Preparing for the Broadcast Flag?
Couch Potato asks: "I'm worried that, come next July, the FCC mandated broadcast flag will soon take away all sorts of fair use rights I have long enjoyed. Given that there are only a few months left to make purchasing decisions, how best can one prepare for the advent of the broadcast flag?"
"I'm somewhat aware of projects like Myth TV, but it's not all that I want. Specifically, I want to make sure that I can record DVDs or similar files of any program I want off of cable, sattelite or broadcast TV, flag or not and without any other encumbering restrictions (such as the Macrovision DRM for DVDs) and without worry that someday they'll change something so that my old drivers and hardware are suddenly obsolete and useless when faced with updates to the formats. Note that this makes closed-source-only drivers an issue, because assuming the hardware can still be adapted to whatever they change on us, open-sources drivers can be modified and closed-source ones probably won't be, whether for legal or practical considerations. So then, what can someone with a modest budget do to make sure that their constitutional fair use rights don't succumb to planned obsolecense, like the VCR has?"
Hey, the FCC is an arm of the people you helped to elect. If you have a problem with what they're doing, you can either challenge their decisions in court (assuming that someone isn't already) or get people fired up to fight. What people fail to realize (assuming they're smart enough to realize when their corporate government is in the process of screwing them, anyway) is that they still have to elect congresscritters. If people really care about the issue, you can whip them into a frenzy and threaten the re-election prospect of the fat cats from your district.
If people don't care? Well, it's like the music industry's continued assault on aural quality. Too fucking bad. People are free to do as they will, and that includes fucking themselves over if they so choose.
Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
While on the topic, does anyone know if I buy a HD tunner card now, before they become extinct in July, if it will even work after the flag is issued?
I am using an AMD 1700+ CPU with 1 GB memory, an nVidia GeForce FX 5700 128MB board. I only have 80+GB space on the system right now (enough for around 5 hrs recording time ) but I will probably upgrade it later this year.
I bought this card because it does not have the broadcast bit and since it was made before July it will not be encumbered with all those restrictions.
I do not, however, plan on abusing that flexibility by sharing my recordings and thus ripping off the content owners. It is the thieves that feel it is thier right to steal from people just because they can that have brought this onerrous situation upon us.
Can't you just by cards made offshore that will not honor the broadcast flag? If there is a market someone will build them.
UNIX/Linux Consulting
Just buy an ATI TV tuner card before its too late.
Move to Canada!
/ducks
.. buy from Canada? :)
Wasn't this a worry when they first came out with DVDs, that you lost your ability to "archive" them? I'm sure that given some time, people will be able to easily defeat the broadcast flag with relative ease. Although the legality of doing so is questionable at best...
How to best prepare.
Stock up on:
Canned Food
Water
Yacht Batteries
Guns
Ammunition
link from Ars Technica
Unfortunately they're fighting it on a technicality - that Congress did not give the FCC explicit power to create the broadcast flag, and thusly they have no authority themselves to create it.
The Doormat
If you're not outraged, then you're not paying attention.
Chris
"You can drive out Nature with a pitchfork, but It always comes roaring back again." - Tom Waits
cause the site was already melting when i tried to click it
mirror
#include sig.h
Follow these simple steps:
like any other type of restrictive technology, 95% of the people won't care, the other 5% of us folks will find cheap and easy ways around it. Yeah it won't be legal, but the cops only care if you are selling them or distributing them in large quantities (on the internets).
Nothing different anti-CD copying measures, anti VHS copying measures, anti video-game copying measures, and so on.
Nothing new here, move along
The guy asks you a computer question, and you suggest he moves to a different country? Bunch of fucking trolls.
-------- I dig Mobile Phones
Honestly. I haven't had a TV/Cable connection for the past seven years. I haven't missed it at all. All my friends drone on and on about the latest episode of "Star Trek: the Berman Tragedy" or "Friends II: Las Vegas," but I honestly don't envy their ability to keep track of the latest shows. So-called news regarding ideas like "Survivor: Soyuz," Martha Stewart's version of "The Apprentice," and sequels to "The Simple Life" just enforce my resolve to not care about television at all.
[
maybe I should break down and get one of those newfangled video to LP recorders...
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
" Given that there are only a few months left to make purchasing decisions, how best can one prepare for the advent of the broadcast flag?""
Not worry about it.
1-I doubt it's going to be widely available come July.
2-It's a bad idea that's going to quickly be realized as a bad idea.
I doubt it's going to last long, especially for programming people pay for.
The DC Circuit Court isn't so sure the FCC has the right to make that rule.
I have no idea what you can do to try to sway the judicial system, as it's only 2 of 3 so far.
I guess you could contribute to the folks trying to take the FCC to court over this.
Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
I found myself asking this same question, too. So I put the question to the makers of the EyeTV 500. This is their response:
"EyeTV 500 does not support the broadcast flag. Units bought before July 2005 will never support the broadcast flag. We will not update EyeTV 500 units bought before then to support the flag.
Thus, your EyeTV 500 will never support the broadcast flag. It will ignore flags, and not use DRM for any content. That means you'll have the maximum freedom possible with its recordings."
It's a little pricey, but it does the compression on the box. I don't have digital cable yet, but I may buy this come May/June just for the fuck of it since pre-July box prices will probably go up dramatically come July 2 (on the black market, of course, since the law bans all inter-state trade of these devices).
The IRS is the one organization that you don't want to fuck with. Remember, these are the guys who took down Al Capone.
My plans involve an underground bunker, stocked with old books and DVD's that will be stored in perfectly dark conditions to preserve them for as long as possible. Upon these DVD's are recordings of the great television shows and movies.
Upon the day of the broadcast flag, I will be taking my family into the bunker along with a supply of food, air, and other needs to last 100 years.
When my great-grandchildren emerge into the world after society collapses, all the old books (which were deemed illegal during the Copyright Stealing Prevention act of 2050) are burned and all eyeballs gouged out during the Copyright Memory Prevention Act of 2075, when humanity has children born without R/M/AA approved Eyeball Extractors coming to remove their ocular sockets to be installed with DCMA III approved cybereyes (which shut down if it appears the looker is attempitng to actually remember what they see to replay it in their mind later, which of course is a copyright violation), then my great-grandchildren will be able to use these books and DVD's as barter.
Hm - I wonder how much food they'll be able to buy with a copy of "Cryptonomicon". Maybe I should get another copy....
52 Weeks, 52 Religions with John Hummel
As with all laws, the authority comes from elected officials. So i recommend that you purchase an elected official. You can probably get one cheaper than you think.
DISCLAIMER: This post was not checked for speling and grammar- if you complain- you're a whiner
Step 1: Understand that 99.9% of shows on TV are crap anyway.
Step 2: Cease to care whether or not you can legally record them.
Step 3: Cancel your cable/satellite service.
Step 4: Download the 2 or 3 shows you really enjoy watching.
0 1 - just my two bits
the OP is trying to stay within the law.
Your assesment is kinda wrong.
You've never experienced things like a state tax filing amnesty? librariers that have fine amnesty?
never heard of realtors trying to close deals before laws change so they can be grandfathered in and legal?
the Question is,
"HOW BEST CAN I PREPARE MYSELF FOR SOMETHING THAT IS LEGAL"
not, how can I circumvent the law.
the advice being sought is in fact, ON THE SIDE OF LAW and wholly valid, I'm glad to see the topic, I was thinking about snapping up some hardware myself.
As I understand it- and I'd LOVE to be courteously corrected, the law only applies to products moved across state lines (or into the country) so a product manufactured, marketed and sold in the same US state, is actually still a possibility.
(fabrication facilitys then needing to be built in each state of course)
every day http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Special:Random
Sure, you can stock up on pre-broadcast flag HDTV cards, and you can do all sorts of other tricks, but to do what you talk of for long-term goals, you're gonna need to work from the inside of the "system". Like others have said, big companies can spend all they want on re-election campaigns, but they still get elected by those who vote.
What most people forget about American democracy is that it is designed to work well in facilitating peaceful revolutions- when people care and vote. The blame for the sorry state the American government is in lies with nobody save every last American citizen who is currently enfranchised (older than 18, etc.). And I write this as an American citizen.
I wish I could write clever and witty sigs.
I have already purchased my brand new camcorder and tripod to set up in front of my TV! I keep hearing people say as long as you're able to see/hear/smell it you're able to record it!
> Specifically, I want to make sure that I can record DVDs or similar files of any program I want off of cable, sattelite (sic!) or broadcast TV
Is that fair use?
"Any program I want" - doesn't sound very compromising and regardful of possible copyrights and restrictions on recording of broadcasts...
I'd wish you luck but I can't feel simpathy for you.
FYI, in very near future people will not record but create playlists, that's all you'll need as you will be able to play whatever you want right off the network.
Managing thousands of media files is insane and unnecessary.
does anyone have any HD solutions for OS X that ignore the flag?
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
Once the broadcast flag becomes standard, can't the FCC be sued for violating the Supreme Court order mandating fair use in the Sony Betamax case? It would seem to be a slam-dunk of this argument is used.
- Just my $0.02, take with a grain of salt, your mileage may vary.
"Learning is not compulsory... neither is survival."
--Dr.W.Edwards Deming
Can't you just by cards made offshore that will not honor the broadcast flag? If there is a market someone will build them.
And this is why any attempt to controll how an end user uses media will fail. The whole system will work as long as everyone plays ball. As soon as you have somebody that realizes they can make a better product by simply ignoring DMR/Broadcast flages/whatever, they will have 'built a better mousetrap'. And since implimenting copy protection takes extra effort, the product without it will cost the manufacturer/consumer less than other products.
And the best part is, if all the companies get together and conspire to squeeze out anyone who doesn't play ball, we just start filing anti-trust suits, and let the government dismantle them.
HA! I just wasted some of your bandwidth with a frivolous sig!
This is one of those things that is making me reconsider my conservative philosophy. It seems like the Republicans we've elected don't actually care about it.
This is one of the few unfortunate examples of complete bipartisanship in congress.
You could try to stop time, progress and technical evolution. That way, your shiny new equipment will never become obsolete.
Sorry, that's a small jab. We can't predict what the future will bring. I can tell you this though...
If you want to be able to do things with bits that the powers that be try to stop you from doing, your best bet will always be had in the hobyist (read free software / oss) areas. This is because companies who want to compete and cooperate to get your money will b forced to play by the rules imposed by those would deny digital rights. Individuals will not bend to this, so the free stuff, while admitedly slower on the curve, will be your best bet, if freedom is your motivation. This means invest in your PC.
If you want digital input to your TV, go over DVI, but be sure that any set you look at will play non DRM encoded stuff. I believe the MPAA is attempting to mandate the broadcast of digital signals in a format which will limit rights. There are two types of digital interface on a television. My memory is sketchy here, I bought my set over 18 moonths ago. I do know though that there are a couple of different interface/protocol types, some of which use only the protocol which the MPAA is trying to define (in their favour). Be careful of that.
