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Blu-Ray to Include New Copy Protection

Lord Haha writes "In an announcement (warning: links to a PDF) last night, the Blu-ray Disc Association, led by Sony, representing one of two competing high-definition DVD formats (the other being HD-DVD, led by Toshiba), stated it will simultaneously embrace digital watermarking, programmable cryptography, and a self-destruct code for Blu-ray disc players. Will this be the continuation of the trend into more and more restrictive DRM? Or something that will fade away like Betamax Tapes? Two articles on the topic can be found at Tom's Hardware and PC World."

8 of 536 comments (clear)

  1. Death of Blue Ray before it even got started by Zed2K · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If Blue Ray requires the device to be connected to the internet then that will spell the death of it before it even is sold anywhere. Same thing for HD-DVD. People will not want or be able to run internet connections to their tv area just to be able to play hidef dvd's. If people have to do anything more than plug it into the wall for power and plug the player into the tv and/or receiver then it won't sell.

  2. Not buyin' it by Stanistani · · Score: 4, Insightful

    >a self-destruct code for Blu-ray disc players

    That's waaaay over the line.

    Not gonna buy it.

    You think I'd let a mistake by some techie or program destroy a few hundred bucks of my hard-earned money?

    I'm tired of people treating me like a thief, when I never pirate ANYTHING!

    I've got lots of CDs and DVDs I already bought in the 80s and 90s, and I can always just walk along the street and whistle (or daydream).

  3. Follow the Porn by Dhaos · · Score: 5, Insightful

    All these new systems will fail for one reason: Porn.

    Porn producers are very realistic, and very saavy. Do you think people are going to buy "Buttbandits 23" if they know that every time they queue it up, some manufacturer is getting a record of it?? Even those without tinfoil hats know this is a bad idea...

    My prediction is that the pornographers will use a version of the high-def discs WITHOUT the phone-home feature, or will stick to DVDs.

    Pornography: Saving Western Civilization since 1826.

    --
    It's not what you know, or even who you know- It's how many people recognize your damn .sig
  4. Re:Self-Destruct? Not likely by cbrocious · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Besides, what's to prevent a hacker from filtering out this self-destruct code from the downstream content anyway?"

    I'd be willing to bet a month's salary that they are going to use public-key cryptography with a bigass key to protect it. RSA2048 will keep anyone from screwing with it. Hard-code the SSL public key, and the only way you're going to launch a man-in-the-middle attack against it is by rewriting the key.

    --
    Disconnect and self-destruct, one bullet at a time.
  5. Re:Self-Destruct? Not likely by tgrimley · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Even worse: what about when hackers can start sending these self destruct packets themselves. Imagine how pissed you'd be when someone "destroys" your dvd player!

  6. Re:True costs of piracy? by shmlco · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm pretty sure you forgot #4 freeloaders. Or the why should I pay for it when I can get it free crowd. (Also includes the "I'm entitled to it just because..." crowd.)

    --
    Any sect, cult, or religion will legislate its creed into law if it acquires the political power to do so.
  7. Re:Point-Counterpoint: I say let 'em crash by Todd+Knarr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    It'll be worse, the retailers will get in on it. They'll be getting all sorts of returns from people who don't have an Internet connection. Parents whose player doesn't work after little Johnny unbeknownst to them tried to play a disc his friend at school gave him. People whose player got "self-destructed" because somebody at a content provider mis-keyed a serial number. And people won't be happy about having to pay restocking or repair fees when they didn't do anything to break the player. A few consumer complaints later, Blu-Ray players will be anathema to retailers who can't afford to eat the cost of all those returns.

  8. Re:I remember this... by Maxo-Texas · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That is EXACTLY what I was thinking. This is just DiVX all over again.

    And just like divx- when they decide the market is going to BluRay2, they just stop validating your disks and they become unplayable. (like divx became unplayable for those who forgot).

    --
    She was like chocolate when she drank... semi-sweet at first and then increasingly bitter.