On Jul 1, 2005, at 8:13 PM, Richard Gaskin wrote:

I need to ship a CD with a number of QuickTime movie files, and the
client would like to find a way to protect the files if possible.

Since wired sprites seem to have a lot of capability and we have
callbacks in Rev, I'm wondering if we could add a sprite track to the
movie which makes a callback to the player (Rev) and expects a specific
value to be returned; if the movie doesn't get the expected value it
assumes it's running outside of our player and stops playing.

Am I dreaming?  Is this doable?

I have GoLive (which has some cool wired sprite editing built in) and I
can get LiveStagePro if needed.

Thanks in advance for any tips you can offer -

This is possible though maybe not how you envisioned. A couple of ideas come to mind.

A wired sprite cannot call a function in Rev and get a value back. You could open a socket using Rev and a wired sprite could make a call to the localhost (127.0.0.1). You could then return a value from Rev but this could easily be picked up by someone watching traffic on the machine so it wouldn't be very secure it you were just sending back the proper password or something.

If you are using a codec other than Sorenson or you have other media types to protect you can use the EnhancedQT external to set variables in QuickTime movies. You can have wired sprites that will basically shutdown a movie if the variable isn't the correct value (shut off volume, hide all visual media, etc.). A similar method for doing this is talked about in Interactive QuickTime: Authoring Wired Media <http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/1558607463/ qid=1120275770/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_xs_ap_i1_xgl14/002-5692117-1577651? v=glance&s=books&n=507846>.

As sims just mentioned in his post you can use media keys if the playback environment supports setting those. The Sorenson codec supports media keys but Revolution does not. Support for this could be implemented using an external - <http://developer.apple.com/ documentation/QuickTime/APIREF/WorkingWithAccessKeys.htm>.

One thing that has intrigued me for a while is the possibility of writing a custom QuickTime component that you can insert into every movie. As I understand it you can have your application register components with QuickTime when the app launches meaning it doesn't have to be installed. By only registering the component with your app then you could successfully load movies that use your component. Any other QT app would fail to work since the component was missing. I think this would be possible but I haven't played with it at all.


--
Trevor DeVore
Blue Mango Multimedia
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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