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DVD Hack Delays DVD Audio

An anonymous reader noted an article that is running over on CNN that is discussing the news that DVD Audio will be delayed while manufacturers attempt to implement strong encryption to prevent the same thing from happening to DVD Audio that happened to DVD Video. They are still operating under a fundamentally flawed assumption: if we can decrypt it to watch it, someone will figure out a way to decrypt it to rip it. The delays hurt their profits as well as irritate their customers that want new products. Its quite frusterating.

404 comments

  1. Why DVD Audio? by Splork · · Score: 3

    Not 100% on topic, but:

    What exactly -is- DVD Audio supposed to provide that a CD don't? 5.1 surround concert CDs? 10 hours of music? More expensive players?

    just curious..

    1. Re:Why DVD Audio? by cybaea · · Score: 1

      Why? Possibly to obsolete your old equipment so you have to pay the manufacturers $$$ for new stuff???

      --
      Hi!
    2. Re:Why DVD Audio? by verybusy · · Score: 1

      It's definitely more expansive players and... and... more music on a disk. Not everyone needs them though (including me)...

    3. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 5
      DVD-A will be 96kHz at 24 bits per sample. This means that the signal amplitude will have 256 times the resolution of CD audio, and the sampling errors will be pushed further out into the ultrasonic range.

      -jwb

    4. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Rob_u · · Score: 1

      On the other hand, some of us can use more music per disk. I'd love not to need to switch disks three times during a single piece of music.

    5. Re:Why DVD Audio? by jejones · · Score: 1

      With any luck, it should be possible to trade time for fidelity--so if you want your Ring Cycle, or somebody reading War and Peace, on one disc, you can get it.

    6. Re:Why DVD Audio? by DJ+Cricket · · Score: 1

      So basically, we get more music, that's outside the range of the human ear.

    7. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't forget the ability to put all instruments on separate tracks, to be able to change their levels and equalization separatly (or output em to separate speakers, talk about simulating live music. . .).

      of course i doubt that will happen anytime soon. . .

    8. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Zeni · · Score: 3

      As a Sound Engineer, CD audio quality is IMO not as good as analog. (read 1/2" 2-track) For a few reasons, 1) 16bits is not enough. I would love to see DVD audio be 24 bits. 2) Sample rate is too low. With DVD audio we can have a higher sample rate 96khz and up. I haven't been keeping up to date on the specs of DVD audio, so I 'm not sure what the bit and sample rate are going to be.
      Most likely they'll encode all those extra channels. Blech! When I listen to MUSIC, I only want 2 channels. Heh, I guess I'm a purist.
      In essense better audio quality.
      Note I use digital recording as part of my job, but just _prefer_ analog. :-)
      Gotta go to work, or I'd give a more in depth explaination.

    9. Re:Why DVD Audio? by mjackso1 · · Score: 1

      "further out into the ultrasonic range" being the point that I don't understand. Current technology already exceeds our capacity to hear. If you're sampling in 16bit/44.1kHz, sampling errors are already ultrasonic to all but the most sensitive human ears. If you can hear the sampling errors, go to a rock concert and stand near the speakers. The aliasing will never bother you again.

      Of course, if the content being sampled has a lot of REALLY high ultrasonics, then some of that may creep back into the extreme low end via aliasing, but it'd have to be very high in both frequency and amplitude.

      If you want to spend a lot of money, spend it on equipment and cables with great conductivity and shielding, and speakers with a wide flat response.

      Personally, I would like DVD audio to be the same quality as CD, and use that extra space for more music.

    10. Re:Why DVD Audio? by jyang · · Score: 1

      Every 10 years recording companies have to get to a new format to make themselves relevent in Wall Street's equation of :

      P/E ratio >= Growth Rate or else.

      So now the "Greatest Pianists of 20th Century" CD series has to be re-issued in DVD huh?

      MP3 rules!

      --
      --- You make things foolproof, and they'll find you a damn fool.
    11. Re:Why DVD Audio? by blazer1024 · · Score: 2

      Well, it won't provide more music. Both record companies and the musicians are happy with the amount of music a CD can hold. They'd much rather sell three CD's with 13 or 14 songs than one with 45 songs. For one, nobody's going to pay $40 to listen to one or two songs they like, not sure of the others, so you can potentially make more money by selling it in smaller quantities. So, the logical answer is what everyone else is saying. Higher sampling rates, better sound depth, etc. But I don't really think they want larger music capacity. Except maybe in some situations.

    12. Re:Why DVD Audio? by AugstWest · · Score: 1

      Capacity to hear doesn't necessarily mean capacity to absorb. Music doesn't just come in through your ears, sounds aren't entirely processed by hearing. I personally would rather have as much of the sound originally created as possible.

      Besides, the vast majority of musical releases are less than an hour long anyway. The only real benefit I can see is getting double albums on a single medium, bos sets on a single medium, etc. Big deal, they'll still cost just as much.

    13. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 5
      Studies have shown that the presence of frequencies above the usually audible range (20Hz-22kHz) help the listener to locate the source of the sound. This is depite the fact that most people can't even hear above 18kHz.

      When a CD is recorded today, the recording process has to ensure that no frequency above 22.05kHz is recorded, else there will be nasty alising problems. This is acheived using a "brick wall" filter, which is a very high order low-pass filter whose -3dB point is at 22.05 kHz. Therefore all information above 22.05kHz is lost, and this is the information that helps the listener locate the sound. With a 96kHz sampling rate, this filter could be moved all the way up to 45.5kHz, well out of any useful range. Better still, it could be moved to 30kHz with a lower order, thereby introducing les noise into the audible range.

      I do tend to agree with your point about getting good speakers. But once you get all the good equipment, you start to really hate the CD audio format.

      -jwb

    14. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh. You're either listening to classical music or some early Rush. =) ALG

    15. Re:Why DVD Audio? by general_re · · Score: 2

      It's definitely more expansive players and... and... more music on a disk. Not everyone needs them though (including me)...

      Yeah, so instead of shelling out $15-$20 for an album with 12 songs, 10 of which are shit, you can part with twice as much for a disk with 80 songs, 78 of which are shit....

      And this is progress?

      --
      ABSURDITY, n.: A statement or belief manifestly inconsistent with one's own opinion.
    16. Re:Why DVD Audio? by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      As a Sound Engineer, CD audio quality is IMO not as good as analog.

      Speaking as a consumer, CD audio quality is better than any consumer grade analog option (and 1/2" 2-track isn't an option for the consumer, for that matter 1/4" 2-track open reel isn't a serious option). That is all that matters. Since I can't hear over 16kHz anyway (and most people can't hear over 18kHz), increasing the sample size or sampling frequency seems like a complete waste of time and money for a consumer product. Maybe it would be worthwhile for studio grade products, but I can't see anyone but a serious audiophile buying one for at home.

    17. Re:Why DVD Audio? by TheMCP · · Score: 1
      Well, it has several potential benefits, problems, and purposes.

      First, it makes for more expensive players which are - guess what - a new format! The industry loves new formats because it means everyone has to go out and buy all over again. That seems to be the big part of why DVD is here in the first place, because there's no money in VCR's any more because everyone already has one.

      Second, it can provide higher audio fidelity. However, how many of us really care? Yes, I know that there are some people who want higher quality audio than CD, but most of us can't really hear the difference beyond 16bit 44khz audio.

      Third, you could pack a lot more audio on one disc. Beyond the apparent uses for operas and audio books that were mentioned in an earlier comment, this doesn't have a lot of use. Most albums are 8-15 songs primarily because albums have been about that length for a long time - CD albums took after vinyl. The whole pricing structure is built mostly around that you pay a certain amount of money and get a certain amount of music. If you were to go to, say, Madonna and tell her that now to sell a $15 album she has to produce five times as much music, she'd laugh at you. Her contract no doubt gives some parameters to what an album consists of, and it's nothing like the amount of audio a DVD could potentially hold.

      I remember J.Michael Straczynski saying on usenet that the reason videos of TV shows always have one or two episodes is because if they put more on, the royalties would start making the product too expensive. I expect the same would hold true for DVD audio.

    18. Re:Why DVD Audio? by bonehead · · Score: 1

      I'll have to agree that, given high quality equipment, anolog recording produces superior sound to digital. It only makes sense, since music is analog to begin with, it can do nothing but lose quality in the conversion.

      However, that argument relies on the assumption that you have access to very high quality equipment. As far as consumer grade equipment is concerned, I think CD audio provides better end results. If you want to purchase audio recordings in an anolog format today, you have one choice, the cassette. Playing a cassette on anything but high-end equipment produces a nasty hiss.

      So, while you're technically right about analog producing better quality recordings than digital, the unfortunate reality is that in the consumer market (the guy who just wants to buy an album at Best Buy and listen to it) the current digital products offer a better result than the current analog products.

      But this is primarily due to details of the particular implementations and don't mean a thing in the broader argument of analog vs. digital.

    19. Re:Why DVD Audio? by CRB2500 · · Score: 1

      Well I just bought a turntable after 8+ years. I have a record collection that would cost too much to buy on CD and many couldn't be found on CD. You know what? They sound great. I bought a very good high output needle. Sure some of the older records that I didn't take good care of have issues but the 12 inch 45 rpm cuts sound AWSOME. Very full and detailed. My old DEVO albums, Q and A for example, are a joy to listen to.

      For the majority of people the difference that 16/44.1 vs 24/96 won't mean a thing. 24/96 is good for studios to create the best master recordings and capture the smallest detail and then mix down to 16/44.1.

      Don't believe the hype. The quality of a recording comes from the TALENT that is there in both the artist and the sound tech. Peter Gabrial's albums are wonderful examples of just awsome talent and masterful mixing. This was late 70 early 80 all analog.

      Tech is good but it will never replace talent. Everyone seems to forget the law of diminishing returns. So you double the sample rate and add eight bits to the data (the latter is more important) but what you get back is much larger sound files but performance that can only be measured by machines or people who are machines in disguise (just kidding).

    20. Re:Why DVD Audio? by pen · · Score: 1

      Of course it's progress! The disks cost almost the same to print, but you're paying twice as much! Oh wait... you're a consumer. Never mind. :)

    21. Re:Why DVD Audio? by seaportcasino · · Score: 1

      Yes, and for every 1 bit of music, there will be 4 bits of crypto to insure that Joe User doesn't even think of pirating it... Pretty sad!

    22. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Bobzibub · · Score: 1

      Add to that cheap phillips disposible mechanisms which hold the laser in place. Lots of plastic. If one checks out some of the audiophile records---they are awesome. Even with moderate equipment. Cheers, Bobzibub

    23. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Since I can't hear over 16kHz anyway (and most people can't hear over 18kHz), increasing the sample size or sampling frequency seems like a complete waste of time and money for a consumer product.

      That humans can't hear high pitched audio is irrelevent to the issue of increasing sampling frequency.

      Increasing the sampling frequency is equivalent to increasing the resolution of your video monitor. One would not argue against increased video resolution modes on the basis that they can't see up into the ultraviolet spectrum.

      Likewise, increasing the bits-per-sample is like increasing the color depth. More colors equals better pictures.

    24. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The only real benefit I can see is getting double albums on a single medium, bos sets on a single medium, etc. Big deal, they'll still cost just as much. "

      Right, but then i only have to take ONE disk with me instead of the box set, and i won't have to change disks...that would be enough for me to purchase the technology. I like so much music, that it would be MORE than worth it.

    25. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Pope · · Score: 1

      Yeah, those new House remixes are getting really silly!
      At least with vinyl you could tell when the song was gonna end! :)

      Pope

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    26. Re:Why DVD Audio? by dalroth5 · · Score: 1

      Er...just to back off and inspect from a distance for a sec...can somebody tell me whether we truly ever decided that creating a few good songs ought to make somebody a multigrillionaire? I don't think we ever did. I think Tin Pan Alley decided that for us, back when it was all about cunning wax cylinders that we couldn't make for ourselves.
      Accourse, the multigrillionaires were those record companies, until the creators of the songs got in on the act too. All that came from that was they retired early to Califrnya to get wasted, then came back when they ran out of dosh but were too old to be original any more.
      Well, we can make our own wax cylinders now, and In My Humble But Outspoken Opinion (IMHBOO) we damned well should.
      I'm for MP3s, ripped or not I don't care, just give me some minstrels, and keep 'em poor so they keep producing, just like in the (really) old days.

      --
      "We reject kings, presidents and voting. We believe in rough consensus and running code." Dave Clark, IETF
    27. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Apparently, frequencies beyond what we can hear to precision far finer than the best noise reduction. (Ultrasonics help with location, huh? I wonder who paid for the research...)

      I think it's just a ploy to make CDs obsolete. Remember repurchasing all your old LP recordings as noisy CDs? Now your kids will be repurchasing all their old favourites under DV[sic]D-Audio. How many times you think they're gonna be able to milk profits from Jim Reeves' Greatest Croons? Pbbt.

      Maybe if I could get that Jimmy Stewart Reads Winnie the Pooh I had a kid, or some of those oll Cook "Donder and Blitzen" records on DVD under NetBSD, I'd fall for it :-)

    28. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Grey · · Score: 2
      Speaking as a consumer, CD audio quality is better than any consumer grade analog option.

      There are two analog option that are superior to CD. Records (LPs), and VHS tape, both have full 20-20 frequency response and don't have digital media problems. The reason why CD are more popular is that they are way easier to operator correctly then LP, just pop in not need to clean before every use, and VHS is an expensive media to manufacture. CDs are less then $1 in volume, don't know about VHS, but Cassette tapes are about twice that, I'll assume that VHS is about 3 times, as a wild guess. I have an uncle who work in the recoding manufacture industry in the 80s even after getting new facility to manufacture CD, they where less then $1 CDN to produce and much better production quality. Tape production had serious QA problems then at his factory. Given that CDs where new then and cassettes established I doubt that it has changed much recently.

      --
      Grey (Chris Lusena)
    29. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're going to call this DVDA? Have they never read a porno video catalog? A little silly if you ask me.

    30. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Linux+Lovah · · Score: 1

      Most artist can't even fill a 72 minute disk, why should we all go out a buy DVD played for 1/10 filled disks? Really, how many double cd's are there out there? DVD Audio is not the way to go, they should use compression (like minidisc that only eliminated sounds not audible to the human ear) and fit more music on our 650-700 meg disks. Change in standard would be hard but if they are gonna do it, that should be the way to go

      --
      -- "I'd rather be dead than cool" -Kurt Cobain
    31. Re:Why DVD Audio? by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      There are two analog option that are superior to CD. Records (LPs),

      Fine if you have a cleanroom to play them in. But in reality LP's effective sound quality is ruined by the fact it is virtually impossible to keep them dust and scratch free. And unfortunately, LP's are basically a playback only media, and a dead one at that (since virtually no new content is released in that format anymore).

      and VHS tape

      If you had said Hi-8 tape, I maybe could believe that. VHS tape sounds pretty good, but I would still expect it has more hiss than CD.

    32. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Audin · · Score: 1

      Eh? You going to need new player hardware anyway. Why use compression when a vastly more dense storage format is already available? It makes even more since when the DVD-Audio player will be able to play both DVD-A and CDs...

      And remember how cheap VCR technology is now days...DVD will go the same way.

    33. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well i suppose with a little imagination one could maybe see some upstart indie label offering perhaps an evenings entertainment from dance and electronic bands. not all musicians get off playing 3 1/2 minute songs just so they than market them for radio. imagine what F.Zappa would have done with all that space.imagine what Eno will do. Or imagine putting on an extra long instrumental as a sountrack to the movie of your day(kinda like we do with mp3 cds now but with fewer breaks in the action.)Now heres unexplored territory for musicians:extended long playing mood music,whatever there is:rock,country,polka,etc. The industry?who cares what those buttleeches think anyway?they couldnt have an original idea by themselves if it came in suppositories.its always the indies that bring about change.then the "industry"buys in when it looks safe. the price of music neednt be measured by the time it takes to play it.doesnt cost me anything to write it.more than one artist has complained that they had to leave several songs off an album due to size constraints.hell some even manage to fill a cd.back in '79 "London Calling"by THE CLASH was released as a double album for single album price followed by "Sandinista" a triple album for double album price. think you could get a triple album on a dvd at a higher bitrate?now what if an indie company did that for a single album price.if that got trendy(more bang for the buck,what a concept) i bet those fat crackheads in the penthouse offices in music city take notice. remember,artists paint on any size canvas from the micro-art in computer processors to wheat field size pieces. to sum up my position;next time you wanna speak for "most musicians",use a little imagination. imagination is what seperates musicians from instrument owners.

    34. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Zeni · · Score: 2

      >the unfortunate reality is that in the consumer market...
      >the current digital products offer a better result than the current analog products.

      Yea I know. :(
      I'm the type of person that gets annoyed by the 15kHz "noise" made by TV sets. It's extremely frustrating trying to convince non-audio people why I need all this expensive equipment.

      rant mode = 1
      Why do all these companies want somebody like a programmer or a graphic artist to do recording? Can you tell I'm looking for a new job? ;) You might as well hire me to program, yea I _can_ program, but I'm not that good at it. You'll get as good recordings as my code. Let an expert do HIS JOB!
      Sorry had to get that off my chest.

    35. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Haight6716 · · Score: 1

      At least with the move to DVD, we still get backward compatibility. So your new DVD player will still (for pete's sake, I hope) play all those old ripped CDs. So at least we're not forced, microsoft style, into using the new format.

      -=Julian=-

    36. Re:Why DVD Audio? by twinpot · · Score: 1

      >And unfortunately, LP's are basically a playback only media, and a dead one at that (since virtually no new content is released in that format anymore).

      Eerr, maybe where you are, but there's quite a lot of activity over here in Europe, and down under.

    37. Re:Why DVD Audio? by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      You actually find vinyl LP's of new releases in stores in Europe? I don't recall seeing any when I was there last fall, but I didn't have a chance to check out any specialty stores, just big places like Herrods and stuff.

    38. Re:Why DVD Audio? by zube · · Score: 1

      LP's have their own set of problems, even under ideal circumstances you have.

      A higher noise floor

      More crosstalk between channels

      A signal to noise ratio that goes to hell as the needle head towards the center of the record

      Everytime you play it, the needle scrapes away at the vinyl constantly reducing the sound quality.

      That said, vinyl does have it's values, I find the clicks, pops and "warmth" (aka distortion) soothing.

    39. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Studies have shown"???? Really??? Have a respected journal reference on this? No audio magazines please. Your ignorance of current state of the art A/D converters is astounding; brick wall filters haven't been used in years. You need to get up to date. Hint: the magic word is "oversampling".

    40. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You aren't going to see more music on a disk. Lets say you can fit 10 hours of music on a disk. First of all, what are you going to fill it with? (I'm just waiting for some dinosaur to rumble out of the primordial ooze and pine for the entire "eagles" collection on DVD-Audio). Second of all, the cost of a CD is not related to the manufacturing cost, but is a function of what the record companies believe you'll pay. Third, if you're willing to pay $120 for 8 music disks now (CD's), then are you willing to pay $120 for a single DVD Audio disk packed with stuff? Probably not. The ONLY REASON the record companies want to push DVD audio is to obsolete CD's. And the reason why is CD's provide pristine sound in a completely unencrypted format that my mother can rip. If you don't think CD's can go away, think about how quickly vinyl records disappeared. And they were around for generations, not just 15 years.

    41. Re:Why DVD Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, you get vinyl releases of new stuff. A lot, actually. Including Whitney Houston &.c.

    42. Re:Why DVD Audio? by SoftwareJanitor · · Score: 2

      Yes, you get vinyl releases of new stuff. A lot, actually. Including Whitney Houston &.c.

      Oh boy, Whitney Houston. I can harld contain my enthusiasm.

      I hope someone was kidding when they gave that example. I meant new releases, and preferably from someone who doesn't suck.

  2. frusterating? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If frusterating is anything like frustrating then we should all be pretty pissed off.

  3. Urk by tweek · · Score: 5

    Rob,
    I think using the phrase "rip it" was probably a poor choice. My take on the whole DVD deal was that I just want to watch them under linux and not have to run a proprietary OS to do it. I don't want to have to buy 2 dvd players (one for the living room and one for the bedroom). Using phrases like "rip it" make you think of copyright violation via copying.

    just a thought. not a flame.

    --
    "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    1. Re:Urk by Chuck+Milam · · Score: 3

      Using phrases like "rip it" make you think of copyright violation via copying.

      That fact that phrases like "rip it" immediately conjure up images of "copyright violation via copying" shows just how effectively the RIAA propaganda machine has been doing its job. I regularly rip my legally purchased audio CDs in order to make my own audio CD music mixes for the car, etc. This is perfectly legal--but I'm sure the RIAA will try to find a way to make it appear illegal or, at least, immoral.

    2. Re:Urk by Supergrass · · Score: 1

      Tell this to Creative Labs. I was at the store the other day, and one of their CD-RW box sets (piracy-in-a-box) had some text on the cover graphic that said "rip it" or something to that effect...

      I agree that "rip it" does imply copyright violation, but if you think about it, "make a tape of it" probably did also, but it doesn't seem to anymore... Probably in 5-10 years "ripping it" will be used in the same way as "taping it" is today...

      --
      Wherever there's a will, there's a motorway.
    3. Re:Urk by tweek · · Score: 1

      If I'm not mistaken what you are doing is technically illegal. At least someone had made reference to that during the Canadian DJ discussion.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    4. Re:Urk by tweek · · Score: 2

      I take that back having read other posts about fair and legal use below.

      --
      "Fighting the underpants gnomes since 1998!" "Bruce Schneier knows the state of schroedinger's cat"
    5. Re:Urk by bonehead · · Score: 1

      Yeah, probably a poor choice of words, but not exactly for the reason I think you meant.

      The problem is that ripping a DVD movie today is not a terribly useful thing to do. What would be the purpose? Burn it on another disc and give it to a friend? A second copy of the movie would cost less than blank DVD media. Archive it for backup purposes? Nah, cheaper to just replace a lost copy than invest that much cash in disk space.

      But that's just today. In the future, I'd love to set up a multi-terrabyte movie jukebox in my basement. Add a web interface and a WebTV type box, and you have instant onscreen access to your entire movie collection without even getting up off the couch, just like I have with my music collection now. Very cool thought, and perfectly legal under fair use, just like my mp3 music collection is.

      So, in the end, and when technology permits, I'd say that ripping DVD's will be a very useful thing to do....

    6. Re:Urk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "make a tape of it"

      I think the term you're looking for is "dub it".

    7. Re:Urk by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      . In the future, I'd love to set up a multi-terrabyte movie jukebox in my basement. Add a web interface and a WebTV type box, and you have instant onscreen access to your entire movie collection without even getting up off the couch, just like I have with my music collection now. Very cool thought, and perfectly legal under fair use, just like my mp3 music collection is.

      You can already do this with existing technology, the only limitation is the drive space. You can get a nearly TV broadcast (not cable) quality movie in about 500 meg (MPG/ASF format) so you could get around 40 movies on a fairly cheap 20 gig drive.

    8. Re:Urk by bonehead · · Score: 1

      You can already do this with existing technology, the only limitation is the drive space. You can get a nearly TV broadcast (not cable) quality movie in about 500 meg (MPG/ASF format) so you could get around 40 movies on a fairly cheap 20 gig drive.

      Interesting. I might have to get started on that. :-)

      It would still be much more convenient to extract the file from a DVD than to go through the whole capture / compress routine. Even on my Athlon 700, I'd bet that compressing 2 hours worth of TV quality video is going to be a time consuming process.

      Be cool to have instant access to every Star Trek episode ever made, though. :-)

    9. Re:Urk by Troed · · Score: 1
      DeCSS (which I assume the industry is talking about) wasn't made to make watching DVDs in Linux possible. It was made to rip DVD .vobs to your local harddrive.

      99% of what has been done to those .vobs afterwards involves mpeg2avi and then re-encoding to either VCD (mpeg1) or miniDVD (mpeg2).

      ... now, there are _other_ advances being made possible by the hack of CSS, among those Linux support, but that really didn't catch on in the media as much as DeCSS did.

    10. Re:Urk by Supergrass · · Score: 1

      "Dub it" has a high-stylin' audiophile ring to it, which usually doesn't apply to anything I dub. "Making a tape" implies amateur, personal, and small-scale production. I don't "dub" tapes for my car stereo, I make tapes for it...

      Agreed, "dubbing" is the correct term, but "making a tape" conveys those subtle linguistic notions which I thought were appropriate, since a CD-RW is a personal device, usually used for amateur, small-scale production of ripped CDs. :)

      --
      Wherever there's a will, there's a motorway.
  4. How is that a fundamental flaw? by FallLine · · Score: 2

    If you can decrypt it to watch it in a DVD machine, you can always theoretically rip it. I see nothing "fundamental" about it. It may be logistically tough, and a pain in the ass, but it remains do-able none the less. Futhermore, I can almost gaurantee you that someone will discover a way to rip it and view it practically, some time in the future.

    Disclaimer: I am not a crypto expert, but this is pretty common sense.

    1. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by Rob+Parkhill · · Score: 1

      True, if you can decode it to listen to it, you can re-record it in any format you want.

      But with a good watermarking/encryption scheme, they can make it a royal pain in that ass, if not impossible, to -create- an audio-DVD that will play on a standard home DVD-audio player.

      Sure, the average /. reader will just build their own DVD-audio player out of a pile of old 386's and one of those whizzy 140-Gig CDs, but the average joe won't be able to just rip an Audio-DVD.

      Unless, of course, they (the DVD-audio producers) do something stupid (from a security point of view) like release software that will let people create their own Audio-DVDs on their computers. Then the whole watermarking/encryption scheme was a waste of time and money. Just take the Audio-DVD, decode it to play it, capture the digital audio output, pipe it into the DVD-Audio recorder, and slap it back onto a recordable DVD. Then you need only worry about the watermark, and the DVD-audio recording software detecting it, instead of the encryption -and- the watermark. And as soon as someone rolls their own DVD-audio recording software, it will be easy to ignore that watermark...


      --
      "Tomorrow's forecast: a few sprinkles of genius with a chance of doom!" - Stewie Griffin
    2. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by belgin · · Score: 1
      How? It isn't, unless your wealth depends on strangle-hold monopolies of media. The record companies have already wet themselves a thousand times over on MP3's.
      "They NEED to have an 'absolutely secure', 'many times better' format to distribute music in, or they DIE."
      It is the narrow vision of an industry that is threatened for virtually the first time. If they could, some of the music companies would go back to vinyl records. Those were secure.

      Video companys should actually take the fact that people can make copies of their copyrighted materials much more calmly. The only public distribution method that has caught on before was VHS and Beta cassette tapes... easily ripped.

      Anyone with a brain and some thought understands that some people are going to be able to copy anything. The goal is to make it as difficult as possible, so that few will ever bother. If you want security, you give EACH DVD a random key that your player contacts the manufacturer to discover and the key is based on a timestamp algorithm or something that would prevent anyone but a crypto expert from bothering. (No, I am not one either.) But that would actually cost money and the music and video industries are based on a high initial cost, long term profit model. Just like many software companies in the entertainment industry.

      In short, they will be fools in our eyes. It is hard to give up the goose that laid golden eggs, even when they have started coming out iron pyrite.

      B. Elgin

      --

      B. Elgin
      "Read at your own risk; feel free to ignore."
    3. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      vinyl isn't secure. Last year I hooked a record player up to my PC, riped some songs and MP3 encoded them.

    4. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by jareds · · Score: 1
      • If you want security, you give EACH DVD a random key that your player contacts the manufacturer to discover and the key is based on a timestamp algorithm or something that would prevent anyone but a crypto expert from bothering. (No, I am not one either.)

      First, you can always record the output. If you can use a PC to play it, you can even record the original digital audio data.

      Second, how would this work? A DVD is a static object that doesn't know what time it is. Whatever fancy cryptography you use: it boils down to this: Player gets information from manufacturer. Player runs information through algorithm to decrypt DVD. If you have a hacked player, you can record and reuse the information. I don't see how timestamping works in, unless the key is at the player level, not the individual DVD level.

    5. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by belgin · · Score: 1
      First, you can always record the output. If you can use a PC to play it, you can even record the original digital audio data.

      Most PC's do not record at DVD quality, as near as I can tell. I am not a big time music or movie buff, so I've never bothered to try. If you can do that, what is the point of the original CSS? *Shrug.*

      Player gets information from manufacturer. Player runs information through algorithm to decrypt DVD. If you have a hacked player, you can record and reuse the information. I don't see how timestamping works in, unless the key is at the player level, not the individual DVD level.

      You can do it, I just don't think it is worth the effort. The key that would go onto the DVD would be the timestamp of when the DVD was created run through some complex and nasty algorithm, plus the manufacturer serial number run through a different algorithm. You then run this new number through yet another algorithm and you have a key that nobody is going to WANT to decode.

      The player then does some other funky thing and talks to the manufacturer to get the key direct from the manufacturer, (based on serial number) and decrypts the result of what the Mfg. sends. The decryption of this encrypted key could vary off two more timestamps and just get absurd.

      In short the players would be hideously complex software-wise, and the key would be to crack the players, because an uncracked player wouldn't play a copied DVD. The kicker of it, is that if you can even hack a player that decodes the manufacturers message correctly, a ripped DVD might have something like the timestamp different and still not work. I haven't worked out all the details of this yet, but I am sure some crypto expert could take this idea and run with it. I have heard that some government encryption makes the complexity I have just outlined seem childishly simple.

      B. Elgin

      --

      B. Elgin
      "Read at your own risk; feel free to ignore."
    6. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Figured out how already. Just need to run it through the Patent office. 8^) How much will they pay not to make it?? 8^)

    7. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by jareds · · Score: 1
      • Most PC's do not record at DVD quality, as near as I can tell. I am not a big time music or movie buff, so I've never bothered to try. If you can do that, what is the point of the original CSS? *Shrug.*

      I meant record the data via software on the way to the sound card to be played, not with a microphone. If nothing else, someone could write an audio driver that outputs to a file. Indeed, there is no point to CSS or anything else like it, for this very reason.

      As for the second part of your post, you seem to be making it too complicated and confusing your self. No matter how good your cryptography is, your scheme must rely on players that refuse to play unencrypted DVDs. Otherwise, you can just go through the normal process of getting keys and all that, and just write the data unencrypted to a DVD. If your scheme were in place, somebody would make a player that plays unencrypted information.

      Granted, if you put hardware-based crypto in the player, you can force pay-per-view, but you'd have to control the specs pretty tightly to avoid hacked players being produced. However, it all has to be done in hardware, even if the player is a DVD-ROM drive. Putting the CSS key at the software level in computers was really boneheaded.

      Anyway, what RIAA is trying to accomplish is futile, for the reason in my first paragraph, no matter how sophisticated their cryptography is.

    8. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by Betcour · · Score: 1

      Well it is even easier since the music on Audio DVD is not compressed. With Video DVD the compression that occurs make that, if you rip the output of a player, you have to compress back gain, introducing some quality loss. But with Audio DVD there is not such problem. Even if this thing has a 10e7 bit RSA key, it will be really easy to rip.

      The only good way I see is to make some sound card with crypto in the DAC : the audio stream would go cyphered there, and the only way left to rip would be to digitize back the sound, creating some quality loss in the process. Yet I doubt sound card manufacturers are going to ask people more money to implement this (expensive) scheme.

    9. Re:How is that a fundamental flaw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I already have a way to rip it...