Problem being, too many americans are too busy watching their spoon-fed share of culture on TV to care what happens, as long as the crap keeps showing up on their bigscreen they're fat and happy.
A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
here's a great way to prepare!
throw your tv out the window. nothing like getting a little bit of this air while it's still fresh, huh? HUH?
i mean, the stuff that's on tv these days is mindless garbage. ok, that's not entirely true *cough adult swim cough*, but anything worth getting can be done so on DVD.
this from a guy who used to watch "turbo teen" when it was hot (and he was 6)
"when the sun sets on the ghetto, all the broken stuff gets cold"
The current prevailing Republican attitude is "Businesses are almost always right, and moral values should usually be legislated.". The prevailing Democratic attitude is "Businesses is usually not right, moral values should rarely be legislated.". The prevailing Libertarian attitude is "Businesses are almost always right, but moral values should almost never be legislated.". The prevailing Green view is "Businesses are almost never right right, and moral values should almost never be legislated.".
:) Of course, individuals vary, especially on the individual-issue level; this is just averages. Of the two major parties, you get better ratings for the Dems by the EFF and ACLU, but it's not universal. The two biggest marginal parties (Greens and Libertarians) tend to be more ideologically polarized than Dems and Republicans.
Take your pick.
"Lock and load, Brides of Christ!"
Or maybe you'll just move the TV to your bedroom and watch recorded shows after the kid is asleep. But I tell you, once you break the cycle of frequent TV watching, you realize how many cooler things you could be doing with your time besides watching corporate entertainment.
I for one will not be doing anything to prepare; I'm just not going to buy anything with broadcast flag support in it. Period. If this means not buying any more TVs, maybe it's for the best. All I use my TV for anyway is as a monitor for my video game systems, and with the next generation of those, I'll be able to just use a monitor. Who needs a TV?
Irritable, left-wing and possibly humorous bumper stickers and t-shirts
Move.
I'm amazed at how many people think that simply not watching TV is any sort of solution.
Broadcast flags are utterly evil for two reasons.
First, they are contrary to our fair use rights to record programming via Universal v. Sony.
Second, they create perpetual copyrights. Under the current rules, broadcasters will even be able to stop recording of public domain programming. Why do broadcasters get greater rights than the creator?! That makes no sense. And what's so hard to understand about the phrase "for a limited time"?!
Merely sitting on the sidelines and ignoring the problem will NOT help! If and when broadcast flags succeed, similar systems will become even more commonplace.
If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
Exactly. On slashdot, when the topic has something to do with USA, everyone is just expected to know everything about it. And the topic is discussed (even in the stories) as if it something general that has to do with the rest of the world. Like, talking about US laws as if they apply to the rest of the world, or slashdot is only meant for US readers.
Buy an HD tuner that doesn't respect the flag before 1 July 2005, or purchase any such preexisting device after 1 July 2005 (all non flag compliant devices can be resold after that date).
But it's not that simple, after all. Because the problem is TUNING the content you want to record, e.g., from a satellite provider or cable operator. And since more and more of the digital content is encrypted, and is only able to be tuned by devices sanctioned by the provider, and all such devices will respect the Broadcast Flag, the answer is to "What can I do to prepare for the Broadcast Flag?" is "Not much."
Unless, of course, you don't mind recording from an analog connection, such as composite video, S-video, or component video. But the FireWire ports that are, for example, also mandated on all HD/digital cable set top boxes after 1 July 2005 will be mostly encrypted. One might ask the question, if they're encrypted, then what the hell good are they? Indeed. But what can you do in the face of a cable provider whose call centers don't even know what FireWire is, or who argues that "technically" the FireWire ports are "functional" (as required by the FCC), even though their output is encrypted.
The real answer, of course, is that these ports will interact with OTHER 5C-compliant FireWire devices that also respect the Broadcast Flag. There's no way around it unless you go analog. And that INCLUDES all the nice things on the EFF's page. Sure, you can tune over-the-air HD channels and record them. And that's great. In some markets, that may account for a lot of content. But you won't be able to digitally record content that is flagged as Record Never that you're paying for from a cable or satellite operator, because you need THEIR EQUIPMENT to tune to those channels. (Or, something like a CableCard in - guess what - another device that respects the flag.)
All in all, we'll be able to do less with our current (i.e., digital) equipment than we could do with equivalent equipment (i.e., the VCR) 30 years ago. And most of the operators won't shoulder any of the blame. They'll just point the finger at laws or at the content providers. And then what is a customer to do? The only thing you really *can* do is write your elected officials, and provide feedback to the FCC. Or, not buy any flag compliant devices, which might ultimately prove to be a very hard thing to do.
In sum: anything you buy now won't guarantee you recording of ALL content you might legitimately have access to, unless you're ONLY concerned about OTA recording.
"We'll need 2000 crickets, 4 cans of Easy Cheese, and the fluid from 18 glowsticks for this plan to work...." - ph0n1c
how best can one prepare for the advent of the broadcast flag?"
Stop watching TV. It CAN be done!
-R
...to what others have said in response, not only will it still work, but it will still be legal to own, use, AND resell indefinitely.
Yes, I did buy a pcHDTV2000 card, more on general principles than anything else, but my overall attitude on the broadcast flag can be summed up in two words:
Screw them.
If the broadcasters insist upon making me not the master of my TV, PVR, and DVD player, then I shall not consume their product - I'll read a book, I'll work on my car/computer/house/physique, and generally be better off than I am now.
The manufacturers of HDTV sets aren't seeing quite the volume they want - guess what guys, if you continue to make things less friendly to the consumer they will not consume as much!
Perhaps we shall see a rise of "GPL TV" - people creating shows for download (Considering the success of Homestar Runner, this may not be as far-fetched as we might think). Imagine - a Star Dreck^WTrek that has somewhat sensible science and stories! A rendition of Starship Troopers that is actually faithful to RAH's vision!
But no matter what - if my TV does not recognize me as its lord and master, then it shall be summarily expelled from my castle.
www.eFax.com are spammers
So if I buy a HDTV tuner card and use it to record a program that includes the broadcast flag is it a violation of the FCC rules to if that recording does not have the flag set? In other words could I set it up to not only ignore the flag but to stip it out ?
I wonder which will be the first country to be invaded for "Intellectual Property terrorism" ??
U.S. foreign trade moves continuously toward importing real goods and exporting IP. Eventually the stream of rights income from abroad will be as vital as wheat and steel, and the invisible fences we're building around our make-believe property will become as sacred as real ones around real land. We go to war for oil, we go to war to prove that one person's invisible friend is better another. It's just a matter of time before we go to war over IP.
Knowing a number of close friends that have worked in congressmen/senators' offices, I can tell you that writing/calling your congressmen will do.....NOTHING. They get ridiculous numbers of emails/calls a day (in addition to the normal spam and telemarketing no doubt), and just end up feeding it off on some intern who sends out cookie-cutter replies. No one in Washington or the state capitol wants to listen to you.
The U.S. is a Represenative Plutocracy (one dollar, one vote), and it's Capitalism - not Socialism - that's pushing this particular threat to freedom.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Stick to analog.
People who think they know everything really piss off those of us that actually do.
Come on, how can this be overrated?
What if you punished them for creating the Broadcast Flag by not watching TV?
Seriously, play World of Warcraft or City of Heroes w/ your friends or play The Legend of Zelda: Four Swords w/ your family.
If enough people decide to break the habit, maybe the bad guys will reflect on the error of their ways.
[o]_O
Ultimately, you, the consumer, are still left with the final word. Since broadcast media depends, oh, I'd say, 100% or so, on whether or not you actually watch it, take the gun away from your head, and go do something else.
If consumers play their cards right (which is a long shot, having some idea of typical consumer behavior), this broadcast flag could become a rather significant problem for those using it, rather than the control mechanism originally intended...it all depends on how willfully consumers decide to put up with it.
Nor does posting foster intelligence. Socalism is an economic system. Democracy is a political system. It is possible to have a socialist democracy, just as it is possible to have a marxist democracy. Or to blow your mind a captialist monarchy.
Say stupid things attempting to belittle people and you just sound stupid mommy.
By golly, people - don't you have anything else to do with your lives then stare at an idiot's box all day and get brainwashed?
I sure hope they make another flag that makes it impossible for a program to be viewed on any compliant device, and then set it on all programming.
First, you need to know what the 19.3 megabit DTV "Transport Stream" looks like. The "Broadcast Flag" is a small collection of bits embedded in "Transport Stream." DTV equipment will be required to watch (or listen) for those bits and take the appropriate action.
But suppose you know where those bits are, and what they mean, too. Why couldn't you simply flip the ones you don't like and then record or whatever? All you would need is a serial to parallel converter to turn the serial stream into a 16 bit parallel bus (for example) and them suck those bits into a DSP, where you do a little bit bashing. Then run them into a parallel to serial conervter to reconstruct the transport stream as seen by your digital disk recorder? If you have a commercially made unit, it will be looking for the flag bits, so it will know what it can or cannot do, but your freshly set bits tell it that this program is OK to record and play as long as you like.
I think such a device is likely to appear as a small plastic box with 2 firewire ports and a wall-wart, selling for $20 in a year or two.
Remember Macrovision on VHS? Do you know how easy that was to defeat? All you had to do was to make your VCR run with fixed video gain instead of AGC all the time. A little hardware hacking was all that was needed. This shouldn't be much worse. But don't try bit bashing after the compressed video is expanded. The data rate there is likely to be upwards of a gigabit, and most folks don't know how to make PCBs to handle stuff going that fast. This is precisely why the DRM folks want the interconnects to be 1 gigabit or faster. But remember, the "broadcast flag" must be readable in the 19.3 megabit transport stream.
An analog gray hair frantically clinging to the trailing edge of technology.
You've sure helped out the origional poster a lot with this valuable piece of insight. If you had a question about freeBSD and everyone said I prefer typewriters I'm sure you'd be really happy with the responses.
"Monopartisanship" would be more accurate. The democratic caucus and the republican caucus of the Business Party are both voting the party line on this issue.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
Yes. The best thing we can do is stop electing those whom we always elect. Even if that means voting third party.
The broadcast flag is simply a flag that indicates that people are not entitled to do what people don't do anyway - Make multi-generational copies of broadcast media.
Not exactly... the broadcast flag will allow the control of recording, including the possibility of *not* being recordable at all. It's a possibility that you won't be able to timeshift some shows, and some won't be DVD writeable (which is how I store some shows for long term storage).
If your conservative make your issues known, you can post to conservative blogs. If you can post intelligently enough for them to see your side of the issue others will discuss it. Unfortunately, most people will only see one side of the argument. The side that places anti-piracy ads on MTV or the Grammys. Money is a powerful thing to overcome but it takes getting off the couch, using your head, communicating effectively and most of all voting.
Probably what I've already done: Stop watching tv.
