Startup Tries Watermarking Instead of DRM 344
Loosehead Prop writes "A U.K. startup called Streamburst has a novel idea: selling downloadable video with watermarks instead of DRM. The system works by adding a 5-second intro to each download that shows the name of the person who bought the movie along with something like a watermark: 'it's not technically a watermark in the usual sense of that term, but the encoding process does strip out a unique series of bits from the file. The missing information is a minuscule portion of the overall file that does not affect video quality, according to Bjarnason, but does allow the company to discover who purchased a particular file.' The goal is to 'make people accountable for their actions without artificially restricting those actions.'"
I see this "cracked" in five seconds (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Nothing major (Score:4, Informative)
Did you read even the summary? Removing the beginning does not remove the unique signature formed by bit removal.
Of course bit removal or any sort of water mark can also be mucked with.
Still, this would be more user friendly than "hard" DRM.
They already do this in theaters (Score:4, Informative)
However, they already do something similar in theaters. Every so often in theatrical movies you will notice a weird pattern of "cigarette burns" that appears for a brief moment. (Yes, to my eyes at least, they are visible and sort of distracting.) The pattern is different for each copy of the film shipped. The idea is that, if someone sneaks into a movie theater and makes a cam of a first-run movie, the producers of the movie can analyze the video and figure out which theater it came from. That helps them put more pressure on theater owners to enforce bans on video cameras, etc.
But does it seem like there are fewer cam bootlegs out there since they started doing this? They started it maybe five years ago.
Re:Digital Fingerprinting? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Easy work around (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What about the doctrine of first sale? (Score:3, Informative)
no cigar (Score:2, Informative)
"Because of its design, the watermark even survives most editing changes and format shifts"
Re:They already do this in theaters (Score:5, Informative)
Most people don't seem to see them, and they typically try to make it after a bright flash (which makes them a little less visibile). Personally, they drive me nuts, but so do single projector DLPs [dummies.com].
Re:re-encode the movie : Not enough (Score:3, Informative)
Thats the whole challenge.
Off course the watermark might not be resistant to extremely destructive transformation such as downscaling from HD to QCIF, but then who cares about pirated QCIF video ? But certainly a very accurate transcoding would not affect the watermark.
Current watermarking technologies are very much dependant on proprietary algorithm.
Re:Still doesn't solve the real problems (Score:3, Informative)
I don't know about you, but I know plenty of people who go to such filesharing sites because they are unable to obtain the media in a usable format if they pay for it. If they can't view the "legal" media for whatever reason (unsupported mobile device, Linux user, etc), then the legal media becomes worth $0.00 to them, and they go the illegal route.
Now, if the legal media were usable to them, then it would actually have some value to them. Why pay for something when you can get it for free? Convenience and selection. Back in the days of pyMusique I bought more music in a week than I did in 3-4 YEARS, none of which has ever been copied to a device I don't personally own. Same with allofmp3. While allofmp3 had its own issues in that the money flow from the user to allofmp3 broke down there rather than flowing to the RIAA, the RIAA were incredibly stupid not to look at allofmp3's success as proof that people WILL pay for music they can get for free if you offer them convenience and compatibility. If you can't beat em', join em'. The RIAA could have made a killing by creating a site with:
Better selection than allofmp3 (somewhat difficult, but not really for the copyright holders themselves)
Better convenience than allofmp3 (accept more credit cards, and simply be a "trusted" vendor people are comfortable providing CC information to)
Double the price of allofmp3 (still quite reasonable)
No DRM
EZtakes (Score:2, Informative)
EZTakes [eztakes.com] is already doing the same thing in the US. A brief intro before the film shows who purchased it. I've tried ripping the disc just using selected titles (as the "watermark" intro is just a title on the DVD) to remove my name, but they've anticipated that also. I haven't got a good rip yet without the watermarked intro.
Not that I wanted to rip them off or anything. I just took it as more of a technical challenge as to whether I could remove the watermark on the otherwise non-DRM'ed DVD.