      1. Insert DVD-A disc into your DVD-A player.
      2. Attach one RCA-to-mini-jack wire from your DVD-A player out to the "Line In" input on your soundcard.
      3. Hit play on the DVD-A player
      4. Hit Record on your computer
      5. After approximatley umpteen hours of listening enjoyment, you will have a 6.3 GB WAV file on your hard drive
      6. Manually split this WAV file into the different tracks.
      7. Use your favorite MP3 encoder to convert these WAV files into MP3
      8. Delete your WAV files

      This entire process will probably take up the rest of your life.

      The above procedure is copyright 1999 Common Sense Foundation. www.get-a-clue.com

  5. FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by rawrats · · Score: 5

    From the DVD FAQ:

    [1.12] What about DVD-Audio or Music DVD?
    When DVD was released in 1996 there was no DVD-Audio format, although the audio capabilities of DVD-Video far surpassed CD. The DVD Forum sought additional input from the music industry before defining the DVD-Audio format. A draft standard was released by the DVD Forum's Working Group 4 (WG4) in January 1998, and version 0.9 was released in July. The final DVD-Audio 1.0 specification was approved in February 1999 and released in March. DVD-Audio products will show up in late 1999 at the earliest (Panasonic has announced DVD-Audio/DVD-Video players for October 1999). The delay is being caused by the slow process of selecting copy protection features (encryption and watermarking). A watermarking technology was supposed to have been chosen from the top two contenders: Aris Technologies and Blue Spike. (Aris press releases in late June touted itself as the winner but there has been no official announcement.) Proposals from Cognicity, IBM, and Solana were eliminated during testing, although Solana later merged with Aris.) The evaluation process is being done by major music companies in conjunction with the 4C Entity, comprising IBM, Intel, Matsushita, and Toshiba. It's possible that the RIAA's Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI) could push the introduction of DVD-Audio into 2000.

    DVD-Audio is a separate format from DVD-Video. DVD-Audio discs can be designed to work in DVD-Video players, but its possible to make a DVD-Audio disc that won't play at all in a DVD-Video player, since the DVD-Audio specification includes new formats and features, with content stored in a separate "DVD-Audio zone" on the disc (the AUDIO_TS directory) that DVD-Video players never look at. New DVD-Audio players are needed, or new "universal players" that can play both DVD-Video and DVD-Audio discs.

    Plea to producers: Universal players won't be available for some time, but you can make "universal discs" today. With a small amount of effort, all DVD-Audio discs can be made to work on all DVD players by including a Dolby Digital version of the audio in the DVD-Video zone.
    Plea to DVD-Audio authoring system developers: Make your software do this by default or strongly recommend this option during authoring.

    DVD-Audio (and universal) players will work with existing receivers. They output PCM and Dolby Digital, and some will support the optional DTS and DSD formats. However, most current receivers can't decode the high-definition PCM audio (see 3.6.1 for details), and even if they could it can't be carried on standard digital audio connections. DVD-Audio players with high-end digital-to-analog converters (DACs) can be hooked up to receivers with two-channel or 6-channel analog inputs, but some quality will be lost if the receiver converts back to digital for processing. Future receivers with improved digital connections such as IEEE 1394 (FireWire) will be required to use the full digital resolution of DVD-Audio.

    The music industry has requested an "embedding signalling" or "digital watermark" copy protection feature. This uses signal processing technology to apply a digital signature and optional encryption keys to the audio in the form of supposedly inaudible noise so that new equipment will recognize copied audio and refuse to play it. Audiophiles claim this degrades the audio.

    In the meantime, the DVD-Video standard includes surround sound audio and better-than-CD audio (see 3.6.2).

    Sony and Philips have developed a competing Super Audio CD format. (See 3.6.1 for details.) SACD provides "legacy" discs that have two layers, one that plays in existing CD players, plus a high-density layer for DVD-Audio players. Ironically, initial price for these dual-layer discs will be higher than for a standard CD plus a standard DVD. Sony released version 0.9 of the SACD spec in April 1998, the final version is expected in April 1999. SACD technology will be available to existing Sony/Philips CD licensees at no additional cost.

    --
    -- jar
    1. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by Hobbex · · Score: 1


      Do away with me for being offtopic, but I really don't think that this should have been moderated up all the way. It wasn't really called for here, a simple link would have been good enough.

      Are cut and pasted faqs going to start occuring at the top every /. article?

      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    2. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by bonehead · · Score: 1

      A few reasons why I, personally, think that posts like that DO deserve to be moderated up:

      1.) It's useful and relevant information.

      2.) It provides answers to questions that people have specifically asked during the course of this discussion.

      3.) He just allowed me to read only the relevant portion of the FAQ and saved me the hassle of having to wade through the whole thing to find the info.

      4.) You never know what type of a site the FAQ is hosted on. A great many sites become inaccessible soon after being linked to on Slashdot. By posting the info here, Slashdot bears the load and not some poor guy hosting a web site over a 56k modem.

      Just my thoughts on the matter....

    3. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by Fizgig · · Score: 1

      It may be a cheap way to get karma, but it's not that bad. I think everyone needs to ignore the whole karma thing. The post is informative. The guy may not deserve 4+ karma for posting it, but the moderators are correct in that many of us would like to see it. It was nicer when karma was hidden, I think. Let's hope Rob never implements a "Top 10 By Karma" list or anything.

      I do have a problem with people posting copyrighted material and getting moderated up for that, since it only gets /. in trouble, but this seems ok.

    4. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by Hobbex · · Score: 1


      I have read that FAQ before, and iirc he posted just about the whole thing. Karma has become something that people aspire for here, and I don't think that setting an precident where we get FAQs spammed to every thread is a great idea.

      FAQs are usually well mirrored...

      (oh, and to the dumbo who moderated my comment here up: you realize that if you agreed with me, you would have spent the point better moderating the previous post down.)

      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    5. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by Hobbex · · Score: 1


      Just to get this straight, it wasn't about karma envy. I don't suffer from karma envy, I lost it somewhere around 100. I haven't even looked at Sig11's user page in ages :-).

      Mostly it was just that I sort by score and don't like the idea of having to scoll past a long faq on every post (and I don't want to lower the long post cut threshhold either). There are places to get FAQs...


      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    6. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by bonehead · · Score: 1

      I have read that FAQ before, and iirc he posted just about the whole thing.

      That may be the case in this instance. Most FAQ's are quite a bit larger.

      Karma has become something that people aspire for here,

      True enough, although I'm not sure I understand what the big deal is.

      and I don't think that setting an precident where we get FAQs spammed to every thread is a great idea.

      Entire FAQs, no. That wouldn't be good. But a relevant snippet from a FAQ, especially if it answers a question people are asking, is useful. It would also be useful if the person posting the relevant snippet would, in addition, provide a link to the entire FAQ for those with the time and inclination to digest the entire thing.

      FAQs are usually well mirrored...

      Yeah, but providing a list of 10 links to mirror sites would use nearly as much space as this guys post did anyway.

      (oh, and to the dumbo who moderated my comment here up: you realize that if you agreed with me, you would have spent the point better moderating the previous post down.)

      Good point. Especially since your post (and my response to it) was entirely off-topic. :-)

      Anyway, not trying to start an argument, just pointing out the other side of the issue.

    7. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by gellor · · Score: 1

      Actually that was an a VERY small snippet of the DVD-FAQ. It took me a couple hours to read through the whole thing the first time I read it.

      Just an FYI.

      --
      Gellor

    8. Re:FAQ: What is DVD-Audio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So this watermarking is just encrypted data encoded in bit 0 of the 24bit samples.

      No one will hear bit 0, or bit 0 could be stripped

  6. DVD Audio format? by ...+James+... · · Score: 1

    What are the specs on this? Will the sound quality be dramatically better or will it just hold alot of music? or both?

  7. Retard-O-vision by 1010011010 · · Score: 3

    "Great product, but it's too easy to use. Add some needless encryption or something."

    Currently, I can play CDROMs on my computer. With the data encrypted, the playback unit will have to have the key and decoder. For stereo equipment, it'll work like DVD video does, I assume. But will computer audio now be windows-only? Until it's cracked again?

    Will the "completely new encoding system" raise the hackles of ITAR?

    CSS2 must not have been much more secure than CSS, much egg for the faces of Intel, IBM and Toshiba.

    --
    Napster-to-go says "Fill and refill your compatible MP3 player", which is a lie. It's not MP3. It's WMA with DRM.
  8. Oh my, yes. by Demona · · Score: 3
    Yes, it's the fault of those evil hackers that people think they have the right to do what they want with the product they've paid money for (we've gone into excruciating detail comparing this with shrinkwrap licensing "agreements"). How dare they?

    On a more serious note, I hear that after this year, all DVD players MUST have region locking enabled in hardware...but it's only a matter of time before someone breaks from the pack, like Plextor did with Digital Audio Extraction in CD-ROM drives. Even to the uneducated, apathetic layman, stuff like this makes no sense, and annoys them to the point where it may galvanize them into either breaking the "security" (bad enough from the industry's standpoint) -- or worse, educating themselves on the issues and becoming a real threat.

    Big Government and Big Business don't want you thinking (or creating) for yourself. Just sit back, shut up and eat your gruel, citizen-unit.

    --
    Fuck Slashdot
    1. Re:Oh my, yes. by Alan+Shutko · · Score: 1

      The problem is, things like region locking in players can be mandated by law. I haven't checked if the DMCA requires it, but the DMCA _does_ require macrovision in VCRs.

  9. Was cracking the video DVD done too early? by Doctor+Fishboy · · Score: 4

    More of a question than a comment:

    Is there a danger that companies will pull out of the video DVD market now they are frightened of ripping? Although the DVD market is strong here in America, I know that in Britain it is still taking off, and I could imagine big companies panicking and cutting out of the British Video DVD market until another 'secure' video scheme comes along.

    Even though millions of dollars have been invested in DVD, I wouldn't be too surprised at seeing companies cutting their losses...

    Any thoughts on this, or am I being too paranoid?

    1. Re:Was cracking the video DVD done too early? by DJ+Cricket · · Score: 1

      Piracy exists in every form of media known. Ripping DVD, using 2 VCR's to record a cassette... there's no difference except the level of the technology. There is still profits in a product, even if it will be pirated. If company's didn't want their product pirated, they might as well keep it to them-selves then.

    2. Re:Was cracking the video DVD done too early? by Crossbones · · Score: 1


      No. It really doesn't matter WHEN dvd was "cracked."

      The whole point a lot of people seem to miss here is that you can't guard the data forever. I can take the output from either a stand-alone dvd player or the output on my dvd decorder card and bring it right back in the computer using my MGA200-TV. I could even record it at that point if I so desired with very little loss in quality.

      So what's to stop someone from doing the same thing with a dvd-audio and their soundcard? Nothing.

      In order to really make the protection work, they'd basically have to make some sort of signal protection ala macrovision, but at the same time, you'd basically need to replace all existing audio/video hardware to make it work. This simply isn't going to happen.

      All in all, this is a non issue. It's still much easier to copy a vhs tape than it is a dvd, and it's done more on a regualar basis. The only reason a big stink is being made is that the people who broke the css protection have basically thrown sand in their faces..

  10. So? by Indomitus · · Score: 2

    I've never thought that DVDAudio was going to go anywhere. IMO, it's going to be a niche market like Laserdiscs were to the home video market. A few loyal fans will be able to spend the money and tell the difference but most people won't want to give up their large CD collections for a more expensive technolgy that they won't be able to hear the difference of anyway. I still know people who can't tell the difference between a tape and a CD. Those people are not going to tell the difference between one digital audio format and another. All this delay is going to do is hurt the bottom line for the companies involved and give downloadable music a bigger chance to grow market share.

  11. The other fundamental flaw. by Shafik · · Score: 2

    Hmmm, wasn't the reason they where able to crack it so easily was because one of the keys was not protected and therefore they used that key to break the others? I mean that had nothing to do with weak encryption, that was just incompetence.

    1. Re:The other fundamental flaw. by randombit · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, wasn't the reason they where able to crack it so easily was because one of the keys was not protected and therefore they used that key to break the others? I mean that had nothing to do with weak encryption, that was just incompetence.

      No, that just made it easier. All of the keys were only 40 bits, which takes a few weeks (at most) to brute force. Not only that, they screwed up the crypto (badly) so it's trivial to break (a few hours on a run of the mill machine). And the fact that knowing one key allows you to get all the others shows quite clearly that the crypto is weak [this should not be possible for a "strong" encryption system].

      And if they want to change it, they'll have to replace every single player and DVD (I think). So it's not really economical (I mean, who's going to pay for a DVD twice!?!?!?).

  12. Hah. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    It's interesting how not long ago all of Slashdot was ripping DIVX (and rightfully so, too), while hailing DVD as the 2nd coming.

    The tables have turned, haven't they? THe DVD fascists have really shown their true colours, haven't they? DVD doesn't look much better than DIVX to me at this point...a closed standard controlled by a closed group with a very small mindset.

    1. Re:Hah. by Darchmare · · Score: 1

      Perhaps, but what should we do? Use VHS from here on out?

      They have the right to encrypt everything, just as we have the right to crack it and render the encryption useless. DIVX was flawed from the beginning, but for 99.99% of those who'd use DVD, this isn't a problem at all.

      DIVX sucked for everyone, even for the average person who just wanted to watch a movie and didn't care about ripping archival copies.

      - Jeff A. Campbell
      - VelociNews (http://www.velocinews.com)

      --

      - Jeff
    2. Re:Hah. by seaportcasino · · Score: 1

      People never expect the Spanish Inquisition!@!

    3. Re:Hah. by Creepy · · Score: 1
      I'd much rather have a DVD than a DIVX - at least I can create DVD-ROMs with a DVD writer. DIVX was a protected, proprietary technology owned almost entirely by Circuit City, sold only by Circuit City, sent all personal information back to an address in Florida where marketers could know every movie a person watched and all the while charged a 'per use' or 'per machine' fee. Think about it - most marketing people pay for information about what viewers are watching - DIVX was charging for it!

      The DVD facists haven't changed their tune at all - they wanted a protected format to protect from exact duplicates of commercial movies, a huge problem in countries like Russia and China (I think something like 95% of all CDs and Video Cassettes sold in China in 1996 or 1997 were pirated, but I can't remember the source... 95% of all figures are lies anyway :) Figures are high for Russia, too).

      The real problem is that their paranoid, protectist ways give bored crackers and professional thieves something to do - break the encryption. I see it a lot like the Apple II/PC/64/etc software protection in the 80s - they'll keep trying, declare something uncrackable, and 3 hours later someone will distribute the crack (as happened to Microsoft's "uncrackable" Flight Simulator - not only cracked in 3 hours, but distributed on pirate BBSes across the country within 12 hours of release). Eventually the software people (mostly) gave up because it was a losing battle - it cost more to create and implement the protection than what they recouped by having the protection.

    4. Re:Hah. by mitheral · · Score: 1

      The Reason everyone with a brain was down on DIVX was that it was controlled by a central source. And that source could disable your player/media anytime it wanted. Or if the company went out of business (which it has) then your investment in upgraded DIVX disks when out the window. Basicly at this point anyone who bought a DIVX player paid too much for an inferior DVD player. The fact that DVD encryption could be broken like it was is one of the reasons it is a good format.

  13. ITAR? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    So if they're going to use "strong encryption", how is this going to keep from falling into the same US Gov't anti-encrypt ITAR crap?

    I would love to see the rich & powerful RIAA square off with the gov't. It'd be an interesting application of the immovable object vs the irresistable force.

    It'd also be funny for a DVD-Audio of The Who to be classified as an illegal munition.

    -gc

    1. Re:ITAR? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ITAR?

      Wasn't that the really bad movie with Dustin Hoffman and Warren Beatty?

      (me wakes up screaming after dreaming of the Hoffman/Beatty duet of "Louie, Louie".)

      :o)

  14. Reinventing the crypto wheel... again *sigh* by neophase · · Score: 2

    Why, oh why, do so many companies seem to feel a need to create their very own *special* encryption mechanisms when there are proven algorithms out there?
    ==================================
    neophase

    --
    ==================================
    neophase
    1. Re:Reinventing the crypto wheel... again *sigh* by Sloppy · · Score: 2

      Because their employees are secretly on our side.


      ---
      --
      As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    2. Re:Reinventing the crypto wheel... again *sigh* by Jerf · · Score: 2
      Because the proven algorithms are designed to securely transmit a message from A to B while C can't understand the encrypted message.

      They want standards that
      • Prevent copying to the largest extent possible (prevent C from ever entering the loop between A (the DVD produced) and B (the player program)). This is not really encrytion, but designing a closed box. Security through obscurity... literally. (look it up with provided link)
      • Makes sure that if you do copy it, you can't use it. This is something like encryption, but it's called "watermarking", and has different purposes, techniques, and ways of defeating it. (In general, ways to strip the watermarking exist, but degrade the signal to one extent or another.) This is entirely unhandled by "proven" encryption like RSA et al. New theory on how to uniquely watermark these items without degrading them so far as to be useless, yet making them secure enough that it is not trivial to strip the watermark, is a difficult problem that may or may not even be solvable.
      • Also, they may want to be able to track you, even if you get through all that.
      Now, at some points you can use proven encryption, but you can't just take a system designed for simple secure communication between A and B and apply it to this scenario; you need to develop a more sophisticated system, none of which (to my knowlege) have been in existance long enough to be "proven".
    3. Re:Reinventing the crypto wheel... again *sigh* by Zog · · Score: 1

      Dude, I've told you before - don't mention that in public, regardless of how much your significant other plays with your hair in attempting to force you to.

      :)

      DynDNS - Dynamic DNS. Source Code.

  15. Waiting game by technos · · Score: 3

    All this accomplishes lost revenue on the new product and an tapped R+D budget. Even if they use a key four times larger than the last, it is still only a matter of months before someone manages to unlock them. Then we have the MPAA and the RIAA screaming again, and the cycle repeats.

    There are millions of brains and PC's out here waiting to beat the system that only a dozen of them engineer. Who do you think wins? Not Matsushita and certainly not the RIAA!

    --
    .sig: Now legally binding!
  16. Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by alexhmit01 · · Score: 3

    The Label's need to realize that the business model of charging for distribution is starting to collapse. MP3s are currently on the fringe, but as MP3 ripping technology and transferring becomes easier, and MP3 Hardware solutions (for cars, etc.) becomes more popular, there isn't going to be a major market for an encrypted DVD Audio. If you can buy a CD for a few dollars less than you can rip, what is the incentive to get a DVD Audio? I mean, for "best of" collections, it is a boon as 2-3 CD collections can be combined on one DVD-Audio, but are current albums limited by the CD's capacity? It would seem like most albums use less than 80% of the CD, why switch to DVD. Also, with the encryption nonsense, DVD players are going to be more expensive than CD-players. It really seems like DVD audio is a solution in search of a problem. I mean, DVD Video is MUCH higher quality than VHS or Laserdisks, while more convenient than Laserdisks. I don't see a clamoring for DVD technology for audio systems. CDs had an advantage over records/tapes (being able to skip around track-by-track with ease). My family, when we had tapes in the car, would always buy the CDs and make two tapes, one for each of my parent's cars. I mean, unless the DVD-Audio comes out with dual-deck CD-players for copying/dubbing, I don't see a clamoring for a new digital format. Minidisks had a technological advantage (somewhat mitigated by MP3 technology), DVD audio doesn't. CD quality is "good enough," and I don't see an improvement in quality really making a different. Alex

    1. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2
      I have two problems with your post. First, the video quality of Laserdisc is in fact higher than that on DVD. DVD video is MPEG compressed, and on every disc I have watched, there have been visible artifacts. Laserdisc is uncompressed and does not have visible artifacts unless the surface of the platter has been damaged.

      Secondly, DVD audio does have advantages over CD audio. A single DVD could hold hours of music at a higher quality than CD. The sonic difference between 44.1kHz/16bit (CD) and 96kHz/24 bit (DVD) is very audible on good equipment. Think of the difference between 16-bit color and 24-bit color on your monitor. Yeah, you can get away with 16-bit but it really doesn't compare to 24-bit. The ear is similarly sensitive.

      -jwb

    2. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2


      Sure DVD-Audio might have it's advantages over CD-Audio, but unlike DVD/LaserDisc video, I just don't see the mass market appeal.

      Certainly there might be some in the high end 'audiophile' market that are clamoring for DVD-Audio (and are willing to pay for it, and unlikely to 'rip' copies), but by-in-large what I hear from people is that even CD Quality is 'too good' and they'd rather have a more storage/bandwidth efficient format like MP3.

      Combine this with the fact that the vast majority of DVD players are actually computer drives, and that very few computers have sound cards/speakers worthy of even good CD-Audio reproduction, and I think I'm getting the picture.

      Sure DVD-Video is a way to soak the audiophiles for extra cash (just like those 'Gold Edition' CDs). But it's primary intention in the long term is to get consumers to dump Compact Disc and adopt an audio format that supports encryption and discourges copying or piracy.

      Just like those Divx discs that look like they came from the same crappy master as the VHS version, we need to start calling a spade a spade here.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    3. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by dillon_rinker · · Score: 2

      Think of the difference between 16-bit color and 24-bit color on your monitor

      Except that the 44.1kHz/16bit sampling is at the edge of human perception, while 65,000 colors is far below the limit of human perception. I think a more apt comparison is 24-bit color vs 32-bit color. Sure, you can't really see the difference between a picture rendered at 32 bits and one rendered at 24 bits, but the extra 8 bits make all the difference in the world if you are scanning - a little extra room for maneuver. Sampling right at the edge of human perception means that small artifacts of the sampling process will be perceptible. Sampling orders of magnitude beyond the limit of human perception means that small sampling artifacts will likewise be beyod the limit of human perception.

    4. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Cuthalion · · Score: 2

      Um. When you say to your video card "Do 32 bit colour" it doesn't really use more colours. It's just 24 bits with padding or alpha (Depending on your application.)

      --
      Trees can't go dancing
      So do them a big favor
      Pretend dancing stinks!
    5. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by richnut · · Score: 3

      The thing is, not everyone agrees that CD is "good enough". Pro audio gear is at 24bit 96khz, why shouldn't all of that fidelity be sold to the consumer as well? Some people think MP3 is "good enough" too, and it's not even CD quality. Furthermore they're adding more channels other than right and left to allow for a better listening experience. Are you saying that watching a DVD via stereo speakers and surround sound speakers affords the listener the same experience? Multichannel technologies will allow engineers to record music that makes more subtle nuiances audible.

      Maybe YOU dont want it. But there's a lot of people who do. It's a shame they're going to encrypt it though.

      -Rich

    6. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by bonehead · · Score: 1

      The sonic difference between 44.1kHz/16bit (CD) and 96kHz/24 bit (DVD) is very audible on good equipment.

      Yes, but the *typical* consumer doesn't own the quality of equipment necessary to hear the difference. Heck, the typical consumer doesn't really care. Most "normal" people I know have a CD collection at home, but still listen to most of their music in the car, on the radio and on cassette. I know one girl who isn't the least bit bothered by listening to FM stereo in her car with only one working speaker. I offered to fix it for her, no charge, and she declined. These folks just want to hear a catchy tune, they could give a rat's ass whether or not they can hear the guitar player's finger sliding across the string.

      I obviously can't prove it, but I strongly believe that CD audio caught on not because it produced better quality audio than cassettes (on consumer grade equipment, anyway), but because of the improved Fast Forward / Rewind speed. Except for that factor, DAT provided the same set of improvements over cassette, yet I don't recall seeing too many DAT players sold to average consumers.

      In order to sell enough of these things to make them qualify as having "caught on", they need to provide enough advantage to convince Joe Average, not just a few elite audiophiles.

    7. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by m3000 · · Score: 1

      I strongly believe that CD audio caught on not because it produced better quality audio than cassettes .... because of the improved Fast Forward / Rewind speed

      That's my favorite part of CD's. I personally don't give a crap about sound, as long as it's not super "staticy". MP3's sound the same to me as CD's, and radio is perfectly fine for me too. I'm sure the DVD-Audio would sound better, but I already know there would by no way I'd ever notice the difference.

    8. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Cyberfox · · Score: 1

      Greetings,

      Grrrr...

      Well, a few things... For video cards, 32 bit color is really RGBA, where A is an alpha channel. Alpha is easiest (although somewhat inaccurately) described as a level of translucence. Your actual color is 24 bits, even in 32 bit mode.

      For scanners, colors are often listed as '48 bit' color, and such. Those scanners detect a wider range of color depth (16 bits/color), and then downscale to 8 bits per color, to make up for signal noise, potential variance in the scanning equipment, etc...

      More importantly for display, however, RGB is painfully inaccurate for color reproduction. I'm given to understand (from printing houses) that there are levels of purple which are doable with dyes that are impossible to represent, for example. Plus there are scattered zones in 24 bit color where the delta between a given color and any nearby colors are more than the ~5 angstroms of visible light that human perception can notice.

      Printing and color management software has always had to be VERY smart in order to color-match what gets drawn onto a screen and what gets drawn onto paper, and there are sets of dye-creatable color that are unreachable on a monitor at present.

      We live with it, because nobody has a better answer yet, and not enough people care.

      This relates to DVD Audio in that the extra sampling capability finally does give that extra nudge over the top, to perfect audio, where the only limit is your own hearing, and noise from your own equipment. CD's, like monitors currently, are 'Good Enough', but if you really care about the depth of your sound, you want something more.

      On the other hand, I sincerely doubt that DVD Audio will ever matter to the mass of men, leading lives of quiet desperation.

      Cyberfox!

    9. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by bonehead · · Score: 1

      Actually, I *can* hear the difference between a CD and an MP3, but only on my home stereo system. And only if the house is quiet. I certainly can't tell a difference between the two on the crappy boombox on my desk at work, or on the factory stero in my car. I especially can't tell the difference on an average set of computer speakers, which is what (I'd guess) most .mp3's are still played through.

      Since the large majority of my music listening is done while in my car, in my office, or in my house during a noisy party, the difference in quality between the two is pretty much meaningless to me.

    10. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      okay laserdisc bigot.... let's set you straight.

      the video quality of Laserdisc is LOWER than DVD in every concievable way. Let's discuss them.

      Laserdisc = Analog Video. That's right.. despite LD being on a shiny optical disc, the video is just plain old analog, which through age and scratches on the disc, the picture CAN get worse. I've got a couple of discs that exhibit analog interference here and there when there's a finger print or scratch.

      Lines of resolution.

      DVD has more lines of resolution than Laserdisc, and the video is stored in progressive mode on the disc, unlike laserdisc which is plain old NTSC interlaced.

      MPEG-2 artifacts.. The truth is, you only see these on 1) badly calibrated monitors (like when you have the sharpness control turned up too high) or 2) on badly compressed discs (usually the cheap off the wall stuff and early discs)

      Quit moaning because you spent too much money for your laserdisc collection and resent people buying a higher quality product for less money.


    11. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by cr0sh · · Score: 1

      I know one girl who isn't the least bit bothered by listening to FM stereo in her car with only one working speaker.

      My GF enjoyed listening to her AM radio through one speaker (and that speaker had a rotted surround, so it buzzed) - and no matter how many times I offered to fix it (via a new radio and speakers), she declined, and then insisted that if all she had was a cheap transistor radio from the shack, that would work for her!

      ROTFL!

      --
      Reason is the Path to God - Anon
    12. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2
      Usually I would not respond to a post that contains so few facts, but I feel strangely compelled. To answer your baseless accusation, I don't even own a television, much less a laserdisc player or an expensive laserdisc collection.

      As for your assertion about "analog" video on the disc, I suggest you smoke fewer joints. Laserdiscs are the same technology as CDs. The information is not analog in any way.

      Lastly, the output of DVD does not "have more lines" as you suggest. The MPEG encoded video can be formatted to have as many lines as you want via interpolation and filtering. This does not translate directly to superior image quality, as the same treeatment can be applied to laserdiscs. Also, DVD does not have a monopoly on progressive scanning. It is perfectly possible to have a progressive scan output from a laserdisc player. Remember that the output of the player is not tied in any way to the encoding format of the disc.

      -jwb

    13. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Jherico · · Score: 1
      The thing is, not everyone agrees that CD is "good enough".

      True enough, but I think that the comparison of DVD-Audio to CD-Audio has more in common with the comparison of LaserDisc to VHS than DVD to VHS. The advantages of DVD-Audio are so high end that I think it will remain a fringe technology, as LaserDisc did. Consider past format changes. Records provided excellent quality. Tapes provided portability, but reduced quality and prevented easy random access. CDs provide higher quality than tapes and random access as well. While DVDs can provide higher quality than CDs, that argument wasn't enough to make LaserDisc a widely popular format, and while DVDs offer the portability that LaserDiscs didn't, any situation where portability is important , i.e. in the car, on headphones, probably defeats the point of the increased fidelity.

      Consider, the biggest advantages that DVD-Audio can add are longer playing time and much higher fidelity. Longer playing time simply won't happen because of the economic reasons discussed elsewhere. Higher fidelity requires too much investment for the average user. I listen to music in my car, through car speakers and on my headphones while roller-blading. I also listen to music frequently while working on the computer for long periods of time. In the first two cases, car and headphones, the combination of relatively poor speaker quality and likely background noise will make any increase in fidelity pointless. In the last case, working at my computer, the music is background atmosphere and I don't need ultra-high quality audio for atmosphere any more than I need a real Monet on my wall instead of a print. The only time I could imagine really appreciating the full fidelity available on DVD audio is if I'm listening to the music entirely for the sake of listening to the music, which I virtually never do.

      I really think the consortium is being perversly beauracratic in worrying about encryption for something that will be, IMHO, a fringe format. Jherico

      --

      Jherico

      What can the average user can do to ensure his security? "Nothing, you're screwed"

    14. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by bonehead · · Score: 1

      My GF enjoyed listening to her AM radio through one speaker

      At least AM is mono. :) Heck, one time when I was in this girl's car a song came on which, due to the stereo separation, you could not hear any vocals coming from her radio! Still didn't bother her.

      This was, by the way, the day I offered to fix it for her. Even offered to pay for the replacement speaker myself. :-) (She did, however, let me replace her AM radio with an AM/FM model. Not for sound quality, though, we just don't have any good AM radio stations here. :)

      On the other hand, there's me. When I bought my amplifier for my home stereo, I took around 30 CD's into the store with me and spent almost an entire Saturday comparing different tracks on different amplifiers. You should have seen the dirty look I got from the salesman when I insisted on listening to *ONE* single drumbeat on every amp they had. :)

      Man, I hope he got a good commission out of that sale.

    15. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Ma'at · · Score: 1

      "CD quality is "good enough," and I don't see an improvement in quality really making a different." Alex

      Ahhhh But have you ever heard 96kHz/24-bit audio? There is a very noticable difference between the DVD-audio standard and Red Book 16-bit audio. Until we can match the imaging and frequency response of analog tape there is definately a place for better digital audio formats. I've heard 24/96 audio and it is a Good Thing. (and Sony's Super Audio CD is a Better Thing.) One the RIAA realizes that people don't wan't to pay $25 for an album and we can afford the players, I'm sure we'll all laugh about how we thought "CD quality" was such a great thing way back in the 90's. Ma'at.

    16. Re:Audio Encryption Jeopardizes Medium's Growth by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      LaserDiscs do, in fact, use analog for the video signal. However, the fact that they are read by a laser beam rather than by a needle should give them one of the key advantages that CDs had over LPs (namely, playing it won't make it wear out). LaserDiscs are much more random-access than tape, although I don't know how they compare to DVD in this regard.

      Many LaserDiscs have digital CD-style sound - or Dolby Digital surround sound. For a time, there were 5" and 12" CD-Videos (not the same as Video CDs) which were like small LaserDisc/CD hybrids. The 5" ones gave you 5 minutes of LaserDisc-type video plus 20 minutes of CD-quality audio. Many LaserDisc players can play these hybrids and CDs.