The ironic thing is that, as part of my job, I already know enough to build a broadcast flag filter. It doesn't seem too terribly difficult. To defeat the broadcast flag, one merely needs a high-frequency sampling circuit and a fast computer - you simply pull the signal from the tuner and ignore whatever bits you don't like. The signal itself is pretty easy to pick out from the "other" things - like Macrovision, broadcast flag, etc...
But why bother? Why spend time in front of the tv when you could be surfing the net, learning new things, and - gasp! - actually expanding your mind as opposed to turning it into a vegetable. There's a lot better content than what's on tv, and you'd probably be a better person for it.
The society for a thought-free internet welcomes you.
OK, I did that.
After I made love to your wife, my wife got rather annoyed with me. And she really got pissed when I kept at it after our first child was born.
I ended up having to move to Canada, and I already knew there was pr0n on the internets before I started, so where, precisely, was the win here?
http://ask.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=140255&cid =11747042
Costs $350 USA.
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
wtf are you talking about. search the text of the US Constitution and you will not find the phrase "fair use".
/interpretation/ that the language actually present in the constitution denotes a "fair use right" -- and much as the "right to privacy", the "right to own a handgun", "the right to choice", and the "right to have gay sex", anything up to interpretation is likely to be re-interpreted.
/in writing/ and not rely on changing interpretation or to wait and see which pile of lawyers has the bigger money pile.
/interpretations/ centralising power not only left us with an FCC which could mandate the broadcast flag, it left us with not much choice other than to just take it in the arse when they mandate it. the FCC is just another massive government agency battling for tax dollars in a massive, misspent, misfortunate contest of penis size as budget cap.
you seem to be talking about the generally held
us freedom-loving people have had it high on the hog with the centralisation of power under a liberal government (except for gun rights). now that this centralised power is under conservative control we're shocked (shocked!) when the interpretation changes to our disliking. boo fscking hoo.
if we want a lasting right to fair use, to privacy, or whatever, we had better get it
if we don't want a powerful central government dictating law to us from their corporate puppeteers, then massive decentralisation of that power or, at least, less corrupt influences on that power, are needed. seriously, is there a more sure recipe for corruption than to put as much power in as few hands as possible? guess what, the Constitution never outlined plans to vest this much power in Washington, DC, but a rampant-running series of
MORTAR COMBAT!
Yes... And be forced to watch nothing but Anne of Green Gables or Hockey Night in Canada since we only get 2 channels.
...all of the Broadcast Flag plans were in motion up long before Bush became president, during Clinton's presidency. Clinton appointed Michael Powell to the FCC [when he became Chairman, he didn't get any more votes], Clinton signed the DMCA into law, and Fritz Hollings (D) (along with four other Democratic senators) is the sponsor of the CBDTPA (née SSSCA or "DMCA 2").
I'm not saying the parent is speaking to this specifically, but this is just a point of information for others who will no doubt ignorantly vomit out the opposite in this thread.
Here's a concept:
1. We work hard on establishing a world wide WiFi network that isn't supplied or owned by ISPs, but is a collective non-profit organization.
2. Set up multiple membership levels with different requirements:
a. Standard users (just a regular WiFi access point to "catch the signal")
b. Operators (a bridging WiFi set up that connects several neighborhoods together)
c. Watchtower men (long range WiFi setups that can spam 20-50 miles to connect the Operators together)
d. Publishers (Centralized content hosting for free media perhaps in partnership with Wikimedia and the like)
3. Use this network to broadcast live and on/demand programming that is supplied and produced by any members
Ideally, this should really be multiple assocaited projects. The primary one being the non-profit that organizes the members of this wireless network. The other projects would be focused on creating content publishing software that would make it easy for anyone to publish video and audio, as well as education on creating media.
Barring any of that, a similar kind of network would probably grow tremendously if "Joe Average" learned that he could download the latest episodes of his favorite show using a WiFi peer-to-peer network...
So which is it going to be corporate America? Do you turn every citizen into a criminal, or do we find alternatives to your crap?
-"...bad old ideas look confusingly fresh when they are packaged as technology" - Jaron Lanier (Digital Maoism on Edge.o
The Broadcast Flag doens't apply to analog TV, it only applies to HDTV.
I have an old analog TV which I bought in 1994. It works fine. Along with a decent Audio/Video Receiver, I can watch DVDs, video tapes, streams from the computer or 10 broadcast channels with some rabbit-ears. I can watch PBS, Lost and the local news (not sure why I bother with the local news).
Personally, I don't think that HDTV is worth it. The sets are still way too expensive, and I'm not going to spend $100 on a HDTV tuner just so I can watch the same program that I currently get for free. Why spend $1000 on a HDTV when you can get a perfectly fine analog TV for $150? Hello Credit Card society!
At some point, the FCC wants to shut off all analog TV transmission, and then auction off the analog TV spectrum to make a few bucks for the government.
If the FCC does shut down analog broadcasts, I'll simply stop watching broadcast TV. I'm not alone, and the TV broadcasters know this.
Although, I kind of doubt this will happen anytime soon--- there isn't enough demand for the HDTV sets yet, which means that the broadcasters must continue to broadcast in old-fashioned analog TV. I doubt that HDTV will make it into 90% of homes anytime soon.
94% of Repubs and 21% of Dems voted to renew the Patriot Act
Apparently you missed where I stated "individuals vary". But lets look at averages - a good place for that might be, say, a party platform. Lets look at the Libertarian party platform, shall we?
h tm l
http://www.lp.org/issues/platform/platform_all.
They want every pro-business issue out there: a repeal of *all* controls on wages, prices, rents, profits, production, and interest rates; a completely free-market system (even on issues of the environment); elimination of all tarriffs and trade barriers; the complete elimination of anti-trust; elimination of superfund (!!! - they don't even explain how to compensate for it), elimination of most or all consumer protections, elimination of OSHA, elimination of resource regulations, etc.
Take a look at the Green Party platform some time - it's just the opposite:
http://www.gp.org/platform/2004/index.html
"Lock and load, Brides of Christ!"
The problem with this logic is that congress critters do not get elected or rejected based on their positions on obscure issues like the FCC broadcast flag. I am very concious of problems like this, the DMCA, etc, and I can say with certainty that I have never voted for or against a candidate because of these issues.
Things like health care, the war in iraq, social security, etc, are infinitely more important than whether I can back up a copy of the Matrix. So it's going to be difficult to convince a candidate that their re-election is dependent on such an issue because, realistically, it isn't.
There are two forces that work in politics, one is the ability to mobilize people, and the other is money (used to mobilize people to vote for you). It seems that, with an issue like this, there's neither the ability to mobilize enough voters, nor enough money to reasonablly counteract the efforts of the broadcasters. So while you may be able to convince a few individual congressman with letters, it's very very unlikely to reach a critical mass such that the broadcasters cannot stop it.
This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
...why don't they get busy and invent a way to permit duplication of digital files onto physical media that also prevents duplication over a network?
You can just barely make a plausible fair use case about unlimited personal copying of an entire work for personal use, but even Lessig draws the line at hosting digitized works on servers that permit unlimited duplication by all comers. I.e., you have no fair use right to allow unlimited numbers of strangers to make unlimited duplicates of a work to which you do not hold the copyright.
The TV and movie folks are worried about people making thousands of DVD's for their personal use (who would?). They're worried about their products being almost instantly made available for unlimited duplication by anyone across the globe.
-- Slashdot: When Public Access TV Says "No"
What right do you have to claim it as "your" culture? Did you create it? Did you exert a single creative impulse to make it come into being? No, it was the copyright holders. Sure many of them did not actually create the material either but the material's creator gave them the copyright in exchange for, what they considered, fair compensation. You have no right to stand there demanding free access to the IP that someone else created on the basis that it is "your culture". What arrogance!
I create plenty of IP as I am a software engineer and your attitude smells of slavery. You want to force the IP creators to give away thier creations so that you do not have to expend any effort in acquiring it your self. That amounts to the producers becomeing the slaves of the consumers and that is wrong.
I have said it before, and I will say it again, the Open Source movement has got this right. The Producers ( open source developers amoung which, I count myself ) have choosen to release thier software under a license that grants the consumers ( open source software's users ) the right to use it free of charge. When the artists/producers choose to do the same thing, then you can copy it around to your heart's content. But until then, you are a thief if you overstep the bounds of fair use. Fair use does not include making copies whole copies for others' to use with out paying.
The problem with the broadcast flag is that it impinges on fair use. Fair use allows me to make a copy of something for my own use and keep it indefinately but the broadcast flag requires that the recording be deleted after a proscribed interval. This is wrong and should be fought against.
It doesn't matter who you elect anymore. I'm almost begging Osama bin Ladin to attack the U.S. again, but suspect he's just as bad. The media lies to us. I'd move to a different country, but the U.S. cripples people like me to make that impossible, not to mention the logistics of getting real information on other countries. You think China censors information? The thing is that the U.S. pulls the wool over people's eyes so that they think that it doesn't. http://www.capecodonline.com/cctimes/webreporterzx s11.htm
http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=%22a+partisan +question
including the possibility of *not* being recordable at all. It's a possibility that you won't be able to timeshift some shows,
That is not a possibility with the broadcast flag. It will always allow you to record shows off air.
and some won't be DVD writeable (which is how I store some shows for long term storage).
Long term storage isn't a legal right as it is. So you can't breach copyright the way you've always been able to in the past? Well, that's unfortunate, but it wasn't legal before. Why should it suddenly become legal now?
Has anyone looked into decrypting the broadcast-flagged data streams? Judging by past efforts of the home entertainment and media industries to secure their content, there's a good chance that the broadcast flag will be irrelevant in a couple of months.
and since there is no hockey, we just get Anne of Green Gables, of Avonlea, of etc...
MORTAR COMBAT!
Not exactly. Money buys advertising. Advertising can't work miracles if one side is much more popular, but it does make the difference in any competitive race.
Hmmm... Is that the one where a bunch of people get stranded on an island? I seem to recall there was a professor, and a millionaire, and his wife...
Yes, because it's impossible for them to ever conceivably have a valid point.
How about answering the question! What could you legally do before that the broadcast flag prevents?
The only time I watch TV is when I rent or watch DVDs. There is NOTHING I want to watch on TV. And now that the broadcasters got the FCC to ram the broadcast flag down our throats I will not subscribe to anything. I will buy a HDTV eventually, but it will be used as a monitor only. In the meantime, my 27" Sony works just fine for now.
"I bow to no man" - Riddick
Something like this takes a very well organized campaign to be successful. There are only 58 representatives that are truly in control of this issue. For 87% of the electorate, writing a letter to Congress is a pretty fruitless endeavor.
It is much, much more complex than "oh, you elected them, you can un-elect them." Well, one voter has sway with only 0.2% of the legislature, and that 0.2% influence still only has a 13% (58:435) chance of having a 1.7% (1:58) chance to get the issue out of committee...and even still, to your rep, you're political weight is roughly 1:337931, probably less if you're in a well gerrymandered district where they aren't at risk of losing their seat anyway (read: almost all of them). They know this, so "you'll lose my vote" carries about as much weight as a square of wet single-ply toilet paper.
