Real DRM 290
Cinematique writes "C|Net is reporting that RealNetworks has released a format-independent Digital Rights Management software called Helix DRM. Real states that MP3, AAC, and even OGG can now be released with a DRM wrapper. And this is groundbreaking how? More importantly, do they expect content producers and consumers alike to really adopt this?"
Obnoxious (Score:4, Troll)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:5, Insightful)
The poster is actually correct. Real has been ticking off everyone I know for quite some time now (go ahead - try and find the free player on their site - it's hard!). The player rarely works, and when it does, it stutters. Firewalls? Forget about it...
For one of the premire streaming media tools of the past (and the only one for linux back then), they have really gone down hill.
As much as I would love to support them, it is becoming harder and harder. For them to put DRM restrictions on their player, well, that kind of put them over the edge for me...
Re:Obnoxious (Score:5, Insightful)
And I say that as someone who used their software back in '98, '99 to run a very popular, linux-based streaming audio app. It was great then, and I still appreciate what they made available for free. I understand that they need to make money, but it's possible to make money without being awful about it.
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:5, Informative)
Just because you tolerate that garbage... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:5, Funny)
So, you went through these steps then?
- Tell it you don't want to register
- Tell it you don't want it to eat your screen up with ads and such
- Tell it you don't want to it take over your file associations
- Tell it you don't want it to send your personal data to real
- Stop the automatic stuff from playing
- Tell it not to play the automatic stuff again
- Tell it you don't want start center enabled
- Tell it you really wanted to do the above
- Tell it you don't want the "latest" version
- Tell it you don't want to register
- Tell it you don't want it to eat your screen up with ads and such
- Tell it you don't want to it take over your file associations
- Tell it you don't want it to send your personal data to real
- Tell it you don't want to register
- Tell it you don't want it to eat your screen up with ads and such
- Tell it you don't want to it take over your file associations
- Tell it you don't want it to send your personal data to real
Yup, that's right, you have to redo a lot of the steps if you want to keep your realplayer private.
Anyways, I'm sorry, but I get paid too much per hour to go through that trouble again. And on one job I'm only a dollar an hour away from minimum wage! They can keep their trash.
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Actually... (Score:3, Informative)
Fair enough, it's not the most obvious thing on the page, but it's not exactly hard to find, and you can't blame them for pushing the pay version.
Re:Actually... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Seriously though, maybe they do have a better low bandwidth codec, but it's like putting a Ferrari engine in a motorhome - you just can't appreciate the engine with all the other crap around it.
MOD PARENT UP. (Score:2)
The player is CRAP. I use on my windows xp box an older version of Real Player because I got tired of the RealONE player hijacking my system. You turn the fscking thing off and reboot and back it came asking to FIX my associated files.
And the free player is buried about 4 to 5 webpages deep. Real pain in the butt to find for a install on a new system.
Easy way to get non-RealOne realplayer (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2, Offtopic)
What a fantastic collection of mods!!! You must be very proud.
For those of you who appear not to know. This post is 'offtopic'. The parent was not a troll, although it wasn't very polite. And this is not a flamebait, jerkass!!!! Ok, now it is, but it wasn't until then.
Why can't you people mod up instead of down??
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2)
Re:Obnoxious (Score:2, Interesting)
But what about their open source initiative? [helixcommunity.org] Can one make a more tolerable player with that? (I tried sourceforge, but they're too busy for a search at the moment.)
parallel concept (Score:5, Funny)
Re:parallel concept (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah, but most of the time when I unwrap a candy bar, I expect (and usually get) some _real_ content. In this case, it's just more Real(tm) crap.
Can DRM ever work? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Can DRM ever work? (Score:3, Funny)
Everyone knows that the only safe media is media that can't be played or watched. And eventually the Companies who know what's Best for us will find a way to make that an appealing thing to purchase. And we'll all be Happy.