      As for progressive scan, most DVD players do not have progressive scan outputs (at least not with RCA or S-VHS jacks) and most TV sets aren't able to display progressive-type signals. That won't really change until HDTV gets cheap.

      Release of a "progressive" DVD player was held up for copy protection reasons, which brings up a neat little LaserDisc advantage: LaserDisc does not have any copy protection to mess up your TV picture, make an expensive line doubler useless, or keep you from format-shifting a picture to VHS.

      LaserDisc is where the traditions of "widescreen" and "extras" started.

      Finally, back in the dark days of DIVX, LaserDisc was the only way to get an optical disc version of Disney's animated classics.

  17. DVD audio is completly useless by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    Since most people don't care to listen to mp3
    and cannot see the difference with CD, what 24 bit
    96 kHz will bring to the average customer? nothing. What IS interesting is real multichannel
    support (not the fake encoded ones like dolby)
    which could provide new creative possibilities
    (as well as the possibily to listen to old
    Stockhausen's classics the way they were intended
    to be) but I am not shure if the market is going
    to support that. Would YOU buy an octophonic
    sound system? (I know I would)

  18. Don't they realize? by TheSlack · · Score: 2

    Don't these guys realize that it's not copy protection that keeps the cash flowing into their hands? It is copyprotection that will eventually be broken. What will this copyprotection be used for? To keep DVD Audio unfair just like with DVDs.

    What will keep pirated copies to a minimum and money in their hands will be media that is cheap, availible to anyone that wants it at the same low price, media that is in a format that is easy to write players for. (How many of us have seen a REALLY buggy DVD player?) I would much rather just go across the street and buy this media than find it on the internet and download an illegal copy. It's more conveniant. (And my Linux box would be able to play them.)

    My 2 cents....
    Jack Neely

  19. am I missing something? by Ser\/o · · Score: 3

    Did this type of hoopla occur over cassette tapes or CDs when they were new technology? Being in my mid-twenties, I was wee little when these took place, but I would imagine similar concerns over copying audio have been voiced since the availability of easily recordable media. The way I see it is that people are going to find ways to 'rip' the audio, even at a loss in quality, no matter what they try. They did it with tapes and CDs, why would this be any different? But what do I know, encryption isn't one of my strong points.

    --
    -Just because you're not paranoid doesn't mean they're not out to get you.
    1. Re:am I missing something? by kokopeli · · Score: 1

      if i remember correctly (i wasn't -that- old then) at the time cds came out there wasn't much fuss over the ability to copy them because that ability didn't exist for the majority of consumers. i think they were thought of more as a possible solution to professed problems with illegal tape duplication.

    2. Re:am I missing something? by bonehead · · Score: 1

      Did this type of hoopla occur over cassette tapes or CDs when they were new technology?

      I don't recall much hoopla over cassettes, but I do have a vague, early-childhood memory of advertisers being bent out of shape when the VCR was introduced. Seems they were annoyed that people would be able to watch TV and skip commercials.

    3. Re:am I missing something? by IntlHarvester · · Score: 2

      Actually, the answer to your question is yes, there was a big hoopla.

      The Compact Cassette medium was designed in the 60s for low quality voice recording, but by ~1970 people were introducing high quality stereo decks with Dolby B and so on.

      The Audio industry responded by putting alot of weight behind the defective playback-only 8 Track format, refusing to release prerecorded Cassettes, and getting Detroit to dump Compact Cassette decks for 8 Track. You could eventually get 8 Track recorders, but I understand that they were fairly expensive, and 99% of the decks made were playback only.

      It wasn't until the 80s, after all those lofi 8 Track cassettes had broken, did Compact Cassette have a big comeback. Record companies loved it then because it was cheaper for them to produce than LP.
      --

      --
      Business. Numbers. Money. People. Computer World.
    4. Re:am I missing something? by Pope · · Score: 1

      Yep.

      (Caveat: I'm 28 and have a large record and CD collection :)

      I have a Captain Sensible album (12" vinyl record to you youngsters :P) from 1982 which has a graphic of a tape cassette made into a Skull and Crossbones with the legend Home Taping is Killing Music and is Illegal on the back near the bottom.
      This was in the midst of the cassette explosion of the late 70's/early 80's when all the record companies were up in arms over potential lost sales from people copying each others albums instead of going out any buying their own copies.
      Bow Wow Wow even had a song called "C-30 C-60 C-90 GO!" which glamourized the home-taping issue, albeit in a rather tongue-in-cheek manner.

      Still, it was enough for the record companies to cry "foul" and run to the gubmints of the world to do something about it.

      Blah blah blah. Same problem, different decade.
      The record companies still haven't figured out that the vast majority of people will still go out and buy their own media.

      Pope

      --
      It doesn't mean much now, it's built for the future.
    5. Re:am I missing something? by Mindwarp · · Score: 1

      Hmmm, sending my mind back through the hazy fog that was my childhood I seem to remember broadcast companies in the U.K. transmitting a special marker signal at the start and end of commercials that would allow video recorders to automatically pause and un-pause their recording (automatically skipping the commercials for you).

      As far as I remember, the whole scheme was blown out of the water when the advertisers pointed out that they REALLY didn't like that very much, and that it was going to cost the broadcast companies that implemented it DEARLY.

      Of course, I may just be hallucinating the whole sorry story. Who knows?

      --
      The gift of death metal does not smile on the good looking.
    6. Re:am I missing something? by bonehead · · Score: 1

      I was pretty young at the time, so my memory of this is pretty hazy, but that's pretty much the exact scenario my fuzzy memory was trying to piece together.

      Funny, it's not been until this year that I finally purchased a VCR that will actually skip commercials. It records them, scans the tape when it's done to mark them, then does an automatic FF during playback. It's time consuming and it still screws up and plays one every now and then though. And they could have been doing this the "Right Way" 20 years ago. Sheesh....

    7. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Perhaps somebody with more knowledge on this can add their insight, but didn't industry try to suppress digital audio tapes from catching on because people could make perfect digital copies of CDs?

      Also, is it just me or are governments much more quickly passing laws benefitting the media industry now than they were in the past? I'm not old enough to remember these sorts of things more than ten years ago

  20. The real problem by TheCarp · · Score: 3

    The REAL problem here is that they are expecting
    to be able to decrypt this on equipment that is
    not under their control.

    What is to stop a person from hacking a DVD drive
    to allow reading (and eventually writting) to
    the entire disk? (as I understand it they rely
    on the DVD drive being able to read a special
    track but there being no way to get the drive to
    divulge that info)

    Alternatly...the music HAS to exist in unencrypted
    form for some span of time. So...if I hack their software I can make it do anything...including
    hack it to output to a file.

    Or better yet...create an Audio Driver that claims
    to have the highest possible quality output
    surround sound and whatever ooptions the software
    might look for to determine what it needs to
    output as....that just captures the output

    The same could be done for DVD movies even.

    Their entire idea is thus fundamentally flawed.
    Encryption just stops John Q Moron who has lots
    of money for buying readers and writters from
    doing a direct copy.

    Someone needs to hack a DVD, figure out the disk
    format and all that shit...and publish enough
    info that independant hardware manafacturers can
    make DVD drives. Force the standard open!

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    1. Re:The real problem by belgin · · Score: 1
      Someone needs to hack a DVD, figure out the disk format and all that shit...and publish enough info that independant hardware manafacturers can make DVD drives. Force the standard open!

      Believe it or not, many people will disagree. It is true that the way the industries are trying to cling to closed standards are untenable, but most people are likely to say that they have the right to try.

      The real problem is that these industries are VERY aware of how much more profitible closed standards are. If they can kaeep the standard closed for a while longer, their stock stays high, they make more money, they can afford to pay more for the products they create. They can afford to create fringe items once the technology continues to catch on. If the standard is forced open, that money base vanishes.

      We are inclined to say that this is good, because it places power in the hands of many small competitors. The downside of this is that quality suffers dramaticly at the fringes of the industry. Brittany Spears, the boy bands, etc. would have high quality distribution right now as people fought over having the best version, but orchestral music, most alternative, hard rock, rap and anything that doesn't sit squarely in the ultra popular realm will suffer lower quality in a "forced open" market.

      (I am assuming here that the power base of the music industry continues to erode.) In many ways, closed standards stink for users like the average /. person. For Joe Average, they are a way of assuring quality. You and I can find good quality by knowing the right places to look, or at least who to ask. We who are in the technological "know" are the very ones that these companies fear. If everyone was like us, forcing the standards open would be good, but for many people who do not have the time or technical inclination, it is nice to know that the high quality is available in such and such a place.

      This is my opinion, because my own brother is totally computer illiterate and greatly enjoys public media. There are more consumers like him than like us. The REAL problem is that the industries need to ACCEPT this. More consumers will be happy buying a good product from a legitimate source than will actually bother with piracy. It is really rather sad.

      B. Elgin

      --

      B. Elgin
      "Read at your own risk; feel free to ignore."
  21. Why hack it? by gregstoll · · Score: 2

    It seems to me that if the companies producing DVD Audio want to store the audio with encryption, that's their right. As long as they provide players for Linux, *BSD, etc. (very unlikely, unfortunately), what is the justification for breaking the encryption? It seems that if these things happened, the companies would have a strong case against the hacker(s), claiming that the only possible reason to do this would be to illegally share copies. Just a thought...

    1. Re:Why hack it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      One reason would be to make a clip of it for a review. This would probably be legal (just like a quote from a book) under fair use. IANAL, but my parents are... -Dave Turner, AC of convinience

  22. Digital music and proprietary encodings by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3
    Hrmm this seems like quite an exercise in futility. The people who are going to purchase DVD-A players in the early adoption statge are going to be serious audio enthusiasts. These people are going to want to hook their DVD-A players up to an outboard digital-to-analog converter, like the Mark Levinson 36 or 360. Accordingly, the DVD-A player is going to need an unencrypted digital output stream. Thus, it will be trivial to intercept the raw, perfect digital music that is encoded on the DVD.

    Nevertheless, the music industry will undoubtedly come up with some brain-dead scheme to attempt to prevent copying. In historical context, there is a high probability that this move will kill the format. Witness HDCD, whose encoding is a trace secret of the only company that makes the stream decoder. Almost nobody uses HDCD, and nobody really cares about that format anymore. DAT and MD were saddled with stupid copy-protection schemes that made their initial adoption slow. Luckily the enthusiast community was able to overcome these schemes and DAT and MD have found a niche in the hobbiest world.

    In the perfect world, the digital encoding format of DVD-A would be an open, published specification like CD audio is. I expect that the outcome will be the opposite.

    -jwb

  23. Another Betamax war? by cybaea · · Score: 2

    Is this going to be another formats war?

    Sony has the rival format Super Audio CD which claims to "produce nothing less than a quantum leap in music resolution." Yeah, right, but at least it is available now.

    However, Sony's argument for this format does not excite me:

    What are the benefits of SACD?
    In addition to exceptional sound quality through the DSD system, the SACD format can accommodate more than four times the information of the current CD format. With this extra capacity, a standard Super Audio CD will provide space for 2-channel stereo data, as well as an area for up to 6-track multi-channel data, storage capacity for text and images, disc variations, copyright protection and much more.


    Sony SACD FAQ

    I read this a "copyright protection and maybe something else if we can think of it, perhaps". It does not seem like a compelling argument, and it certainly does not seem like we need two different formats for this.

    Any chance that Audio DVD will silently die now?

    --
    Hi!
  24. This really heads back to Cap'n Crunch Draper... by Christopher+B.+Brown · · Score: 3
    Head back to Cap'n Crunch; there was, in the early days of the Apple ][, the idea of creating a super powerful modem that would be programmable.

    By being programmable, it was inherently able to do the sorts of nefarious things that one would do with a "Blue Box" or any of the other Phone Freaking equipment.

    At the time, Apple concluded that deploying a more freakworthy variation on what had just gotten Draper imprisoned would be a very bad idea.

    That, of course, was a goodly dozen years ago. Time has passed, and the average computer with sound card contains 50 times as much DSP hardware as "scared off" Apple.

    In effect, the modern PC can be programmed to be a phreaking monster.

    Back to DVDs... If they deploy software on PCs that allows reading DVDs, and do not use some form of tamper-resistant hardware-based strong crypto, then the general purpose hardware along with general purpose software represents a potent force to completely crack anything the music folk try to use to prevent unlicensed dissemination of music.

    Furthermore, even with strong crypto, of the DVD happens to be readable by a DVD drive, then copies can be made, even if the music can't be played on one's PC.

    It is evident that the industry moguls are entirely clueless in this...

    --
    If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate.
  25. DVD Audio - the need? by hattig · · Score: 2

    Hmm, it is nice to see that someone is creating a spec for DVD Audio, CDs are nice, but they are plain stereo, whereas DVD Audio will include the excellent 5.1 channel sound. Also, I would hope that the sampling rate went up to at least 96kHz or more (just because it can), and maybe the bit depth will go up - maybe 20/24 or 32 bits per channel to make the sound perfect. But, are you one of those people who claim that they can tell the difference between CD Audio and high quality analogue?

    Hopefully, because of the vast amount of space on the disc, some videos can be included as well. I always think, when buying a single, that it would be nice to have the video on the CD as well, mainly because it is possible, and the video has been made! Also mp3 versions could be included on the disk.

    Anyway, back to the subject in hand:

    The problem is that with audio you can always rerecord after it has been decrypted. If the equipment for playing Audio DVDs is of sufficient quality, then the outputs will be hi-Quality and make excellent sampling sources! So you won't stop copying of Audio DVDs that way... It is pretty pointless really - most people are happy with CDs, and CD quality sound, and if they can just rip the sound off of an AudioDVD by resampling after it has been digitised then they will!

    Obviously there is a big quality hit from recording video from DVD to a standard video recording medium (the VCR). But there will be little quality hit from recording audio from an AudioDVD onto a CD-R or DVD-RAM or HD.

    1. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by jyang · · Score: 1

      I might be ignorant. But I doubt music need 5.1 channel at all. The movie need surround sound because in real life things happens around you. While a band or orchestra usually performes in front of the audience. 5.1 channel may sound good when audience applaude, but other than that what would be the point?

      Maybe good for Church music in pipe organ?

      --
      --- You make things foolproof, and they'll find you a damn fool.
    2. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by Steve+B · · Score: 1
      But, are you one of those people who claim that they can tell the difference between CD Audio and high quality analogue?

      Or, equivalently, are you one of those people who can spot the crooked seam in His Imperial Majesty's new suit?

      The number of people who delude themselves into thinking that they hear a difference, or who just have to have The Next New Thing[tm] is nowhere near enough to displace the CD format in favor of something incompatible with the existing CD base.

      Hopefully, because of the vast amount of space on the disc, some videos can be included as well.

      Er, how is this any different from existing video DVD?
      /.

      --
      /. If the government wants us to respect the law, it should set a better example.
    3. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sorry, I do hear a difference between analog and digital. Maybe you should clean your ears?

    4. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, you have to remember that "5.1" is now a marketing triggerpoint to bring in dollars.

      Soon, it'll be a K-Tel selling point on Tee Vee.

      Hype has a way of filtering slowly through the market that way.

    5. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's the point of DVD audio? Correct if I'm wrong but I think that sound quality mainly depends of speakers/amplifiers, so if you play dvd-audio with normal stereos you get worse sound quality than with high-end cd system. What's the point of sampling sound at 96kHz when human ear and speakers can do only (in the best case) 20kHz?

    6. Re:DVD Audio - the need? by argathin · · Score: 1

      Correct if I'm wrong but I think that sound quality mainly depends of speakers/amplifiers, so if you play dvd-audio with normal stereos you get worse sound quality than with high-end cd system

      Widespread myth, that. Fact is, the further you get to the front of the HiFi chain, the better the quality must be. Reason: Each and every mistake your source (i.e. turntable/arm/cartridge (in that order), CD player, tape deck, etc.) makes cannot be corrected by the amplifier or the speakers. In many cases it will even be, well, amplified...

      Hence, there's a fair chance that a CD player with a high-end amplifier and high-end speakers sounds worse than a high-end record-player (plus suitable preamp) or DVD player (if they keep the promises they make about quality - I have yet to listen to one) with an average amp/speakers.

      Cheerio,

      Thomas

  26. Gee... by Greyfox · · Score: 3
    Move to an encrypted DVD-audio format that does its damndest to remove my fair use rights to make mix tapes or encode the data to another format or stick to CD's, which has no copy protection and therefore allows me to make a 12 hour MP3 CD that I can carry with me rather than having to carry my entire CD collection. Hmm. What to do what to do?

    The music industry can blow me. I can always find higher quality music from garage bands who don't have a problem distributing their stuff on the net in MP3 format. I'll do my business with companies that support open protocols and don't try to violate my rights in their greedy scramble for more money. Don't let them ease us in to a pay-per-view world.

    --

    I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?

    1. Re:Gee... by G27+Radio · · Score: 2

      The music industry can blow me. I can always find higher quality music from garage bands who don't have a problem distributing their stuff on the net in MP3 format. I'll do my business with companies that support open protocols and don't try to violate my rights in their greedy scramble for more money. Don't let them ease us in to a pay-per-view world.

      I agree whole-heartedly. Dig around mp3.com for a little while and you'll find many bands that are as good or better than you'll hear on the radio. Of course, a lot of it is as bad, and some even worse than the crap that gets played over and over on the top 40 stations.

      I've been thinking about this a bit though and I do see one big thing that will keep the record companies in business. There seems to be a pretty huge segment of the music-buying population that only wants music that's "safe." By "safe" I don't mean the opposite of dangerous. I mean that they want something that will be deemed acceptable by their peer groups. They tend to choose their music like I chose my clothes.

      I don't particularly care what my clothes look like as long as I'm comfortable--yet I do care about my appearance, so I try to select clothing that makes me "fit in." In other words, I think most people want music that's in fashion.

      The girl in the cube next to me listens to the local top 40 station, the most popular in town, and I can hear it from my desk just fine. Some of the music is cute, but none has any depth to it--it's as if it's specifically chosen for the fact that in 12-18 months no one will ever want to hear it again so they'll have to upgrade their CD collection. Planned obsolescence I guess. The alternative stations are somewhat better but they seem to be becoming more like the top 40 stations as far as quality of music these days.

      I think music released on the Internet will end up hurting the recording industry, but not killing them. I think they'll lose people that are really into music, but they'll still keep the crowd that needs to be told what kind of music they like--no garage band is going to be able to compete with the recording industry marketing machines.

      The "sheep" segment will continue to make them the most money and won't care (or even know) about open standards and such. And of course, where there's money to be made the industry will try to protect it.

      numb

    2. Re:Gee... by VAXman · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking about this a bit though and I do see one big thing that will keep the record companies in business. There seems to be a pretty huge segment of the music-buying population that only wants music that's "safe." By "safe" I don't mean the opposite of dangerous. I mean that they want something that will be deemed acceptable by their peer groups. They tend to choose their music like I chose my clothes.

      I doubt anybody outside of high school is concerned about the social acceptability of the music they listen to. I don't think anybody older than about 15 cares about that.

      However, most people DO care about "safety" in terms of accessibility. The reason most people will never dig around MP3.com and find (legal) music which they want is because it is TIME CONSUMING. Most people have careers, kids, car trouble, etc. and have way too much stuff to do in order to have time to wade around MP3.com and find music. So they'll set for music played on the radio, and sold at mainstream stores such as Best Buy.

      For these people, the music companies do a great service. They pre-select music such that most people are interested in most of the music which is promoted. Everybody's happy - the people jget their music, the companies get their money, etc.

      For the rest of us who want an alternative to the norm, and want to go through lots of different stuff, there are options for us also. But don't assume what's right for you is right for everybody.

  27. The Failure of DVD Audio by Ex+Machina · · Score: 4

    DVD Audio is doomed. Sure, the quality rules. I'd like it. But people have a HUGE investment of money into the CD technology. People want their music to work on their car stero, their boom box and their computer. The high-end technoweenie consumer also dislikes DVD audio because it is not as portable as a handheld digital audio device (mp3man, rio, etc.). Can you imagine how much a DVDAudioMan would cost? And it would be very bulkly. You need decryption on the player.
    This isn't meant to start a flame war, but I think, despite the technical merits of it, DVD Audio is not a comercially viable technology. Perhaps the future of commercial audio recordings is in some encrypted mp3 standard.

    1. Re:The Failure of DVD Audio by timothy · · Score: 2

      The bulk of the investment in "CD technology" that Ex Machina refers to is not in *players*, but in media.

      Mnay middle-class, wealthy and even some poorer Americans (adjust categories as you have the knowledge to for other countries) have tens, hundreds or even thousands of CDs -- but few people have all that many players, at least not that many players if you take into account their projected lifespan. (In other words, though I have quite a few CD players in form of a portable player, a couple of CD ROM drives, an old component deck or two, and a DVD deck that plays CDs -- sheesh! -- none of them would I necessarily expect to least more than 5 years ... so they're going to get replaced piecemiel anyhow.)

      As long as new players continue to play the old media, my investment in CDs is not lost. I see every reason to think that future players-of-little-flat-discs will continue to work well with my Dead Milkmen CD from 1990.

      I have to disagree (with the above as one reason) that DVD Audio is doomed to failure. In fact, it seems like a great media / format combo for several purposes. Potentially very long playback times, potentially far-beyond-human-threshhold audio quality, and quite a few compromise points in between.

      Yeah, the encryption stuff is a pain, but I think this is a baby/bathwater thing. I'd like to see a DVD-Audio player in the Volvo 240 turbo wagon that I don't yet own ... :) I'd like to listen to timeshifted talk radio on cross-country trips on DVD-RAM discs playing on my in-car player ...

      timothy



      --
      jrnl: http://tinyurl.com/c2l8yr / foes: http://tinyurl.com/ckjno5
    2. Re:The Failure of DVD Audio by Buaku · · Score: 1

      I so totally agree with you. DVD video has a bright future, but DVD audio? MP3 has a brighter future IMO. This six month delay they are talking about should help guarantee that DVD audio is stillborn. The idiotic recording industry is going to lost the audio format war because of their fear of piracy.

    3. Re:The Failure of DVD Audio by Porky+Pig · · Score: 1

      DVD Audio will be doomed - yes. Protection from digital copying is a reason one. Not a standard format but very large number of different formats under the common umbrella of DVD Audio - reason two, you don't know what the hell you're dealing with. Multichannel instead of two-channels is a reason three. Audiophiles frawn on multi-channel technology. I'm not the one, but I do agree that two speakers are better than 5.1. Personally I believe SACD has a better chance as 'audiophile format'. As to the rest of us, simple humans, I believe that good remastering makes CD fairly adequate. Just compare the original and remastered edition of Kind of Blue.

      --
      Grunt. Oink, oink.
  28. Frog in the well by Gurlia · · Score: 3

    "Another frog in the well croaks indignantly against in protest against construction workers who are unearthing the century-old useless well. Joining a whole crowd of other frogs in the well, insisting that the construction workers respect their rights to the well, and the water therein. But some day, the bulldozer will smash through the old well walls, and concrete poured in as they finish the basement of a new high-rise to be."

    Not another pathetic attempt to put the genie back into the bottle. When will people get out of their well and realize that the Information Age cannot be shoe-horned into traditional industrial models? Copy-protection is an old, obsolete concept that just doesn't fit in the modern context of the Internet and the Information Age. This new era is about sharing information, not hiding it. It's about making things available to people, and opening up choices by allowing fair competition to your trade. It's a new set of rules that sells services instead of hogging commidities. Trying to fight this will only shoot themselves in the foot, real hard.

    And here we have yet another obviously traditional, "orthodox" company talking about "increasing encryption key size", while not realizing that the weak link is the fact that information is actually being displayed through the DVD player -- hence it's copiable. They're clinging on to old principles that are quickly becoming obsolete. Pathetic.

    People who intend to survive in the new millenium better break out of their old mentality, and learn to play by the new rules. And they better learn this before the concrete is poured into their well. Time for them to get out of the well and look for higher, better things.

    "Stagnation breeds failure and miserable defeat."

    (BTW please excuse my melodramatic intro :-) )

    --
    mikre he sophia he tou Mikrosophou.
  29. I think the solution is simple by deanc · · Score: 3

    The solution to these piracy problems with ripping video or audio media is obvious-- encrypt the digital data on the media and prevent it from ever being played in analog form... there you go. If you cannot play a music on your stereo or watch the movie on your television, then noone will be able to make illegal copies of that media. The use of speakers and video displays in conjunction with digital media should be illegal, and then all the piracy fears will be allayed.

    ;)

    -Dean

    1. Re:I think the solution is simple by KnightStalker · · Score: 2

      100% non-piratable encryption:

      dd if=/dev/random of=dvd-a_file

      :-)

      --
      * And remember, it's spelled N-e-t-s-c-a-p-e, but it's pronounced "Mozilla."
  30. Yeah, THIS is going to work. by Outlyer · · Score: 3

    Ok, Mr.Salesman, explain this to me. I buy this player. It has slightly better audio quality, so I can now hear the limitations of the studio where it was recorded. Sounds great! Oh, and I won't be able to use my car stereo, discman, or computer to play it? Even better! And if I manage to get a drive that can read it into my computer, I won't be able to even LISTEN to the music I own unless I run Windows? Oh, sign me up!

    First of all, I don't see independant labels (the ones who produce the most important music anyway) moving to multi-million dollar studios to record something, and I don't see any real value in the added quality. Not so much that I'd want to fsck myself for it. Count me out.

    --
    ----------------- "I have a bone to pick, and a few to break." - Refused -------------------
    1. Re:Yeah, THIS is going to work. by billstewart · · Score: 1

      A college housemate of mine, who liked classical music, decided that he already had a good enough stereo system to hear the flaws in the music - his solution was to buy records made by better orchestras with better conductors.

      --

      Bill Stewart
      New Fast-Compression-only CPR http://preview.tinyurl.com/dy575ks
    2. Re:Yeah, THIS is going to work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watch out for unwanted features in new recorders ... if the industry rigs them to respond to the copy protection watermarking in DVD-Audio, they might also rig them to respond to SDMI copy protection watermarking in future CDs.

  31. Why not hack it? by TheCarp · · Score: 2

    Why NOT hack it?

    Seriously...why does a person NEED a reason.
    Yes, its their right to encrypt it. However...
    if I have a copy of it...it is my RIGHT to
    copy it, or do whatever _I_ want to the data,
    as long as I do not distribute it
    (Copyright law ONLY covers distribution remember)

    The reason for doing it is the same reason that
    when i was 10 and got a little Star Wars walking
    robot toy (I think it was star wars..probably
    wasn't) I grabbed a screw driver and opened it up
    and took all the gears out....cuz I wanted to see
    how it worked
    (never did get that damned thing back together...)

    Isn't that justification enough?

    --
    "I opened my eyes, and everything went dark again"
    1. Re:Why not hack it? by bonehead · · Score: 1

      The reason for doing it is the same reason that when i was 10 and got a little Star Wars walking robot toy (I think it was star wars..probably wasn't) I grabbed a screw driver and opened it up and took all the gears out....cuz I wanted to see how it worked (never did get that damned thing back together...)

      Isn't that justification enough?


      For those who understood that explanation, there was no explanation necessary in the first place.

      Unfortuneatly, the rest of the world will never understand that point of view no matter how much explaining you do. :-)

    2. Re:Why not hack it? by VAXman · · Score: 1

      99.44% of self-proclaimed computer geeks do not know how the microprocessors in their computers work. Most will know something about the computer architecture, and will know the general details about their computer such as how many pipeline stages it has, how many pipelines there are, the associativity of the cache, and almost all of them know assembly language for the machine they use, but none of them have knowledge of the path an instruction takes through the machine, the exceptional cases for each operand, the implementation of the ALU units, the circuit issues encountered during design of the microprocessor, et cetera, ad nauseum.

      A microprocessor is closed and extremely proprietary. It is a black box. You have no idea what any one circuit in it looks like. You literally cannot take it apart, aside from dissolving the layers off one by one, and using an electron microscope (but no "geeks" do this - it is very expensive and only companies do it). It is not your little Star Wars action figure. It is a complicated piece of machinery.

      So, since you do not understand how the microprocessor in your computer works, how can you claim to demand knowledge of how the encryption technology works? A microprocessor is a general purpose device, and performs all operations your computer does. It appears that you should be more interested in demanding knowledge of this since it is more integral (and more interesting) than an encryption algorithm. Besides, encryption algorithms are a dime a dozen; if one is closed, what is all the fuss about? Just look at others. Every microprocessor is closed and proprietary so you cannot look at others for examples.

    3. Re:Why not hack it? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about the not yet released Freedom CPU http://f-cpu.tux.org/

    4. Re:Why not hack it? by drox · · Score: 2

      Excellent example (I love a good analogy)! And it's good in more ways than you elaborated on.

      The reason for doing it is the same reason that
      when i was 10 and got a little Star Wars walking
      robot toy (I think it was star wars..probably
      wasn't) I grabbed a screw driver and opened it up
      and took all the gears out....cuz I wanted to see how it worked


      That last bit is your motive. And it does matter. You wanted to see how the robot toy worked. In that instance there is nothing wrong (and a lot right) with opening it up, taking it apart, and attempting to find out. If your motive had been different (say, you worked for a rival toy company and wanted to find out how it worked so that your company could duplicate the mechanism) then there would be a problem. But the "crime", if any, would not be in cracking open the toy and finding out how the mechanism was made, but in duplicating and distributing it... at the expense of the creative folks who invented it in the first place.

      (never did get that damned thing back together...)

      Here's another potential problem with hacking... what if you're unsuccessful? In the example above, you and only you suffered the consequences (the toy didn't work right anymore). Other hacks may have worse consequences, and this is where the ethics get a little hairy. While there may be nothing wrong and a lot right with attempting to find out how something works, ferchissakes be careful. Doubly so if what you're taking apart doesn't belong to you. Even if you do own the thing you're hacking (the DVD example) there may be consequences for others. Like the delay of DVD audio. To the standard hacker ethic I would add something like the Wiccan Rede. "An ye harm none, do as ye will."

  32. Do People Want DVD-Audio? by Balerion · · Score: 2

    I guess the question is: will people bother to buy it? The transition to digital audio (via CD) was easy for most people to make, since the difference in quality was obvious. Also, the new optical medium allowed for unprecedented ease-of-use (track skipping, random play, etc). For the most part, people were willing to give up vinyl and cassettes and move to this new media.

    However, for a high majority of the population, CD quality is more than good enough. I'd say that most people don't have the equipment to fully realize the entire range of sound that a CD can produce. If they did, why has MP3 become so popluar? Why are people willing to move to a format that's "near-CD" quality? Because to most people, it sounds just as good, it works on equipment that they already have, and it provides unprecedented ease-of use. You can create your own mixes, playlists, and store a huge amount of music in a small amount of space. The only advantages that that DVD-Audio has to offer are increased quality (which most people can't appreciate) and longer play times (at a time when most albums come in well under the 80 mins available on CD).

    I think that this format may very well fall into the same category as laserdisk: great for a small minority of the population, but essentially ignored by most people. And it should be.