You've moved away from your wife and you still have to ask that?
--- "When I think back on all the crap I learned in high school, it's a wonder I can think at all..."
A number of groups like the EFF, American Library Association, etc. are all challenging the broadcast flag in court. With a bit of luck it's implementation will be delayed or even stopped.
Is there a mechanism in this country for the peple to to throw out bad laws?, something like putting proposition on ballots. I know some states have stuff like that (California recall anyone?). I think we can fix all the laws passed by lobbyist, campaing contributors and bribed congressman.
HTML is obsolete. It's time for a new, simpler and richer markup language.
Comment removed based on user account deletion
QAM support was added to the HD-3000 DVB drivers recently. There's a thread about it in their supoprt forum. Unfortunately their site is agonizingly slow right now (/. effect?) otherwise I'd post a link to it.
hi.
/OF
The simplest solution is to stop watching television. I got bored of television some 10 years ago. I took it up again last autumn but lost interest.
I guess this is not feasible for everyone.
Next thing is the observation that somewhere there is a DA converter where the input side is digital and the output side is analogue. And as long as there isn't any unbreakable decryption technique buried inside the DA converter the solution is simply to read the input side of the DA converter.
This is also the same reason that copy protection will never work. Somewhere the digital data has to be converted to analogue so all you have to do is to nick the data right there.
I guess this text will render it impossible for me to get a visa to the USA...
FWIW
You got marked as troll in the previous post because that post was a troll. If you don't watch tv thats fine, but to go into tv threads and bash people that do watch tv and want to talk about it is nothing but trolling.
Here's a clue, we don't care if you watch tv or not.
The broadcast flag is designed to control content due to the success of TV shows on DVD sales. Also factor in the nice high resolution broadcast quality versions you could be saving/recording instead of buying on HD DVD... :) They just dont want you to record what you've already paid for. And yes sitting through commercials during a tv show is paying for a tv show. Afterall, they dont get advertising money for tv shows if they didnt have our ratings numbers. Hey according to the FCC, Them's is our airwaves! ;) HAHAHAHAHA. As if fucking over the entire public wasnt enough for the FCC, spitting that bullshit back in our faces should have resulted in riots ;)
:)
I think the real shame is that as a result of this broadcast flag, Hollywood will simply fuel an entire underground HD-TV show swaping network on the internet.
There will be 10x the amount of traded HD-TV shows being swapped online. There will be a huge demand for those who can provide recorded versions of your favorite tv show.
Dont these companies realize that the more they squeeze the people, the more willing the people are to fuck them back?
We're a country of rebelling bastards, its what we do best
So let the corperations continue to own and control our government. It's nothing new. We've already lost that war years ago.
Hollywood, say hello to the larger than ever, more elite than ever, more unstoppable than ever, and more right than ever... underground HD-TV show scene that you have created. Way to learn from the past, you fucking morons (hollywood).
So, you think 90% of slashdot's readership is from USA?
Is there a way to mod the Op as flamebait, or no?
IANAL. TINLA.
A common error... you are confusing certain acts explicitly enumerated in copyright law as "not infringement" with acts of fair use (not explicitly enumerated in copyright law, but which encompass all other cases of "copying a work, or portions thereof, without infringement occuring").
Copyright law says that certain acts (e.g., creating archival copies of lawfully-obtained software) are specifically not infringement. If (for instance) I get hauled into court because someone finds a burned copy of Corel Office Suite 8 in my home, I do not call "fair use" (Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 107) - I instead pull out the lawfully-obtained copy I bought while in college and point to Title 17, Chapter 1, Section 117.
"Fair Use" (in section 107) talks about reproduction of copies for uses not explicitly exempted as "not infringement" elsewhere in copyright law. It gives an exemplary (not exhaustive) list of four things that should be used to check whether or not a given case is "Fair Use" but "Fair Use" is to be examined on a case-by-case basis.
In other words, what the article poster asks to do MAY in fact be "Fair Use" or it may not - that will have to be decided by the courts, not by you or I. In fact, the Sony-Betamax decision sets a precedent that what he seeks to do is in fact "Fair Use"...
"noncommercial home use recording of material broadcast over the public airwaves was a fair use of copyrighted works and did not constitute copyright infringement."
Another important note from the same case:
"[Copyright] has never accorded the copyright owner complete control over all possible uses of his work. Rather, the Copyright Act grants the copyright holder "exclusive" rights to use and to authorize the use of his work in five qualified ways, including reproduction of the copyrighted work in copies. All reproductions of the work, however, are not within the exclusive domain of he copyright owner; some are in the public domain. Any individual may reproduce a copyrighted for for a "fair use"; the copyright owner does not possess the exclusive right to such a use."
If I might be so bold as to alter your question a bit, I ask copyright holders, "what rights do you want?!?" (Copyright law gives you but five!)
Let's face facts here - the broadcast flag is an attempt to gain full control over the work - no more, no less; a level of control which the Supreme Court itself says they are not (and have never been) entitled to.
The question is not, "why is Joe Sixpack trying to grab rights to which he is not entitled?" (and it should be noted that in this case, legal precedent says that he IS entitled to these rights) and rather, "why are copyright holders trying to grab rights to which they are not entitled?" (Which IS what is happening with the DMCA, the Broadcast Flag, and so on).
The hardest part of learning is asking the right questions... you still haven't learned the right questions.
--AC
The copyright holders payed the congress to extend copyrights, so copyright lasts a loooooong time after the creators have died.
That strikes me as unfair, unethical and even illegal. Trying to avoid this new law, is just fighting fire with fire.
(how come they paid the congress? they just gave $$$ to the campaigns of the necessary people. Basically, they bought their votes. That is not democracy).
pcHDTV 3000 from here
Air2PC from here or here
2. When you're ready, build a computer for MythTV. Use this guide, look here for HDTV tips, and ask questions on this mailing list. You can also search for answers on the mailing list archive.
3. You say that Myth isn't all you want. I think you're wrong. Here's what it can do:
It can record analog content from cable, satellite, and over-the-air broadcasts.
It can record digital content from over-the-air broadcasts, including HDTV.
It can record unencrypted digital content over firewire from some digital cable boxes.
Using free tools that come with MythTV, you can cut commercials and export any recording from MythTV to a number of different formats, including Divx, Xvid, VCD, SVCD, and DVD.
4. Here's what it can't do:
Myth can't record encrypted digital content from digital cable or digital satellite. Keep in mind that no PC-based solution can do this. The only possible ways to do record content from these sources in digital format are to use a black-box solution (usually) provided by the cable or satellite company or to put on your black hacker hat and crack the encryption. If you choose the former, odds are slim and none that you will be able to export the recordings.
I am concerned about any program, any piece of hardware, any treaty, any law that treats me as a consumer, not a citizen
Why do you need to do that? It's certainly nothing to do with delayed viewing.
There are various settings for the broadcast flag and how long content is supposed to remain arround after recording. the four key levels are as follows:
No Record
30 Minutes
1 Week
Unlimited
"No record" means just that. Don't allow recording. 30 minutes is the shortest setting with the broadcast flag. A show may remain around for that long and then it must be deleted in compliant hardware. I find this interesting as many shows are langer than 30 min. 1 week is the longest period of time (shorter than unlimited) that the flag alows shows to stay around for. If that bit is set, after the 1 week the show must be deleted. Finally, "Unlimited" or basically, no flag, allows what we currently do.
Unfortunately, I see a lot of people trying to get the 30 min or no record bits set on the shows and essentially eliminating time shifting because of that. I also see this as a step towards controlling VCRs where, if recording is allowed, we can play and stop. No pause, rewind, fastforward, etc... (And when we play, it starts from the very beginning) As a way to make sure that if we watch something we can't skip through any part of it. Such as at the beginning of many Disney DVDs where you have 20min of commercials advertising Disney products that you can't skip past.
Fly me to the moon Let me sing among those stars Let me see what spring is like On jupiter and mars
No video format that I know of supports a broadcast flag. I.e. if you record it to an mpeg file, the mpeg file has no knowledge of the flag. It will be just another mpeg. In fact, the EFF's article on the FCC's ruling states nothing about a recording format to support the flag, only restricted video ouputs based on the flag while receiving.
"It's a very tangled subsystem." --Windows kernel guru
I, for one, welcome our broadcast flag-waving overlords!
The problem is that scumbags keep retroactively increasing the length of protection, and that is cheating
Why is it cheating? Because the people that BUY your IP do so at a set price with the assumption that after they wait x # of years the stuff they bought today will be theres to do with what they want. That is one of the decisions they made when they bought it.
Example: Lets say that in 1968 I purchased one of the original film reals of star trek, for say $5,000. I get to watch it myself, but I can't charge cash to others to see it... YET. For just myself, it would only be worth $4,500. But I know that in 20 years, it will be a rare commodity and I will be free to charge people to see the film. My $5,000 is an INVESTMENT.
now 10 years later, some scumbag lier has convinced congress to change it from 20 years to 50 years. I just lost my investment.
The real problem is HOW MUCH DO WE WANT TO PAY INVENTORS/CREATORS for their work.
And while they are certainly entilted to a fair price, we - as the PURCHASERS of that work are entitled to negotiate a fair price - and that price includes a limit on how long you hold the rights to it. May be it should be shorter, maybe it should be longer, but once our society sets a reasonable time limit and you "accept that condition" and create the IP, there is NO POSSIBLE, FAIR REASON to change it. That is just thievery by cheating, greedy scumbags. It is no better than if Ford suddenly decides to extend the 5 year rental agreement with an option to buy after 5 years to a 10 years rental agreement, after you already signed the papers.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
And what are you going to do when your pcHDTV card fries itself, hmmm? It will happen eventually and unless something has changed you will be forced to purchase a card that is broadcast-flag aware and you will be screwed.
Don't discount it because its marxist but: unless the proletariat (the common man) rises up against the owners of the means of production (the corporations who control the "content" distribution channels) and wrest those means of production from them (via burners, electronic distribution, etc.) this type of breach of rights will continue to repeat itself. Marx even warned that the owners of the means of production, when faced with innovation that threatened their monopolies, would turn to the law in order to secure their control and to maintain the status quo. At some point, unless something drastically changes, you will be forced to ask yourself whether the right to unfettered access to content is worth the risk of significant fines and jail time. It will happen; at this point, only a significant revolution against the "owners" can prevent it. Something has to gain the ear of those who are supposed to represent the people and fight for the rights of the people.
I, myself, am caught in the middle. I do not condone the unlicensed use of materials created by others - the people who created those materials deserve to get paid even if it is a mere fraction of what they should receive. I also do not condone the "limitless" copyrights granted by our (US) laws. So...I choose not to play. My wife and I do not purchase much music; we do not subscribe to cable or watch commercial television. We do purchase movies - primarily because I find it easier to get behind the position of the MPAA and am not opposed to renting movies or seeing movies in a "B" theater before I make the decision to purchase. FWIW, though, the cost of purchasing a DVD is now cheaper than the cost of two movie theater tickets, one drink and one popcorn so we tend to wait for movies to come out to DVD before going to the theater.