Re:Can DRM ever work? (Score:3, Insightful)
Now we have Microsoft's Palladium. Both Intel and AMD are supporting it in their upcomming chips. It will take control of your computer and completely prevent you from grabbing the stream in any of the unencrypted digital forms.
And you thought you owned your computer? uh huh.
Now if you want to copy the audio, you will have to do it analog. But wait, when you upgrade your computer once more, who's to say Palladium2 won't require speakers with Palladium2 in them. Then you won't even be able to capture an analog stream. You will be forced to play it through the speakers, and record it on a microphone. At which point they have won.
Re:Can DRM ever work? (Score:3, Insightful)
Such as?
I mean, yes Intel is "commited", AMD is "commited", but did they actually release a TCPA-product? No. Has Intel or AMD actually announced a chip with TCPA-functionality? No. Is TCPA showing on their roadmaps? I didn't see it.
Recently, it has become so quiet around TCPA (well it has been quiet around the TCPA-group, the anti-TCPA groups are loud and active) that I don't expect it to become a reality anytime soon if at all.
Let's face it: People love to pirate software/videos/music and will not buy anything that will try to prevent them doing that. Seems like Intel/AMD have realized that.
Re:parallel concept (Score:2)
By unwrapping the present wrapper, you agree to be bound to the following agrement:
This product come with no health garanties.
You agree to not sue us for bad touth or obesity.
In the case where you put the candy in your mouth without first removing the wrapper, or employ other such derivative mesures to access the content without unwrapping it first, you must be warned that our candy contains bacteria encoding digital informations. This make you a DMCA violator, and you will be prosecuted to the full extend permitted by the law of our choosing.
Real and my PC (Score:5, Interesting)
At least on Windows machines, installing their software means you've installed a LOT of registry keys everywhere, plus you get several programs that default to starting with Windows.
Even uninstalling it leaves crap everywhere. And their ad-ridden players are massively annoying.
Quicktime is getting worse in the same way, but I'm more likely to download a Quicktime video than a Real one anyday.
So do whatever you want, Real. I'll be happily counting the days until your extinction.
Re:Real and my PC (Score:2)
Mpeg-4 is more useful (real's codec is too bad to be useful) and more standardised. And not only that, I want to choose my player, and then play whatever format I want in it. I don't care a dime about anything real player makes, because I will rather live without the content than use their worthless software.
Re:Real and my PC (Score:2)
Spyware...you forgot to mention that RealPlayer is spyware (unless every configurable option is scrutinized and disabled appropriately).
It's amazing how many programs try to peek in on what people are doing. PkZip did it for a while, Windows XP & Media Player, RealPlayer, Netscape Download Manager, websites that use cookies--all of you marketeers just need to mind your own business!
Re:Real and my PC (Score:3, Informative)
Or you could simply uncheck the box in Quicktime preferences that says load into system tray at startup...
Re:Real and my PC (Score:3, Informative)
This Just Goes to Show... (Score:4, Insightful)
It's not about what's good for the customer -- It's about what is good for the competitor. Something like: "Who cares if the little guy wants this or not, Microsoft will make their DRM work and we need to have something even more DRM-ish to compete!"
Real's business model. (Score:5, Funny)
1. give out free player and charge for server
2. lose market share to every other game in town
3. come up with proprietary protection that no one will use.
4. ???
5. no profit
6. bankruptcy!
Re:Real's business model. (Score:4, Informative)
3a. Sue people who complain that your software stealthily collects data from your computer
3b. Sue people who create software that lets you convert RealMedia files to standard formats like mp3
3c. Whine to the Justice Department about Microsoft
As much as I hate DRM.. (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:As much as I hate DRM.. (Score:2)
besonic [besonic.com]
Some of the music makes a point of being 'free'
Now if only someone started that for films......
And next year they release... (Score:2)
Helix 2 or "Double Helix" as it becomes known.
The year after they patent "double helix" as a term in the scientific community. Then the sue everyone who dares to publish double helix material.
Twelve months on they go bust.