    1. Re:Do People Want DVD-Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      amen brother

    2. Re:Do People Want DVD-Audio? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      For those of us who have a large investment in audiophile grade speakers, DVD Audio is worth it. The problem with most CDs is that they are recorded poorly, or there are errors in the not-so-ultrasonic range. I have Martin-Logan reQuest electrostats as my mains, Martin-Logan Logos center channel front and center channel rear, and Martin-Logan SL3 rears, all being powered by Krell mono-block amps. I have demoed DVD-Audio discs made by Meridian, and I have also listen to Meridian Lossless (MLP). DVD audio makes CD audio sound like listening to music through a tin can. However, MLP is where its at. As you know, when a CD/DVD is made, there a certain sampling rate. Well, MLP comes in and takes super-high sampling rates (those close to the human ears) and then uses a ZIP type compression scheme to compress the music. When played, the music is "UNZIPed" in real time and it is awesome. So all hail DVD-Audio, I would like a player for Linux, but my computer isn't where DVD-Audio was intended to be played.

    3. Re:Do People Want DVD-Audio? by argathin · · Score: 1

      The transition to digital audio (via CD) was easy for most people to make, since the difference in quality was obvious.

      No, unfortunately it's not. Of course, the music industry wants us to believe it, as they were able to make oodles of money out of the changeover from LP to CD, but it wasn't quality. Try pitting a high-end, state-of-the-art record player versus a CD (quality recordings assumed) and be surprised.

      Of course, in the "budget", consumer standard realm, the quality difference was obvious - and that in combination with the "easier handling" was good enough to get the majority to spend money on perceived upgrades.

      (Now, where have I seen such tactic before outside the music business... :-})

      Which is one of the reasons why this whole DVD encryption business is so flaming annoying, as I'd actually be interested in finding out whether the new system finally has a chance of matching analogue techniques - but not with the mess they're making out of it now, no sir!

      Cheerio,

      Thomas

  33. ..but only 20 of the 24 bits are actually used by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    In the analog world, it's very hard to make a DAC which can reliably output 2^24 different voltage levels.

    1. Re:..but only 20 of the 24 bits are actually used by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 3
      That's not really true. Analog Devices, Burr-Brown, and Crystal Semiconductor all make DACs with very nice programmable capability up to 24 bits. The problem with most DACs is that the resolution is swamped in noise from RF, cheap power supplies, cheap output stages, etc.

      -jwb

    2. Re:..but only 20 of the 24 bits are actually used by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      It is true; he said it's hard, not impossible, and that is indeed a fact.

      Another important point everyone overlooks is the fact that these pieces of equipment have to be manufactured. Getting 24 bit resolution is incredibly difficult on a pcb; even with perfect layout, you get enough leakage to hammer several of those bits. Unless something changes radically, you'll probably never see true 24 bit resolution from a mass produced piece of equipment. Add to that the fact that in the ADC process, various errors also eat some of that res... A higher sampling rate is helpful, but not for the reason many people think. There is a certain amount of error inherent in the quantization process that cannot be avoided. It tends to be constant. If we sample at 96 khz, giving us a much higher number of samples, those errors are a smaller percentage of the whole, thus having a smaller effect.

      Of course, all of the above is close to being irrelevant until we come up with something to replace speakers. Even the best speakers hammer the holy hell out of the signal, rendering most of the differences spoken about above inaudible.

  34. dvd-audio encryption is ethically misguided by kuma · · Score: 3

    minna-san:

    this is one of the biggest frustrations imaginable...

    1) the physical media is already difficult to manufacture, but those with deep pockets will have the means to create bootleg copies--this does nothing to really slow down major pirates, and much to confound consumers.

    2) burning dvd-ram copies for sale is long and tedious, and will not have a big impact (how many music and software companies going broke due to the popularity cd-rw drives?).

    3) a good engineering student could hack together a compact disc player, but even with a suite of standard components, would have difficulty building a bare-bones dvd player... when dvd media becomes obsolete, some audio may be effectively lost due to the encryption.

    4) what happens when audio legally purchased on dvd-audio becomes public domain? no one seems to be concerned about all these encryption schemes which potentially lock away information *forever*.

    sincerely, kuma

    1. Re:dvd-audio encryption is ethically misguided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You won't need to worry about audio purchased on dvd-audio ever becoming public domain. The big entertainment business has had no difficulty getting the duration of copyrights extended time and again, and they will certainly do everything in their power to ensure that Gone With the Wind will never become public domain.

    2. Re:dvd-audio encryption is ethically misguided by bonehead · · Score: 1

      4) what happens when audio legally purchased on dvd-audio becomes public domain? no one seems to be concerned about all these encryption schemes which potentially lock away information *forever*.

      This is an excellent point, and one that I hadn't even thought of. Thank you for pointing this one out.

    3. Re:dvd-audio encryption is ethically misguided by VAXman · · Score: 1

      3) a good engineering student could hack together a compact disc player, but even with a suite of standard components, would have difficulty building a bare-bones dvd player... when dvd media becomes obsolete, some audio may be effectively lost due to the encryption.

      A good engineering student could hack together a PDP-11 processor with relative ease, but coupldn't come close to hacking together a Pentium III processor. Should we stop using Pentium III computers and switch back to PDP-11's because they are easier for engineering students to build?

    4. Re:dvd-audio encryption is ethically misguided by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Should we stop using Pentium III computers and switch back to PDP-11's because they are easier for engineering students to build?

      seems you're missing the point - a PIII can't lock away your data. DVD can when it goes obsolete.

      Anyway, CD players are plenty good enough for just about anyone - they honestly can't tell the difference between CD and HDCD

  35. In one sense... by RoLlEr_CoAsTeR · · Score: 1

    You may be right. I acknowledge beforehand that this isn't a very knowledgeable post, so I'm sorry.

    But, continuing with my earlier thought.. it seems as though, in one sense, DVD was hacked too soon because things like DVD-A weren't released yet (am I right) and because of the hacking, things like that are being delayed for fear of being hacked. If you ask me, though, it must be some sort of deep-seated desire for $. Then again, I wouldn't know.

    --

    Insert mind here.
  36. Thoughts by PenguinDude · · Score: 1

    Well, here's my take on the issue:
    I don't think companies are going to pull out of the DVD market. Why? Well, what is the alternative? Well, there's the "old" standard, VHS, which is completely insecure (though I have heard of some kind of "copy" protection on the VHS tapes, were the picture fades in and out, but I've never had a problem with any of my tapes). In reality, DVD still offers more benefits and is more secure. Granted, there will be people ripping the movie off, but they will always be those people. The vast majority of people would rather buy the disc, then find some techno-guru that A) has the movie, and B) will rip them a copy.
    Ripping DVD movies is still a much more detailed process than, say, ripping audio tracks from a CD into MP3s. The population of "hackers" that has that ability will remain small for quite some time, I suspect (i.e there aren't any "point-and-rip" DVD applications out there yet, like Musicmatch Jukebox for MP3s).

    1. Re:Thoughts by Mythias · · Score: 2

      I have seen the fading-in-and-out first hand. I recently bought a DVD player, and since I have an older TV without any RCA inputs, I had to route it through my VCR. Well suffice it to say that didn't work. The VCR detected the Macrovision (I believe its called) protection and started fading my DVD movie in and out, and giving flickering blue screens like it was losing the video signal. I wasn't trying to record it or anything, just trying to output the DVD to my screen. Its annoying and I can see how it would keep someone from ripping a movie if it was corrupted in that way.

    2. Re:Thoughts by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      As seen in the GNU Humor Pages (Software Terms):

      Copy Protection: A clever method of preventing incompetent pirates from stealing software and legitimate customers from using it.

      Now be a good mindless "consumeroid" and upgrade your TV and stop bothering those poor multinational corporations.

      Or better yet, check at Radio Shack, etc. to see if they have something for this. I heard that there are devices available for dealing with Macrovision(?) but I don't know if they're legal in your jurisdiction and I don't know if they work as promised.

      Another option might be to try and find an old VCR without Macrovision but with RCA inputs. I don't know how the quality would be... Seems like you'd be losing some of the benefits of having a DVD player. Find a friend with an old Beta and try it!

      Still, you shouldn't have to be going through this trouble.

    3. Re:Thoughts by Bishop · · Score: 1

      My TV dosen't have RCA inputs either. To get around this, I bought a little box from Radio Shack that takes an RCA input and converts it to channel 3 or 4. Cost $30 I think. It was labled as a TV adapter for console gameing stations.

  37. poetic justice by Borealis · · Score: 1

    Wouldn't it be spiffy if they implemented strong encryption and then ran into trouble with the US govm't for doing so?

    "Sorry sir, you can't take that laptop out of the country unless you remove the DVD drive".

    Unlikely I know (it would be stupid of them to implement encryption that strong), but it's fun to imagine. Sorta like that Dilbert where Phil and Catbert square off and Dilbert comes home with the comment "Two wrongs made a right".

    --
    Unbreakable toys can be used to break other toys.
    1. Re:poetic justice by DeRobeHer · · Score: 1

      I've been wondering a simmilar thing... Will you be allowed to take a PowerBook G4 (when and if they're released) out of the country?

      --
      Donald Roeber

      --
      Donald Roeber
      Generating 2048 Bits of Randomness...
    2. Re:poetic justice by timster · · Score: 1

      Actually US export law has a special exception that allows US citizens to take strong-encryption products with them on a trip outside the US, with certain restrictions (you are required to keep track of where you go, though you don't have to give the log to anyone) and as long as the products remain within your posession. IANAL of course, and obviously this still doesn't have anything to do with US companies who want to make DVD players for export.

      --
      I have seen the future, and it is inconvenient.
  38. DVD audio isn't needed by Sloppy · · Score: 2

    Just buy your music straight from the band. They email you a 256kbps MP3, or maybe even something with a higher-than-44kHz sample rate. Then, if you want to take advantage of DVD technology, no problem: just copy the MP3 to a DVD-RAM or writable DVD-ROM. Or burn it on a CDROM. Or copy it to an Orb or Zip disk. Or a flash card. Whatever. It's just a file.

    Movies cost millions of dollars to make, so the media companies still have control over that product. But in the case of music, we're about to throw away the whole industry anyway, so who cares what lame games they try to play?


    ---
    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
    1. Re:DVD audio isn't needed by Hobbex · · Score: 2


      I usually recommend people to pirate the cd, and then send a $1 donation to the band. That is more than they will see of your money should you buy the cd.

      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    2. Re:DVD audio isn't needed by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hay kool, man!

      If we all just send our dollar to the band, they can say "hell to you" to the distributors, and the radio stations, and the publicists, and anybody who would draw attention to them.

      Then they can open up a dinky little website and hope somebody wanders in.

    3. Re:DVD audio isn't needed by Hobbex · · Score: 1


      You are so gone if you think getting publicity is difficult in this day and age. The companies may have been willing to fuck any band that didn't go the conventional way until now, and the radio stations may have been their whores, but those days are gone.

      On the web, there are people who know what symbiosis means. Give it two years and watch.

      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

  39. Re:This really heads back to Cap'n Crunch Draper.. by Loligo · · Score: 2

    >there was, in the early days of the Apple ][,
    >the idea of creating a super powerful modem that
    >would be programmable

    Sounds like the old AppleCat modem by Novation.

    Amazing little device, had a tone generator on it (we weren't hip enough to call it a DSP yet), so you could use it for the various things you mentioned (generating assorted phreak-related tones) as well as playing music. There was also a DTMF decoder PROM available for it, but I never got/burned one..

    The niftiest thing at the time about the AppleCat was the ability to do Bell 202, 1200-baud half-duplex (at the time, 1200 baud full-duplex modems were still prohibitively expensive).

    Of course, the warez scene at the time picked up on this and pretty soon Cat Fur systems popped up all over the place. Cat Fur was a nifty terminal/transfer program that allowed chatting between the sender/receiver (definitely a novelty at the time).

    Fun stuff.

    Gosh, sometimes I miss being 15...

    -LjM

  40. Engineers just create new formats by heroine · · Score: 3

    Like I always said, you can decrypt other people's formats as much as you want but unless the hacker community grows beyond the college lecture hall, the engineers who actually create these formats will forever build stronger encryption. If they don't replace DVD with DVD-2 they'll delay DVD audio. If you decrypt DVD audio they'll just replace it with another format. The only way to win is to become the engineers who create the formats.

    1. Re:Engineers just create new formats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Problem with this is, consumers quickly tire of having to buy a brand new audio playback device every year because the new encryption scheme isn't supported on the old one. So just coming out with a new format every time someone cracks the old one pretty much dooms your entire industry to failure. (Which may be a good thing!)

      I think we need to try some completely new business models for music anyway, like shareware, or giving the bits away for free as advertising to sell tickets to live performances, or...

    2. Re:Engineers just create new formats by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Problem is, the engineers aren't the ones deciding on the encryption. The laywers and executives are the only people who actually want this.

      So, it would seem that the only way to win is for the hackers to become CEOs and majority stockholders of these companies...

  41. Ripping is not always illegal by David+Jao · · Score: 5
    Copying does not automatically imply a copyright violation. Most legal experts agree that copying CDs that you own for your own personal listening convenience is legal under fair use even without permission from the copyright owner. For example, if I take my favorite songs from 10 of my CDs and burn them all onto one CD so that I can carry around one CD instead of 10, that's perfectly legal.

    The recording industry would like us to believe (falsely) that any form of copying is illegal. Their entire encryption efforts are based around this false assumption. Rob is entirely right to say that ripping should be technologically allowed. Please don't perpetuate the myth that copying without permission is automatically illegal.

    1. Re:Ripping is not always illegal by the_tsi · · Score: 1

      I'd really like to see a lawyer say this. I have a feeling that the "personal copy" thing is one of the biggest urban legends going these days. Everyone has heard about it from a friend who heard about it....

      It's sort of like those stupid warez sites that say "you can download this but you have to erase it within 24 hours" and think that they're clear of legal issues or something.

      -Chris

    2. Re:Ripping is not always illegal by Gis_Sat_Hack · · Score: 1

      How broad do the court decisions on 'fair use' of data go?

      I've recently bought the entire set of National Geographic maps ( digital ) to complement the family archives of the Nat Geo's & map inclusions that have been gathered over the last X generations.
      It's an 8 CD set, and being in mapping I've got the live drive space to quietly tuck the lot away in a partition or 'virtual CD' space, or to print the images to TIF file & browse. However, by the Mindscape & Nat Geo liscence, this sort of usage is stated to be 'illegal'. The only behaviour allowed by their liscence is to play silly buggers with the CD tray & to put disc1 in followed by discX etc. Never mind that the tray might not be handy to the desk, or that, god forbid, you might actually be using the device for something else.

      So, hands up everyone that thinks 'fair use' of purchased data/media includes anything that you personally want to do with it, bar onselling, giving away to pirates, public performance, etc. Are we free & should we be free to plasticly bend, warp, copy, deface etc, data( - image, sound, numeric, ...) however we wish in the privacy of our own homes.

      hmmm & what about a 3D rendered view of my living room with a Nat Geo map on the wall ? If I rendere from the image on disk, that's illegal. If I take a photo of the room that includes the map hanging on the wall & the other paintings etc, that's apparently legal.

      The whiff of double standard anyone.. ?

    3. Re:Ripping is not always illegal by WNight · · Score: 2

      That agreement isn't 'fair use', it's nothing to do with a copyright. It's an EULA which is a contract they're trying to hold you to.

      Fair use applies to those CDs in the same way it would apply to anything else. If you can convince a judge that a photocopy from a map book is fair, then a printing of one of the images is fair. Media is completely irrelevant.

      On the other hand, you can sign a contract giving away your rights. For instance, an NDA appears to be a free speech violation, except that you voluntarily give up that right in trade for something (a job, secret design specs, etc.)

      But, an EULA isn't a valid contract. So it doesn't have any power at all. This isn't a gray area. Until they manage to push a law through, EULAs are completely without force.

      This is because you don't 1) get to read and sign the EULA before purchase, 2) don't get compensated for signing it, 3) have to say 'I Agree' to be able to use software you already bought.

      Apply those three things to any area other than software and the contract is obviously not valid, so therefore it isn't valid with software.

      Can you imagine buying a toaster and getting it home to discover an EULA they make you sign before the box will open that states you can only toast a certain brand of bread, and that you'll buy site licenses for the toaster if more than two people use it? Not bloody likely.

    4. Re:Ripping is not always illegal by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      If they are audio CDs of musical recordings, you don't have to resort to fair use to justify copying for your own use. Here's what 17 USC 1008 says:
      "No action may be brought under this title alleging infringement of copyright based on the manufacture, importation, or distribution of a digital audio recording device, a digital audio recording medium, an analog recording device, or an analog recording medium, or based on the the noncommercial use by a consumer of such a device or medium for making digital musical recordings or analog musical recordings."

      This was part of the revision of the Copyright Act that gave us the so-called "DAT tax" on digital media. The proceeds from that are distributed to the music publishers, and that is their compensation for the lost revenue from noncommercial consumer copying.

      Note, by the way, there is nothing in 17 USC 1008 that limits its applicability to copies you make for your own use. If you want to borrow a CD from a friend, and make a copy of that, that is legal in the United States (if it is a musical recording...can't copy spoken word stuff).

      I think the music publishers got screwed here. They clearly anticipated DAT becoming the consumer format of choice, and expected the money to be pouring in from the DAT tax. Instead, we consumers got the right to make legal copies, and th publishers got virtually nothing.

  42. Encryption is Futile, Music Will Be Assimilated by RJ11 · · Score: 1

    _NOTHING_ will ever be so secure that no one will be able to crack it. As long as there is encryption, there will be people trying (and succeding) at cracking it. Instead of wasting time and money, and pissing off potential customers, the recording industry should be rushing these technologies to the market and then capitolizing on it.

  43. A new twist by chchchain · · Score: 2
    I just saw something at the end of an article on digital standards for flat panel display signaling protocols that goes further than anything I'd seen before. There is a variant of one of the protocols, DVI, called DVI-CP. This variant supports encryption of HDTV DVD's all the way from the disk, through the graphics controller, and into the enhanced digital monitor. Presumably this would prevent audiojacker type tee'ing of the video.

    Now if they can find a way to sucker people into buying them...

    1. Re:A new twist by dmaxwell · · Score: 1

      So what? We pull the cover off the display and solder some ribbon cable to the lines driving the display and then reconstruct the video. The hardware required is well within the capabilities of a good engineering student. If you can view it then you can copy it. Since LCDs are digital in nature, there won't be a quality hit. Anyone else ever notice that heavy handedness and stupidity go hand in hand?

    2. Re:A new twist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you ever tried to pull the cover off and tack wires onto one of your PCMCIA cards?

      You'll be attempting the equivalent when you attempt what you suggest above.

    3. Re:A new twist by bonehead · · Score: 1

      It'll be interesting to see what sort of marketing spin they come up with to make this sound like a desirable feature.

    4. Re:A new twist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How about "required by law" after they lobby Congress?

  44. my machines serve me... by Hobbex · · Score: 5

    In many ways, I think there is a shift of view here so new that while I see it among us geeks, it has yet to proliferate into the general public. With the PC, and with the coming of age of open, free operating systems, we have reached a point where we dare ask for control over our machines, or more specifically, that they serve us, and no one else.

    If you think back ten years, technology was about companies. A new system or format would come out, and we would all praise the creators for giving us new technology (ok, not everyone, but people who like new technology). We didn't ask for input into the design, and didn't complain very vocally when they were designed for the good of the companies rather than the consumer. The people creating these formats are still stuck in that age where they, a small number of large companies, controlled the means by which we also used them.

    But those days are over. I simply will not invite a machine into my house unless it serves my agenda, and my agenda alone. I don't want a black box that keeps secrets from me, spies on me, controls my freedom, or generally tells me what I can and can't do. I believe that this attitude is the only way we can keep the integrity over our machines in the techno future, and I believe it will spread.


    Regarding the specifics of making these disks hard to crack, they really only have a few options. They could put more keys on each disk, so that they can quickly stop printing one key once it is known to be cracked (damage control, but it means people will have to keep updating their players). And they can use stronger crypto (if they can get by the regulations which seems very difficult), but that only means makes the known plaintext attack that the CSS crackers used to attain all the other keys when they had one implausible, they would still have get first one.

    I'm interested in hearing for people with better insight then myself into this sort of programming, if it is plausible to write a program where the key cannot be retrieved from the memory when the encryption is going on? After all, GPG complains about insecure memory everytime I run it, but that is from other users: this is worse, since it will be me trying to scan the memory for the key. Can it really decrypt things right under my nose without showing what transformations are being applied when analyzed carefully?


    -
    We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    1. Re:my machines serve me... by platypus · · Score: 2

      I'm interested in hearing for people with better insight then myself into this sort of programming, if it is plausible to write a program where the key cannot be retrieved from the memory when the encryption is going on?

      I doubt I have better inside, but I have one remark. The thing you ask about is something the record industry doesn't really want to defeat.
      Well they want to defeat it, but in reality they have to go further. Remember they want to defeat _copying_ the data on the dvd. That's archivable without cracking the encryption scheme.
      Just intercept the data _after_ it's decrypted (i.e. pseudo sounddrivers streaming in a wav file, pseudo video drivers etc.).
      And they want to defeat bit for bit copies of dvd's, because that way one just copies the protection scheme too.
      Naturally, breaking the encryption scheme would also allow copying, even simplify it, but the bitter truth is that that is harder (but not impossible), this is bad for alternative os's.
      This may be very hard to do for an outsider, but all it needs is just one insider to hand out crucial information and boom, game over for copy-protection.
      So, even if it were impossible for "normal" people to crack it (which I strongly doubt), that would only bring the real criminals who make big bucks selling pirated copy and can afford investing money to pay some insiders or technicians.
      And once such a technology is there, it will slowly (or not so slow) diffuse in the public domain - again game over. Oh, and hackers, I remember the story of some people hacking warner (was it really warner) and getting control over some computers controlling the feed of tv channels. Stealing some of the crypto secrets of dvd-players would be a great trophy and thinking of the sheer number of people sharing that secret someone probably will make a failure.
      It has happened with cable pay-tv, satellite pay-tv, it happens everyday with copy-protected
      software, with the vhs-protection, with radios manipulated to be able to hear the police channels or aircraft-tower conversations (and even participate actively), with the sony-cams which could "look through clothes", console-game cds, console-game regional locking, tuned motorcycles, overclocked smp celerons, microsoft's "secure" player ...
      Everytime someone set up a technological barrier which hinders the customer to do what he wants to do, it fell sooner or later (mostly sooner).
      This dumb managers paying some technology consultants big $$$ for coming up with a dumb techology which only serves the purpose to make me pay more, and additionally makes the product more inconvenient, this managers are annoying the hell out of me.

      ---Oh shit, what a long rant and mostly unrelated to the question, well let's submit anyway....

    2. Re:my machines serve me... by umoto · · Score: 1
      Can it really decrypt things right under my nose without showing what transformations are being applied when analyzed carefully?

      No, it cannot. Even if the algorithm were made too complex for humans to ever comprehend, it would still be possible to eventually lift the code and use it for unintended purposes. Legal? Hard to say. Difficult enough to keep 99% of the people out? IMHO Absolutely!

      DVD-Video requires a part-hardware solution to keep the secrets under tight control. That solution would have worked well enough if someone hadn't made the mistake of implementing an all-software solution.

      However, the objective of the RIAA was to keep the masses from copying DVD's. It would have been more effective to create some kind of special licensing requirements than to try to withhold the inherent ability to copy. That way, the people who want to watch videos using Linux could license the code under a NDA.

    3. Re:my machines serve me... by roystgnr · · Score: 3

      I'm interested in hearing for people with better insight then myself into this sort of programming, if it is plausible to write a program where the key cannot be retrieved from the memory when the encryption is going on?

      Not only is it implausible, it is theoretically impossible without tamper-proof "black box" hardware to help.

      Read Bruce Schneier's latest Crypto Gram for a better discussion of this topic than I could give you, but here's a thought experiment or two to get you started:

      People are going to want to play DVD Audio with their existing DVD-Rom and sound card (albeit at "only" CD quality levels), without getting a special "DVD audio card", right? So that means that DVD Audio players will have to come out that use existing Windows sound drivers. What's to prevent someone from writing a dummy sound driver that simply stores unencrypted audio to disk? Or from hooking up the digital output on their high end sound card to the digital input, and recording while they play?

      Even if Windows 95/98 didn't let you pretty much bypass the kernel (Check out the Wine devel lists for info on Bleem's naughty tricks) to get a complete memory dump at any point in time, you could always do just that with Win9x running on a virtual machine in VMWare; just suspend the VMWare process and dump /proc/processid#/mem to examine at your leisure. (or dump /dev/kmem if necessary; doesn't VMWare require kernel patches or some similar weirdness?)

      Anyway, they're fighting a losing battle. Computer systems aren't black box hardware, and they're going to stay that way.

    4. Re:my machines serve me... by Hobbex · · Score: 1

      thanks for the heads up about the Schneier, I forgot to check the crypto-gram this month. I should have known better than to ask without checking what he had to say about it first.

      I really think this article (the zdnet version of the dvd article from the crypto-gram) should have been run on Slashdot.

      -
      We cannot reason ourselves out of our basic irrationality. All we can do is learn the art of being irrational in a reasonable way.

    5. Re:my machines serve me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No need to memory dump to find the audio data.

      Just look in /proc/.../fd for /dev/dsp or /dev/audio, and strace the player. RTFM to find the options needed to get everything written to that fd.

      I already did this (over a year time ago) with the UAE, to get a audio file that could be played at full speed.

      Kent

  45. Some info for the non-music-oriented by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    The whole point of DVD-audio and its competitors is to provide a higher-quality music format than CD. Some of the formats also want to provide more channels for surround-sound, or a new mastering format for recording studios.

    There are basically three hi-res music systems around. The one you can listen to now is DAD, which is basically a DVD-video disc with no video, that contains two-channel 24bit/96kHz audio. These discs have been available from Chesky and Classic for about two years now. They play on standard DVD players, although not necessarily at 24 bits or 96kHz, and on dedicated hi-end playing systems such as that available from Muse Electronics. Discs are around $30.

    Then there's the Sony SACD, in the process of being released. The first Sony player has come out, at $5000, and there are a few discs available. This sytem does not use pulse code modulation encoding, but rather is one bit wide by several million bits a second. Each bit indicates whether to increase or decrease the signal voltage for that 2/millioneth of a second. It is essentially analog implemented digitally. Sony has basically oriented their format towards two-channel, and although they promised to support dual-layering with CD-compatible data they have not done so on their first discs. They appear to be aiming for the audiophile and recording studio market.

    Finally, there is DVD-audio. They've taken a long time to get off the ground, but finally they've written a 'standard' that allows a zillion formats. Two channel, five channel, six channel, 16, 20 and 24 bits, 44.1, 48, 96, 192 kHz, Meridian lossless packing...you get the idea. They're aiming at the mass market insofar as they're firing in any direction.

    The reason for all this stems from two contradictory goals: to re-excite the masses and get them to buy new stereo equipment, and to provide a higher-quality audio format. Sony is tired of being sneered at by tubes'n'vinyl audiophiles, and is going to the best. Also, their patent on the CD is expiring and pretty soon they won't get 12 cents for each CD you buy. The DVD group wants this 12 cents, and they want to sell everybody new equipment--they don't seem to care much about sound quality, although they make it available as an option.

    So we'll see what happens. I'm sticking to my 2500 LPs, my kilobuck phono cartridge, and those glowing glass bottles.

    1. Re:Some info for the non-music-oriented by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm with you-- I'm sticking to my 2000 LPs. There's lots of used vinyl in them thar hills. ;-)

    2. Re:Some info for the non-music-oriented by bonehead · · Score: 1

      The whole point of DVD-audio and its competitors is to provide a higher-quality music format than CD. Some of the formats also want to provide more channels for surround-sound, or a new mastering format for recording studios.

      The more I read and think about DVD-Audio, the more I wonder if these factors are the point of the technology, or simply the justification that will be offered to the consumer.

      Seems to me that the real point of DVD-Audio might very well be to standardize on a format that more readily lends itself to encryption and copy-protection.

      Or maybe my inner conspiracy theorist is acting up again. :)

    3. Re:Some info for the non-music-oriented by argathin · · Score: 1

      So we'll see what happens. I'm sticking to my 2500 LPs, my kilobuck phono cartridge, [...]

      Amen to that, even if I'll probably never manage to collect that many vinyls... It's getting harder these days, though there seems to be a revival taking place: More and more titles are released on LP as well - or re-released (180g and suchlikes...).

      Thomas

  46. Hack vs Crack, Extract vs rip by Booker · · Score: 3

    Sure, but "rip" is an unfortunate choice of words. There may be some RIAA propaganda involved, but still - "rip" is awfully close to "rip off" while "extract" sounds like a much more reasonable thing to do. As in "extract for personal archiving purposes."

    It just doesn't get the conversation off on the right foot when you say "I want to be able to rip copyrighted material under Linux."
    ----

    1. Re:Hack vs Crack, Extract vs rip by fusiongyro · · Score: 1

      After all, the RIAA is not interested in "ripping off" the consumers, just maximizing the "extracted" money from our pockets to theirs. :) Evidently, the game works both ways.

      If the RIAA have a problem with our desire to listen to music we have legally acquired, and for which the artists have been legally fairly compensated, the RIAA can screw themselves. I think it's high time the RIAA and every other commercial organization remembered that they are at our mercy, and we are tired of having our rights violated simply so they can make an easy buck. Intellectual freedom is finally a possibility, and the corporation bigwigs are just trying to win back as much turf as possible before we realize that they are completely useless middlemen.

      Unfortunately for them, there are thousands of artists at www.mp3.com who have realized that they can get their message and music across without being pimped by the music industry. Do us all a favor and listen to free music while you hack free software.

      Daniel

  47. Die, DVD, Die! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I used to be excited by the prospect of DVD but all this encryption/decryption bullshit which PREVENTS customers such as myself from ever usefully using this technology has made me thoroughly disgusted with this technology.

    I can't even VIEW DVD on my OS of choice, for crying out loud.

    I sincerely wish that the DVD effort crashes and burns and is replaced by a superior alternative, such as high-density CD.

  48. I just use my earphones for god's sake by Travoltus · · Score: 0


    I'm not sitting there trying to see what issue I can take with the quality of the music (considering it is CD quality).

    What quality do you think the sound at theaters is?

    --
    --- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!
    1. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At "ditigal" movie theaters, I would assume that the sound quality is about the same as a DVD-A would be.

    2. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by Jeffrey+Baker · · Score: 2
      Yeah like I said in other posts if you don't have the rest of the equipment, they there isn't much point in getting the greatest digital format. But I want the music to sound like there are musicians in the room. I prefer to listen to the music intead of the recording.

      As for theaters, the SDDS format is 16 bits at 44.1 or 48 kHz. I don't know about DTS. Many theaters still use analog sound tracks. Most theaters would be very bad for music reproduction.

      -jwb

    3. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I prefer to listen to the music intead of the recording.

      If you truly mean that, then you're way off the mark. You can listen to the music, instead of the recording, by listening to classic 78 RPM jazz recordings. Listening is a focused activity. Great performances of the past, recorded using less than optimal methods and lower fidelity, are highly listenable. But people who focus on listening to the recording will never get it.

      For that true "concert hall" listening experience, you want to simulate 1500 people rustling their programmes, anyway.

      It's not about the technology. It's about the music. I, personally, can "listen" to a piece of music by looking at the notes on the printed sheet music (hackers would call it "the source code") and playing the notes in my head.

      Anyway, back to arguing about numbers, etc.

    4. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by wass · · Score: 1
      It's not about the technology. It's about the music. I, personally, can "listen" to a piece of music by looking at the notes on the printed sheet music (hackers would call it "the source code") and playing the notes in my head.

