Oh its just like the old days :)
Jem Stone
Communities Executive | BBC Audio and Music
O7966 551242 | twitter: @jemstone | jem.stone [at] bbc.co.uk.

----- Original Message -----
From: [email protected] <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] <[email protected]>
Sent: Fri Oct 02 20:12:04 2009
Subject: Re: [backstage] The BBC is encrypting its HD signal by the back door

Rob Myers wrote:
> On 02/10/09 19:17, Nick Reynolds-FM&T wrote:
>> People on this list may be interested in this latest blog post:
>>
>> http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2009/10/freeview_hd_copy_protecti
>> on_a.html 
> 
> The first commenter is far more worth reading than the original post -
> 
> http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2009/10/freeview_hd_copy_protection_a.html?ssorl=1254509384&ssoc=rd
> 
http://www.bbc.co.uk/blogs/bbcinternet/2009/10/freeview_hd_copy_protection_a.html

2. The DTV is not serving the public if it introduces unnecessary 
controls and complexity into the standards process. Requiring secret 
codes to decompress the data stream is excluding free and open source 
software (just like the content scrambling system excluded open source 
DVD players). The ability to revoke or otherwise impose sanctions on the 
consumer electronics industry, including retrospective disabling of 
products and impose restrictions on functionality. After all that is 
it's intent.

3. To whom ever the DTLA is responding it is not the public. As 
indicated above, it is about giving the content industries control.

4. It will apply to HD devices without a HDMI output, another overly 
complex standard that will raise the cost to consumers due to the 
addition of encryption etc, which restricts the devices it will 'trust'.

5. The BBC's "cosy negotiation" with rightholders and "secretive 
consultations" amounts to us neglecting our responsibilities and a 
desire to slip this process through quietly

"This point we take most seriously. Above all else, we are a public 
organisation funded by the Licence Fee and have committed ourselves to 
greater transparency and openness because we believe that this is an 
obligation we have to our audience"

And yet you are looking to sophistry and an abuse of language to subvert 
the legal requirement to broadcast an unencrypted signal. It is clear 
that if you need a secret key to uncompress the broadcast stream rather 
than using a public standard which anyone can implement, then you are de 
facto engaged in encryption just like the Content Scrambling System.

In my view this is a breach of the legal requirement to broadcast an 
un-encrypted signal.

Any collusion by Ofcom's part, would not void the intention and letter 
of the law.

[email protected]

 >How would the cause of audiences be served if the BBC refused to deal
 >with content vendors and as a result audiences could not access that
 >content?

 >As usual it's a difficult balancing act.


No it is a blatent breach of the law

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