Audio Watermark Web Spider Starts Crawling
DippityDo writes "A new web tool is scanning the net for signs of copyright infringement. Digimarc's patented system searches video and audio files for special watermarks that would indicate they are not to be shared, then reports back to HQ with the results. It sounds kind of creepy, but has a long way to go before it makes a practical difference. 'For the system to work, players at multiple levels would need to get involved. Broadcasters would need to add identifying watermarks to their broadcast, in cooperation with copyright holders, and both parties would need to register their watermarks with the system. Then, in the event that a user capped a broadcast and uploaded it online, the scanner system would eventually find it and report its location online. Yet the system is not designed to hop on P2P networks or private file sharing hubs, but instead crawls public web sites in search of watermarked material.'"
So if the watermarks are public, they can be identified and scrubbed before posting?
I have a Web Newspaper rolled up, waiting on it.
"No freeman shall ever be debarred the use of arms." -- Thomas Jefferson
Because, yeah, I store all my potential copyright-infringing materials on my public web server.
Check out the cave on the east side of lake Hylia. Strange and wonderful things live in it.
A better way. Put a bunch of legitimate sound clips out on the internet, but change it to have the watermark. Make sure your files get spread all over the place. A lot of false positives would render this useless.
And on a more sick note, you could find the "I am browsing gay porn" wav file and modify it. Can you imagine the poor schmuck who has to go review each report to see if it is true?
See my journal for slashdot ID's by year. Mine created in 2005. http://slashdot.org/journal/289875/slashdot-ids-by-year
Does it respect robots.txt?
Does it run on Linux?
Nice theory, but in reality the watermark will be copyrighted so they will sue you for copyright infringement anyway. :)
I dont read
No wait... I think I've got it... Isn't it called a "computer"?