      So, then, acoustics would mean nothing to you. Why bother with the expense of a stradivarious as opposed to a cheesy keyboard emulating a violin. It's all just the same notes anyway. :-)

      I'll really be in awe when you just look at a CD, and can appreciate the tunes on it. Or even a record, for that matter. :-)

      "In a world without walls, who needs Windows" - Someone from LinuxToday

      --

      make world, not war

    5. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The audio output from the speakers may be that quality, but all those other people in the room, ruffling popcorn, reflections off seats etc, the audio quality is never going to be perfect. I notice the difference between higher end systems, and my 10" 3 way system, but only when I'm listening for it. If I'm just relaxing and listening to my mp3z, or some CDz I don't notice the difference. If I'm absorbed into the action in a half life game, there is no way I'm going to notice.

    6. Re:I just use my earphones for god's sake by gorilla · · Score: 2
      Actually, there is at least one person who can identify a record by looking at the grooves.

      this page tells of Dr Arthur G. Lintgen being tested by James Randi, and Lintgen passing Randi's tests.

  49. a few questions by mastagee · · Score: 2



    does anyone know what audio compression algorithm is going to support 96khz and 24 bit?(i assume there's gonna be a loss in quality, but it still should be a better than cd quality)

    are the d/a converters in current DVD players 24 bit?

    are there any soundcards out that currently support 24 bit 96khz?
    obviously theres no consumer level ones. the highest best combo i've seen is 18 bits @48khz with some of those turtle beach cards.

    ok When DVD audio comes out there will initally be a standard 96khz 24 bits. but if they start stuffing more channels or music on the dvds, then the quality's not going to be the same. Not that that's necessarily a problem -- it gives you more options. but i can guarantee that record companies are going to be re-releasing 48khz 16bit DAT recordings of old stuff in DVDs and people will buy them because they think it's better quality.

  50. What about GoVideo by LetterJ · · Score: 1

    What about GoVideo type dual deck VCR's?
    LetterJ
    Writing Geek/Pixel Pusher
    jwynia@earthlink.net
    http://home.earthlink.net/~jwynia

  51. It reminds me of rip off. Or riposte. by Hermelin · · Score: 1

    Which is what people are trying to prevent, I guess. It is just ambigous. It isn't a propaganda machine that did it. It is just our general language, and some non-suit thought of it also.

    Take the work hack. It can mean hack & slash. Or hack in the computer sense, or hack in the way of "I hacked a path thru the jungle."

    Rip doesn't exactly have a positive meaning in the base sense of the word. The base meanings are cut, hit and slash according to Webster's.

    I extract songs off CDs. That's is what I use when I 'rip it' off a CD. You don't rip off a game when you take it off the CD that it came on.

    The pun was intended.

    --
    "I disapprove of what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it" - F. Voltaire.
  52. Pirating DVD's by Parsec · · Score: 1

    One would think that given a pirating organisation with a little bit of resources it wouldn't be difficult to reverse engineer the silicon/software, or tap the digital output of the decryption chip/software...

    How hard would it be, anyway, to intercept the decoded digital output of a software player and write it back to a DVD anyway?

    1. Re:Pirating DVD's by Parsec · · Score: 1

      Doh! I've gotta start proofreading my anyway's better...

    2. Re:Pirating DVD's by mastagee · · Score: 1

      well to put it one way. . .
      DVDAudio generation one players will have an optical digital output. and DVD RAMS have been around.

  53. Making copies is not necessarily illegal by Outland+Traveller · · Score: 4

    You are allowed by law to make copies of your personal music and software for personal use and backup purposes.

    You might want to listen to the music on a Rio or some other device, or you might want to make a backup copy in case your physical media becomes damaged. You might also want to keep a few copies in different places so you don't have to lug your music collection around with you. It's also fun to manipulate your music on a PC to see what it sounds like backwards and stuff like that.

    There's nothing inherently wrong with "ripping" a CD, and the music industry shouldn't be so caught up in trying to control distribution to the point where their efforts are at odds with technological progress.

    Copying music and then distributing it without permission is against the law, except in very limited circumstances where you can claim fair use (a la Negativland). But there is no reason that simply copying it, without distributing it, is wrong.

    Don't let coporations control more of your life than they already do.

    -OT (who is not a lawyer and knows these statements are not 100% accurate :)

    1. Re:Making copies is not necessarily illegal by David+Greene · · Score: 1
      Question: If "fair use" has been upheld by law, can a class-action suit be brought against the recording industry (or any industry for that matter) for preventing such use?

      Probably not, but I'm curious.

      --

      --

    2. Re:Making copies is not necessarily illegal by WNight · · Score: 2

      Perhaps. It's worth looking into.

      Or, at least, to challenge the Digital Millenium Act which severely limits your ability to crack protection systems.

      Show that the protection systems exist only to stop your legal use of the material, and that cracking them is essential for your use.


      The whole thing is silly. Even if protection systems were invented that couldn't be cracked (work with me here) and the industry used them, we'd simply put up with one generation of loss by recording the music after it was played (in precisely controlled conditions, with known speakers and microphones, this can result in *very little* loss.) and then make our own unprotected MP3s.

      And then we'd be right where we are now, except a lot more upset at the industry.

  54. Nah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DIVX still sucks, DVD rules..

    I'm a dolt, you're a dolt.

  55. Re: put all instruments on separate tracks... by CodeShark · · Score: 2
    AFAICT, that wouldn't make sense, except as a medium where the entire performance might need to be remixed at a different location -- sort of like shipping a 24 track master tape to a different location than where it was recorded. For virtually everyone else, why would an artist or recording company want to allow the listener to essentially remix the recording?

    Other points: Secondly, even a violin has tones ranging from high bass to what is considered mid-range (G below Middle C up to about three octaves higher.) [I haven't played since early H.S., and I am not sure how high the top violinists can go]. So, not counting the overtones (which are important!!), the sound from one instrument still needs to be able to come from more than one driver, so in order to recreate the recording we'd need at least three or more speakers for every instrument and voice.

    Even then, it doesn't make sense, because humans only have two ears, and our entire sense of direction about where a sound is coming from is synthesized in the brain by the variation between the sounds coming in the left ear and the right. What many people don't realize is that if, for example, you go to a symphony at with good acoustics, what you are actually mostly hearing is the mix of sounds as reflected by a "sound shell", which integrates the voices (sounds made by the instruments, etc.) acoustically and which a recording engineer simulates electronically. Which is why most of us will do just fine with two high quality, multiple driver speakers, and for movies, etc. the lucky folks who have spent the extra money will have a surround system (IIRC, five speakers).

    By the way, if you've never heard a surround system used with a movie that has a high quality, directionally orientd sound track (i.e., where you would hear footsteps behind you if you were actually in the place portrayed by the movie), you're missing a real treat. Of course, one you hear it you'll want a surround system for yourself, so I may have just ruined your budget at some time in the future...

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
  56. You're not quite right on these issues by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The incentive for DVD Audio is much higher quality.

    DVD's have more scan lines, but lower quality than
    laserdiscs. Laserdiscs are uncompressed and look
    noticeably better than DVD's.

    Minidiscs are LOWER quality than CD's; their only
    advantage is the ability to write and rewrite the
    discs.

    You're right about CD quality being "good enough"
    and it will probably end up that DVD Audio is just
    a way to squeeze more money out of audiophiles who
    are willing to pay the premium for 24 bit 96K
    sampling.

  57. CSS by jetpack · · Score: 1

    It's interesting to note that CSS is a TLA for both "Content Scrambling System" and "Cascading Style Sheets". Coincidence? I think not!

  58. What? Me worry? by Randy+Rathbun · · Score: 3

    I know, we all love to stamp our feet and jump up and down and say things like we are all saying here. I am as guilty of this as the next guy. But let's think about some things here...

    Way back when CD Audio came out. It was cool. However, you could no more make a CD than you could to press your own album. If you wanted to copy it you used crappy analog audio tape and did it that way.

    Then along come the CD-ROM drives and the CD-writeables. And minidisc and DAT. And the recording industry comes up with SCMS which is so easy to crack it is not even funny. Actually there is not even anything to crack - you change two bits on the bit stream and everything is cool.

    Next we had MP3 show up. The recording industry again comes up with all these protection methods. None of them lasted. That Microsoft thing lasted what, a day?

    DVD is really no different here. It fell and fell fast once MoRE figured it out. Someone else will figure out DVD-Audio. And someone else is gonna figure out whatever other formats show up. They do it for the Playstation by putting in modchips, and I remember a long long time ago in my Atari 800 days there being an addon for the floppy drive to let it write bad tracks so backup copies could be made of the commercial software.

    Some little namby-pamby encryption scheme will not stand the test of time. No way, no how. Copy protection is a total joke. So quit worrying.

  59. GoVideo: buy now by Alan+Shutko · · Score: 2

    According to their FAQ

    All VCRs, including the Dual-Deck[tm] VCR, are affected by Federal legislation that was passed in October 1998, commonly referred to as the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. One of the effects of this new law requires that all VCRs sold after April 2000 recognize a type of anticopying signal that prevents consumers from making a usable copy
    of videotapes encoded with that type of anticopying signal. We have modified our current models of Dual-Deck[tm] VCRs so that if they are
    purchased prior to April 2000, they will continue to operate as originally designed for the lifetime of the VCR. If they are purchased after April 2000, they will recognize and respond to the anticopying signal as required by the Digital Millennium Copyright Act.

  60. MODERATE ABOVE POST UP! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My, what a good point indeed. DVD is turning out to be an absolute disaster.

  61. Re:region locking... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Whaz'dat? For us poor uneducated AC's of the world, could someone with the know-how explain what "region locking" is, and how it could be mandated and/or prevented by law? Then maybe we "citizen units" can flame our political leaders into doing the rational thing...

  62. hardware can be cracked to y'know :-) by mosch · · Score: 3

    www.codefreedvd.com is a British firm that'll happily sell you that DVD player you've been drooling over, but with the ability to play imported DVDs and to get rid of the signal degradation that MacroVision causes.

    It's all a game. hack, counterhack.

  63. Phase problems with higher frequencies... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3
    Another thing with high frequency sampling that I've always been concerned with but not managed to get my head around is the question of phase of samples and what happens when the samples are at frequencies that do not have the cutoff frequency as a clear harmonic.

    For example, if we are sampling at 48khz, then the highest frequency wave that we can represent is 44khz. However, this assumes that the peaks of the waves are aligned with the sample points. If they are not then the phase is either going to get shifted up to 90 degrees in either direction to be able to represent the waves, or they will be anti-aliased into the wrong amplitude (if they even come out as a wave at all). Even by the time we get down to 11 khz, we still only have a phase resolution of +- 45 degrees. As a lot of the sense of position and space is defined by the phase coherence of a sound (especially in room accoustics) then this 'smudging' of the sound at higher frequencies could be a real problem.

    The second problem is what happens when your frequency isn't a nice divisor of your cutoff frequency. If we go back to our 48 khz sampling rate: we have a 22 khz ceiling (/2) and then the next 'clean' frequency is 16 khz (/3). What happens with the frequencies in between? most likely, you are going to get a beat frequency introduced as amplitude modulation of the signal as it moves on and off the sample clock rate. As you move down the frequencies (/4, /5, /6) then the problems become less pronounced and it is possible to represent more of the wave-forms as a cleanly phase coherent signal.

    I therefore think that it is quite possible that although the theoretical maximum frequency is well up into the super-sonic range, the effect of doubling the sampling frequency will provide a much more natural coherent sound than you would initially assume.

    1. Re:Phase problems with higher frequencies... by Tau+Zero · · Score: 3
      For example, if we are sampling at 48khz, then the highest frequency wave that we can represent is 44khz.
      24 KHz.
      However, this assumes that the peaks of the waves are aligned with the sample points. If they are not then the phase is either going to get shifted up to 90 degrees in either direction to be able to represent the waves, or they will be anti-aliased into the wrong amplitude (if they even come out as a wave at all).
      Alignment of the signal peaks and the sample points is only an issue near the Nyquist frequency. Below 1/3 of the sample rate you can get essentially perfect reproduction of the original, including phase. That includes pretty much all of the audible frequencies, and all the fundamentals and the first few harmonics of even the highest notes.
      I therefore think that it is quite possible that although the theoretical maximum frequency is well up into the super-sonic range, the effect of doubling the sampling frequency will provide a much more natural coherent sound than you would initially assume.
      What the increased sample rate is really going to do is eliminate the need for re-sampling and/or sharp cutoff filters at 18-20 KHz, which will get rid of a lot of phase distortion up near the limits of audibility. To the extent that phase distortion creates audible artifacts, this will improve the experience.
      --
      Time is Nature's way of keeping everything from happening at once... the bitch.
    2. Re:Phase problems with higher frequencies... by YoJ · · Score: 3

      I think people have some misunderstanding of how analog->digital->analog reproduction happens. There are two kinds of distortion introduced in converting an analog signal into a digital signal and back again. The basic idea behind the conversion is sampling. A sample is taken every t seconds (where t might be 1/44100). Each sample is represented by b bits.
      • Quantization error - this happens because b is not infinite. There is less quantization error in a 16-bit sample than in an 8-bit sample.
      • Aliasing artifacts - these are signals introduced at the output that were not present at the input of the system. They arise because any frequency in the input higher than the Nyquist frequency will be reflected back into the 0-Nyquist range.
      By increasing the number of bits used per sample, b, you help eliminate quantization errors. By increasing the sampling frequency (decreasing t) you eliminate aliasing effects.

      The Nyquist limit is half of the sampling frequency. To represent a frequency at the Nyquist frequency, it is necessary to have samples alternate like +1,-1,+1,-1,etc.

      The previous poster wondered about phase information when you get close to the Nyquist limit. The answer is that if you have infinite precision samples (each sample is a real number), then all phase and frequency information below the Nyquist frequency is preserved. Suppose you have 10 sample points on a high-frequency sine wave (but that is still below the Nyquist frequency). Shifting the sine wave left and right slightly (altering the phase) makes the sample points go up and down. If you have accurate sample point resolution, you can exactly restore the phase of the signal (and its frequency).

      If you try to sample a frequency that is higher than the Nyquist frequency, you will get sample points that look like another frequency between 0 frequency and the Nyquist frequency. There is no way to determine if the sample points represent the lower or the higher frequency. The solution is to filter out all frequencies higher than the Nyquist frequency at the input.

      -Nathan Whitehead

    3. Re:Phase problems with higher frequencies... by fingal · · Score: 1
      Firstly, sorry about blatant mathematics incompatancy (48/2 = ??) (i'm not anonymous anymore). Secondly, I'm not sure if I totally agree with your statement about phase information. True, if you have 10 samples on a a wave then you can model the shift of a sin wave left and right (phase) very accurately (to within 36 degrees), but 10 samples is moving down to the 4 khz range which is firmly into the noticable range with sample frequency.

      I think (unless I've missed something very fundamental) that if you take a sin wave at the Nyquist frequency that is in phase with the sample clock such that the sample's are being taken as 'completely positive' followed by 'completely negative' (+1 -1 +1 -1 as you said) then you have the frequency represented (albeit very crudely). Now if we shift the phase left or right by 90 degrees then our sampling period will be 'half positive/half negative' followed by 'half negative/half positive' which to my mind comes out as (+0 -0 +0 -0). Phase shifts in between these two extremes will produce a wave with an amplitude somewhere between zero and the true amplitude depending on the degree of phase shift.

      Now if we have a frequency that is slightly under the nyquist frequency, there will still be a situation where the wave starts off in phase with the sample clock and then slowly (speed depending on the difference between nyquist and sin frequency) moving off the phase of clock speed. This will therefore introduce an amplitude modulation of the signal equal to the difference between the two signals. Obviously the more you move down the frequency range, the less noticable these modulation artifacts will be but as far as i can see, there must be artificats appearing below the nyquist frequency as well as above. increasing the sample frequency is the only way to move these problems out of the perceptible range.

      --

      The only Good System is a Sound System

  64. Re:Audio is best in two channels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I agree with jyang-- live performance is always in *front* of you on a stage (hence the term "Soundstage" in hifi circles). If you have a high enough quality system, you will get all the directional queues you need to place each performer on the sound stage using just two channels. 5.1 is a waste of money for audio. Movies on the other hand is what surround sound was made for.

  65. Why rip? by Mandus · · Score: 1
    Why in the world should anyone be interessted in ripping a DVD. Of course, you want to be able to play it in Linux, but not rip, which means saving it to disk. Just 10 DVD's will easily kill all your storaga.

    Someone gotta change their mind in this business.

    --
    Ta det kuli, det ordner seg i marsjen
    1. Re:Why rip? by Eric+Smith · · Score: 2
      The CSS "crack" was necessary whether you want to rip or just to play the DVD.

      Naturally, the recording industry chooses to interpret the situation as an act of piracy, even though that had nothing to do with the motivations of many of the people involved.

      If they put stronger encryption on DVD-Audio, so that I can't play them under Linux, I will never buy a DVD-Audio disc.

      These are the same fools that have complained about every new recordable audio and video medium since the introduction of the Philips Compact Cassette in 1964 and the Beta VCR in the 1975. But now the industry makes billions of dollars each year on sales of prerecorded cassettes and videotapes.

      Instead of viewing new technologies as opportunities, they choose to view them as threats.

  66. Much ado about nothing? by Bill+the+Cat · · Score: 1

    It boggles my mind that content companies are spending time and $$$ trying to "copyproof" their material. If someone wants to pirate something, it will get pirated; it's about that simple.

  67. Re:This really heads back to Cap'n Crunch Draper.. by ucblockhead · · Score: 1

    Oh God, I used to love my old AppleCat! My first PC modem was such a let-down compared to that.

    I remember having programs that did all sorts of nifty sound tricks. I had a speech synthesizer for it. I had the 1200 baud add-on back when 1200 baud was just too ultra fast for words. (You could actually read newsgroups without having to wait for the screen to fill!)

    Impressive stuff for what it cost at the time.

    --
    The cake is a pie
  68. It doesn't mater how strong the lock is . . . by turg · · Score: 2
    Exactly. It doesn't mater how strong the lock is, when everyone knows the hiding place for the key.

    I think this is what Rob was getting at -- he should have used a period instead of a colon.
    -
    <SIG>
    "I am not trying to prove that I am right... I am only trying to find out whether." -Bertolt Brecht

    --
    <sig>Guvf vf abg n frperg zrffntr
  69. soundcards that support 24/96 by mosch · · Score: 2

    There's actually a lot of stuff that supports 24/96. If you've heard 24/96, the best analogy I can give you is the difference between gaming with 16 bit colour and 30 fps versus 24 bit colour and 60 fps. You'd *think* that 16 bits with 30 fps is perfectly great until you start playing seriously with the better setup....

    Sure 16 bits is okay, but 24 is nicer if only for the fact that your level ranges are large enough that you no longer have to care about the levels. Actually with 24 bit audio, I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of players actually had built-in compressors to allow 'quiet' listening.

  70. some shithead screwed it up for everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    By decoding dvd some fucking asshole gave the whole community the shaft up the ass.

    1. Re:some shithead screwed it up for everyone by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yep, it really affected me who can't even watch DVDs due to the fact I don't have Windows...

    2. Re:some shithead screwed it up for everyone by radja · · Score: 2

      That shithead would be matsushita corp. not somebody who happened to make a thing to play DVDs. I can legally make a cassette player, I can legally make a recordplayer. So I can definately make a DVD player. the silly buggers fromn the industry should get their head out of their ass and their hand out of their neighbour's. But don't try to monopolize the market. At least M$ tries to hide it...

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
  71. CopyProtection is Bought by the Week by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2

    When I volunteered as a Conference Associate at Game Developers Conference 1999, something that I recommend for all of you, one of my assignments was to watch over a talk on encryption.

    Several companies who sold encryption products/services were represented.

    They KNOW that every lock has a key, and that there's no way you can make something that will be absolutely encrypting.

    They don't claim to make something unbreakable.

    But they DO claim that they can buy you some time.., provided that no one slips out a gold.

    I imagine that this is also the case for the audio folks. They just need something that will work for at least a little while, while the major sales are going underway.

    I believe games make their most money in the first 3 weeks; I recall some of the companies saying that they could cover a company for this period of time.

    Lion Kimbro =^_^=

    (someday I'll make yet another Slashdot account and write down my password...

  72. eh? that is what he meant. read properly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I think using the phrase "rip it" was probably a poor choice... Using phrases like "rip it" make you think of copyright violation via copying.

    Yes, that's what he meant. Lets look at the original text:

    They are still operating under a fundamentally flawed assumption: if we can decrypt it to watch it, someone will figure out a way to decrypt it to rip it.

    Translation: they're stupid, because if its possible to decrypt to watch it, it must be possible to decrypt to copy it. Hence, because copy-protection is never, ever going to be possible, they're wrong to be delaying it in order to add copy-protection.

    Get it?

    1. Re:eh? that is what he meant. read properly! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's saying the opposite dumbass. He says such an assumption is flawed. It doesn't necessarily mean that because the hardware can decrypt it, we can crack it. Not at all.

  73. Blowing money through a furnace.. by Panaflex · · Score: 1

    And why not? The "industry" might as well. If it isn't painfully obvious, I don't think anybody can come up with a fool-proof system as long as you've got multiple vendors and short design cycles.. not to mention billions of devices in the hands of curious and defiant people.

    Six months to come up with a new system?? Well, atleast it's longer than the 2 weeks they spent on the last one. But still..

    When you are using a small limited subset of keys, and provide the algorythm(even in machine code).. someone is going to reverse engineer. Not to mention than people can just raid the DMA buffers to get at digital audio anyhow.

    And do they think that they can just invent a new crypto system in 6 months.. ohhh kay do kay.

    Why don't they face the facts instead of flinging this crap in front of the 99% of us who want _legal_ fair use from our audio and video purchases.

    Stop burdening the consumer with your "industry" ego. If you didn't make such a big deal of your "protection" and just stuck to what the consumer wanted (content), you'd have alot better net profits in the end, instead of trying to be a defense organization.

    Pan

    --
    I said no... but I missed and it came out yes.
  74. Hmm, I have a stupid question... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if this audio analog output is supposed to be so great that errors can not be discerned by the human ear, then what's to stop me from re-digitalising the analog output and using that as a just as good digital copy??

    1. Re:Hmm, I have a stupid question... by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 1

      > what's to stop me from re-digitalising the analog output and using that as a just as good digital copy??


      Nothing. The trick is to be able to re-sample it at a decent (or better) quality.

  75. Re:Quality over quantity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Balerion askes why we should bother adopting a new superior audio standard. Music if you haven't fogotten is *Art* (at least most music is). CD doesn't cut it if the goal is to reproduce as closely as possible the musical performance. Yes, consumers have voted that convenience is what they favor in a given media format. But when quality suffers because of it (and ultimately the artform) it's a real shame. We can still be watching black-and-white TV because it's "good enough". And who is going to run Linux when Windblows is "good enough"? I think at the moment Linux is great for a small minority of the population, but essentially ignored by most people. Should *it* be????

  76. DAT anyone? by drf · · Score: 3

    Is there even a place for DVD-Audio? Most people wouldn't buy new players for one or two CD's, as DVD-Audio will be pretty expensive at first (as manufacturers ramp up production), and it will take more time to get the DVD electronics in a small package, like a CD Walkman.

    This reminds me of the stuff when DAT came out. DAT was a failure because of all the arguing over copy-protection (as well as being non-random access, but that was less of an issue than having copy-protection schemes voted on by the US Congress).

    DVD-Audio has no place in high-end audio either. People who spend thousands for professional gear tend to stick to standard formats (I've noticed a migration to .WAV files, which is the one of the best ways to store a master because it can easily be converted to an MP3, burnt to a track on a CD, spat out digitally using S/PDIF, or dumped to DAT.) Storing a master on DVD-Audio is not a concept professional sound people would consider -- so many other alternatives, DAT, burnable CD's, MD's, that another entry in this market really wouldn't fly.

    So, if the high-end audiophiles do not have a use for this technology, and Joe Average has to buy fairly expensive equipment, from people who assume he is a thief bent on stealing their music, to listen to discs that sound pretty much the same to an untrained ear, then there isn't much real mass market here.

    The only place I see a place is selling to audio buffs who have to have the best of everything to listen to their CD's, and have to have 24/96 no matter what. However, these people are fairly rare, and probably would resent having to get yet another piece of gear to stick in their rack.

  77. Philips condoning Piracy by JabberWokky · · Score: 1
    Sure the RIAA seems to be lauching a nice campaign to make copying from a CD for *any* purpose look "evil".

    Meanwhile, Philips is launching an expensive advertising campaign that shows how copying is good, even to the point of using the catch phrase: "I have to admit, it's getting better" (a la the Beatles song).

    Interesting that the portrayed uses of their CD-copier skirt the edges of legality. Bringing a CD-R to a DJ at a club... I've been told by DJs here in Merka that CD-R's can't be played, and that they have to have the original media. Later, a guy makes a copy of a copy for his pets to listen to while he goes off to listen to the "original" copy at a party.

    It'll be interesting to see the RIAA versus the people making the players and media if the manufacturers decide that they want to accept the inevitable. Sony, who makes hardware, media AND owns intellectual property on songs and movies, will be sitting in an interesting position. Security through encryption, or make up what you lose through piracy by selling the tools for that piracy?

    Incidently, I spent the last weekend copying a few record albums to CD for my sister - they are all rare garage demos of Carolina bands, some of whom are now "big". Am I evil, according to the RIAA? I doubt that most of these pressings were ever even heard of by the RIAA, and in one case, the artist said "Oh, yeah... if you want to make copies for your friends, go ahead. Give me a copy when you're done. Cool".

    --
    Evan

    --
    "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    1. Re:Philips condoning Piracy by ColinG · · Score: 2

      As a DJ, I can tell you exaclty why a DJ at your local club won't play a CDR that you hand to him out of the blue-

      -he doesn't know what is on it. He doesn't know what song it is (even if it's labelled, he doesn't know you) or the quality of the sound. Any recording which isn't top-notch will reflect poorly on his performance.

      Handing a DJ music, or constantly requesting the same piece of music is not only obnoxious, but annoying and distracting to someone who is trying to get a crowd excited- the DJ has his full attention on the crowd and the music, not you.

      Trust me, the DJ knows his music, and his art. Don't bother him .

      Is there a song you want to hear? Don't give him the CD. Instead, write your request on a slip of paper in bold capital letters (not big, just bold) and leave it on his desk. If it doesn't fit in with the set, or if he just doesn't have it, he won't play it, and that's all there is to it. If blacklights are set up above the desk, write it in hi-liter so he won't miss it.

      Stop concentrating on your desires to have a specific song played... leave your cds at home. Go dance and have fun with the rhythm.

      --
      You'll eat it and you'll like it.
    2. Re:Philips condoning Piracy by gellor · · Score: 1

      OR....

      Just go to clubs where the DJ's care what you want to hear. :)

      I love how 3l33t most DJ's seem to think they are.

      "I am your musical GOD you NEED what I play for you..."

      Bah..

      --
      Gellor

    3. Re:Philips condoning Piracy by JabberWokky · · Score: 1
      > Handing a DJ music, or constantly requesting the same piece of music is not only obnoxious, but annoying and distracting to someone who is trying to get a crowd excited- the DJ has his full attention on the crowd and the music, not you.

      Heh.

      Sucks if it's a wedding DJ that has this attitude. Particularly if 80% of the people at the reception (including bride and groom) are on a Rocky Horror cast and he won't play the Time Warp because it's on a CD-R (because it is the "screen correct" version unavailable retail).

      (Dragging this back on topic - sorta) His reasoning was that it was illegal, and DJ's can't play CD-Rs. This is in Florida, if it makes any difference. As a DJ, what have you heard?

      Maybe I should have clarified the type of DJ :)

      --
      Evan (Who hasn't been seriously clubbing since college, and is only recently able to listen to Peter Schilling's Major Tom again)

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
    4. Re:Philips condoning Piracy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      tell me about it.
      I can't count how many times I've come across some poseur DJ playing CD's through a $75 used Radio Shack mixing board who thinks he's king golden for some unknown reason.
      There were DJs back in the days of breakdancing that could do ANYTHING with a pair of turntables and a microphone -- and were MODEST.
      And it irks me to no end to have some top-40 listening punk trying to pretend he has (1) taste, and (2) any knowledge of music.

    5. Re:Philips condoning Piracy by ColinG · · Score: 2

      Well, he said in a club...

      ...and I'm your regular Canadian student trying to work his way through school- so, with a good sound system, a couple of turntables, a cd player, a laptop, and a LOT of practice, you're versatile.

      There's nothing more annoying than a greasy 16 year old handing you a CD and bothering you to play it when you're trying to get the beats matched between trance tracks- oh, yeah, there is something more annoying... when you're playing a trance set and that kid is handing you Limp Bizkit.

      --
      You'll eat it and you'll like it.
  78. Eliminating Fair Use by _Sprocket_ · · Score: 4
    The recording industry would like us to believe (falsely) that any form of copying is illegal. Their entire encryption efforts are based around this false assumption.
    It might be worth stressing this point a bit more.

    The RIAA does not like the concept of a customer making copies of legal material for their own personal use. The ability to buy a CD then make a tape (or now, burn a copy or burn your own CD mix) for your car irks them. This has gone to court and "fair use" was upheld. Since then, RIAA representatives have made comments that imply their dislike of "fair use" is strong today.

    Enter technology.

    Take a good look at SDMI. Embeded within the specifications is the groundwork to eliminate that pesky "fair use" copying. Technology will enable the industry to eliminate what the courts would not.

    I would expect a simular thought process to rear its ugly head within the DVD arena.

    1. Re:Eliminating Fair Use by Wah · · Score: 2

      Technology will enable the industry to eliminate what the courts would not.

      and hopefully clueful and willful consumers can show the obsolesence of such an attitude.

      --
      +&x
    2. Re:Eliminating Fair Use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You just completely misused the term "obsolescence" there. You need to work on your vocabulary, guy.

    3. Re:Eliminating Fair Use by umoto · · Score: 1

      Perhaps he meant "obsoleteness", referring to old attitudes becoming antiquated. How is this incorrect?

    4. Re:Eliminating Fair Use by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SDMI will die a death, unless they give away the players for free. ie 128meg free SDMI rios

    5. Re:Eliminating Fair Use by Wah · · Score: 2

      Main Entry: obsolescence
      Pronunciation: -'le-s&n(t)s
      Function: noun
      Date: circa 1841
      : the process of becoming obsolete or the condition of being nearly obsolete {the gradual obsolescence of machinery} {reduced to obsolescence}
      --
      ...willful consumers can show the "condition of being nearly obsolete" of such an attitude.

      so maybe it's my grammar or your nitpicking that need work, but the vocab is fine. Thanks for your conern, AC :/

      --
      +&x
  79. Yep, you missed it. by Sloppy · · Score: 2

    Did this type of hoopla occur over cassette tapes or CDs when they were new technology?

    So, you have forgotten what happened when consumer-marketed cassette recorders came out. Isn't it remarkable how a young mind can blot out traumatic events? Quite merciful, I think.

    Basically, what happened was that Sony damn near went out of business, Columbia stockholders were jumping out of highrise windows, there was rioting and lawlessness in the streets, and America collapsed. Rock stars got depressed from lack of sales and took up drug habits, but then had to go sober because they couldn't afford the drugs. Animals escaped from the zoo. Usenet flamewars raged unchecked long after Hitler comparisons were made. Windows became the dominant desktop OS and preachers cried on TV. Civilization plunged into a new Dark Age, and the gas pumps all went dry. Whenever you could get away from the crumbling cities full of rioters and looters, you would see that the countryside was littered with roving gangs of scavenging road warriors.

