Sounds like a bunch of suits have been sold some snake oil.
Trolling is a art,
Unless I can extract the content to a non-encrypted format that I can play using non-proprietary software on stock hardware, it can go to hell.
Isn't not being able to copy "Who's Your Daddy?" multiple times a feature and not a bug?
And just like DVDs today, all it takes is a decent amount of time and effort, and suddenly the keys you thought were secure are now being used to playback content under Linux.
It's only an insult if it's not true.
that re-digitized HDTV stream will have better quality than direct rip from a DVD.
Correct. It is technically impossible to steal a thing using a recorder, unless you do something really odd like club a victim witha VCR during a mugging, or heave a reel-to-reel unit through a jewelry store window in order to break in and burglarize it.
Don't blame Durga. I voted for Centauri.
Yeah, I can see how the consumer wins in that scenario.