Analysts usually manage to miss the point... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's not significant in the slightest. The reason MP3 and such formats are popular is because they're open. Just because Real are adopting open standards and making them closed doesn't mean that consumers will benefit from it.
However, the PHBs will love it, because it contains both MP3 (popular with consumers, but see above) and DRM (popular with the accounts department).
(I know that MP3 isn't totally open as there are patent issues, but I think my point remains.)
Re:Analysts usually manage to miss the point... (Score:3, Interesting)
Real keeps trying... (Score:4, Insightful)
If Real can convince enough content producers to switch to protect their interests (people stealing their content), they will force consumers to switch, and then they have both sides paying whatever ransom they want.. and when someone trys to make another player that supports the format, they run screaming DMCA! DMCA!... its garbage...
Personal Views & MP9 DRM (Score:2, Insightful)
The main benefit... (Score:2, Informative)
Of course, consumers don't seem to want anything but the MP3 format, and they don't want DRM at all... it's just a press release. If there was any real consumer demand for it we'd be hearing about it from its supporters before the official press release...
For what it's worth, here's Real's Technical Details [realnetworks.com] about Helix DRM. It's a bit light on the specifics, though.
Re:The main benefit... (Score:3, Insightful)
There may be indirect demand for DRM insofar as it procures an environment conducive to content that consumers demand. In other words, without DRM there there may be less digital content produced under high demand.
We will see, I guess.
More like... (Score:5, Insightful)
There's a reason Apple Computers has yet to enter the DRM market on a serious level, and it's because their CEO knows a bit about programming and realizes that, aside from NP complete-type problems, there's nothing a computer can't solve in a short amount of time with enough hardware thrown at it.
Apple knows that DRM is futile, so they don't waste billions of dollars making some half-assed version of content management. Yet they still continue to profit.
I advise M$ and Real to both "get real" and stop trying to convince the content makers that there actually is DRM code that works.
Re:More like... (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:More like... (Score:2)
DRM - Digital rights monopoly (Score:5, Informative)
Make a difference - support EFF, or write your Congress jerk. Ask them to stand up for the rights of citizens over the rights of the corporations for a change.
DRM and corporate greed. It's all about selling out to tell you what entertainment should be. This announcement brought to you by the good folks at the RIAA who remind you that you don't own music when you buy a CD - didn't you read your EULA.
Where can you listen tomorrow?
Re:DRM - Digital rights monopoly (Score:3, Interesting)
here you go [iuma.com]
turn off your radio, and get away from your CD's and kazaa..
sit down for 1 week and listen only to IUMA music and you will find that with a little bit of effort you can get completely away from RIAA music and listen to some really cool and good music.
you can do the same with the MPAA... watch only indie films. there are some really good producers and film-makers out there that are not in it to make a bajillion dollars. and yes the special effects are cheezy, but it's entertainment, if you are entertained, then it was successful
well, something tells me that (Score:5, Funny)
i guess we now know what those 94 "helper" processes that Real products always run on startup were, and what all those hidden registry keys were for
and you figure that they've collected your e-mail address at least 66 times on installation.
i wish they'd at least be honest with me and change their tray icon to a picture of Satan ramming me in the ass.
(AND NO, I DON'T WANT TO AUTOMATICALLY FUCKING CHECK FOR UPDATES! CHRIST!)
-fren
Re:well, something tells me that (Score:2)
Are you sure it's legal to wrap OGG? (Score:3, Interesting)
Or is it so liberal that it lets anyone do anything they want with it?
Re:Are you sure it's legal to wrap OGG? (Score:3, Informative)
But say it was GPL, do the terms of the GPL apply to the output of a program?! That's ludicrous. Would a graphic artist who uses Gimp have to give has work away for free? Does your tax return belong to Intuit because you used TurboTax?
I don't think anything you do to an applications output has anything to do with the applications license.
