I have yet to recieve an answer to the BBC's false claims, why is this?

The BBC claimed:
> There is no open source digital right managment

All I have to do to prove this false, is to demonstrate that 1 Open
Source DRM solution exists.
You must therefore disprove that all the following exist:
http://www.sidespace.com/products/medias/
https://dream.dev.java.net/
http://sourceforge.net/projects/openipmp

The BBC:
> If you have digital rights managment how can you then have it open source,
> if it's open source people will be able to find out how it works and get 
> round it.

How does that differ from your proprietary solution?
I have presented basic security proof that making code proprietary is
not capable of securing the algorithm.

Tell me Mr Highfield, do you ever use Chip and PIN?
If so why?
You said if people know how something works they can "get round" the
security, and yet EMV publish the specifications and I can't charge
money to other peoples card.

I have asked the BBC to explain this and yet you refuse. Why?

There are also ways of deploying a more secure system using openly
specified protocols which would allow it to run platform neutral
(didn't the trust order you to do that, what is the penalty for
failing to comply with orders from regulators? Will someone end up in
jail?)

Either justify your claims so the security community can examine them
and if necessary point out the flaws in them. Or offer a full public
apology and remove the person who allowed these untruths to be
broadcast from the BBC. And then perhaps you could provide the real
reason you won't use an open scheme.

And yet BBC staff seem to think that long debates about "copyright"
are significantly more worthwhile than explaining claims which
contradict some of the most profound security experts around.

Andy

-- 
Computers are like air conditioners.  Both stop working, if you open windows.
                -- Adam Heath
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