Or, sit on your ass and suck it up...
As a Libertarian, my vote never gets anyone elected, even in local elections. So I am used to that. I have a comfortable chair.
This country used to be known as a country of individualists and, yes, anarchists to an extent. 'Tis no longer true of course, but I stand by our proud tradition of thumbing our noses at our government, poking fun at our ratlike leaders and ignoring laws and any other rules that I don't agree with. This is what makes me an American.
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
"IP should not go into the public domain untill the copyright holders chose for it to or the applicable law forces it to."
That's a circular argument. You're saying that the law should exist because it's the law.
If you don't want "your IP" to be public, then keep it tucked away in a corner of your mind. Take it to the grave if you want. If you want to put "your IP" into the marketplace, the public is willing to protect your work within reasonable limits.
The problem in recent years is that deciding what's reasonable is being left up to people who are clearly biased.
A monkey has the right to copy what he sees other monkeys doing. Shouldn't humans have equivalent rights?
Oral arguments and such...
this guy went to the oral arguments re: the Broadcast Flag case and blogged about it.
The FCC's stance seems to be that if they don't currently have the legislative mandate to do this now, they'll just go out and get it (easily)... which is worrysome, imho.
e.
Build Your Own PVR/HTPC news, reviews, &
Your numbers sound about right. But you are forgetting something...
100% of the people who pay for cable are the ones who pay for cable! This might sound odd, but let me explain. The broadcast flag does not HAVE to be enabled at the source. The broadcasters can turn it on and off. If HBO started using the broadcast flag, they might change their minds if 10% of the people both wrote letters AND canceled their service. Men, you can grab by the balls. Companies, you grab by the wallet. The problem is that consumers TOLERATE this stuff. If ABC doesn't let you TIVO, then don't watch. Networks live and die by Nielson ratings.
I dumped all cable and broadcast TV over a year ago. I get my movies from Blockbuster, and I get my news from news.yahoo.com. I am happy.
"-1 Troll" is the apparently the same as "-1 I disagree with you."
There are various settings for the broadcast flag and how long content is supposed to remain arround after recording. the four key levels are as follows:
Please supply a source for this information. Sounds like an internet rumour to me.
So long as the broadcast flag only applies to HDTV, I don't give a crap, because I've already decided I have zero interest in HDTV. And yes, I've seen it.
There's no point having the shows in high resolution if they're still packed full of ads, have ugly station logos in the corner, and are mostly crap. There are maybe three stations I'd care to watch in HD, and it would pump the cost of cable or satellite to over $50 a month to get those stations in HD plus the handful of other channels I watch, so I'm not interested.
Movies I watch on DVD.
GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
Consider further: [I]Three's Company[/I] in high-def is still, well, [I]Three's Company[/I]. There are very few offerings--even on cable and satellite--outside of sports that aren't utter crap, and your mileage may vary on the exclusion of sports from that.
"Oh no--they're taking my crap away!"
Bleh.
What right do you have to claim it as "your" culture? Did you create it?
The enumeration in the Constitution, of certain rights, shall not be construed to deny or disparage others retained by the people.
Yeah, it's really awful that people can continue to benifit from thier creations for so long.
Wow, Walt Disney is still alive? What great news!
hell, if logic isn't enough for you the damn thing is enumerated in the constitution itself:
To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries;
You're missing the point: It isn't about which person gets elected. Whichever one wins, s/he owes too many favors to the companies that paid for the campaign (likely giving money to both sides). Money doesn't buy elections; it buys elected officials.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
I don't believe anyone buys a movie based on the fact that in 20 years the copyright will expire. An interesting point, but I don't buy it. Anyway, changing gears slightly, I always wondered what would happen if (or when) the technology exists to completely lock down all copyright material so there is no way to reproduce it. Will people totally lose interest in the mass media? I think a certain amount of fair use and illegal copying actually help to drive the popularity of alot of artists. I think a total lock down would trigger a huge boom for independant artists and filmakers. I mean, if kids can't get an illegal copy of Briteny Spears latest album, they'll find something else to get hooked on.
Stupid Broadcast Flag Tuner Device -> Regular VCR or DVR.
The tuner is going to tune with the broadcast flag. As long as the device your using as the "output" such as a TV, VCR, or other proper equipment, you wont have a problem.
On a second note. Will you PLEASE fix your government down there in America. The rest of us are getting annoyed with having to put up with bs crap to benefit american companies because your citizens are too lazy to make a difference.
It works everytime. No tv, no tv hassles.
But what value is the pcHDTV-3000 if you can't receive broadcast, anyway? Due to construction in the area, or NTSC broadcast quality degraded over the years to the point where we finally got cable.
I like the idea of the pcHDTV-3000, but since I can't get a decent NTSC signal, I figure that by the time I get HDTV, it'll be over cable or satellite. In either of those cases, it'll need to be some sort of proprietary box, and the pcHDTV card will stay on the shelf collecting dust. (or get sold on eBay - step3: profit!)
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
Remember the consolidation wars? The FCC got thousands and thousands of letters opposing the action, and micheal powell actualy basicaly said "Well, if the NRA and the ACLU are both opposed then obviously there's nothing wrong with it." Bush is as pro-bussness as they come.
ReadThe ReflectionEngine, a cyberpunk style n
Much like the rather silly DVD region protection, just get a firmware patch. End of story, and you'll get your fair use rights back.
ACs are modded -6. I don't read you, I don't mod you, I don't see you. Don't like it? Don't be a coward.
Make friends with the FCC and when they get to trust you alter the broadcasting flag to something even more sinister, like a swastika (even though the flag itself is innocent enough, the connotation is bad).
This new flag will be rejected and with all the publicity, there will go the whole flag.
This technique is used time and again by our good old US Government. Join the bad guys and then make 'em look even worse. Then we, the people, want to bomb the f*ck out of 'em.
It works.
Good grief... It's only TV.
Lets face it 99% of it is mind numbingly tedious shite anyway. If I couldn't timeshift the small amounts of TV I do watch (mainly so I can fast forward any adverts) I simpy won't bother with it at all. Big deal, one less eyeball for the idiots to pitch their crap at.
Honestly I made the decision years ago to stop sitting around watching TV and to do other things instead.
Now I can play several musical instruments (badly), speak various amounts of several foreign languages (well enough to get laughed at by a native) and cook some truly appaling food - not to mention being able to write awful bug riddled code in a variety of languages.
And all because I don't sit around vegetating in front of the idiot box. (I should also mention my semi alcoholism as I now also like a nice walk to the pub of an evening...)
But really once you stop watcing TV there's so much to do. Learn to fix your car, indulge your latent rubber wear fetish, have an affair, catch up on the latest teenage drug craze or even flit from garden to garden stealing underwear from washing lines. The worlds your oyster.
TV. Dumb stuff for dumb people. Or as Timothy Bleary might have said "Tune out, Turn Off, Do drop in for a cuppa".
Sky subscribers are morons. They pay to be advertised at !
Copyrights and Patents were originally put into the Constitution in order to enrich the culture. They were put there as a short-term deal to reward creation with a "limited term" monopoly, in order to keep the creator creating. But the other side of the coin is to get those creations into the public domain, so the rest of us can build on them.
We've gotten completely out of balance.
Isaac Newton (IIRC) once said, "If I have done great things, it's because I stand on the shoulders of giants." Well, in today's society, nobody's allowed to stand on those shoulders without paying the descendents, at least not in the realm of copyright.
The living have better things to do than to continue hating the dead.
Yeah but there used to be some truth to this. What happened is the US became more socialist (and fascist) and Europe become less. So I'd say we are about equal now in an economic sense. In other (non-economic) areas I would agree that America has less, not more, freedom than most of Europe. The most important indicator of economic "freedom" is taxes. How do yours compare to the US? The average American pays somewhere between 35% and 55% of his income in taxes. In other words 1/3 to 1/2 of his work day is spent as slave labor for the government. I don't know if I would really call that "freedom". I guess we should all just move to the Special Administrative Region of Hong Kong. Cantonese is a tough langauge though. Maybe the hardest in the world.
Funny that you talk about slavery. IP is slavery. It's ownership of something you have no right to own. You want your information to be your slave to benefit nobody else unless they pay you. You can get paid for your work by making a contract. When you get paid, you should completely forget about it. Your desire for control is the real slavery here. Nobody wants you to give your work away against your will. That's just the strawman that all of you like to throw out to confuse the arguement. I just think you should work under the same conditions that I do. I get paid for work performed. I don't get any special entitlements for the next 75 years. After which the buyer is free to do with it whatever he/she wants to do. Why should you be granted any special privileges? Are you claiming that you should get these because of your creative "genius"? Sounds pretty arrogant to me, and gives some backing to the backlash against "intelligencia" that some countries suffer from. It's no wonder we won't elect qualified poeple to office. The eggheads among us are just too arrogant. Your claim to ownership comes from government edict. It is NOT derived from any natural or inalienable right. And yes, it is our culture. The producers are just (mis?)appropriating it for profit. All well and good. They're wecome to it, but they(the producers) do not own it in any way. They deserve no exclusivity.
What?
First, TV is mostly crap as others have said. Second, who do you think the people are that are actually implementing the broadcast flag? They are normal people who make mistakes. Third, this whole thread of posts serves to show that no matter what the fat cats do, we can still do what we want because we are just as smart (actually a little smarter) than the people running the show. During Prohibition, did people actually stop drinking? Hell no! They can't stop us from doing what we want. Some people might go to jail for it, but they can't put everyone in jail. Fuck, 'em we always win as long as we try. Small changes lead to global revolutions.
Most Disney movies are based on old legends, fairy tales, and historical events. Those are pieces of my culture as much as they are Disney's. Content producers have the constitutional right to a limited protection of their works, after which they are expected to revert to the public domain.
If you mistakenly believe otherwise, then I hope you demand that the publisher of your "collected works of William Shakespeare" track down his rightful, legal heir and fork over the appropriate royalties. Or that Disney pays Hans Christian Andersen's family for "The Little Mermaid". Or that Mel Gibson found someone to pay for the rights to Jesus's life story. Otherwise, you're a corporatist hypocrite who doesn't really understand the "intellectual property" rights you seem to be in love with.
Dang, writing that made me feel dirty. I'm a pretty staunch conservative, but this idea that recent works based on old public domain offerings have some natural right to be privatized for the rest of eternity is just plain bizarre.
Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
Just don't buy any HDTV equipment with the DRM crap--reject DRM by making BestBuy eat it. If you must write letters, just tell your congressional reps that you aren't interested in the new schedule of planned obsolescence.
If you are on the artists/producers' sides, then start looking for a way to reach your audiences sans the traditional middlemen. Think about how JibJab and SouthPark got started. At the point people start waving distibution contracts in your face, you have a choice to walk away and take money directly from advertisers and/or consumers. Technologies like BitTorrent are comparatively free, and effectively superior to Hollywood distribution. On one hand they promise to make you wildly rich and famous, but on the other hand they rip you off worse than a scratch-off lottery ticket. Just say no.