    But back in the cities, if you watched the seething crowd, you would see that on every street corner, there was a man standing calmly. If you walked up to him, he would smile at you and say, "You lookin'?" If you replied with "Huh?" he would open his trenchcoat and show you his collection of pirate cassette recordings of all the best-marketed media creations. For a mere dollar you could have anything that knew you were supposed to want.

    They were dark time indeed. I'm sorry that I had to drudge up these unpleasant memories, but perhaps I have saved you a few hypnotherapy sessions.


    ---
    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  80. vynil rox! by Pegasus · · Score: 1

    I'm sticking to my 2500 LPs, my kilobuck phono cartridge, and those glowing glass bottles.

    Yes, i belive that is the right decision. Only now i got the chance to listen to dvd audio in comparison to LP on the same system. Vynil left dvd in dust.
    Now who is going to waste a lot of money for something that sounds worse than existing technology, is more expensive and somehow less usuable in terms of sound transferring? I guess only the emptyheaded consumeroids. But hey, thats 90% of the western population *grin*

    I just hope i'll have someday a true "old-school" audio system ... hi end turntable, class A single-ended tube preamp & amp with ~5watts of output and big horn driven speakers. Now that would be something to listen to! And definitely to look at:) But not some strange little silver plastic disk...

  81. DVD: Why am I paying microsoft? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Here in the States, IDE DVD drives are currently running about $80. (Give or take a little bit depending upon exactly how fast you want it.) A DVD-capable video card, say the 3dfx Voodoo3, runs about $120.

    Call it $200 for the hardware.

    Now could someone please explain why I need to shell out an additional $150+ to microsoft (for the windows toy-operating-system) and, presumably, some other company for their window's DVD-playing software?

    We are talking a 75% surcharge here because those boneheads decided to encrypt their product.

    The real irony is that, while I now own all the hardware -- the DVD drive, the video card, the DVD movie disks -- I can't watch the movies I bought without first cracking the damn disks.

    And all I care to say to the DVD consortium is fuck you. Fuck you very much.

  82. i thought DVDs were already rippable to mpg? (n/t) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    nt

  83. Maybe I'm Missing Something here, but.. by Kenneth · · Score: 1

    wouldn't the easiest way to 'hack' DEV audio encryption be to run the audio out from my DVD audio player (This is needed because you want to be able to have speakers.), to the audio in of something that can record them in MP3 or other format of similar quality? What have I missed? What is the point of encrypting it at all? It seems a great waste of time, money, and effort for zero gain. If I had stock in any company pushing for such a stupid security model, I would sell it.

    --
    There is a civil war coming in the United States. Remember which side has most of the guns
  84. Re:Seattle WTO Protests by Elgarth · · Score: 0

    Stand up for our rights? The WTO is about freedom, breaking down boundaries! You want to stand up for 19th century tariff walls? The fact that these people get out there and protest is simply because they don't understand. They're the idiotic type that get violent when their simple little brains get overclogged. Imagine this scenario. Governments around the world prevented you from accessing any web page that is outside your country. What the WTO would be doing is attempting to remove this boundary - it is about stopping tariffs, creating a global marketplace. These are commendable goals, not ones that should be protested at...

    --
    -- "History will be kind to me, for I intend to write it" -- Winston Churchill
  85. Few CDs use all 74 min. DVD audio == wasted space. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    DVD audio is just hype. 96KHz?! Ooooo so now we can reproduce frequencies to 48KHz. Um, human hearing ends at 20KHz (and less as we age). Dog's hearing ends at 30KHz or so. Are we really gaining anything here? Unless you want a recorded dog whistle or insect repeller audio on a disc, DVD audio will be a waste of space. On the other hand, you could pack the discs with classical music, but then why not just record ad CD quality (44.1KHz/16bit) and be able to record more audio? What's next? Video with 128bit color depth?

  86. How does encryption help? by bluGill · · Score: 4

    I'm trying to understand encryption in the audio world. They encrypt this disk, I can't play it except on autherised players. What is to prevent me, owner of two autherized players and the equipment to burn a DVD (This doesn't exits AFAIK, but it will soon) from making a copy of it? Oh sure, I can't play it in linux (if it is good encryption), but I can now make a couple digital copies of the encrypted disk.

    1. Re:How does encryption help? by Hello+folks · · Score: 1

      I sorta agree with what you're saying, except for different reasons. If they didn't encrypt it, then (according to economic theory) wouldn't the equipment to rip it have a severe price increase, making it pointless to rip because it would be cheaper to buy from the producer?

      First time poster, long time Coke Drinker.

    2. Re:How does encryption help? by jd · · Score: 2
      Not necessarily. It's just bits, after all, so all you need to do is run one disk through a good bit-copier, and feed the output onto the exact same place on the second disk.

      It's been done since the first disk-copying software was written. Ripoff-9, Basil's Copy All, Marvin's Paranoid Disk Copier - all did just that. Bitstream in = bitstream out, and the protection scheme was irrelevent.

      On even more primitive technology, tape-to-tape copying was virtually unstoppable with any kind of high-level protection, as the copying was of the low-level noise.

      That's the catch. Any protection scheme can NEVER stop an attack that's on a lower level than the protection scheme, no matter HOW good it is. Software encryption, therefore, can NEVER protect a disk from trivial duplication.

      --
      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)
    3. Re:How does encryption help? by mindstrm · · Score: 1

      Because the key tables are stored at the beginning of the disc, in a place where DVD-R will not let you write? So it will not be possible to play the copied disc, because the crypto information won't be copied as well.

      This is all just assumption, though... I don't know for sure.

    4. Re:How does encryption help? by QuasEye · · Score: 1

      Alack, but the DVD standard thwarts this as well. Certain pieces of crucial data are put on a non-standard place on the disk, and you won't be able to write it there with a normal DVD burner drive. Playstation games have the same thing, but some very capable hardware hacker figured out how to get around it by soldering an extra programmable logic chip into the console. If you have it you can play copied games made with a standard CDR drive. Voids the warranty, and I wouldn't attempt it unless you know what you're doing. This probably won't happen with DVD players though - too many different kinds...

      bp

      -------------
      "

    5. Re:How does encryption help? by WNight · · Score: 2

      So, what stops a company from making a disc with that much data area, and a copier that'll burn that far out?

      Like, 1GB CDs are unavailble today, but with the Dreamcast (or the PS2, I don't use consoles) using them, they'll start to appear.

      And they won't be for piracy, they'll be for general storage of more data. But pirates will use them too.

    6. Re:How does encryption help? by Troed · · Score: 1
      This probably won't happen with DVD players though - too many different kinds...

      Duh.

      Region hacks, anyone? I haven't seen a stand alone DVD player in a loooong time that didn't have a few extra ICs and stuff soldered in to defeat region and/or macrovision protection.

      Too many different kinds? Oh no - the consumers do pay for that kind of service ... I know, I did.

  87. 5.1 channels? You fool! I only have two ears! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I though all this 3+ channels stuff was dismissed as unnecessary, no benefit, bunk back when quadraphonic audio was (rightfully) abandoned back in the 1970s. people only have two ears. Adding channels beyond that makes no sense.

    1. Re:5.1 channels? You fool! I only have two ears! by oki900 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, gee your probably right, sound is probably only 1 dimensional, and only comes form the left and right, we'll just ignore that sound coming from the front or rear will sound different, and we wont even thing about 3D space and how that affects sound, because we want to listen to something from the 1970's that says quadraphonics is a waste of time, hell we might as well get rid of all these computers too because in 1970 I belive they said there was no way everyone would have a computer in their home. Maybe you should head over to Dolby Labs Technical Information, and have a look at some of the information there. You may also want to head over to WWW.THX.COM as there is some very good information there about 3D sound and THX in general. There are tons of other places you can find if you look, but those 2 are the ones that came to mind straight off the top of my head. I personaly plan to build a 7.1 surround home theater for myself. I wont go into room size/shape and acoustics as Im just now learning all about it and couldnt provide you with accurate information, but I do know it does affect how you hear sounds. Unfortunatly there are no Linux programs yet that allow you to edit 3D sound in either 5.1 or 7.1 surround, that I am aware of. If there are and you know of tehm please inform me as I would love to check them out.

      Listen, it's all around you!

  88. Re:Seattle WTO Protests by KlomDark · · Score: 1
    Yes, in theory, what the WTO is supposed to do is great. I agree with you on stopping tariffs, creating a global marketplace, but I do not agree with they way they are taking advantage of the people who actually do the work.

    They really need to stop and address that. That is what people are protesting - the human factor, not the business greed.

  89. Yes but... by Wah · · Score: 2

    ...the translation from analog to digital has a special feature. Bit for Bit PERFECT copies. If you've ever seen a second or third VHS copy you would see how this scares big companies even more. From the point we're at (my mantra: The Internet makes control of digital media impossible) it will either take tons and tons of legislation and massive crackdowns or a total change of perspective from media companies, to reach resolution.

    Personally I'd like to see newcomers establish new workable business models based on massive VLC (very low cost) distribution. At least that's what I'm gonna do.. (An internet connection and a Linux box ~= radio station + tv station + newspaper)

    --
    +&x
    1. Re:Yes but... by WNight · · Score: 2

      The interesting thing is that even with perfect disc->tv-cable encryption, such that the file can not be read in plaintext anywhere, you can still copy it before it hits the TV. And then make your own digital version and pirate that. There is loss, but only a single generation.

  90. 24/96 sounds kinda useless at present. by Wakko+Warner · · Score: 3
    Most digital studios master to 16/48 or 16/44 at present. 24/96 digital mastering setups are too new and far too expensive for most studios right now. Give it a couple years, and, sure, there will probably be a significant number of major recording studios that master to the new standard, but what about the old stuff that was done to 16/48 or analog, or all the new stuff still being mastered at the old rate? It will sound no different in this new format! I really hope DVD Audio is relegated to the niche market of audio enthusiasts, because most people will not hear a difference at all between it and a normal CD on their stereos.

    - A.P.
    --


    "One World, one Web, one Program" - Microsoft promotional ad

    --
    "Remember when the U.S. had a drug problem, and then we declared a War On Drugs, and now you can't buy drugs anymore?"
  91. Pay-per-view temporary keys. by GossG · · Score: 1

    If you want security, you give EACH DVD a random key that your player contacts the manufacturer to discover and the key is based on a timestamp algorithm or something that would prevent anyone but a crypto expert from bothering.

    I started to write the same comment. We haven't thought out all the implications of cheap full-time internet access. The recent Real-Networks privacy blowup was probably a baby step towards such a pay per listen concept.



    I withdrew my comment before posting when I realized that full-time internet will not be available from your BMW in some ski valley in Colorado. If they want to sell super-upscale versions of this kind of thing, it will need to fit into cars. And a lookup-at-time-of-play key is not going to fit into cars for another several years.

  92. Re:region locking... by zimbu · · Score: 1

    Regional locking means that a DVD purchased in one region, Asia perhaps, couldn't be played on a DVD player purchased in the USA. I don't know if the player just checks for a certain region code, meaning the player could just choose to ignore it, or if the actuall encryption is different, so the player would need the decryption keys for different regions to get by that. They do this because movies are released at different times in different parts of the world and they don't want people buying the DVD when its still out in the theatre.

  93. It has some benefits, and will get cheaper by flatrock · · Score: 2

    CD's didn't catch on instantly either, but after a year or so the systems became affordable, and people started buying them. DVD audio will start out as an audiophile's toy, but the price will drop, and high quality surround sound audio will be accessable to the masses. Cars will start to come with DVD audio players as standard. The costs of the development of the format/encryprion/hardware will be spread out over millions of units sold. DVD audio is a superior format, and eventually the cost won't be significantly higher than what we pay for CD audio. If you don't think there's any benefit to DVD audio, fine, don't buy a player. Or if you're like me, and it's not important enough to you to purchase until the price goes down, wait.

    As for the copy protection, I think it's a waste of the industry's time and resources. Copy protection has been tried many times in the past, and people have always found ways around it. Some of the methods have been legal, others haven't. The software industry has come to the conclusion that the copy protection just isn't worth the effort. Hopefully the recording industry will eventually learn the same lesson, and quit trying to sell me three coppies on every album I buy (home, work, car), even though copyright law allows me to make coppies for my own personal use.

    Unfortunately, the recording industry hasn't learned that I'm going to find a way to make a copy for my personal use wether they like it or not, and unless they convince congress to make it illegal, and convince an AG to prosecute me, they're really just wasting their time and money. Their copy protection methods won't significantly slow down large scale pirating operations where there's enough money involved for the criminals to find a efficent way to avoid the protections. They're much better off spending their money lobying the government to find and prosecute those criminals, or hire private investigatiors to find them. They're just wasting their money and continueing the PR nightmare which comes from accusing basically every one of their customers of being a thief. They also haven't seemed to learn that if you reasonably honest people thieves often enough, a lot of them will no longer feel any remorse in stealing from you.

  94. Re:5.1 channels? I have two ears + a brain by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 2

    > people only have two ears. Adding channels beyond that makes no sense.

    You're forgetting that your brain uses triangulation to determine wheter the sound is in front L/R, center, or behind L/R.

    Go snag a SB Live and check out some of the demo programs where you can move the "audio source" around in 3d. You should be able to tell some difference from where the audio sounds like it is coming from.

    IANAAE (Im am not an audio engineer)

    Cheers

  95. Strong encryption? by GossG · · Score: 1

    Is there any reason that Matsushita needs to meet US *EXPORT* restrictions? Why can't they design the "best" product (from their RIAA-influenced point of view) and ship it *TO* the states?

    Sure, RCA won't be allowed to ship a jukebox out of the country, but Matsushita would be allowed to ship anywhere. Unless you also make it illegal to IMPORT strong encryption as well.

    1. Re:Strong encryption? by demon · · Score: 1
      2 reasons:
      1. IIRC, Japan also has crypto export restrictions. This puts companies like Sony and Matsushita up against a wall.
      2. Also, since the vast majority of movies on DVD (and likely DVD-Audio discs as well) are exported from the US, I think that the cryptography restrictions may also apply to them.

      Correct me if I'm wrong, though...
      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  96. Listen to yourselves... by um...+Lucas · · Score: 3

    It reads more like a looming threat to the recording industry... Try to make it so we can't copy your goods and we'll be sure to make it possible.

    From my vantage point, I think that the huge majority of CD-Rs which contain CD-Audio are pirated CD's, not mix CDs or archival CD's... Some of those probably would have been paid for had CD-R's not been so easily accessible.

    DVD Audio has the potential to add value to audio, with better sound quality, possibly more music per disk, and other gimmicks. For that, the industry should be allowed to protect their investment. That being all the money they've shoveled out and fronted to artists, studio's, etc, without knowing how well a particular act is going to sell.

    It's their risk, so it should be their profit. Since DVD exists already, they don't need to go and invent a new form of media in order to add value to the music. But that opens up them up to piracy. So... like any busines, they're trying to cover their butts. If they come out with a format that's "unbreakable" to consumers, but easily crackable by /.er's, it's a win for them. They can lose these sales no problem if it means that the other 99% of the public can't dupe their works...

    ----------

    On a second subject, maybe you all could do something about this by not supporting the industry. Ever thought of that? Don't like it? Don't buy it!!! It's just that easy.

    Go a step further and think for yourself and don't even buy music from the major labels, rather than listen to whatever they shovel your way this week...

    Do SOMETHING more to show your disatisfaction than ramble about how some mean old industry doesn't want anyone to copy their products....

    1. Re:Listen to yourselves... by Commie · · Score: 1
      "From my vantage point, I think that the huge majority of CD-Rs which contain CD-Audio are pirated CD's, not mix CDs or archival CD's... Some of those probably would have been paid for had CD-R's not been so easily accessible."

      That's probably true. I do get annoyed when people champion anti-encryption standards on the "archival/backup" excuse when it's damn obvious that the majority, if not the vast majority, of audio CD-Rs burned are pirated copies. I'm not for encryption schemes of any sort, but let's not pretend industry is overblowing the piracy problem - it's enormous. Lets stick to arguments we might actually be able to defend.

      "DVD Audio has the potential to add value to audio, with better sound quality, possibly more music per disk, and other gimmicks. For that, the industry should be allowed to protect their investment. That being all the money they've shoveled out and fronted to artists, studio's, etc, without knowing how well a particular act is going to sell."

      Well, here's where we get into the problem - the Recording Industry does not compensate artists anywhere near what they should be. Yeah, sometimes they lose a bit of money fronting for an unknown band - but no major label is dumping THAT much money into a basically unproven bands first record. I know all about it - I've been playing in bands, signed with indy labels (not the same bag, and not the same piracy problem or money issue here), watched many many bands sign with majors and get relatively screwed no matter what level of success they achieved. A first time signee, or a not-a-platinum seller resignee is not going to make much more than around $1 per *retail priced* CD (meaning $16.99, or whatever it is right now) sold in the US (Overseas royalties are horrible). Whoever says the studio costs, marketing efforts, and whatever else justifies this is either 1) Someone who doesn't know what's going on and really needs to do some research or 2) A major-label goon.

      Anyway, this is all a long way of saying if I felt like the DVD-audio industry pushing encryption was actually going to help artists make the money they deserve off DVD-audio sales, then I'd feel a lot better about it. As it is, I really hate to see the machine attempting to suck in as much cashflow as they can.

    2. Re:Listen to yourselves... by Requiem · · Score: 1

      Look. I've got friends who are avid electronic musicians, but, due to Canada's looming tax on recordable media, will face Yet More Moronic Charges. You know what that means? That's right. It's going to be even more expensive to buy blank CDs to record their music to.

      I don't give a flying fsck if people are pirating CDs. If people are prevented from getting their music out there and listened to, then that is far more of a crime than people ripping CDs and somehow shorting some multi-millionaire recording artist.

    3. Re:Listen to yourselves... by Chris+Johnson · · Score: 3
      I already don't buy music from the major labels.

      I'm a musician. Mind explaining to me why I shouldn't have control of the means of production? I'm not talking about distribution, I'm not suggesting I should get free promotion: I'm just saying that the current approach seems to be reliance on say 40 special encryption keys, and you have to basically be a multinational to get one.

      I have no problem with all this if equvalent _unencrypted_ data can be played back in consumer decks- if I can burn a DVD and distribute it using my own limited resources. I am getting the feeling that this is a 'Why would you want to do that?' situation to the big conglomerates- and that it's not necessarily going to be happening.

      I really don't _care_ if it's easy or hard to copy off major-label releases. I'm not even interested. I'm more interested in what all this means to me- and if we're looking at a world where you CAN'T MAKE the 'records' of the future, scant years after it became seriously easy to do just that with the once-highly-techie audio CDs, well, I have a problem with that.

      Again: give me ability to record unencrypted and release product, or give me ability to use some default encryption if you _must_ have it, but if the ability to produce these disks will be limited to the industry only, with 'indies' finally legislated out of existence by technology itself, then that is a very ugly world for an artist. It's bad enough being a musician without such crap. This is the thin end of the wedge- it _won't_ stop there. The logical direction this is going is to stomp out support for old formats that can be easily ripped from (and, coicidentally, easily released on), and then for the indie musician, not even cassette tapes or CDs would remain, and it'd be "Oh, please, mister consumer man, won't you buy a worn-out old CD player to mount under your _new_ wonderful encrypted CD player so that you can listen to _my_ music too? It won't take up too much room." ;P

      I can't even begin to explain how bad that would suck, and I'm already boycotting the industry as hard as I can. I think us indie musician types need help. The odds were already heavily against us, but now it's just getting ridiculous, and there's no reason to expect it'll level off by itself. Hopefully there will always be some sort of mp3 underground, as that might end up the only option for a lot of us. We could be watching all of the following:

      • the final takeover of the entertainment industries by multinational conglomerates
      • the greatest level of control and highest barriers to entry of any industry ever- comparable to if you had to run all floppy and CD-Rom software distributions through Microsoft because they built encryption into the drives and became the gatekeepers
      • possibly the most receptive audience for stuff like underground, 'indie' music not coming from the machine. Normally people don't care to pay attention to acts with low budgets. If the industry stuff gets plastic enough, and the barriers to crossover get high enough, it almost by default produces a market for underground stuff- acts that normally would have found a niche within the machine, but can't anymore because things are so well controlled.
      • really severe skepticism towards the entertainment industry fantasies- some people these days still believe you can play music and have that facilitated by the industry, and make as much as 99 cents on each CD, rather than pumping large amounts of money into the fantasy to get to see your name in lights. This belief will fade, to be replaced by the anger of betrayal.
      • probably a lot of absolutely phenomenal music by indie artists who will be blacklisted by the industry for practices such as releasing mp3s. Such artists might be barred from playing certain clubs or gigs for this (if the gig is in the pocket of the industry, that is).
      • Maybe ten percent of the absolutely phenomenal indie artists will actually make a lot of money at it. These might not be the greatest artists, but the one common factor will be this: they will be the artists who run their bands/record labels/whatever like a serious business. They'll plow most of their profits back into their music (as Frank Zappa said, "Some rock stars take their money and snort it up their nose. I stick mine in my ear") and they'll put out product that's markedly better than the average industry offering, and they'll do well even when forced to handle all the promo and distribution themselves, typically with a heavy Internet emphasis, and a heavy emphasis on mp3 freebies.
      • The money is in merchandising and in releasing versions of the music that sound better than mp3s- as the industry pushes newer and newer technology, the back-end stuff such as amps and speakers will start to perform really well at good price points. Klipsch has a computer speaker setup that is flatly astonishing. Information will be out there helping people to maximize their 'stereos' (which will tend to merge with the computer). This gets back to the need for access to tech like the new audio DVDs- but honestly, if you know what you're doing and try hard you can get extremely impressive sound out of the humble CD, even, and the indie people will try all the harder if they're barred from putting out DVDs through lack of access to the encryption keys.
      • Nobody is likely to argue for indie musicians' access to such technology- it's all about the industry versus pirates. There _are_ no artists except those owned by major labels. Right? ;P
    4. Re:Listen to yourselves... by Erik+Hollensbe · · Score: 1

      It really depends on how you define pirated.

      For instance, I take music off my my cd's, arrange them, burn them to a cd, and take it to work to listen to? Why? Because I end up paying $17 for one song, I better be able to put the other 14 songs that I ended up paying $17 apiece for on there too.

      But of coruse, the RIAA wants to call that piracy.

      I won't purchase DVD until there is a fully recordable format. I seldom listen to music straight off the cd's that I purchase and it's not worth my money to "wait and see". Remember the 3 or 4 digital tape formats that were out about 5 years ago? DAT survived because it was easily recordable, and didn't cost an arm and a leg (relatively... dat is still through the roof) to purchase the recorder.

      -Erik-

    5. Re:Listen to yourselves... by demon · · Score: 1

      Some of those [CDs] probably would have been paid for had CD-R's not been so easily accessible.

      This sounds familiar. Sounds like the software industry's excuse for why every pirated copy of software counts as a "lost sale".

      Listen buddy - if I get an MP3 of something, it's usually because (a) I want to hear the music before I lay down my money, because you don't get a good sampling of most CDs from radio stations (though I hate having to give my money to the RIAA - if I could just get the MP3s, and mail the $20 DIRECTLY to the band, I'd do that...), or (b) because I wouldn't have bought the CD anyway, but instead I just wanted the one track. (This doesn't count MP3s of tracks from CDs which I own.)

      Please, don't apologize for the RIAA's greedy practices. They're making life hard for EVERYONE, and they don't have to - the encryption schemes aren't gonna help against the real pirates (like the guy who thought it'd be a good investment to acquire a CD/DVD duplicator, and recoups his spending by duplicating music/movies and selling the copies). MP3s aren't the real problem - but in their blind rage, the RIAA seems to be forgetting that the average customer isn't taking profits away from them.

      Not like they have anything to worry about - the RIAA member companies' employees certainly aren't going without, I'd bet... and you thought your whole $20 for each CD goes to the band who put it together? Get real.

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
    6. Re:Listen to yourselves... by Commie · · Score: 1
      "For instance, I take music off my my cd's, arrange them, burn them to a cd, and take it to work to listen to? Why? Because I end up paying $17 for one song, I better be able to put the other 14 songs that I ended up paying $17 apiece for on there too."

      I don't think most people attribute piracy to making mix CDs/pure copies out of commercial CDs you already own for *personal use*, I certainly don't. And as greedy as the RIAA is, they aren't expecting or hoping copy-protection/encryption is going to force people into buying 3 copies of the same CD so they can have it in their car, at work, and at home.

      The only "piracy" the RIAA really cares about is when you copy your CD and give it to a friend, who then gives it to two of his friends, one of which then encodes the CD to mp3 and puts it up on an FTP site. Then someone else downloads it, decodes and burns it, and on, and on. That IS a very large problem. Most people don't attempt to deny this is a big problem, many though (as with you) just avoid it altogether and focus on the personal use aspects of copying.

      Making mixes = the same argument as making "archives" = personal use. If that was all that the vast majority of people with CD-Rs did right now, no one in the Recording Industry would be spending the money to lobby for encryption/give a flying flip about it. As it is, I can honestly say I don't know one person that owns a CD-R that hasn't burned multiple CDs off friends and/or via decoding mp3s found off FTP sites. I would probably explode into a coughing fit if you reported the opposite experience.

      Anyway, it's a legitimate problem, and I suppose you might say "Well, too bad - I need to make mixes. The recording industry just has to eat it." That really doesn't fly with me, and it's never going to fly with them. You can shout all you want that you'll never buy DVD-Audio unless it's recordable, but the sales to people like you seem to pale in comparison to the sales lost from people who copy CDs/mp3s instead of buying them.

      As for DAT/DCC and all that, they never really took off as far as audio goes. DAT recorders/tapes were very high priced back when, and your average consumer had no interest. The only people I've ever known that owned DATs were either musicians doing home recording (before CDRs became cheap/availible) and recording studios.

  97. the real pirates by Wansu · · Score: 1

    The record companies are the real pirates. They just don't want any competing piracy. For decades, they have gouged consumers and stiffed bands. Many a good band withered on the vine because they couldn't get backing while the record companies heavily promoted sucky acts.

    I miss vinyl. In '88, LPs disappeared off the shelves real quick to make way for CDs. Here we go again.

    --
    Wansu, th' chinese sailor
  98. You need a fucking PHD for this crap. by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1


    If it can't be explained in a half sheet of paper at 16 point size, it's gonna bomb. People often have to read VCR instructions 30 times to figure them out.

    DVD Media players should play any DVD. No Audio vs Video. No regional encoding. No encryption. Video tape seems to be working, burnable CDs are working. Why, would anyone want to fuck with a good cash flow.

    The peolpe adding all this politicing to DVD are going to make it as popular are an 8 track tape player jukebox, or a minidisk changer car sterio.

    What are they trying to do, bring DIVX back from the dead as our only hope? That is what will happen if the ball is dropped 100 more times.

    -- Smile :)

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  99. And if anyone complains..... by Nodatadj · · Score: 1

    the dvd makers can blame on those *NASTY* *EVIL* hacker people who only want to steal.

    iain

  100. No such thing as uncrackable. by dmorin · · Score: 2
    Sure, we could argue about what uncrackable truly means(*), but if you assume that people are willing to go to any lengths to copy something, you have to make it *unfeasible* to copy, rather than *impossible*.

    Say, for example, that I've got a 700 page user manual on paper. I wish to copy it. I can sit at the copy machine for several hours and make a copy that is really cumbersome, not as good as the original, and took up way more of my time than simply buying another copy. I remember being asked many times in the early 90's when CD software was becoming popular how people could copy it. Luckily at the time the only answer was, "If you've got the space, go ahead and copy everything onto your hard drive". And most people didn't have the space. :)

    So how do you solve the DVD problem? Keep it unfeasible to "rip" them. Right now it is -- I don't think recordable DVDs are on the market yet, are they? But they're coming soon enough, and eventually they'll be as prevalent as CD burners. So get the cost of the DVD cheap enough that it costs the same if not more to buy a recordable DVD and rip a copy. The problem will still exist. But people will be more likely to say "Ya know what? I'll just buy the thing." If the potential bootlegger had to spend as much to rip the thing as the original cost, then he can't stay in business long because he won't be able to make a profit.

    How do you get your costs down? Lots of ways.

    • Stop wasting your time on encryption games.
    • Open source some code and get some free help/support.
    • Work on supporting more operating systems, so that you have a larger potential customer base.
    • Advance your own technology so that you'll continue to stay one step ahead of the crackers. Make playable DVDs that have 8x the capacity of a recordable DVD so that it'll be that much less likely people will copy.
    • Help make DVD a popular standard. This will encourage more movie companies to want to produce DVD versions. This will cause more people to buy players. Repeat ad infinitum.

    d

    (*) The argument I hear most is, "What about retinal scans? Those rule!" Yeah, until I hold a gun to your kid's head and make you open your account for me. Hey, I never said realistic, I just said *not impossible*. You never know what people are willing to do, it all depends on what it is that you're trying to hide.

  101. Personal Copying Specifically Legalized? by Lagged2Death · · Score: 1

    The RIAA now has a deal where it gets a percentage of the price of blank media (CD-Rs, CD-RWs, DATs, etc), on the theory that some of the blank media is depriving the artists and the industry of sales. Its a daffy scheme that doesn't even produce very much revenue, but it's there.

    I thought that as part of the deal, recording for personal use (like to play in the car) was specificially and explicitly legalized. Anyone have more info on that angle?

    Of course, they can still lobby for all the technical barriers they want to.

  102. Re:Audio is best in two channels by escher · · Score: 1

    I agree with jyang-- live performance is always in *front* of you on a stage (hence the term "Soundstage" in hifi circles).

    Yeah, but just imagine what music artists will be able to do if 5.1 becomes a standard for audio. Why stick with a limitation just because "it's always been that way"?

  103. Re: ethically misguided by Black+Parrot · · Score: 5
    I can't help but wonder whether attempts at copy protection aren't directly undermining public ethics. Twentysomething years ago, you might expect to hear someone say,
    "Don't bootleg your software/music/whatever instead of buying it; it's ethically wrong."
    Now you'd more likely hear,
    "Don't try to bootleg your software/music/whatever instead of buying it; it's copy protected."
    With ethics, "there is no try", but with copy protection it's a simple matter of "do or do not". So the idea that I can't do it because it's wrong is replaced by I can't do it because it's hard, and when the inevitable crack shows up and makes it easy, the can't part disappears, and no one remembers to ask the question that kept most of us from stealing beforehand.

    A naive analysis, perhaps. But I can't help but wonder.

    --
    It's October 6th. Where's W2K? Over the horizon again, eh?
    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
  104. Foreign markets and the region 2-6 DVD boycot by Morgaine · · Score: 2

    Don't worry about foreign markets, they're doing just fine riding the wave of region 1 (ie. US) DVD. (I'm in the UK, which is in region 2).

    Regionalization is pure evil, and R2 versions of R1 material are particularly bad: the result is sometimes sub-standard in quality, often has fewer extra features, and to cap it all, sometimes R2 versions come out as flippers when the R1 version is dual-layer.

    Needless to say, lots of people in R2 are very annoyed at this situation and about regionalization in general, so it's common to hear about DVD fans boycotting region 2 altogether and buying R1 DVDs exclusively. That's what I do, and I make sure that dealers know that this is going on so that they invest more in R2 stock.

    Furthermore, everyone I know buys only region-free or region-cracked players. People aren't stupid, and they're not the sheep that the studios would like them to be.

    If this means that native DVD markets will not flourish, that's excellent news. Regionalization deserves to die.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  105. What does "rip" mean? Rip is a technical term for by lwilliams · · Score: 1

    Raster image processing....
    The term "to rip" comes from Raster Image Processing, and it's the main way that stuff from your screen becomes ink on paper from your printer. PostScript software is often referred to by people who make printer software as a "PostScript rip" or "ripper." People used to know it was an acronym because in the beginning they used all caps -- RIP. Over time, "ripping" became a verb, and now "rip" has become a general term for moving and distributing data; taking a CD and making an MP3 file is often called "ripping" even though there are no raster images involved. Unfortunately, rip is associated with the colloquialism "rip off."

