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The Broadcast Flag is Nothing Compared to What Microsoft Has in the Works for DRM

Started by Gregg Lengling, Monday Mar 14, 2005, 08:47:38 AM

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Gregg Lengling

For people who've been obsessed with issues surrounding the broadcast flag on HDTV content, things are about to get even more difficult. Heise Online is reporting that the next version of Windows will have extra-strength DRM capabilities tied into PC hardware. The move by Microsoft is to assure content producers that products they release will be protected against unauthorized copying and distribution when used on a PC. So say bye bye to audio stream rippers and video capture techniques that in the past have circumvented copy-protection on digital works.


At the end of April at the WinHEC 2005 developers´ conference Microsoft intends to furnish further details on the copy protection functions of the successor to Windows XP Longhorn, which is planned for 2006.

The preliminary WinHEC 2005 Master List of Tracks and Sessions under the heading Media Advances for the Windows PC Architecture lists a number of events dealing with the form of control of use known as Digital Rights Management (DRM). One of these track sessions will, for instance, be concerned with the Protected Media Path (PMP), which is to be established for media data in Longhorn PCs. A Protected Environment (PE), whilst providing a Protected Video Path (PVP) and Protected User Mode Audio (PUMA), will enforce defined requirements on hardware drivers (for TV or graphics cards, say). These channels are to be proof against data theft by rogue software. PUMA runs in the PE, with the PVP even encrypting data transfer to the graphics card over the PCI Express Port (AES 128). A PC´s outlets - in the case of video signals the outlet of the graphics card - are also integrated into the output protection management concept (OPM). Here Microsoft mentions known output protection schemes such as HDCP, Macrovision or CGMS-A, but also speaks of artificial resolution constrictors. According to Microsoft "significant hardware features must be implemented in graphics chips for Windows Longhorn to support PVP and OPM, with additional larger implications for the drivers." The longer term project PAP is to introduce audio encryption all the way to the audio codec chips. [Heise Online]


With this heavy blow to "fair use," which in the near future will be non-existent, will Linux developers buck the system? In other words, will no-name PC hardware vendors sell non-DRM compliant products to run on Linux? And will software gurus create programs that will bypass copy-protection, in lieu of what the content producers want imposed? Hmmm... my guess the battle is about to heat up. And if my prediction of a Linux counter movement comes into being, get ready for a mass exodus from Microsoft and Apple (because you know they're secretly working on a similar scheme).

http://www.ehomeupgrade.com/entry/710/the_broadcast_flag
Gregg R. Lengling, W9DHI
Living the life with a 65" Aquos
glengling at milwaukeehdtv dot org  {fart}


tazman

From a skeptical point of view, disregarding any of the ramafications of the copy protection.  Sounds like some pretty heavy duty, system wide hardware intrusion on the part of MicroSoft.  Of coarse when has MicroSoft ever attempted to make a leaner more efficient OS for the PC. :rolleyes:   Ya gotta figure there's gonna be a significant performance toll with those kinds of modifications. :eek:

Bebop


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