--- Nothing clever here: move along now...
...but the broadcast flag requires that the recording be deleted after a proscribed interval.
Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
All this is true, of course. I think Capitalism can have a democratizing influence,through fostering social mobility. "new money" parvenus get access to the corridors of power, which in a monarchy or aristocracy is usually restricted to the "select group".
That's it...
Sitting around and doing essentially nothing is one option.
Another option is to actually get involved and start fighting for what you believe in:
http://www.freeculture.org/
http://www.eff.org/
http://www.publicknowledge.org/
Stop watching television.
My favorite button on the remote control is the big red one in the corner. It's marked "power" for a reason, ya know.
I did this years ago, and my life is enormously enriched because of it. I'm happy to say I'm once again shocked by what appears on TV.
Indeed: neither the constitution, nor the copyright laws require copyright owners to make access to copyrighted works "easy." However, from a technical standpoint it only takes one person to slog through the hard work of figuring out how to access a protected work and then write document describing the method to everyone else.
The constitutional issue present is whether the government can impose prior restraint on that speech (which is exactly what the DMCA does), and whether computer software is, for the purposes of the 1st ammendment, protected speech. The US Supreme Court has yet to rule, however at least on the 2nd half of the argument, the 9th circuit had ruled that computer software was speech in the first ammendment sense. The 9th circuit was set to re-hear the question en banc when that case (this one was about export regulations on encryption software) was made moot.
In short, no, you do not have the right to insist that copyrighted works be made "easy" for you to use. But I believe that the copyright holders do not have the right to prevent anyone from documenting the steps necessary to access their works. And if I am right, then any copy restriction regime is nothing more than a waste of everyone's time.
(IANAL, of course, but I play one in my mind)
Even if you do come up with a good solution for when they turn the flag on, its only going to work until either your machine dies, or when you have to be able to conform with the drm/flag just to see your content at all.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
You want GNU Radio.
Oh, and that's just one congress-critter. Doesn't one need a majority?
This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
iptables provides all the protection that IP needs.
Ok, so computers tend to be more interactive, but I couldn't pass up the joke. I don't get cable TV either. As for computer time, I spend a decent amount of each day reading online, including the various classics which have slipped into public domain. And it's amazing how many books you get read waiting for websites to load...
This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
The problem is that powerful copyright holders have extended the "applicable laws" more than once, retroactively. The problem is that "applicable laws" have ceased to protect the public from IP hoarding.
What right do you have to claim it as "your" culture?
The right to sing a combination of notes, or to write a combination of words, is inherent. The people chose to give that right up in the form of a temporary monopoly called copyright, in exchange for more and better creativity. Specifically, copyright laws enabled a professional creative class that doesn't require private sponsorship, which is a very good thing so far, but the people did not sign away the right to sing those notes or write similar words forever.
One thing you need to understand is that copyright also prohibits anybody else from independently coming up with that series of notes later. That "anybody else" might in fact have released the song into "our culture" for free, but we've chosen to lock that part of "our culture" up temporarily to encourage the first comer.
[...] your attitude smells of slavery. ou want to force the IP creators to give away thier creations so that you do not have to expend any effort in acquiring it your self.
First of all, you need to apologize to slaves for trivializing their plight. If copyright was not protecting your livelihood, you can switch to another job that you can do. Slaves have no such choice, so don't even begin to compare software engineers or musicians without copyright to slavery. (No, it doesn't even "smell" of it.)
Secondly, I see no such sentiment in the post you are responding to. The complaint seems specifically directed at the "ones with complete contempt for the notion of the public domain, who have repeatedly bought extensions to the duration of copyright". I think we're talking about people who want to retroactively extend copyright, which is in its moral essence refusing to uphold their end of the deal.
Finally, speaking specifically to the software engineer, the public will derive zero benefit from your software after a certain time period (depending on the nature of your work, of course, but particularly if the sources are closed). Thus, it's not in the public's interest to protect your work for that long. We'd like it to be somewhat useful, for some time, in the public domain, in exchange for that protection. A balance needs to be struck so you will be encouraged to create, but it's not fair to expect to profit for as long as your creation is useful.
If you prefer to "compile a little longer", of course it works on Gentoo as well - which makes sense, since the goal for the living room should be an optimized, fanless PVR. (Of course, the ultimate challenge is porting this to a Mac mini with some USB or FireWire dongle receiver...)
So come July, (if the EU is spared from software patents - heed the call of your alpha geeks and join the campaign... Europeans now need all the help they can get to continue providing a refuge for otherwise patent-encumbered projects) chances are that the source is here to stay.
Just try and get a compatible card, i.e. one with open source drivers.
An American VDR site can be found at HoochVDR (need to register to see the forums), while the bulk of the discussion goes on at the VDR Portal - much of it is in German, but scrolling down the page, the International (i.e. "English only") section is not hard to find...
No, at least in this case, it's not the device manufacturers' fault. They have no legal choice but to comply with this FCC regulation. If you want to boycott the responsible parties, then boycott Hollywood film studios.
Share and Enjoy: 09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0
Damn right... I don't hold with none of this Atkins rheotoric. You'll have to pry my carbohydrates from my dead and stiffening hand.
And honestly, don't circuses (circii? {ducks}) make most people happy? You know, except for the animals and the carnies...
This sig has absolutely no significance and serves only to take up screen space and waste the time of the reader.
What geek is really worried about the broadcast flag when we already know it's only a matter of time before it's cracked?
Me? I must confess to recently getting CATV but only because it was a cheap adder over cable net access. I could drop it at any time - most the stuff I watch is actually OTA and with my HD card it'll be better OTA than on cable. I also think OTA would get even better if people would stop paying for television.
The Supreme Court has defined "limited" as "unlimited". So the public loses.
This may not be a popular point of view, but the simplest way to avoid dealing with this problem is to simply stop, walk away, and don't watch broadcast TV.
I'm not some hippy-liberal-TV-is-evil type - it's just too much of a PITA for me to deal with commercials, broadcast flags, tivo hacking, paying for cable, etc. If I want to watch something, I either wait until it comes out on DVD, download it via bittorrent, or simply find something better to do.
TV's just not that exciting, if you compare it to real-world entertainment. Play some paintball/airsoft, go hiking, do martial arts, go clubbing and meet girls, etc. I haven't watched broadcast TV in about three years, not from dogma, but just because the cost/benefit doesn't cut it anymore.
vcrs. other than that, nothing. the dmca destroyed fair use rights.
Okay, Mr. Feynman. Ever opened the window of a car doing 130MPH? How about 15000MPH? Care to ride on a space shuttle launch with a hole of that size closed by a jacket? Do you have any idea of the kinds of forces you would be dealing with? Even on airplanes traveling a mere 550 mph people have been sucked out to their deaths due to a hole in the fuselage. And these people weighed a lot more than a jacket.
I am not a physicist (IANAP) either, but I did take high school and college physics. At the speeds she seemed to be traveling through the planetary atmosphere I have to even wonder why the jacket did not just burn up. Maybe it was made of some super-duper material. It would have been pulled/sucked out by the huge pressure difference (even a shop-vac could probably have grabbed it), by friction from the atmosphere, or even by the huge g-forces (inertial changes) with the accelerations and maneuvers she was doing.
Quite an experience to live in fear, isn't it? That's what it is to be a slave.
Yeah, it's really awful that people can continue to benifit from thier creations for so long. IP should not go into the public domain untill the copyright holders chose for it to or the applicable law forces it to.
What right do you have to claim it as "your" culture? Did you create it? Did you exert a single creative impulse to make it come into being? No, it was the copyright holders. Sure many of them did not actually create the material either but the material's creator gave them the copyright in exchange for, what they considered, fair compensation. You have no right to stand there demanding free access to the IP that someone else created on the basis that it is "your culture". What arrogance!
I create plenty of IP as I am a software engineer and your attitude smells of slavery. You want to force the IP creators to give away thier creations so that you do not have to expend any effort in acquiring it your self. That amounts to the producers becomeing the slaves of the consumers and that is wrong.
Slaves my ass. You want to know what right we have to it? We ALLOW you as a society a certain amount of protection for created work. We let you HAVE that time to profit from your work with the UNDERSTANDING that after a certain amount of time that work transfers into the public domain.
That way we encourage people to create, and grow the pool of content available to everyone. So the right we have to expect that work to go into the public domain is the EXACT same right you think you have to that work.
But hey, that's fine, if you don't want your work to go into the public domain. Consider the agreement null and void. Now you have NO claim to ownership and anyone can use anything you do at anytime for any reason.
Learn the facts spanky. IP laws ONLY exist in the context of that agreement. Content creators are granted a limited time of monopoly in exchange for that content becoming the property of all after a certain amount of time.
You don't OWN a certain sequence of notes, words, or whatever, EXCEPT via that agreement. It's not yours by any natural law, so get the fuck over yourself. How arrogant? How dare you think you deserve unlimited protection on something that isn't yours to begin with.
And BTW I'm an engineer too, who the fuck cares. That adds not one iota of authority to your post.
I'm the big fish in the big pond bitch.
I just use a Dazzle Hollywood DV bridge. I appears to my machine as a DV camcorder. It takes a video input signal and converts it to raw DV. I can do with the result what I wish. I generally use it for recording stuff from my DirecTiVo and burning DVDs from the DV. $DEITY bless iMovie, iDVD and my PowerBook.
I bought it originally to keep using my 8mm video camera instead of buying an $800 (at the time) DV camcorder. I've found tons of other uses for the thing now.
The Master (Angelo Rossitto) in Mad Max Beyond Thunderdome, "Not shit, energy!"
Broadcast Flag to be introduced in 5 months. Broadcast Flag to be circumvented in 5 months. Need I say more?
This article on LuminousVoid. should be of interest. It's a blog of the Broadcast Flag oral arguments.
"The CTEA [Copyright Term Extension Act]extended the term of protection by 20 years for works copyrighted after January 1, 1923. Works copyrighted by individuals since 1978 got "life plus 70" rather than the existing "life plus 50". Works made by or for corporations (referred to as "works made for hire") got 95 years. Works copyrighted before 1978 were shielded for 95 years, regardless of how they were produced."
And thus, the reason why I cannot sell my bootleg Mickey shirts for another few decades. :)
--Teechur007
Tangential comment:
Q. what do you do if the only entertainment you can get comes with costs/restrictions that you consider unreasonable?
A. make your own entertainment.
I'm not kidding; if you stop watching TV and whatnot, then you'll suddenly find you have a TON of free time. Mass-market entertainment works because it allows you to pass a great deal of time that would otherwise be boring.
The thing is, there are lots of things you -- yes, YOU -- have always meant to do, but never felt like you had time for. If you can't motivate yourself to do those things when you're bored (i.e., when you would normally watch TV) then consider the possibility that you don't really want to do them...and if you usually watch TV when you're too tired to do anything else, then go to bed.