Pretty cool service, although you won't find any blockbusters in their selections quite yet. But for my taste in '70s cult films, I've found a few that I've downloaded for the fair price of $2.99. Not bad, not bad at all.
Re:What's the enforcement mechanism? (Score:3, Informative)
You've gotta be kidding - at that level of infection the appropriate phrase is "I'm very ignorant".
Re:What's the enforcement mechanism? (Score:3, Informative)
If you're assuming the bits will be in the same place in each file, and it's just a trivial case of doing a diff. you're very naïve. Digital watermarking schemes are generally quite advanced these days, encode the data in many redundant ways thoughout the file, add in chaff with the wheat to foil attackers, and are resistant to many transformations (scaling, transcoding, etc.). That's not to say the watermark can't be removed, or at least corrupted. See Felten's SMDI research for a perfect example. But it's far from trivial to do so with a well designed watermark.
Re:What's the enforcement mechanism? (Score:2, Informative)
As the number of colluders grows, however, the reliability of present codes drops drastically. In addition, I don't know if analysis using fingerprinting codes would be admissible in court: the best results simply show that if n fingerprinted copies are used in a collusion attack, then with some probability (ideally approaching one, but not there yet with present codes) at least one of the n colluders can be identified from the modified copy. Present values of n tend to be small.
Whether this person knowingly contributed to the attack is a separate question. It's easy to devise scenarios where one of the "colluders" was in fact played for a fool or fall guy, which is why one can cast serious doubt on any forensic efficiency of present-day fingerprinting codes.
Well, it's like this. (Score:1, Informative)
First sale is an exception to the distribution right defined at 17 USC 106(3) as the copyright owner's right "to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending." Without that exception, sales, lending, rental, etc., would be infringing.
First sale is defined in 17 USC 109(a): "Notwithstanding the provisions of section 106 (3), the owner of a particular copy or phonorecord lawfully made under this title, or any person authorized by such owner, is entitled, without the authority of the copyright owner, to sell or otherwise dispose of the possession of that copy or phonorecord." There are some exceptions to 109(a) regarding rental of music and computer programs (basically, you can't do that, for the most part, although libraries and nonprofits can).
What's important, anyway, in the definition of first sale is that it applies to lawfully made copies. Copies in the statute don't mean what technical people think of when they use the word copy. We tend to talk about copies as instances of a particular sequence of bits. So, you might say I have two copies of a file on my desk, etc.
But this isn't how copies are defined by law. Copies, by 17 USC 101, are material objects in which a work is fixed. Physical things not sequences of bits. So, an instance of a movie on your disk is not a "copy." The disk is the copy. You can have two or 200 instances of the movie on your disk, but you still have only one copy, and that's the disk.
This is important when considering what it means to distribute a copy. If you want to sell someone your copy, under first sale, you have sell them your actual, physical disk. Chances are you won't want to do that
OTOH, if you sold your computer, and the copies of the programs you have on your computer are lawfully made, it's probably legal under first sale to sell the disk unformatted (even while keeping the originals). That's complete conjecture and I'd have to look at it more clearly, I'm sure someone will correct me
What's actually perverse about US copyright law is that 106(3) is very clear (ie, by the plain language) that distribution means distribution of (physical) copies. But the current interpretation of the law says that transmitting copies to others over the Internet constitutes distribution. So, even though you wouldn't qualify for the first sale exception if you emailed a copy of the movie to someone, you can still be found to infringe the distribution right. This is wrong but the law nevertheless. The EFF is making a good argument against this interpretation in one of Ray Beckerman's cases and it'd be great if they (and he) prevail.
In other countries, transmitting a copy would be a performance, and so it might infringe the public performance and display rights rather than the distribution right. Suffice to say, the guy on the other end is infringing the reproduction right by making his own copy on his own disk, so even if you could get away with selling the work to him by transmitting it over the Internet, he'd still be infringing and his copy would not be lawfully made.