Licensing summary (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Are you sure it's legal to wrap OGG? (Score:2)
Re:Are you sure it's legal to wrap OGG? (Score:3, Informative)
Next please (Score:2)
stone age license serving (Score:3, Interesting)
If you check out Helix DRM's Specs, you find this gem:
"We recommend that you upgrade to the latest stable Linux 2.2.x kernel, which is available at kernel.org. We do not recommend using any Linux 2.3 or 2.4 kernels, because RealNetworks License Server has not been thoroughly tested with these newer kernels."
So we can expect 2.4 support around the time 2.8 comes out?
Re:stone age license serving (Score:2, Insightful)
Just a thought..
Problems from a consumers point of view (Score:4, Insightful)
Supports multiple ways to screw the consumer, how many times will companies try Divx before they realize this IS NOT WHAT WE WANT. People like unlimited use almost as much as free stuff, if you give them a decent product at an even somewhat fair price with unlimited use they like it, but even hint that they will lose their ability to enjoy something they bought and they quickly become unhappy. Think of the ISP market in the US, many many people could get by on one of the lower cost X hour/month plans but almost no one uses them because it's easier to budget for a somewhat larger amount than to pay for a smaller more reasonable piece and pay for overflow once in a while.
Helix DRM enables a wide range of Consumer Electronics (CE) devices to support multiple secure formats by offering two models for integration: native support or transfer to secure memory.
You either need a device that already has some DRM built in that Real blesses as secure or you need a new player probably with an expensive "works with Real" liscense. Got an iPod? Too bad go away you can't view our content, mp3 cd player, too bad, etc.
The conversation (Score:3, Funny)
Content Producer: But what happens when all the consumers give you the finger and nobody looks at my content..what happens when you try to sell me "patches" and "upgrades" to realproducer once im stuck using the format..what happens when people get tired of your crappy "client"...
Goodbye Liquid (Score:2)
I'd accept DRM. (Score:2)
I'd like to be able to copy my cd's, make mp3 (or ogg) out of them, give a cd of good songs to my father and stuff like that.
If DRM can let me keep those rights and still be accepted by the media companies, I'd accept it too.
Atleast if the other option is that I lose all these rights through legislation and copy protected cd's that won't let me make mp3 or copy them.
Re:I'd accept DRM. (Score:3, Insightful)
In the United States, it effectively is. That is, although it would violate section 106 of the Copyright Act, section 1008 says that the copyright owners can't sue him for it.
If something is against the law, but the law specifically says that there can be no punishment for it, is it really against the law?
Well now this just makes it Real easy! (Score:3, Funny)
This is a GOOD THING.
Break one scheme and get tons of formats for free!
The answer to your question (Score:2)
Yes.
Otherwise they wouldn't have invested the time, effort and money into producing such a thing.
(Come on, you don't need an MBA to figure this one out)
Comment removed (Score:3, Informative)
Quite the detailed 'technical description' (Score:2)
Maybe i'm missing something but using the phrases 'secure container technology' and 'encryption algorithms' doesn't seem like a tech doc to me.
Really, fuck Real anyway. It's been a long time since i used their product and even then it was mostly for wasting time with humor clips.
I'll change my mind (maybe) when i see some details.
Real DRM (Score:5, Funny)
is... (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:is... (Score:2)
DRM is coming, whether we like it or not, and when it comes, it will be beneficial for all (consumers) concerned if there is a single standard. That way, you can buy any media and any media player, and be sure that the two will work together. For the more nefarious amongst us, that will also give a single DRM standard to (try to) break.
If there are a number of different, incompatible implementations, then you'll have to be careful about what player you buy - will it work with the songs that your favourite artist releases? Will you pick the wrong one, that uses a DRM scheme that dies out like consumer-grade Betamax did? That will render all your media useless when your player finally breaks, unless the company provides a way to change the scheme used.
Re:is... (Score:4, Insightful)
The only way to "buy .. any media player" and still have it be able to play the content, is if the content lacks DRM.
Dont Care. (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Dont Care. (Score:2)
Does anyone have an actual list of all the (current and historical) DLLs for all the Real codecs?