If you stick with the plan, soon you'll find yourself feeling like your life is full, because you'll be filling in the gaps with things that genuinely entertain you, in a way that TV never can.
That means that even if the CRTC doesn't create similar rules, most TVs will respect the flag anyway.
Each country gets the leaders they deserve. US is mostly a redneck country, and the ones who aren't suffer by consequence.
The AACS key is NOT 0xF606EEFD628B1CA427BEA93A9CA9773F
Why did the designer do it? Well, I think we would assume that it's for the desiner's own use. Necessity is the mother of invention, and there won't be much invention going around. Since it's a hardware kludge, it's very unlikely that it will ever be detected during testing. Even if an external body must approve of the design, it's unlikely this specific quirk will be detected. The designer will be able to buy one of these devices and modify it.
But would the designer share their knowledge with a friend? This is what The Public (tm) would want. The designer may even realize that their company could take a larger share of the market by "leaking" information about the kludge. The designer could certainly help their company.
But, then, the sudden swing in sales would alert someone that something's not right. Eventually they would find those same instructions online, trace down the people who could have inserted such a backdoor, fire them, and probably sue them for breach of contract.
So, even if such a backdoor were to exist, the only way it would be known is if it's a product that's already obsolete (therefore, cannot create a new demand that will trigger alarms) or if the secret kludge is very well guarded - in which case we call it an "engineering prototype."
Has there been a consumer technology "lock" that hasn't been broken?
I sleep well at night knowing that people much smarter than me, and with much more time, are already working on a hack.
...having a TV tuner that recognises the IETF's RFC on the Evil Bit?
It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
The more you tighten your grip, Tarkin, the more star systems will slip through your fingers.
-- Princess Leia
This is the same industry who's copy protection for CD audio data over digital is to have two bits set. Turn those bits off and you can copy all you want over TOSLINK.
This is the same industry who let the CSS decryption code leak out.
This is essentialy the same industry who tries to copy protect XBOX and PS2 games, only to have $10 chips start showing up a week after the machines come out, or, better yet, loading a save game file that creates a FTP server you can log in to by way of a buffer overflow in a font package.
I don't think we have anything to worry about here, folks.
Let them make their piddly little broadcast flag. Give it a week and you will see a story here on Slashdot that says, "HD Broadcast Flag stripped from content with 2 lines of Pearl."
Nope, Koala Bear.
Yep, Sealab.
People won't refuse to buy these DRM enabled devices, but they will refuse to pay more than they are worth, which will be a lot less once they are forced to disable functionality.
"Buy this equipment at this price or don't watch TV at all." Do you really think the American sheeple would be willing to do without TV?
You're one of thoes idiots that likes TV so much that you PAY for it
No, I'm not much of a fan of TV. I like the Internet, and with many local monopoly high-speed Internet providers, a TV subscription comes at no additional charge with an Internet access agreement. Are you still on dial-up? Or how much did you pay for a plot of land within a DSL serviced area?
You act as if it's such a cut an dry scenario. It seems to me when I go to the voting booth, even after extensive research, that it comes down to whether I want it in the ass or elsewhere.
TV does not corrupt on its own. If our generation survived growing up watching TV, the next will be fine too.
Oh, and get used to remodeling without being able to leave any tools or anything outside the little boundary of whatever room you are working in, and all at least 1m off the ground. It's either that or remodel at night while your wife tells you NOT TO WAKE THE BABIES!
"...say to yourself "well, perhaps I should start a task that I normally don't have time for, and see how it goes."
Heck, that's how I ended up remodeling my bathroom..."
Heck, that's how I got my kids in the first place! ;)
--
dman123 forever!
Filtering out the -1s and 0s since 1999.
A sufficiently large majority is ignorant and/or apathetic of the matter.
Most people see television as incidental entertainment, rather than a civil liberty worthy of a crusade.
The REAL jabber has the user id: 13196
What you do today will cost you a day of your life
Obviously you don;t see the big pictue, allow me to explain why this quote came up.
The parent mentioned that (and I paraphrase) as long as the rest of the country sat around snd watched (because it had nothing to do with them...yet) nothing would change, this quote says much more than its obvious meaning, you do more to trivialize it by narrowing its application than I did by sharing it. Also do you think the DVD thing is the only thing this broadcast flag can handle? It can have applications, such as disabling the 'manual skip commercial' features of future tivo-like systems, how about a flag that won;t allow you to change the channel when a certain commercial comes on, (ok this might be exxageration, but it makes a point), also the phrase shows how thinking 'well this is only happening in the USA, so fuck the yanks', when in reality, it will proably be adopted (perhaps by financial force) by other countries as well.
The words of the phrase itself do not apply, but the meaning behind it applies very much so.
I detest when such great quotes are marginalized.
Someone asked me the difference between ignorance and apathy, I told them I don't know and I don't care.
Is the EFF involved, they need to be.
The EFF brought the original suit against the FCC.
Vino, gyno, and techno -Bruce Sterling
Yeah, it's really awful that people can continue to benifit from thier creations for so long. IP should not go into the public domain untill the copyright holders chose for it to or the applicable law forces it to.
It enters the public domain the instant that it is published. It is in the public domain, with copy restrictions. When copyright expires, then it still is in the public domain, but the restrictions are lifted.
I create plenty of IP as I am a software engineer and your attitude smells of slavery.
If copyright was abolished tomorrow, there wouldn't be slavery. It would not necessarily be profitable to be an IP creator, but it wouldn't be slavery. You'd have the option to stop trying to live off IP sales and enter another profession. I'm not saying that it should be eliminated, but that if it were, it wouldn't be slavery. I object to all the people that object to progress because if you mechanize widget making, all the widget makers will be unemployed. Whether it is IP creators or widget makers, I don't accept the "but think of all the people that will be put out of work" excuse. If that worked, we'd still have oil lamps because flashlights would have put all the lamp makers out of business...
Learn to love Alaska
on as many VHS tapes as I can get. The government/RIAA/MPAA/etc can't control what I tape on my trusty old Panasonic Omnivision VCR from 1986. Sure, it's not HD ready and can't backup to a hard drive, but that's nothing a good AV card can't handle.
Now if I could only learn how to get the clock to stop flashing 12:00...
First off Disclaimer: I am a Dean fan but i'm not saying he's worth anything or the real thing etc
He raised money without using corporate donors and advocated breaking up media monopolies (His interview with Tim Russert during the primaries). The media cremated him and there was nothing we could do about it. My point being even despite people being willing to fund something that they 'perceive' (rightly or wrongly) to be better , the chances of them being able to get away with it are negligible. Viva le corporate power.
Sorry for the post being somewhat incoherent
I don't believe anyone buys a movie based on the fact that in 20 years the copyright will expire.
Not anymore they don't. In fact, most people no longer understand that copyright is an artificial right granted by the government "for a limited time, to promote useful arts and sciences." Most people think it is a natural right, that all people should always have, and always did. Anyone planning on buying or selling works using the copyright system, however, should have a reasonable expectation that the rules will not change every few years. In fact, if you asked most publishing houses in the U.S. when they realistically expect their copyrights to expire, I'll bet most would say, "never."
And they may be right.
I just hope we lose SG-1 BEFORE it goes downhill and everyone remembers it for what it was until now and not for the bad last season nobody really liked like so many other shows.
Linux is not Windows
I stand by our proud tradition of thumbing our noses at our government, poking fun at our ratlike leaders and ignoring laws and any other rules that I don't agree with. This is what makes me an American.
Amen!
Though I always thought he looked more like a mokey...
i'd hit it so hard, if you pulled me out you'd be the king of britain [bash.org]
As someone said down below, eventually your cheap made-in-china DVR is going to break down and you'll have to get one with a broadcast flag built into it. I don't know why we continue to trade with china, but I guess our leaders don't read the fucking papers.
Anyway, my point is that once a few Jimmy Homeowners go out and spend $10k on a home theater that won't let them record TV shows like their old VCR used to do, then the resulting backlash of returns and freakouts will force your regulatory bodies to change their stance. No matter how you look at it, if people can't do with a DVR exactly what they used to do with their VCRs, then shit will hit fans.
Alternatively, you could wait for a few months and do one if the following:
a) get a mod chip
b) update the firmware
c) get one with a bypass
---
ECHELON is a government program to find words like bomb, jihad, plutonium, assassinate, and anarchy.
Seriously though, if you can play it back, it can be cracked some way or another. Just like Macrovision's lame CSS system that was decrypted approximately 3 days after it's release, this will follow the same pattern. Meaning that your average idiot will merely have a greater difficulty recording his episode of Big Brother (or whatever crap you watch over there), and the people who consistently hack this kind of protection will just find a way around it.
It's times like these that make me glad I live in Russia.
Gosh, I thought that's what made you a prison-rape victim. Or President.
It's in a DVR manufacturer's best interest if they make their system relatively easy to modchip because that would increase their sales VS a compeditor that does not.
But to answer you question, the "win" was in breaking free of corporate media enslavement. The RIAA and MPAA do not yet regulate hot monkey love with your wife. That said, it is unfortunate for everyone else involved that your wife is not MILF.
Er, Speakeasy DSL.
What do you suggest for people who 1. geographically can't get DSL (or choose to pay for a cell line rather than a land line), 2. can't tolerate 99.odd+ percent of TV programming, and 3. can't tolerate dial-up speeds? Do you suggest moving house?
How or where can I find out if the Toshiba RD-XS32 recorder (most of them built in 2004) will have this DRM technology? I don't want to assume that because it is no longer being manufactured it doesn't have restrictions in place. In the owner's manual, it breifly mentions the inability to duplicate certain copy-protected DVD's but does not mention anything about HDD to DVD restrictions. Thanks for any insight.
Homer no function beer well without.
You folks all seem to be be keeping your eyes on the magician assistant's short skirt, and not watching his hands. Look at 90% of the posts here... Broadcast flag? Why just buy loads of HDTV equipment now (which ignores the flag), while it's legal!
HDTV has an abysmally slow take-up in the US. For most folks cable and DVD quality is good enough. So what do they do? They bring out the broadcast flag boogyman, and get everyone to buy HDTV equipment before the deadline, solving the chicken and egg problem.
Duh.
Can You Say Linux? I Knew That You Could.
The issue is that if a representative is going to vote on a hundred different issues, people are going to vote based on whatever is most important to them. No matter how well you research the issue, if you are going to vote for a candidate, are you going to vote based on their position on health care, or their position on the FCC flag?
This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
Of course its creepy. You hang out with friends to socialize. You watch TV to disengage from reality. There's no point in watching TV with other people unless you discuss the program afterwards.
TV exists as a form of narcotic. They have done studies which show physiological and brain activity changes from watching it. When I get back home from my crappy job, it is the easiest way to zone out or change my mood. Reading's nice, but sometimes your just too braindead to enjoy it. Its healthier than getting drunk or taking drugs. But don't discount its effects or undesirable consequences because its not cocaine or alcohol.
