Tech Firms Announce Video Anti-Piracy Technology

LONDON (Reuters) - NDS, STMicroelectronics and Thomson said on Friday they
will develop new encryption technology to foil video piracy, a $3.5 billion
problem for broadcasters and movie studios.

The anti-piracy technology, known as the secure video processor (SVP)
platform, is designed for media companies to protect their content from
unauthorized copying and redistribution.

A rise in piracy has accompanied the explosion of digital video players.
Crafty programmers have discovered ways to crack into DVD players, for
example, to make copies of Hollywood movies quickly and cheaply.

The new technology is designed to allow media companies to encrypt their
content with their own digital rights management (DRM) specifications and
have it unscrambled for viewing solely by devices embedded with SVP-enabled
chips.

The companies hope enough SVP-enabled video playback devices and TV set-top
boxes will hit the market in coming years so as to allow consumers to
transport the encrypted content to specially equipped SVP devices for
playback.

NDS, 78 percent owned by Rupert Murdoch's News Corp, has developed the
anti-piracy software component for SVP. Beginning next year, Thomson will
embed SVP-enabled chips developed by STMicro into its video playback devices
and set-top boxes.

American satellite TV operator DIRECTV, a News Corp affiliate, is the first
to use the new technology, the companies said.

The SVP alliance was introduced in Amsterdam on Friday at a broadcasters
conference in Amsterdam.

http://news.yahoo.com/news?tmpl=story&cid=569&u=/nm/20040910/tc_nm/media_pir
acy_dc&printer=1


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