  106. Correction: so that they invest more in R1 stock by Morgaine · · Score: 2

    "R2 stock" as written didn't make any sense anyway.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  107. All this "Better quality" stuff is just crap... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Yeah, and sure enough, whats the point having 24bit/96kHz quality if you are to listen to the dam music with all the parasitic sounds from the car, road, trucks and kids shouting in the back because they are excited with their new games

    1. Re:All this "Better quality" stuff is just crap... by argathin · · Score: 1

      My friend, you obviously never had the chance to sit down in a comfortable chair in a quiet room in front of the speakers of a high quality stereo for an hour or two... Ahhh.... Bliss! :-)

      Thomas

  108. Good! by mholve · · Score: 1

    That's what they get for trying to make a closed format system. Bungholes! What, they're not making enough profits from CDs now? Bah.

    1. Re:Good! by demon · · Score: 1

      Remember who we're talking about here - this isn't the movie industry anymore, this is the MUSIC industry (headed by out friends, the RIAA). Profit? Too much is plenty! Screw the customer? Why not?

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  109. Check out this RIAA web site quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    http://www.riaa.com/tech/tech_ht.htm

    The following quote is just wishful thinking on their part. It's flat out wrong. Fair use of material you own means you can copy it any damn way you want to if it is for your own use! Yet, they keep this crap on their web site:

    As a general rule for CD-Rs, if the CD-R recorder is a stand-alone machine designed to copy primarily audio, rather than data or video, then the copying is allowed. If the CD-R recorder is a computer component, or a computer peripheral device designed to be a multi-purpose recorder (in other words, if it will record data and video as well as audio), then copying is not allowed...

    ...Computers and general-purpose computer peripheral devices are not covered by the Audio Home Recording Act. This means they do not pay royalties and they do not incorporate technology to prevent serial copying. As a result, this also means that copying music onto a computer hard drive is not permitted. It is copyright infringement, and a violation of federal law. This is true whether the source being copied is analog or digital; whether you are copying an entire album or just one song or even part of a song; or whether you are making a compilation of songs from albums you already own...

    ...The bottom line: the only digital copying of music that is allowed is with digital recorders that are covered by and comply with the Audio Home Recording Act.

    1. Re:Check out this RIAA web site quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I guess this means that my USB speakers are illegal. In order to play music through a USB speaker, it has to first be digitally copied off the CD, since USB speakers do not have analog inputs.

    2. Re:Check out this RIAA web site quote by WNight · · Score: 2

      This is an outright lie.

      You can copy it in any way you want.

      It's what you do with it afterwords that can be a copyright violation.

    3. Re:Check out this RIAA web site quote by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      The following quote is just wishful thinking on their part. It's flat out wrong.

      You are confused. They are not talking about fair use. They are talking about consumer recording rights specified in the Audio Home Recording Act, which added several sections (starting at 17 USC 1001) that give specific recording rights to consumers in addition to fair-use.

      What RIAA is arguing is that the definition of a digital recording device given in the AHRA is not met by a computer/CD-R, and so no AHRA rights are conferred to record with computers. Reading the definitions (see 17 USC 1001), it looks to me that they are right, perhaps. I could see it going either way.

  110. Re: Hearing Locations and Phasing by wass · · Score: 2
    I think 24-bit audio is overkill, but it'll set the stage for the next (probably) many decades. 16-bit audio may have extremely small perceivable digitization effects, but 18-bit audio should eliminatate most of these. I would also think that on a 24-bit SNR 96-kHz sampler, the 5 or 6 most LSB's are probably random noise anyway.

    As to the above post referring to frequencies above the range of hearing that refer to location, these can occur way into the MHz! I've been told (not personally witnessed, though), that if you take a channel of audio sound and play it into the right ear, and play an identical audio channel, only delayed 1 us, into the left ear, you can notice a very certain direction to the music. Change the delay, and you've changed the direction al response of the sound.

    This is why very good audio amplifiers should have bandwidths up into the MHz, and not just rolled off at 20 kHz or so. CD-quality sound is pretty good, and can still produce these MHz-type effects, though it's been sampled at 44 kHz. How, you wonder? Well, it has to do with the 96 dB (16 bit) SNR. Phasing of a sine-wave can be determined rather precisely with the 96 dB of range, due to the 65536 distinct levels each voltage point can be. There's enough vertical resolution (amplitude) that horizontal spacing (phase) can be determined rather precisely.

    Of course, moving beyond the 16-bit level of SNR is pointless, unless you've got the equipment to handle it. Ie, inherent non-linearities of the decoupling caps between amplifier stages is a killer. If your system is using a cheesy electrolytic here (the horrors), rip that puppy out and use a polystyrene cap. Eventually you may want to bypass this and DC couple all the stages. Also, use monster-cable to the speakers, even any small resistance from amp output to speakers will form a divider with the speaker cone, and introduce isolation from the output driver, which will distort your frequency response. Also never use a passive crossover, use an active one before your final amplifier. This doubles the needs of amplification, but hey, you're an audiophile, right? You'd be surprised by the supposed high-quality audio systems that still throw in a cheapo 50-cent cap just to save a few bucks. Ack!

    "In a world without walls, who needs Windows" - Someone from LinuxToday

    --

    make world, not war

  111. It will if the companies need copy protection by VAXman · · Score: 1

    If CD piracy continues (due to its unprotected nature) and starts to cut into profitability of CD's, clearly the CD manufacturers will turn to a copy-protected medium such as DVD-Audio. If technologies such as Napster continue to take off, and music piracy continues to escalate to the point where distributing copy unprotected music no longer makes sense, clearly the companies will no longer issue copy unprotected music and will turn to a closed, proprietary media for distribution.

    As for the quality issue, I think anybody will notice the different between CD's and DVD audio (which will approach, and possibly exceed the quality of vinyl). Only the people who own a few CD's and just listen to them in the car cannot tell between tapes and CD's (or CD's and vinyl). Any music customer who approaches seriousness will much prefer DVD. Most people agree that because of CD's very limited frequency that CD's sound dry, and DVD will fix this.

  112. I know it costs piles of cash. by Tiger+Smile · · Score: 1


    It costs piles of cash for these joker to jerk abound the recording companies with their fear talk, so how can I cash in on it?

    We've all taken the wrong angle on this. We need to find a way to be part of the problem. We can make a little cash, or alot if we can scare them more and more each year.

    We'll spend days working on a solution to their problem and nights producing a crack for it.

    -- Smile :)

    --
    -- Prepared at the direction of, or to be sent to Legal Counsel, in anticipation of litigation. Attorney Client Pri
  113. I'd like to clarify a few things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3

    From what I've seen, the best pro equipment today has about a 120 dB dynamic range. That corresponds to 20 bits of dynamic range. For comparison, perfect 24 bit data would have 144 dB of dynamic range and perfect 16 bit data has 96 dB.

    Dynamic range is the ratio of the largest signal to the smallest discernable signal in the output for a DAC, or in the input for an ADC. There are many things that can limit the smallest signal a DAC or ADC can resolve and bit depth is just one of them. Of course, the dynamic range of digitized data can NEVER be greater than the maximum for the bit depth being used, but it could easily be less.

    For those of you unfamiliar with signal processing, the important measure is the Effective Number Of Bits (ENOB). This is a measure of the number of bits of information that a DAC or ADC can present in one sample. You could have a million-ka-jillion bit DAC, but the dynamic range will be limited by the analog performance of the DAC so you may have something like 12.6 ENOB. You see this a lot with "CD quality" audio; most low-end CD players and sound cards offer around 14 bit performance with 16 bit samples, but most people can't tell.

    Now, it is VERY difficult to get 144 dB of dynamic range, and even harder to achieve that level of linearity (measured by total harmonic distortion, THD). 144 dB is a ratio of 20,000,000:1. It is EXTREMELY difficult to build circuits that have this level of performance. I'm not even sure if and sampled data systems have achieved 24 bit performance. I do know that the low-noise amplifiers used in the experiments to detect the background radiation of space cost tens of millions of dollars and IIRC involved extreme cooling to reduce the thermal noise.

    My point is that the current limit for production level devices is 120 dB, or 20 ENOB. This is A LOT. Think about this, when describing sound levels (dBspl = dB sound pressure level) 0 dBspl is defined as the smallest sound detectable by human ears. The threshold for permanently damaging your hearing is around 90 dBspl, the threshold for pain is around 110 - 120 dBspl, and the sound level a few mwters behind a jet engine (747 IIRC) is around 140 dBspl.

    We can use these numbers to get an intuitive feel for the dynamic range of various bit depths.

    ENOB Weakest sound Loudest Sound
    16 minimum hearable onset of hearing loss
    20 minimum hearable onset of pain
    24 minimum hearable jet engine

    So, actual 24 bit audio would be able to range from the minimum hearable sound for human ears to the volume of a jet engine. 20 bits is still more than enough, and if CDs are recorded properly, they can come very close to 16 effective bits and this is good enough that most people couldn't tell the difference between 16 bit or any better data. However, if you have the storage space, why not guarantee that the quantization noise from the bit depth of the data is not the limiting factor?

    This all depends on the listening environment as well. There aren't any speakers that can accurately reproduce 16 bit data. In addition, most people listen to muisic either in their cars, with fans from computers running, ar any number of background noises going on. The fact that MP3s are so popular despite the fact that the have worse quality than CDs shows that a lot of people don't know or don't care about the difference in quality. That said, I consider myself an audiophile and welcome any improvement in the recording quality so long as it is not used as a means for greedy studios to empty my pockets.

    Well, that was quite a rant, but I wanted to clear up a few things that I have seen a lot of people on Slashdot showing some confusion about in this and previous articles. Normally, I don't have enough expertise on the topic to post thoughtfully, so I'll take the chances I get.

    Matt

    1. Re:I'd like to clarify a few things by wass · · Score: 2
      Now, it is VERY difficult to get 144 dB of dynamic range, and even harder to achieve that level of linearity (measured by total harmonic distortion, THD). 144 dB is a ratio of 20,000,000:1. It is EXTREMELY difficult to build circuits that have this level of performance. I'm not even sure if and sampled data systems have achieved 24 bit performance.

      I just want to chime in here. It isn't just the fact that we're aiming for 24 bits (ie, 144 dB) SNR here, but it's also the sampling rate that matters with respect to difficulty. It's a general trade off with analog-digital converters (as well as most circuit systems in general) between accuracy and speed. There are a number of 24-bit ADC's that work quite well, I believe. They use dual-slope current ramping (amongst other methods) to really get an accurate level of the voltage to be sampled. HOWEVER, and it's a big however, these things are slower than molasses.

      A quick stroll by the Analog Devices website shows a bunch of 24-bit AD converters which I'm sure are up to specification. However, none samples higher than about 1 kHz. Maybe somewhere else in their page are other converters, but this is a rough indication of what's available today. The faster you go, the more you sacrifice SNR. So, to be repetitive just one more time, it's not the 24 bits that hurts you, but the combination of 24 bits at 96 kHz which makes it hard.

      "In a world without walls, who needs Windows" - Someone from LinuxToday

      --

      make world, not war

    2. Re:I'd like to clarify a few things by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're right. I was only thinking of audio converters and kinda forgot about the other applications. Now that I think about it, I have seen 24 bit, 1kHz converters and, for use in hard drives, when you get to > ~500MHz, just getting 6 bits is tough. Matt

    3. Re:I'd like to clarify a few things by Marshmallow · · Score: 1

      To get 24b/96kHz given 24bit 1KHz ADCs, simply use 96 of them appropriately clock-skewed.

    4. Re:I'd like to clarify a few things by wass · · Score: 1
      Good idea, but have fun building a demultiplexer that will provide 144 dB of isolation between each sample (such that a sample won't "leak" into the next AD) and also maintaining that 144 dB of linearity integrity of the original signal.

      "In a world without walls, who needs Windows" - Someone from LinuxToday

      --

      make world, not war

  114. Re:Why DVD Audio? (Sampling Theory revisited) by jyang · · Score: 1
    I don't want to get too technical here, but since human can only hear 22Hz to 22000 hz sound, you only need 44,000Hz sampling. Anything above 44,000Hz is a waste of money.

    We following the Sampling Theory which says: No information would be lost if sampling frequency (CD recording rate) was double the value of signal frequency (human-range sound).

    It's like you wanna scan a picture of checker boxes, how many pixels do you use to represent one box ? Only 1 pixel per checker box, using 4 pixel a checker box doesn't increase any information the picture carries. (If you argue you want crispier edges, buy a new monitor. 1 pixel checker box is just as crisp as 4 pixel checker box) Here is how we get 1 pixel per box sampling rate: The frequency of the pattern (i.e. signal) is 2 boxes, which means horizontally or vertically, any two points that's 2 checker boxes apart has the same gray-scale value. So the sampling rate should double the frequency (denser, closer...), it is 1 box, double of the frequency of the pattern. This is the difference between Science and Marketing, Propaganda and Ignorance.

    --
    --- You make things foolproof, and they'll find you a damn fool.
  115. A couple more things DVD audio could be good for. by ahaning · · Score: 1

    1. Internationalization. You could have an American track, Spanish, German, and whatever else. It would be lame(like watching old King Kong movies)but nifty:).

    2. Data tracks. You could put this on the disc and make soemthing like the audio CDs that have data tracks as well. Bios(no, not Basic Input/Output System..geesh:)), music videos(encrypted and proprietary, of course), etc.

    3. Words. Kind of like karaoke. You wouldn't need to whip out the liner notes.

    4. Environmentally friendly. If they re-released some songs on new albums, those people who didn't have them could have them and not have to waste physical space with another disc (okay, this is a weak point). Although this would only work well and right if the discs were either the same price as those out now or not much more.

    5. DJs. Same amount of music, easier to transport. Or "all-night-party-on-a-disc". Same for radio stations.


    -------------------------

    These are only some of the reasons I think this will be useful(if we still have SOME control over what's on the disc). And I admit that #4(Environmental) is weak. But this is also something I thought about with regards to Linux and *BSD. You buy a 4-CD jewel box or just download it and there's not as much packaging(unless you're buying Redhat or SuSE or another boxed release...even then, you only need one). Although in order to make the download constantly available, you've got to keep a few systems up 24/7 which uses electricity. And unless you've got 500 rats running in little wheels or a solar power source, it's going to create some pollution.

    Humm-dee-dumm. I'll enjoy the replies.

    --
    Withdrawal before climax is very ineffective and those who try this are usually called "parents."
  116. Re:5.1 channels? I have two ears + a brain by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can still only hear from two channels, it's just that sound sources from behind you sound slightly different because they are absorbed by a different part of the ear, this is the principle that the original 2 channel A3D worked on, modify the sounds the same way your ear would, and voila the brain thinks they are coming from behind.

  117. DVD Audio.. Who cares about the encrytion.... by DraKKon · · Score: 1

    Lets just say for a moment that they DVD Audio encryption is encrypted with military strength code. And the players/decoders have the decryption keys. SO WHAT! If there is an audio out, the neet little red and white jacks on the back, I'll be able to record the DVDAudio disc to the computer anyways. The encryption is pointless.


    I'll never understand why they need the encryption. Its just a waste of time.

    --
    "It's not like your minds are as open as the source you love..." - Me to the majority of Slashdot.
    1. Re:DVD Audio.. Who cares about the encrytion.... by demon · · Score: 2

      The industry is under the naive assumption that encrypting the digital data will stop anyone from ever being able to directly pull it out and manipulate it. Of course, because of the nature of a system that uses static keys, and since the data HAS to be decrypted at some point to be useful, this isn't that secure. Also, the real threat, as others have mentioned, is someone getting duplication equipment (by some unknown means) and just duplicating direct from disc - all that encryption can't stop this.

      Also, strong encryption technology can't be exported (at least not without a fair amount of difficulty, AFAIK) from the US and (from what I understand) Japan as well. With the US and Japan being the primary distributing nations of said equipment and media, "munitions-grade" (hah) encryption is pretty hard to swing. Of course, since the data has to be encrypted at some time for playback, this is all immaterial - someone will figure out how to make it work, and they'll rip the digital audio stream directly from these discs. The DVD-video crack pretty much proves that. (No, Xing's error didn't CAUSE that - just sped it up.)

      --

      Sam: "That was needlessly cryptic."
      Max: "I'd be peeing my pants if I wore any!"
  118. Re:What does "rip" mean? Rip is a technical term f by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

    Are you sure? I had a prepress job for quite a while (with a really craptastic RIP - flakey as hell, the imagesetter was no better) and while we would discuss sending a job to the RIP, or RIPping it, I can't see how that led to ripping audio. I think it probably _does_ come from 'rip off'

    --
    -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
  119. Security of DVD Audio on computer systems by Spacecase · · Score: 1

    One of the security loopholes that could be used to undo any encryption technology for DVD-Audio is the simple fact that the sound must be played through a audio device ( ie soundcard). It occurs to me that it would not be that difficult to create a device driver for a soundcard that wrote any digital information it was sent to a disk file. You could play the disk through a standard legal software player and make a digital copy of the decoded bitstream without having to hack the disc itself. This technique could also be applied to a physical player if you put vampire wires on the motherboard before the A/D chip. This idea would not prevent watermarking technologies from tracking the information, but most audiophiles are against any system that would degrade the quality, which watermarking by definition must do. In any event it is impossible for the entertainment industry to stop the duplication of thier data, and I think they should push for a pricing structure that would make pirating less interesting.

  120. To someone dedicated enough, anything... by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    is possible.

    Hey, they could simply embed all of the electronics in black epoxy - but this hasn't stopped people from RE either. Those in serious RE have been known to delicately take the top off of IC's, using grinding and sanding tools, to peer inside, using with electron microscopes or other tools.

    And don't say an EM is outside the range of the dedicated, garage-based hacker - why, here in Phoenix (and I would imagine in other large cities), places exist which sell old EMs as scrap metal for pennies (or less!) on the dollar (I once saw a large industrial robot arm sitting outside behind one of the places I frequent - I asked one of the guy's what it was going for - "$200.00" he replied!) - most are in usable condition (just gotta get a power supply and vaccumn pump - but hey, they sell those, too). Heck, many of those places sell most of the stuff to start your own chip fab, if you want...

    So, even if they do the most bizzare stuff - there will be those few who are willing to go the extra mile to get what should rightfully be theirs - knowledge of the system.

    The f0ckers can't stop those souls...

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  121. Re:You left out a generation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    When I was a kid listenng to the the radio was going to ruin a whole generation. It really fucked my parents up bad. Then along came TV with various church edicts decrying the preversion of people dancing and wrestling. I can't take anymore.....

  122. Copyright protection? by mindstrm · · Score: 1

    They talk of 'copyright protection'.

    I think they mean 'copy protection', as the only enetity that can protect 'copyright' is the courts.

    And copyright is more about distribution and use than it is about actual copies....

    There is always 'fair use'. Will they say that any sort of digital reproduction is unfair? no.. it is up to the courts to decide.
    But comeon.. the only reason we are all mad is because of delays... we all know that no matter what they do, we will be able to make perfect digital copies. Period. No matter what. Always.

  123. Fairuse has nothing to do w/ Blank media royalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I think in other countries like Britain and Canada all blank media has royalties attached.

    But in America at least, computer products are exempt. So computer CD-R's do not have a royalty attached, but "audio CD-R's" do.

    Again, in America, this has nothing to do with fair use. You are entitled to fair use of material you own whether or not you paid a royalty on blank media. This royalty is just something they negotiate with our congress. If they don't get it, it is their loss. While negotiating this, the RIAA came across a lobbying power stronger than they were (computer equipment makers). And they got spanked, hence no royalties. These royalites (or lack thereof) have no bearing on your fair use rights. (This does not prevent the RIAA from wishing it did and whining like babies about it -- see their quote from the RIAA web site elsewhere in this thread)

  124. OT - Exactly. by cr0sh · · Score: 1

    Just this morning I got an email from MP3.COM (music picks of the week or whatever).

    One of the artists struck me as being special - way better than what I normally find on MP3.COM, and easily up there with the labels. After downloading and listening to the songs that were on MP3.COM, I went to her web site and purchased her CD.

    --
    Reason is the Path to God - Anon
  125. Failure? by sheldon · · Score: 1

    The DVD-Audio standard is widely desired by a great number of Audiophiles. Considering that there have been a number of relatively successful products sold over the years just to try to improve the CD format...I don't think it'll be a failure.

    You have to understand that there are actually people in this world who appreciate music quality. Hint: They don't buy MP3 players.

    1. Re:Failure? by WNight · · Score: 2

      No, and they won't ever buy a compressed format even if it sounds better. But, it's probably ignorant consumers who want bigger numbers who drive the market.

      Sorry, this is a button of mine.

      I know a bunch of people who refuse to listen to MP3s, saying they sound so different as to be unlistenable. They refuse to listen to compressed music in any form... And then they go and listen to a *tape*! A regular analog tape... Because it's not compressed, it must sound better. *Argh*

      Anyone with a clue would realize that if 96Khz 48b music sounds good, you could take 192Khz, 64b music, use lossy compression, get it smaller than the uncompressed version, and still have it sound better.

      MP3s sound worse than CD audio, but they're a tenth (or less) of the size! Duh! If you MP3d (at 1Mbit) DVD Audio, it'd sound way better than CD audio at aproximately the same size.

  126. they won't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they were ever going to "need" copy protectio, they would have "needed" it long before now.

  127. Re:Quality over quantity by Balerion · · Score: 1

    To digress for a moment, I don't think that most recorded music (especially commercial music) accurately represents anything even remotely like a live performance. This is because of all the layering and studio tricks that the recording industry uses to make music "perfect" (read: sterile). Does this mean that I think that CD quality is the be-all and end-all of quality? Of course not. The point is, that when 90% of the music-buying public (who essentially drive the industry) can't tell the sound difference because their livingroom stereo is a discman with battery powered speakers, then they aren't going to adopt it. I certainly don't think that the music industry is "suffering" from CD quality music.
    I like to think of myself as someone who truly experiences music, not just listens to it, but I can count the number of times where I've been in a position to truly appreciate DVD quality audio on one hand. Yes, I have a nice stereo system, and I have a DVD video player with surround sound. Why? Because I can see/hear the difference in both visual and audio quality over analog tape. Plus, I like the advantages that the DVD format has over tape (extras, alternate soundtracks, etc). But I don't think that I will be adopting DVD audio anytime soon, because I take music with me wherever I go. I only watch movies in one place.

  128. You're absolutely right... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And those satellite thingy's are a load of crap too, since we all know the world is flat!

    Can you say Troll, nobody is that stupid!

    1. Re:You're absolutely right... by WNight · · Score: 2

      Actually, they are kind of right. You only have two ears, so you only need two channels.

      If you use headphones.

      Otherwise the sound, not being directly on either side of you all along is going to be processed as coming from a certain direction, on top of the processing done by the card. So it won't work quite right.

      And then there's the issue that breaking the low frequencies out onto their own track means you don't have to use a filter later to do it. Do it once with professional equipment so the consumer doesn't have to do it.

      Speaking of which... With 5:1 sound, do all channels take the same ammount of space? If you've got a channel that you're only going to send to a woofer, does it need the same fidelity as the high frequency channel? If a woofer is for 20-1000Hz, couldn't you same it at 2khz, or 4khz to avoid aliasing problems, and at a probably lower bit depth too? (Woofers don't seem like they'd be as high fidelity as the mids and uppers.)

    2. Re:You're absolutely right... by Dusty · · Score: 1

      >Otherwise the sound, not being directly on either side of you all along is going to be processed as
      >coming from a certain direction, on top of the processing done by the card. So it won't work quite
      >right.

      Funnily enough you actual hear in 3D. There is a system built to do this, following on from the research into hearing by a chap at Oxford University, a web search on Ambisonics will find it. Unforunately Dobly 5.1 is much more popular, possibly because Ambisonics usually recommend an eight speaker set up for a fuller flavour.

      >Speaking of which... With 5:1 sound, do all channels take the same ammount of space? If you've got
      >a channel that you're only going to send to a woofer, does it need the same fidelity as the high
      >frequency channel? If a woofer is for 20-1000Hz, couldn't you same it at 2khz, or 4khz to avoid
      >aliasing problems, and at a probably lower bit depth too? (Woofers don't seem like they'd be as high
      >fidelity as the mids and uppers.)

      Funnily enough it uses five full rate audio feeds for front centre, front left, front right, rear left and rear right. Plus a limited rate feed for the sub-woofer. Which is where the 5.1 label comes from.

  129. Re:Why DVD Audio? (Sampling Theory revisited) by Jeff+DeMaagd · · Score: 1

    Nice... your Sampling theory is the MINIMUM frequency required to record the signal. It is also called the 'Nyquist theory' or something. Doubling the frequency of the sound introduces aliasing at even 1/4 the sampling frequency.

    If you own crappy audio equipment or have enough external noise, you my not hear it, but it is there.

    Your checkerboard idea is invalid, consider some picture instead.

  130. Yeah, Stuff Seti@Home... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would gladly donate ALL of my cpu power to assist in decrypting any pissweak algorithm they come up with to try to screw the poor old enduser.

    Just to spite them...

  131. DVD Audio==Wasted space on disk. by Dast · · Score: 2

    These days, most mainstream (read: crap) artists don't fill up normal cds.

    Why exactly do you want to have a lot of wasted space on a DVD disk?

    Maybe I'm totaly off base here, but what is audio on DVD going to do for you that CD audio doesn't? I (speaking personaly) don't need any higher quality than CD--I'd get more improvement from changing speakers.

    Can someone fill me in on why DVD audio is a good thing?

    --

    This sig is false.

    1. Re:DVD Audio==Wasted space on disk. by argathin · · Score: 1

      IIRC, the idea is to crank up the sampling rate and the bitrate to improve the quality of sound reproduction - to *finally* be able to compete with decent vinyl LPs on decent record players...
      Until then give me an LP anytime.

      Cheerio,

      Thomas

  132. I'll stick with CD's thanx. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Here's a litle story. Currently i am living in Canada with my gf. Both me and my gf have a "tradition" for buying VHS tapes of our favourite movies and recording our favourite TV shows on Tape.
    Recently i have accepted a new job in UK. So me and my gf thought "well if we are going to send all these tapes in UK it will cost us a fortune".We currently have about 400 VHS tapes.So as you can imagine shipping all that will cost a great deal oif money.Not to mention that the tapes will NOT WORK ON EUROPEAN VIDEOS.So we thought "hey why not buy DVD player that can play VC-D's and DVD's so we can carry the damn things on the plane with us". And so we did. I shoved 599+tax to buy a Pioneer DVD that can play DVD/VC-D's/CD-R's etc and decided to stop buying VHS tapes.
    AFter all why i should pay thousand's of dollars to ship my tape collection when i can just buy two of those 120CD cases and solve my problems.
    Granted it will take me some time to convert my tapes to VCD's since i DO have a TV card but it is well worth the effort.Also for a couple of months now we stopped buying VHS and started buying DVD's instead.
    LITLE did i know about the "region locks". When i asked around i found out that i could not play my dvd's or use my DVD player in england. So now i am back to where i started with about 800 dollars LESS.
    So my question is why is there such
    MIS-INFORMATION about the DVD media?
    Why are the big bullies NOT telling these drawbacks to the people who actually buy their crap?I have never seen this "region lock" in their advertisements. I was under the impression that DVD was just like a CD. Just like i can play the CD's my dad sends me from europe on my home stereo i was expecting the same thing with DVD's.

    1. Re:I'll stick with CD's thanx. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most if not all new PAL video recorders can also play back NTSC these days.. so what's the problem?

  133. Empowerment of the individual by Morgaine · · Score: 2

    I think you're right about the awakening desire for technology to serve us without strings attached, but alas only very few people seem to take such a philosophical view of the technology, even among techies. (Increasingly, it's just "cool" :-) Despite that, what you describe does seem to be happening. It's not yet a recognized meme though; possibly all that is lacking is a name by which the media can get a handle on it.

    A related view is that of empowerment of the individual, the PC seen as an extension of one's arm. It's not often used in the context of any gadgets other than computers, but X10-style home automation falls easily into the same pigeon hole, and a/v or hifi equipment is often linked up quite comprehensively in modern homes. They are indeed an extension of one's arm, quite literally in the case of remote controls.

    However, I don't see any sign whatsoever that either philosophy or practice are heading in this direction outside of the techie sphere. Non-tech people are as oblivious as ever to how things work, or possibly even more so than ever since the replacement of analogue by digital has made things even more obscure for them. And since they form by far the larger part of the population, I doubt that the emergence of a new awareness among techies is going to make manufacturers deviate in the slightest from their self-centred plans.

    At the end of the day, the only way in which we're going to obtain technology that serves our own needs exclusively is by creating it ourselves. Free software, Linux, the MP3 scene and Internet radio, www/ftp and the largest repository of information on the planet, none of these were created by commercial entities. It's down to us alone to make the world as we want it.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  134. What a modern dilemma .... by taniwha · · Score: 2
    It used to be that we had 'copyright laws' that 'worked' because it was hard to copy things .... if you wanted to copy a book the cost of typsetting it was very high up-front NRE - if you got sued you lost all that money you put upfront - only a small number of people had the means (access to typesetting hardware and a press) so it was easy to find someone who'd copied your work.

    Then the xerox machine came along and everything changed - suddenly you could copy anything on paper for pennies, you're no longer looking for someone who copied your work and did a big press run - the usefullness of copyright went way down.

    Then came digital media and the cost of copying went to an effective 0 - worse yet thanks to the 'net the cost of DISTRIBUTION has gone down to pennies - there are whole industries based on copying things and getting them from one place to another - these guys are in trouble - whether they realise it or not.

    I think that what we're seeing for audio and video is the equivalent of the the arrival of the xerox machine - pressing vinyl or CDs used to be beyond the reach of us mere mortals - now we can all do it on our computers.

    And MP3's are the next step - no media, no cost of distribution - things like publishers, record labels and moveie distribution houses are dinosaurs - they just don't know it yet

    However now we've got a problem .... we still need a way for the original content producers (authors, musicians, movie studios) to make money .... this is what we should be trying to solve - not how do we get the distribution people to get their cut - they are history.

    Finally there's a fundamental problem with encrypting digital media - at some point - in the machine where it's being played - out of the control of the media's author(s) - the encrypted data has to be rendered into some form that is usefull - bits in a frame-buffer, bits into an audio DAC. So long as that's true people will find ways to get their hands on the digital bits. Sadly the only way that's likely to work is to integrate these functionalitys (sound out dacs, whole frame buffers) out of the reach of mere mortals like the writers of Linux drivers - this can only be bad for a platform like linux that has small market share - will people write drivers for complex media chips for us? will they give us enough information to do it ourselves? (without giving away how to get at the precious media bits) - we still can't play our DVD disks under Linux - pissing off a whole bunch of geeks by not supporting your hardware is just going to get them pissed enough to reverse engineer your technology so they can use what they paid for ..... remember there are alot more of us geeks than the people trying to hide the bits

  135. Re: Future is AC3 not mp3 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The future is AC3, not mp3, once we can all ENCODE
    to ac3 and not mp3 we can enjoy high data rate and 48khz optionaly and 5.1 sound.

    We can also play it back like mp3, and the best thing of all, we can burn AC3 files to a CDR and a DVD box will play it NOW TODAY, no need for special custom mp3-CDplayers.

