Hi Joseph Lee,
        That is an intrusting assumption.  I have heard a different reason
for the Braille notes not being allowed to gain access to NLS yet.  What
I've heard is that because Human ware was involved with the development they
were given first right to distribute the initial equipment capable to
utilize the digital material.  There were however, caveats as with any
agreement.  One of them was that they could not have more than one device
that could work with the new material for a certain amount of time.  Giving
other competitors an opportunity to enter the market space, providing
healthy competition.  I believe that if you look you will see at least one
Blind accessible PDA on the list of devices, however you will not see two
devices from one company on that list.  Have a great night.
Sincerely,
Scott


-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Joseph Lee
Sent: Saturday, March 20, 2010 5:09 PM
To: BrailleNote List
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] USA - digital books



 ---- Original Message ------
From: Flint Million <[email protected]
Subject: Re: [Braillenote] USA - digital books
Date sent: Sat, 20 Mar 2010 15:48:06 -0500

The NLS seems very against the idea of allowing any device aside 
from
dedicated players to play the content.

Here's why:

The NLS's authorization system is completely dependent on a 
handful of
secret decryption keys.  The algorithms and procedures are 
completely
open, and the algorithms themselves are industry standard, open 
source
techniques.  This is actually the best way to implement a crypto 
system
- you don't want any of the security to be by obscurity.

however, what we're dealing with is a DRM system.  The downfall 
of any
DRM system is the very fact that there must be a way for hte 
content
to be decrypted by a legal user.  Take DVD players for example.  
The
content on the discs is encrypted so cannot be easily copied.  
However,
your DVD player must have the decryption keys inside of it in 
order to
be able to decrypt the content for legal playback.  If your 
player did
not have the keys, the content would be secure - against 
everyone,
including the legal users!

To make matters worse, allowing DRM decryption on a standard PC 
(like
with DVD playback software and so on) opens up the gate for 
millions
and millions of hackers to tear into the code, disassembling it,
studying it, and inevitably gathering the necessary decryption 
keys.
Armed with these keys, a user then need only apply them to the
encrypted content to retrieve the completely unprotected data
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