I'd like to have a complete list of what codecs are out there, or a way to figure out what codec is required by a specific .RM file.
I'm pretty sure you can just shovel new codecs into the appropriate subirectories of C:\Program Files\Common File\Real\ and continue to use Realplayer 5.
Problem with this approach is that every few months, they make their encoder require a new codec. No real quality improvements that I've seen, but any files created with the encoder produce the lovely "I need to 0wn0r j00r b0x0r to play this file" message that doesn't even tell you what codec it wants. (Upgrade? No frickin' way, just gimme the damn DLL!)
The larger problem is that the encoder comes from people who've drunk RealKoolAid. So of course they "upgrade", and as a result, everyone else has to follow along. *sigh*
(I suppose I could just install 'doze and Real on an expendable drive, but that's a lot of work if someone reading this already has a complete list of codecs ;-)
/dev/dsp emulation (Score:2, Interesting)
Awesome! (not) (Score:3, Informative)
This is just what consumers have been waiting for. DRM is going to take off like hotcakes now!
Now, how are they going to distribute DRM'd media? Oh, that's still a problem.. then why not figure that part out first?!
They were "progressive" once. (Score:5, Insightful)
According to their website [realnetworks.com] they still donate five percent of their income to charity. Rob Glaser is still their CEO (he founded it in 1994). But the President and Cheif Operating Officer is Larry Jacobson former President and COO of Ticketmaster (see here [realnetworks.com]).
Personally I think that they have a right to develop the technology in the same way that we have a right to avoid it like the plague that it is. I'm curious to see how long it takes before they invoke the DMCA.
Whether they do or not, it seems that things have changed since they had that IPO.
Is "Content Ownership" Backed by Law? (Score:5, Insightful)
A DRM is supposed to manage copy-rights. Precedent has established that those rights (to copy the stuff) can be owned, but not the content itself.
That's why we have fair use; because when you buy a copy of a book, CD, or video, you own that copy. You can enjoy it as many times as you wish. You can lend it to whomever you wish, as many times as you wish, as long as you don't ask for money in return. You can sell it too, if you delete or destroy any fair-use copies you may have... because you own it.
Is this idea of "content ownership" a DMCA thing?
I'd like to see them explain to us why we should not be allowed to loan out our favorite music CD or play a recorded Simpsons episode during a party.
And how does "content ownership" apply to broadcast media like TV and radio, whose audience doesn't pay and isn't accountable to the broadcaster in any way? I expect these DRM supporters will be trying to plug that hole real soon now.
-Rick
Doesn't work (Score:2)
DRM won't work because it _is_ the major flaw (Score:5, Insightful)
Anyone wonder why, after years of pressure and usually successful MS pushing of their formats, it still loses to good old MP3 by a ridiculously large margin in user preference? Three letters: DRM.
When you download a DRM-enabled wma file, it's far from obvious to the regular user. So when the file expires or the user upgrades his computer and tries to listen to his files burned onto an old CD-R, that'll be his last experience with the format. And voilá, another wma hater.
Not to mention wmv's and their 'features', such as popping up web links embedded into the media file. Irritating, to say the least!
And that's what DRM is all about. Even if Big Media backs it up, and even if it'll be the only way to get 'hot new content' (whatever that is), users will always revert to the best free media alternative when they have a choice.
DRM in OGG???? (Score:3, Funny)
>Real states that MP3, AAC, and even OGG can now be released with a DRM wrapper.
Filthy, tricksy hobbitses!
Consumer gullbility (Score:4, Insightful)
How will an MP3 DRM be compatible? (Score:3, Insightful)
"That this can support MP3 and MPEG-4 is significant because up until now you haven't seen adoption of these formats by major content providers because they lacked digital rights management," said Michael Gartenberg, an analyst at Jupiter Research.
Ok... How can MP3's be played back in industry standard devices (such as the Archos Jukebox), and yet remain protected? Am I missing something large, or isn't the point of wrapping an MP3 in such a layer to prevent it from being understood?