    All we need now is for more ac3 tools out there, legal or not.

  136. SSpeaking of the Cap'n .... by taniwha · · Score: 1

    I saw John wandering around at the last Linuxworld in San Jose .... he's still with us

  137. Re:DVD Audio - the need? - Nyquist Theorum by the+eric+conspiracy · · Score: 2

    What's the point of sampling sound at 96kHz when human ear and speakers can do only (in the best case) 20kHz?

    The consequences of the 44.1K sampling rate are quite severe. They can be understood in depth from the following article: Consequences of Nyquist Theorem for Acoustic Signals Stored in Digital Format

    Essentially this article points out that since the sound reproduced at f/2 (the sampling frequency divided by 2) is derived from only two samples per second, the error in sound reproduced is actually larger than the sound itself . This means at 20 kHz you actually have more than 50% distortion in the CD audio format.

    Other factors include introduction of phase inaccuracies from the introduction of a 18-db/octave anti-aliasing filter at the 22 KHz cutoff frequency. Loss of phase accuracy of course leads to odd cancellations in the room sound field.

    In addition it has long been known that the stereo sound field quite poorly reproduced by only two speakers. For decades experimenters have known that at least a center channel improves the sound image dramatically. Home theatre enthusiasts have also become very aware of the practical benefits of a seperate subwoofer channel and amplifier. At the very least they no longer have the problem of tweeter burnout from distortion harmonics induced by amplifier overload.

    Take a look at http://fagersta.com/electronics/audio.html for more information.

  138. Class action against the recording industry? by DragonHawk · · Score: 3

    Take a good look at SDMI. Embeded within the specifications is the groundwork to eliminate that pesky "fair use" copying. Technology will enable the industry to eliminate what the courts would not.

    Well, then. I used to be able to make backup copies of all of my music CDs, because they tend to get scratched over time. Now, with SDMI, I cannot do that.

    How about a class action law suit against RIAA or whoever? They are deliberately ignoring the decisions of the United States court system to increase their own profits at the expense of consumers.

    They love suing anybody who walks in front of them. Let's try turning the tables on them.

    --

    dragonhawk@iname.microsoft.com
    I do not like Microsoft. Remove them from my email address.
  139. Re:This really heads back to Cap'n Crunch Draper.. by sjames · · Score: 2

    In effect, the modern PC can be programmed to be a phreaking monster.

    Interestingly, now that most exchanges have traps so you can't MF them, many voice modems have a "#" command that allows them to produce 2 arbitrary frequencies together. Now to find an ancient exchange...

  140. Re:Audio is best in two channels by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Then it would no longer resemble the live performance.

  141. Digital is digital by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well,maybe DeCSS came a year too early.Now they'll make new encryption However,digital signal must go to a soun card Isn't it simple to record it in .wav and later convert it into a MP3 and give it away on the internet? It seems that we'll have nothing new to listen because noone will find music production a way to earn some money.

  142. Analog sampling, and 128-bit crypto by BigBaldGuy · · Score: 1
    A couple of points:
    • New crypto regs will help the recording industry maintain a lock on the DVD-Audio format. Given proposed new US encryption export regulations, it is entirely possible that the creators of DVD-Audio may be waiting for "retail" status in order to put 128-bit encryption into DVD-Audio discs. That will make it mathematically infeasible (for the foreseeable future) for private individuals to decrypt discs. Which leads to:
    • Resampling isn't the end of the world. If I wanted to tote around a copy of CDs I own (under the fair use provision, of course), I could just run the line out of the DVD-Audio box to the line in of my sound card and make mp3s from that. I wouldn't rely on mp3 to store audio at true "CD quality" anyway, so there isn't a significant loss in doing this.
  143. Nitpick... by Oblio · · Score: 1

    This is kinda moot, but copying for your own use isn't "fair use". Time-displacement, or more generally media-displacement is infringement, but is protected from prosecution via the betamax case that went before the supreme court (84?).

    IANAL, but check this out for some background...

    --
    Pax -- Ob
    1. Re:Nitpick... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      No, time-shifting is NOT infringement.

      A central ruling in the Betamax case was that a technology with significant NON-infringing uses could NOT be outlawed under copyright law, just because it might ALSO be used for an infringing purpose.

      Time-shifting was cited as an example of such a NON-infringing use, and the companies that were suing Sony over the Betamax thus lost.

      Note that the Supreme Court was not enumerating every type of fair use in audio/video contexts. All they needed was one example.

  144. This is BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We've been copying CD's and audio tapes for years. same goes for VHS...and now CD's and DVD's. Why the concern now? people will always buy stuff. quit hording the technology. this is BS!

  145. What the hell are they trying to do? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    i dont understand the point in encrypting that kind of stuff... ? i mean, if a computer can (dis)play it, any lamer with: - a debugger (i recommand soft-ice http://www.numega.com/) - an hexeditor - a very poor knowledge of x86 assembly - win32 api programming - and few cracking techniques (the best is on http://fravia.cjb.net/) could hack the stuff in few minutes... in less than 60 second (i broke my left arm last week) i can redirect any directsound output (or any sound "device", thanks M$) to a file... now, tell me: those guys are mad or what?

  146. Re:Quality over quantity by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've enjoyed my debate with you thus far. :-) I agree that most popular music is overproduced multitrack sterile *products*. I think they do this so it will sound 'good' on the radio and on people's crummy boom boxes. Record companies want their wares to be noticed-- to cut through the clatter. However, you can still find many great minimalist direct to two-track recordings that are absolutely incredible. For instance, the Cowboy Junkies Trinity Sessions. This recording has some flaws but it was made with an microphone connected to a DAT recorder-- you can't get any more minimalist than that! The church they recorded in has the most wonderful acoustics that when I play it back on my stereo system, I feel like I'm sitting there with the performers. This is what recording engineers should strive for. Oh well. In my experience (yours will vary), analog recordings (recorded on analog reel-to-reel tape, and mastered onto an LP record) sound more open and natural than their CD (digital) counterparts. Of course it helps that I have a really nice turntable, and yes, my CD player isn't too shabby either. My point is: it has taken 15 years for the CD to almost match the musicality and quality of analog, and SACD or DVD-A has the potential to put digital over the top. I guess I'm happy to keep expanding my LP record collection but they arn't going to release new LP's forever (even now it's tough to find what I want in new releases, most are imported from Europe). The used ones are the deal of the century since I can get what I want for 1/4 to 1/15th the price of the CD. :-) Let them bring on the high-end recording formats!

  147. Not the first time CSS was cracked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    CSS was apparently cracked back in 97. Can anyone verify this? http://www.cryptosoft.com/snews/ nov97/24119706.htm

  148. Microsoft Audio Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..was never actually cracked.

    unfuck.exe just played the song to a loopback device and re-encoded it into an mp3. A lossy procedure.

  149. paranoid bastards! by maxmisch · · Score: 1

    i'm sure the majority of the people who supposedly "hacked" the previous DVD-ROM encryption schemes didn't intend nor actually make any profits off of that particular technique. a large portion of the "hackers" were probably linux (or other similar variations of unix) users, who didn't feel the need to boot into a win32 session just to watch 'the blair witch project'.

    matsushita should lighten up and stop assuming that every hacker is out to make a buck. what makes them so certain that this new encryption scheme will be inpenetratable, anyway? i guess they under-estimate my kung-fu skills.

  150. Umm.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ..have you actually investigated what people are protesting.

    The WTO is enforcing unfair tariffs on goods and exploiting developing nations. Why? The supporters of the WTO are mega-corporations such as Nike who want to be able to produce their goods for cheap prices in countries like Taiwan.

    The WTO is a complete monster, doing things like attemping to make France to import Hormone Injected Beef, and when France did not comply, they slapped un-realistic tariffs on France's cheese exports, putting millions of farmers at a loss, because they cannot export their goods to countries like the US.

    Why don't you actually investigate why 60,000 people are protesting the WTO, before making ignorant comments like the one above.

  151. Probably phase error from the filter. by Ungrounded+Lightning · · Score: 2
    Studies have shown that the presence of frequencies above the usually audible range (20Hz-22kHz) help the listener to locate the source of the sound. This is depite the fact that most people can't even hear above 18kH.

    What's probably happenening is taht the listener is using phase information from the sound as part of the location process. The low-pass filter that cuts off the signals above the Nyquist limit to prevent aliasing also causes phase errors as the filter's cutoff is approached, and that distorts the phase information and impairs the listener's ability to localize.

    So it's possible that the listener is not actually using sound he can't hear to localize, but instead that the tests distorted the sounds he could hear in the process of filtering out the higher frequencies, and the result was misinterpreted.

    Raising the sampling rate and moving the filter up will also reduce the phase distortion at the high end. So regardless of whether the localization is from phase info near the high-end of hearing or something from higher frequencies than what is perceived as sound, the localization will be improved by the change. And regardless of whether the tests were misinterpreted they did what was intended: Showed the designers that improvement was possible and how to do it.

    Back in the '60s, when I was taking undergrad classes on the subject, it was believed (by authors of perceptual psych texts) that phase information (at least above a few tens of cycles) was not processed into perceptual localization. (Steve Chaikin, who designed the DCM loudspeakers, knew better. B-) ) I was able to easily prove to myself that they were wrong:

    We had two phones in my office in Ann Arbor, and a tie-line trunk to Detroit. The dial tones in the two exchanges were generated separately, and were a fraction of a cycle-per-second off. (A dial tone is the sum of two sine waves, and in those days was generated by rotary equipment, i.e. a motor-generator.) By putting one phone to each ear I could hear the Ann Arbor tone in one ear and the Detroit tone in the other. The frequency error gave the perceptual illusion of a sound source slowly orbiting my head.

    --
    Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
  152. Piracy? What a joke! by aaarrrgggh · · Score: 1

    I can walk down the street (HK), and pick up a perfect DVD copy for US$5.00. No encryption will fix that, and that is the kind of piracy that hurts the studios.

    Consumer piracy, the petty copying of files that can be done with the DeCSS or with "unsecure" MP3 files is really trivial. Concern with that type of copying is nothing more than greed!

    Find a way to punish the companies for their greed... or let the markets do it for them!

  153. Studios and manufacturers will replace CD with DVD by Morgaine · · Score: 2

    DVD Audio would be doomed to failure if everything else were to stay the same in the music scene, but it won't.

    The reason it won't is that, after being stung by MP3, studios will "encourage" artists to publish on DVD Audio once it's available, because of the extra encryption. Of course we all know that that won't help them one iota against MP3, but they'll do it anyway as it'll give their single collective brain cell a good feeling of accomplishment.

    As a result though, pressed music will progressively migrate to DVD, especially since there won't be many plain CD players left because the majority of hifi manufacturers will use DVD drives instead of CD drives as soon as the price difference drops sufficiently. They'll do that because product differentiation is the name of the game, and then where one leads the others have to follow in order to stay competitive in the market.

    --
    "The question of whether machines can think is no more interesting than [] whether submarines can swim" - Dijkstra
  154. Re:This really heads back to Cap'n Crunch Draper.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And some even allow one to send a stream of PCM data out the DAC (read: play .WAV files over the line!).

  155. Re:Videodiscs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I think he's confusing laserdisc with the (obsolete) RCA Selectavision disc. There'a a FAQ about this interesting, if Rube Goldbergish, technology at http://www.cedmagic.com/home/cedfaq.html.

  156. Expanding on this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1
    "The transition to digital audio (via CD) was easy for most people to make, since the difference in quality was obvious."

    Experience shows that the mass market accepts a format change when several conditions are met. There must be:

    A readily discernable improvement in performance. (Look at the transition from black-and-white to color television. Just about anybody could see the difference right away.) Greater convenience or ease-of-use. Compare 78's to LPs... more songs, higher storage density. And better archival characteristics... LPs don't shatter if you accidentally drop them. Reasonable cost-performance ratios. Those who weren't alive when it happened don't remember that it took years to move from monophonic to stereo sound and from black-and-white to color TV. One reason was that the improved products were first priced as premium items (color TVs cost $600 in the early 60s), and most consumers initially didn't find the improvement worth the greater expense. Backward compatibility helps (but isn't required if the improvements provided by the new technology are sufficiently major. Look at the advent of CDs here.
    So where does this leave the audio DVD? I agree that for most consumers (meaning the ones who have spent less than $10K on sound equipment) the improved sonics will be marginally perceptable. You've already made the point about unused storage capacity on existing CDs. Look also at costs: First, while it might be possible to put all 14 CD's worth of Wagner's Der Ring des Nibeliungen onto a couple of DVDs, you can bet that the record company (which currently gets $150 for the 14-cd set) isn't about to drop the price to $30 just because the disc count is less. And second, it looks like initially you'll see higher prices for the same material. (Sony's list price for their new SACD discs is $26... $10 more than the equivalent CD.) Plus, if the new equipment (which you'll need to play the new discs) won't play your existing ones, the purchase becomes less attractive. Add encription or copy restriction ("Whaddaya mean, you're not going to let me roll my own copies?"), and you've set the stage for the audio DVD to become a niche product, appealing only to audiophiles. (Again, look at digital audio cassettes, where limited-capability products have demonstrated that consumers don't like buying broken technology.) And if the audio DVD doesn't bresk out of the niche, it will never supplant the CD, because businesses don't make any money by making products that their customers can't buy.
  157. Pointer to Excellent Article On This Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At least IMO!

    It's by Bruce Schneier in Risks Digest 20:66.

  158. Re: fair use (was: Ripping is not always illegal) by Ping · · Score: 2
    I'd really like to see a lawyer say this. I have a feeling that the "personal copy" thing is one of the biggest urban legends going these days. Everyone has heard about it from a friend who heard about it....

    Urban legend? Have a look at Stanford's fair use site before you go making those claims.

    Although you are right that erasing within 24 hours is no defense. Warez is Warez, and fair use is fair use.

    If fair use is suddenly thrown out, on the grounds that the RIAA can't guarantee people won't be able to prevent 'pirating' of music, it sets a horrible precedent for the academic world. Remember the legal issues with hyperlinks almost being considered copyright violations a few months ago? Imagine every bibliography for any text ever written being illegal. It's absurd and morally WRONG.

    Although I suppose I'm preaching to the choir. Most slashdotters would probably agree with me that fair use is necessary and justifiable for personal backups, quotes, links, bibliographic references, and similar purposes. It's definitely time to move our rants from the slashdot choir into letters to our technology and common-sense impaired representatives...

    Just as soon as I finish finals.

    --
    -- You can actually change my mind with a good argument.
  159. Re:Why DVD Audio - corrected information by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Actually, DVD-Audio allows sampling frequencies of up to 192KHz.

  160. Re:What does "rip" mean? Rip is a technical term f by WNight · · Score: 2

    'Rip off' can mean two things, to steal, or to remove forcefully. You 'rip off' a Band-Aid (tm) brand bandage.

    I use 'rip' for the copying of something that doesn't "want" to be copied. CDs are a pain to digitally copy (it's not like you simply type 'copy track1.wav c:\wavs' or anything.

    DVDs are a much better technology (without the CSS crap) because the disk, even a movie or music (if that ever gets off the ground) disk, has a filesystem, and files can be read without having to 'rip'...

    People don't 'rip' files from a harddrive, because HDs and (decent) OSes are designed to aid in copying data.

  161. I bet people can't wait... by nohup · · Score: 1

    I bet there are some people out there right now that can't wait until they release the DVD Audio, so they can start hacking away at it. There is always going to be a way to hack it no matter what. I can see the hackers now... "Let's go get one of those DVD Audio players and start finding a way to crack it!" It is inevitable. They are just wasting time and money. -Mike Taylor- miketay@removethis.xmission.com

  162. Re: Hearing Locations and Phasing by WNight · · Score: 2

    This sounds like what a 3D sound card would do, for headphone output, to mimic sounds from different places. Distort and slow certain parts of the signal, and at certain frequencies more than others, to mimic the distortion you'd hear in a sound if it were coming from a certain place.

    Do you know if this is what they do?

  163. Re: put all instruments on separate tracks... by WNight · · Score: 2

    Having all the tracks seperate would be good for one thing. You could move your 'viewpoint' around the virtual orchestra and a 3d sound card could remix everything on the fly, not just for volume, but also to add directional cues, which would let you choose where to 'sit' to listen to your copy of some classical music.

  164. Does anybody know anything about speed of DACs? by Handyman · · Score: 1

    (Maybe this is offtopic, but could somebody please answer my question?)

    I don't know how DACs work, but I would like to know how the difference between two digital input signals influences the time before the output signal is accurate. For instance, if the input sample s(n) = 0, s(n + 1) = 65535, does it take a 16-bit DAC longer to reach an accurate output signal than when, say, s(n) = 0, s(n + 1) = 256? If this is true, it could have quite an influence on the sound.

  165. Re:Why DVD Audio? (Sampling Theory debunked =-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The theory is one thing..... (LOL) In practice, it is very established that frequencies above the human audible range are interacting in many ways with the harmonic components of those we can hear. (interference patterns-like) Also, a little calculation of the amount of samples it takes to describe a high-frequency sound shows to anyone but the truly obtuse that you would need at least 6 to 8 references during the half-waveform, unless you want that sound to look like a gross square wave. With a sampling rate of 44.1 Khz, how many slices of digital audio do you have to represent a 15 Khz sound?....... We are talking about describing the curve of a waveform with those samples as reference points. Of course, you can argue that a 1 KHz sound will have 44 points of reference to describe that sound. Perhaps your concept of audio is telelphone-like quality???? (which would probably be OK) So, taking your comment about science and marketing, you may look good on paper, but I don't think anyone would want to buy audio gear you would design =0) In other words, perhaps you should give your brain an opportunity to stop reasoning and start using your ears. Then again, it is so subjective. Being an audio professional for a couple of decades, I feel the right to correct ignorance and complete lack of experience, even if backed by reasonable-looking arguments on paper. ======NOW FOR THE ACTUAL INTERESTING BIT===== Yes, believe the hype, a device capable of playing back 24-bit 96 KHz audio in a multi-channel (5:1) will probably be CHANGING YOUR LIFE!!!!!!!!! But I believe the wrong questions are being asked: No matter what great playback device we have out there, please don't tell me you will use it to listen to another rehash of "Hotel California", because the true power of such a device will only become apparent when creators START AUTHORING for this particular format. Building coherent 5:1 studios and control rooms, experimenting with multi-channel mike techniques, having new console hardware (under $500 000,00) with multi-channel panning and automation, as well as engineers and producers who UNDERSTAND how incredible and powerful this can be made to provide listeners with a truly 3-dimensional audio listening experience. (please elaborate on how many people and facilities are equipped to do this today.....) Right now, the sorry state of the pro audio industry is such that people are struggling to come up with simple multi-channel mastering and authoring tools. (Sonic Solutions is the only 1) So, rather than just talking about all this theoretical stuff, I wonder if anyone out there realizes that even if this stuff was available today, we'd certainly not be lucky enough to have anything to listen to which would actually be doing justice to this format..... ..........until creators, musicians and composers start having the facilities to CREATE for this medium. I believe that 24-bit 96KHz 5:1 audio DVD is the future, but not necessarily for consumers. Moguls can afford a 'media room', but the rest of us will have a hard time getting 5 speakers accurately set-up in a standard living room, not to mention the added expense. As for encryption, it'll never happen for more than a few months. Someone will (luckily) figure out how to keep 'localization' and other evil schemes to be little more than boardroom posturing by soon-to-be impotent persons struggling to remain in control of their copyrights, in the face of 'globalization'

  166. Re:Why DVD Audio? (Sampling Theory debunked =-) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Being an audio professional for a couple of decades, ..." and know nothing about digital signal processing? OK, reconstruction of a 15 kHz signal from 44.1 kHz samples is in theory perfectly possible, and in practice very good. You only need a good reconstruction filter with a rectangular shape in the frequency domain (ask Nyquist :) This for the theory. In practice, due to hard competition on the market, of course, very cheap HW is used, which in turn may not provide sufficient quality. But consumers which cheap CD-Players probably don't care about that ... and the others are welcome to buy an expensive CD-Player with good D/A characteristics :)

  167. Except for one thing... by LocalH · · Score: 1

    They are saying that DAE on your home PC or Mac is illegal, for whatever reason. In other words, according to the mighty word of the RIAA, it is illegal for me to digitally extract my favorite Lynyrd Skynyrd songs from their 1997 live album from Pittsburgh, in order to put them on my computer and listen to them without filling up my CDROM drive. This is bunk. I legally bought the album from a record store, so I may now legally do anything with it I choose, short of distributing copies of it, for free or for cash.
    _______
    Scott Jones
    Newscast Director / ABC19 WKPT
    Game Show Fan / C64 Coder

    --
    FC Closer
  168. Re:Fairuse has nothing to do w/ Blank media royalt by grahamm · · Score: 1

    I don't think that we have royalties on blank media here in the UK. I think that the music indutry (read record labels) tried to have it introduced but did not succeed.

  169. And this means what??? by tilleyrw · · Score: 1
    I could not give a rat's ass about DVDA. CD is hear, CD is cheap, CD is becoming better all the time, CD is easy.

    If these new 140 GB CD using clear disks and flourescent data markers take off, we'll be able to fit almost any type of media onto a CD.

    You can't hear the differences between CD-Audio and DVD-Audio anyways unless you're a geek audiophile with $10,000 speakers. So who cares?

    Right, no one.

    People suck. Kill a friend today.

    --
    This post encoded with ROT26. If you can read it, you've violated the DMCA. Handcuffs please, sergeant.
  170. Need no MHz amp!!Re: Hearing Locations and Phasing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The need for MHz amps is ridiculous.

    With a normal 2 channel 44.1 kHz DAC you can perfectly create a 1 us delay between the signal of the left and right channel, the wave shapes will just not consist of the same values in the wave tables/digital description.

    1 us only corresponds with 1 MHz when talking about whole sine waves.

    The DAC with information at 44.1 kHz will never call for amplification higher than 22 kHz. Stories of linear phase are correct though, that alters the sense of direction.

    aRTee

  171. Re:Origin of term "rip" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back in the old days, people wrote demos with lots of cool graphics and music. Some other people wanted to listen to the music seperate from the demo, and several programs were written to rip out the music, extracting it from the rest of the code. People did the same with video game music. By the time MP3 tech came along, 'ripping' was a commonly used term for audio extraction, hence its use in connection with CDs.

  172. uhh... Firewire? by Drunken+Philosopher · · Score: 1

    Perhaps I'm missing something... if the output signal is digital over firewire, and firewire technology is available for most newer computers, what's to prevent someone from intercepting the decoded audio between the player and the amp? In any case, any professional bad guy determined to copy the DVDs will be able to, given the right equipment. The only signficant result is that personal use copying (DVD to DVD or digital extraction) will be made very difficult in the near term. This use is legal and ethical, yet the recording industry is going to great lengths to try and stop it. It feels like a desperation tactic used by an industry that refuses to change with the times. In 5-15 years or less, when every PC has the capability to be a high-end (by today's standards) multitrack digital audio studio, distribution is a non-issue (Internet), and Internet radio replaces the Industry-controlled broadcast radio of today, I wonder what will happen to today's music industry?

    --

    "There is a diminishing return on caution."
    1. Re:uhh... Firewire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Currently, DVD-Audio players output audio via six analog RCA connectors (one for each channel.

      Separately I have read that Sony's developed some sort of copy-protected FireWire chip for digital video.

  173. Most modern recording are inextricably linked. . by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    with the recording technology at any rate. . the recorded entity _is_ the art, unless you are a big classical fan or whatnot, and in the case of live recordings. . but the vast majority of popular music, as well as "cutting edge" experimental music that is really pushing boundaries nowadays is intrinsically bound to the idea of the recording studio _as_ the musical instrument. Personally, I think I would prefer some sort of true quadrophonic digital standard, with all the extra space on DVDs it would be quite feasable, stereo has had more than its lifespan. .

  174. Re: put all instruments on separate tracks... by CodeShark · · Score: 1
    Good point. I hadn't thought about moving the "viewpoint" around. In a similar vein, I could also balance the sound to make up for any particular tonal deficits (ranges of notes where my hearing isn't as good).

    That said, using all that data space for separate sound tracks would be extremely storage intensive, something I didn't think about yesterday. BTW, both of the above items can be done fairly well with the standard controls on a good stereo and/or surround system, as long as it is equipped with a good multiband equalizer.

    --
    ...Open Source isn't the only answer -- but it's almost always a better value than the alternatives...
  175. DVD-Audio in Linux? Why? by bardencj · · Score: 1

    Maybe it's my not fully converted status that leads me to think this but here goes... DVD-Audio supports 96kHz/24bit, which is high enough to be considered "audiophile." Given that knowledge, how many people are really going to take this marvelous triumph of sonic engineering and slap it into their Brand-X computer DVD player and its paper-thin transport in the first place? The real high-end audio snobs are going to expect heavy transport mechanisms and excellent DAC's in the players anyway, which (I can be pretty sure) will not be standard features in a computer DVD-Audio player. I understand those who have moral issues with copy protection, but honestly, life's too short. I for one plan to have a good listen to one of these players, but I certainly don't plan to scour the world for a Linux device driver. Let's choose fights that make sense, shall we?

  176. No, I am not confused; re-read the quote by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    You are confused. They are not talking about fair use. They are talking about consumer recording rights specified in the Audio Home Recording Act

    No, I am not confused. Yes, they are talking about the AHRA. But they also mention "songs from albums you already own" and they made blanket statements about ANY copying that are flat out wrong. Read again:

    It is copyright infringement, and a violation of federal law. This is true whether the source being copied is analog or digital; whether you are copying an entire album or just one song or even part of a song; or whether you are making a compilation of songs from albums you already own... ...The bottom line: the only digital copying of music that is allowed is with digital recorders that are covered by and comply with the Audio Home Recording Act.

  177. The Rio court said the RIAA was full of it ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Check out the old news at www.mp3.com (or maybe www.eff.com) regarding the RIAA lawsuit against the Diamond Rio. According to one article: 1. The RIAA claimed that the exemption of computers from the AHRA was a "technicality" that the court could fix. (In fact, the exemption was quite deliberate, and was the price that the record industry lobbyists had to pay to keep the computer industry lobbyists from blocking their pet copy protection / media tax proposal.) 2. The RIAA then claimed that if computers were not covered by the SCMS / media tax requirements of the AHRA, that meant that copying audio using a computer was illegal. The judge - quite correctly - wasn't buying it.

  178. Shrink-wrap "licenses" are generally bogus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Generally those shrink-wrap "licenses" aren't worth the paper (or the CD-ROM space) they're written on.

    1. There's no "consideration" - the demand that you "agree, or else" takes place AFTER you have purchased a copy of the software. If I own a copy of the software (money's changed hands, but no signed license agreement has), sealed disk envelopes and "Agree" buttons can be seen as the vendor attempting to hold my personal property hostage against my "agreement" ... and an agreement obtained under duress is not valid, especially if all it gives me is restrictions above and beyond those of copyright law.

    2. There's no opportunity to read license terms beforehand; in the few cases where they are put on some Web site (where you can't read them while you're in the store), there's still no opportunity to negotiate them.

    3. They run afoul of U. S. copyright law (First Sale Doctrine, etc.) - this is a basis on which at least one "license" was invalidated in court.

    There have been some court decisions in favor of these bogus "licenses", most notably in the case of some phone directory where a large part of the product (the data) wouldn't really be eligible for copyright protection. So the actual legal situation may depend on where you live.

    Mind you, there are business groups that want to change state laws so that software sales aren't really sales. They are almost at the point of getting these and other desires passed into law - despite the opposition of at least half the state attorney generals, the Association for Computing Machinery, the FTC, etc. See http://www.badsoftware.com/.

  179. The "need" for copy protection is baloney. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Precisely. CD has been out for how many years now? Long before there were home CD-R drives or MP3 encoders, CDs which the industry touted as being of studio master quality would have been most useful to pirates making CDs or LPs or even plain old cassettes. A single CD could spawn dozens of cassettes (home taping) easily, or thousands of cassettes (commercial pirating) without too much more difficulty.

    So going by the "logic" of the copy protection advocates, CDs should have killed record companies. Yet somehow the recording industry survived and made a ton of money, just like the studios did after the Supreme Court squashed the lawsuit filed over the Betamax.

    I'll tell you the real threat to DVD-Audio. It's not MP3 and it's not a lack of copy protection, but rather the actions of the recording industry and the DVD Forum. I will not buy into DVD-Audio until the recording and hardware industries remove all copy protection more restrictive than SCMS. If these industries keep delaying the release of DVD-Audio, they're also going to be giving Sony and Super Audio CD a chance to pick off the few audiophiles who are still hanging around.

  180. Digital Video Disc Audio? by Ricardo+Casals · · Score: 1

    Woudln't it be DAD: Digital Audio Disk? :-)

    --
    yeah ... i'm going to have to go ahead and not put a .sig here, alright?
  181. doh by Oblio · · Score: 1

    Upon rereading, I agree. The shifting is non-infringing (although it is not clear to me that this is a fair use exclusion).

    Thanks!

    --
    Pax -- Ob
  182. Security and industry... by eksos · · Score: 1

    I think the video and music (and other) industries are all looking at this wrong. They're putting millions of dollars into coming up with good ways of encryption - They're putting their heads against every bored hacker/cracker on earth. Why not just drop it? They wouldn't be paying all this money, and losing time/profits. Very soon you would have utilities out that would copy this stuff, but the average person, even-though freely accessible isn't going to copy anything when it involves using more than one complicated device (such as.. a DVD player and a computer), especially when they have to buy both for it to work. Try *convincing* your grandparents to go out and buy a CD-burner so they can get free CDs (tell them it's easily accessible, so on, just make them think that they get on, get music, and burn CDs).. Most older people I know still wouldn't do it, just based on the cost of buying the burner. I think that would be the way most people tend to think as well. And how many people STILL don't know how to make their VCRs stop blinking 12:00? Are these people just going to go from that to copying each movie they rent? If these industries just dropped the subject for a while, even if they decided to pick it back up on their next generation of products, people are lazy, and if they don't excersize having to go through a bit of trouble to copy stuff, people would probably just stop, except maybe a *few* people. No one would want to go from easily copying everything, to having to try hard to copy anything. The way it's evolved today is it went from records and such, which really couldn't be rerecorded at the time, to audio and video tapes, making it simple as can be to copy things, then for audio it's gone to CD, making it a little hard.. with the current next step of making it "hard" for DVD/DVDA, all it's going to do is let us take our knowledge of the previous step, and apply it to something new, while preparing us for the *next* step at the same time? Nice little never-ending cycle. Hmm, why not just take it down a few steps, so instead of going from 50-60 for their next "best" thing, we'd have to go from 0-60... it'd make it a little harder.

    Maxx

  183. Re: fair use (was: Ripping is not always illegal) by kinkie · · Score: 1

    Did you know that when you lend a friend one of your (rightfully bought) CDs, you're infringing copyright?

    --
    /kinkie
  184. Actually A lot will buy it. by IcephishCR · · Score: 1

    I've heard 96khz/24bit, and it does sound amazingly better, while most of the world does not have audio equipment to really do it any justice, you most likely will still be able to hear the difference through your speakers, the clean audio signals, adnd the crispness of the sound make it sound closer to the real thing. Besides even your normal cd's will sound a bit better in the DVD player from the superior A/D converters, and the advancesments in this field in the last several years, don't be stuck on the idea that CD is as good as it gets, because it isn't, I believe CD's sound worse(you lose warmth and energy from the music by sampling it, increasing the sample rate will help this), remember technology advancements happen in more areas than computers, they also happen in other fields, and then get added to the computer realm.

    --
    Life is but a Beta test...