...guess how many Blu-Ray DVDs or DVD players I intend to purchase after
reading this.....once again, law abiding customers are presumed guilty
before proven so in a court of law.

-rick


Blu-ray makes unexpected, three-way DRM choice for high-def DVD
http://www.tomshardware.com/hardnews/20050810_131820.html

Scott M Fulton III

August 10, 2005 - 13:18 EST

Hollywood (CA) - In an announcement last night, the Blu-ray Disc
Association, led by Sony, representing one of two competing high-definition
DVD formats, stated it will simultaneously embrace digital watermarking,
programmable cryptography, and a self-destruct code for Blu-ray disc
players.

The BDA statement is unprecedented not only because its solution to the
nagging problem of digital rights management is to embrace every option on
the table, but also because Blu-ray appears to have developed its own
approach--in some cases, proprietary--to each of these three technologies.
Knowledge of this impending fact may have been what tipped movie studio 20th
Century-Fox last week to throw its support behind Blu-ray, in a move that
experts believe balanced the scales in Blu-ray's ongoing battle with
competing format HD DVD--backed by a forum led by Toshiba--to become the
next high-def industry standard.

The digital watermarking technique, which will be called ROM Mark, is
described in the statement as "a unique and undetectable identifier in
pre-recorded BD-ROM media such as movies, music and games." "BD-ROM" is the
proposed writable version of the Blu-ray format. Little else is known about
ROM Mark at this time, except that the statement describes it as being
undetectable to consumers. This is noteworthy in itself, since a previously
heralded watermark applied to first-generation DVDs was notoriously defeated
by someone writing over it with a permanent marker.

One part of the announcement that had been anticipated by experts was
Blu-ray's embrace of Advanced Access Content System (AACS), one version of
which has also been adopted by the HD DVD Forum. This controversial
technology would require that disc players maintain permanent connections to
content providers via the Internet, making it possible for discs that fail a
security check to trigger a notification process, enabling the provider to
send the player a sort of "self-destruct code." This code would come in the
form of a flash ROM "update" that would actually render the player useless,
perhaps unless and until it is taken to a repair shop for reprogramming. The
Blu-ray statement noted that certain elements of AACS have yet to be
formally approved by the BDA.

The third part of the announcement that is perhaps most surprising, is
Blu-ray's adoption of a third DRM technique that appears to embrace some of
the ideals of one of the technologies that had been considered, without
actually licensing its methodology or its existing tools. The BDA statement
introduces what it calls "BD+," described as "a Blu-ray Disc specific
programmable renewability enhancement that gives content providers an
additional means to respond to organized attacks on the security system by
allowing dynamic updates of compromised code."

BD+ appears to be Blu-ray's version of a concept previously under
consideration called SPDC, which enabled the method for encrypting a disc's
contents to be included on the disc, rather than on the EPROMs of the disc
player. One of the perceived failures of first-generation DVD was that its
encryption mechanism of choice, called Content Scramble System (CSS), was
spectacularly defeated, with the result being that the industry was forced
to permanently and irreversibly support a now-worthless encryption scheme.
With SPDC, new encryption algorithms could be adopted as old ones are
cracked, enabling successive generations of high-def DVD to be stronger than
earlier ones.

Two months ago, the HD DVD Forum considered a coupling of AACS with SPDC.
But a scientifically accurate though politically imbalanced white paper
released by the creators of SPDC technology, Cryptography Research, Inc.
(CRI), soundly rebuked alternative DRM technologies, and thus may have
unintentionally played a role in SPDC's falling out of favor with the
original supporters of CSS, some of whom were HD DVD Forum members. The
Forum rejected "AACS+SPDC" for undisclosed reasons, leading many to
speculate that Blu ray would respond by embracing SPDC.

However, as SPDC was originally discussed, there would only have been one
encryption standard in use throughout the industry at any one time.
According to yesterday evening's BDA statement, BD+ would follow SPDC's core
principle, but instead allow each content provider to utilize whatever
encryption standard it sees fit at the time. "With these enhancements," the
statement reads, "content providers have a number of methods to choose from
to combat hacks on Blu-ray players. Moreover, BD+ affects only players that
have been attacked, as opposed to those that are vulnerable but haven't been
attacked and therefore continue to operate properly."

This last sentence is important, because one key objection that experts
raised to the pairing of AACS with SPDC was the possibility that, once the
single SPDC encryption scheme was broken, AACS could trigger a signal to all
players using that encryption scheme, rendering all discs that use this
scheme unplayable, perhaps prior to a system upgrade. The BDA statement
appears to distance itself from the CRI approach to SPDC, perhaps to calm
consumer fears that entire libraries of perfectly legitimate content could
be rendered useless due to someone else's illicit activities.

The CRI white paper, incidentally, distinguished SPDC by contrasting it with
other DRM techniques such as watermarking. "Although some progress is being
made at improving robustness and efficiency," the white paper states, "we
are not optimistic that a practical and secure public watermarking scheme is
possible." Such comparisons may have worked against SPDC's eventual adoption
by Blu-ray in method as well as in principle.

On behalf of the HD DVD Forum this morning, Toshiba's advisor to the Forum,
Mark Knox, released a brief statement: "Today's announcement by the BD Group
should not confuse anyone," states Knox. "HD DVD's content protection system
provides the highest level of advanced copy protection to meet content
owner's needs and the rigors of consumer demand." Knox goes on to say that
AACS--which now singularly forms the crux of HD DVD's DRM--is the most
advanced such scheme yet devised, and that HD DVD's own membership continues
to back that approach.

"We will continue to promote further penetration of the format," Knox added,
"while simultaneously seeking ways to eventually realize a single format
that delivers optimized benefits to all concerned industries and, most
important, to consumers."

Tom's Hardware Guide will present an in-depth analysis of the Blu-ray/HD DVD
format combat Thursday morning in its Business Reports section. There, we'll
speak with industry experts, including one prominent media pioneer, in
examining how the participants in this struggle may actually have always
been planning for its eventual resolution, and what form the fruits of that
resolution may take. 



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