There is no America. There is no democracy. There is only IBM and AT&T and DuPont, Dow, General Electric, and Exxon
Get a decent PC, make sure it's quiet enough, install Linux, then install MythTV.
:-) Both cards do not bother looking at the broadcast flag and both of them either let you watch the shows in real-time or dump them to the HDD as MPEG2 files. Air2PC is currently better at receiving digital cable, but pcHDTV is supposed to do that as well pretty soon. Both cards receive HDTV OTA with no problems.
Then either get a pcHDTV or better yet an Air2PC.
You're done.
*Or a MythTV box built from a spare CPU with an old NTSC tuner card if the TiVo box or TiVo the company dies.
http://alternatives.rzero.com/
You could always leave the country... I'm actually amazed that Americans have gone so soft as to give up their freedoms so easily. If you didn't drop out of school you might recall that people died for those freedoms. Oh well. Glad it ain't my country.
Your post certainly doesn't deserve a score of 0. To combat this, welcome to my friend's list.
you posit this course of action because you know it can't succeed.
"Selling content," when it comes to music and to some lesser extent video, is just not a viable business anymore. You can't make it significantly profitable because in order to be able to sell content you have to be able to induce scarcity - artificial scarcity, in the case of digital music.
DRM will be broken, no matter what kind of scheme is used. This leaves you with no way to control duplication other than suing your customers, which cannot continue.
The current business model of "ginormous corporation buys IP of artist for megabucks, artist gets more or less nothing after that" has to go. As for how, well... that I'm entirely unsure of.
+++ATH0
with merely "enough."
+++ATH0
Which six do you think it is?
+++ATH0
Anyone selling a Tv with just linux in it. My phone runs linux (snom.com) My router (linksys wrt54g) be nice to find a way to get my tv to run it. my VCR , I had one of thous once. they are these old devices that U put this huge bulky black plastic thing into it and it has rolls of magnetic tape inside. and it puts a crummy copy of what you hit record on on to this tape.. and the stard and ends of these tapes are crummy. Still I would buy one if it ran linux just because
Me too! I made sure to cover my windows and walls with tin-foil, then painted them and everything else with lead based paint.
Let's see those broadcasters shine their EM radiation into MY house ever again!
Would a simple $30 demodulator or some-such allow you to get around the fact that the HD-3000 only likes "antenna" connections?
Or would this be illegal in the future?
(and do I care if it would be?)
Better yet:
The emphasis on "their" is important because the people who are generally receiving the benefits of this system are clearly not the "Authors and Inventors". Further, as the parent noted, dead people certainly do not receive these benefits and would be unlikely to enjoy them much if they did.Another question that should be asked is this: Should the "exclusive Right" be restricted to the "Authors and Inventors" themselves? And does the Constitution mandate this?
All data is speech. All speech is Free.
Source. Supply a link!
The broadcast flag is a single bit. It can't possibly have 4 states! It allows or disallows rerecording. That's it!
I'm familiar with the ruling. Archiving of shows is not a right and never has been. The opinion was simply that the ability to do this did not make the video recorder an infringing device.
Yeah, those BASTARDS, selling Americans what they WANT! That's HIDEOUS!
>I get hauled into court because someone finds a
>burned copy of Corel Office Suite 8 in my
>home....
Ehh, is possession something stated as infringement in US copyright laws?
move to france? /ducks
>One thing you need to understand is that
>copyright also prohibits anybody else from
>independently coming up with that series of
>notes later.
Ehh, this might be something that is different in US copyright laws, but if you can show that you came up with it independantly it is NOT a copyright infringement. The hard part is showing that though. But if you actually do create something independantly you would not infringne. As I said, not sure if it is the same way in US copyright laws though.
I agree we should fight the broadcast flag, but the number 1 thing to remember is that the broadcast flag only applies to the US. And with the internet it is a small world we live in. We can easily acquire some other piece of hardware from another country which doesn't use the broadcast flag. If we lose the battle, the average consumer may be out of luck, but the people who do some research can easily locate an alternative device to buy.
Don't blame me, I voted for Cthulhu.
The real problem is HOW MUCH DO WE WANT TO PAY INVENTORS/CREATORS for their work.
When you get right down to it, the inventors/creators get paid very little. Corporations buy the rights and try to make as much money as possible off of the special monopoly rights. These corporations are not creative in the same sense as the original author and copyright incentives do not goad these corporations into greater creation and innovation but greater legal expertise and marketing techniques with which to protect and exploit their special assets. And this is where it really gets silly.
For example, when Sonny Bono convinced Congress to extend Mickey Mouse's copyright protection decades after the death of its creator, Walt Disney, the extra monetary incentive did not seem to have motivated Walt to create and invent new and more characters. So much for the intent of copyright law.
"Provided by the management for your protection."
1 fat ass american burning enough fuel to drive around their SUV, compared to 5 german or japanese cars [...]
There are two reasons for SUVs. One is in the cities, the other in the countryside.
In many places in the countryside you need 4-wheel drive, high clearance, and large capacity - period. The US is LARGE. It covers most of a CONTINENT. Some sections are very sparse, with unpaved roads that become mud pits in wet or snowy weather (which they may have often enough to be a major issue), pairs of ruts with take-out-the-pumpkin rocks in the middle the rest of the time. Some have narrow passages. Some have steep slopes. Some have wildly tilted roadways. You need a reliable vehicle that can traverse that, with adequate cargo capacity to supply a home with, for instance, biweekly shopping trips of 50 miles or more, and to carry tools or major appliances.
They're currently calling such vehicles Sports Utility Vehicles: "Sports" because they can be used for recreational offroading or to carry recreational equipment. But the "Utility" is why they are NECESSARY for people in the less built-up areas.
In the cities the prevalence SUVs is the unintended result of federal regulations intended to reduce fuel consumption of passenger cars. The "fleet mileage" requirements killed the station wagon and its flatbed minitruck cousin - the cargo cars of choice for large families and shopping trips - and prevented the design of a replacement vehicle as well. And it also killed anything with the power to tow a trailer. The smallest viable replacement was the next size up - the SUV. That comes under the regulations as a "truck" - the smalles of them - and doesn't count against pasenger car fleet mileage.
(The off-road suspension also helps with the horrendous condition of the freeways in many cities, due to inadequate maintainence. Interestingly, these are sometimes the result of transportation bureaucracies deliberately neglecting maintainence and construction. Sometimes to push for more budget. Sometimes - and admittedly - to try to "encourage" people to switch to mass transportation - typically in regions where the mass transportation is inadequate and/or hazardous.)
Of course many city people buy them because they're fashionable. And that has driven the design of models with comfy suspensions and other car-like rather than truck-like features that make them unsuitable for the original purpose of going on bad roads or off-road. (Off-roaders refer to these as "mall terrain vehicles".) But I'd bet that, if the laws were changed to make mass sales of a smaller, more fuel-efficient, cargo/multipassenger vehicle possible again, many of those would switch at their next vehicle replacement. (And I'd bet it would become the next fad car for those who follow trends rather than think for themselves.)
Meanwhile, killing off the SUVs would literally kill off some farms (which couldn't be served by the NEXT larger truck model due to the land conditions).
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
I asked ATI if they would be making 2 versions of their HD card.
They said that they will be making only ONE version
and that it's not their fault if Canadian broadcasters happen to use the Flag.
====== Original Reply =======
Regarding Broadcast Flag:
There will only be one version of the card produced and after the date of the Broadcast Flag institution the cards manufactured after this date will support the feature. I do not know if Canadian broadcasts will have a similar limitation.
Regards,
Rick Carman
Customer Care
ATI Technologies, Inc.
http://www.ati.com
Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
I asked ATI if they would be making 2 versions of their HD card.
They said that they will be making only ONE version
and that it's not their fault if Canadian broadcasters happen to use the Flag.
Meaning if Canadian Broadcasters happen to use the same source as provided
to American Broadcasters, Canadians will be subject to the Broadcast Flag!
====== Original Reply =======
Regarding Broadcast Flag:
There will only be one version of the card produced and after the date of the Broadcast Flag institution the cards manufactured after this date will support the feature. I do not know if Canadian broadcasts will have a similar limitation.
Regards,
Rick Carman
Customer Care
ATI Technologies, Inc.
http://www.ati.com
Obama's legacy: (N)othing (S)ecure (A)nywhere and (T)error (S)imulation (A)dministration
As they don't have any of this but get the same TV shows without half the censorship.
I can see it now, lines of cars driving up to Canuckland to buy cheap recorders that ignore US limits.
-- Tigger warning: This post may contain tiggers! --
Look forget about the 20 year number.
Let's say something is 18 years old. Can you reasonably see someone buying a movie based on that fact that in TWO years they can show it for free?
OK, forget about THAT example. There is still the point that retroactively increasing the copyright is not in the public interest. The point of granting a monoploistic copyright is to convince people to create.
Granting you more time will NOT suddenly retroactively cause you to create more art. You created it knowing exactly how much time you got as a monpoly.
If you think that right now we won't get enough IP, then fine, go ahead and increase the time protected for FUTURE IP. But there is NO valid public interest in retroactively increasing the copy right time. The creators have ALREADY been paid for that work. Worse, for anyone with the resources to hunt down copyright violations, they have already been paid INCREDIBALE amounts of cash. So effectively all you are doing is giving cash to the rich, succesfull IP creators at the expense of the rest of the population.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
1. I am a software creator. In fact I sell some game software already you arrogant little coward.
2. You are the one helping OTHER people to profit off the work of others, you whiny moron. The creators are GETTING SCREWED here. As in Beatles sell copyrights which they thought were only good for 20 years to other people, Michael Jackson buys them, and HE, not the creator is the one that profits when they get expanded. Think about it, the Beatles got HOSED on that deal - they thought it was only good for 20 years and sold it basing the price on 20 years when it was worth 50 years.
3. I am not profiting at all from the works of others - I made an investment and want it to pay off. To get it to pay off I have to work my ass off - do you know how hard it is to sell 20 year old content?
4. FInally, the most important thing any creative person can know is THAT THERE IS NOTHING NEW UNDER THE SUN. Those star trek tapes I mentioned - hate to tell you but most of them are "based" (read stolen from) Shakespeare. IP is NOT the amazing thing that non creative morons think it is. Creating IP is just another kind of work. It is valuable, hard work, but NOT infinitely so and the guy that did it should not be allowed to GOUGE the people paying for it, anymore than the Oil companies should be allowed to engage in fake shortages to drive the price up.
excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
Prediction: a broadcast flag will not be adopted by any country that uses PAL.
The gap in quality between PAL and HDTV is much less than that between NTSC and HDTV, so HDTV is a very difficult sell in these countries. Adding extra limitations would kill it stone dead. Since the U.S. implementation of the flag is specific to ATSC, there's no compatibility reason for any PAL-based equipment to support it, either.
Wow, this must have been one of the most controvertial comments in the history of slashdot. First it got modded down, then up then down then up then down again. At one point it was up to +5 funny, but not for long. It also hit -1. My initial karma score made it 3.