FAQ: Vista's strong, new antipiracy protections

By John Borland
http://news.com.com/FAQ+Vistas+strong%2C+new+antipiracy+protections/2100-102
5_3-5844071.html

Story last modified Tue Aug 30 04:00:00 PDT 2005


When Microsoft's Windows Vista comes out next year, it will have
unprecedented protections for content, such as video inside the system, in
hopes of foiling would-be pirates.

The new technology, which could go as far as automatically turning off
outputs connected to devices deemed insecure, is aimed at persuading
Hollywood studios that the PC can be as safe as any consumer electronics
device. Microsoft hopes that Windows-based computers will ultimately form
the heart of digital home entertainment networks.

Here's what you should know about the new protections inside the operating
system and how they may affect your equipment.

What's different about Microsoft's new operating system, from a content
protection standpoint?
Video--and to a lesser extent audio--will have many more protections as it
travels through the computer from a DVD or other source to its final
destination. This will make it much harder to copy audio or video without
permission from the copyright holders.

Is this like the anticopying technology on DVDs or on the songs I download
from iTunes?
Not exactly. There are two different kinds of content protection.

The first, typically called "digital rights management," or DRM, wraps a
piece of music or video in a layer of protection, and allows it to be played
only by certain kinds of devices or under certain conditions (such as if
you've paid for it). That's what happens with a DVD or iTunes song. Vista
will be designed to read and respect rules attached to content.

The other type of antipiracy technology, often called "link protection," is
a critical part of Vista. This tries to keep audio or video from being
copied while it is sent from one device to another, or between different
components inside a computer. Think of this as more like the secure
telephone line between the U.S. president and the Soviet leader, which (at
least in the movies) nobody could tap into.

How does this work?
One of the biggest changes in Vista is a technology called "Protected Video
Path." This will essentially keep video streams encrypted and inaccessible
as video is being sent from a DVD (or other copy-protected source) to the
monitor, TV or other display. The operating system will also check what the
computer is connected to (a monitor, a TV, and so on), do another check to
make sure the device really is what it says it is, and then see what kind of
plug, or output mechanism, is being used to connect the computer to the
device.

Vista will go much further than previous operating systems in checking
devices that are several steps downstream, if several digital components are
connected to each other. If it finds that there is a device that doesn't
respect DRM rules, or if it finds a plug that doesn't support transmission
of those copy-protection rules, it might not let the video be sent through
that output at all.

Doesn't that mean that some TVs or monitors won't be able to play
high-definition movies, even if the computer can?
Eventually it might. Some early HD TVs have digital connections (such as
DVI, or Digital Video Interface) that don't support transmission of
copy-protection rules, and Vista won't let these show HD content. Many
monitors and TVs today also have high-resolution analog connections that
don't support protection.

Vista does have one workaround that will let these monitors and TVs operate,
however. If the analog (VGA, or Video Graphics Array) plug is all that is
available, for example, the operating system has features that will reduce
the resolution of the video, and then recode it on the fly. The result will
be video that's slightly fuzzier, without the high resolution of the
original, but the video will be watchable at about the quality of today's
DVDs.

Vista isn't alone in this feature. New consumer electronics devices that can
play next-generation DVDs will also be incompatible with some monitors or
TVs deemed insecure by studios.

How common will this be? Is it likely that my monitor or TV will have
problems?
Microsoft hopes that problems will be infrequent, and that most consumers
won't have any idea that these protections even exist. The company has
released information about this system to the computer manufacturers in
hopes that the secure connections will be standard on monitors and TVs by
the time Vista is released. The secure connections--such as Intel's HDCP
(High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection)--are already standard on most HD
televisions sold today.

Why is it all so complicated? Can't I just copy the video by plugging the
computer into a recorder instead of a TV, anyway?
Not necessarily. Most new digital recorders are built with technology that
checks for copy-protection rules and won't copy a video if it's marked
"Don't copy." If Vista finds that there is a recorder that doesn't play by
these rules, or if the video is going out a connection deemed insecure, it
may simply shut down that output altogether (depending on what rules the
studio has attached to the content).

Will this affect how I use my monitor with any other applications?
No. In the worst-case scenario, the computer will down-sample or shut down
the outputs only while you're trying to play an HD movie or other content
over a connection that the studio has deemed insecure. You'll still be able
to use any other application on your computer at other times.

Will this affect me if I work with digital video or audio at home? Could my
own work get trapped inside the computer?
In general, no. All of these safeguards will only come into play if there's
content involved that has very strong digital rights management wrappers
already applied. If you're working on your own projects, these flags won't
be turned on, and your audio and video will flow through the computer the
normal way.


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