*sigh* (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll take off my RealNetworks hat for a sec. I'm not a big fan of DRM solutions. I've seen the days of hardware dongles and other silly solutions that don't seem to go anywhere, and have not had a personal interest in being involved in that sort of thing. Many DRM systems are intrusive, and as I sit here on my Linux box without the ability to play back our DRM content, I understand why the community gets frustrated.
That said, you'll notice that I still work at RealNetworks. I feel that, as a whole, the company wants to do the right thing, and I'm hoping I can enlist the community's help in that.
As for the criticism of "ooo, DRM is bad bad bad, and anything associated with it is bad bad bad", here's my response to that:
Rob Lanphier
Helix Community Coordinator [helixcommunity.org]
Download links (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Real... (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Real... (Score:2)
From what I've seen of their software, it hasn't gone downhill at all - it has always sucked. At least they don't verify that the email address that they make you fill in is real.
Re:Real... (Score:3, Funny)
Hee hee hee...
I always use "Bob@bob.com" for my emails when I have to enter an address and I'm pretty sure I won't actually need to receive important email about it. I feel sorry for that poor guy if he exists, because I suspect he gets a LOT of my SPAM. Sorry, Bob.
Re:Real... (Score:3, Funny)
Real's Great Idea... (Score:2)
Real had a great idea? Why didn't they do a press release or something?
Damn! Why do I always miss on on these things that everyone else seems to know?
Re:Real... (Score:2, Informative)
For GNU/Linux there is a solution now: xine [sf.net] does pnm and rtsp real streaming. however, most codecs are available on x86 only. See the xine faq [sourceforge.net] for details.
I wonder how this will be affected if their drm crap really catches on among content providers :-/
Re:Consumer demand ? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:DRM adoption (Score:2, Insightful)
For software maybe this is adequate, after a few months most packages are relegated to the bargain shelves, but for audio or video it really accomplishes nothing. People routinely watch movies or listen to music that are decades old.
A better investment would be to spend some time determining how to get the most people to pay for their product. This might be reducing the costs and charging less per piece (good old economics: supply and demand) or just admitting that a certain number of people will not pay for it, but hey, we're still wildly profitable.
Re:Even Ogg? (Score:2)
Incidentally, this is the same approach that MS took with their media OS. They wrap an MPEG2 file in a WMA wrapper, then store it on the hard disk. This makes it easy to add DRM in, as you only have to set up DRM for one format (This is probably also why they chose to support only full-hardware mpeg capture, to reduce overhead. But that's another story).
Re:But OGG is GPL (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:But OGG is GPL (Score:2)
again... people that do not understand the GPL making statments that are very untrue and is helping to spread Microsoft lies as to how VIRAL the GPL is.
the GPL doesnt care if I stick an OGG file into a blender.. Hell I can write a CLOSED SOURCE ogg player, I only have to profide the sourcecode to what is playing the OGG file... my frontend and GUI can be 100% closed source code that has a "I can come to your house and kill you for no reason" clause in it.
the GPL applies to the code it is protecting.. if my code talks to the OGG player or the OGG plugin for winamp it doesnt magically require everything to be open source!!!!!
Gpl protects the content of the files it is protecting... it does NOT viciousally attack everything around it.
stop spreading lies about the GPL... please.
Vorbis ISN'T GPL (Score:2)
Anyway, everything else is LGPL, and given the fact that they can wrap the file however they like without violating any licenses, I'm sure it's not a problem.
Re:baksjdljksa (Score:2)
Yes. Why else would they release it?
Re:Questions about Helix DRM (Score:2)
Re:Sure they do (Score:2)
(The submitter of the story is, of course, but that's a different matter, and of course, the editors get to choose which of the doubtless several submissions actually get published...)
Re:Importance of Rights (Score:5, Insightful)
US Copyright law in effect is a restriction on "consumer" and/or "competitor" unlimited usage rights, on the one hand. At the same time, however, the "fair use" restrictions in the copyright laws are supposed to balance the public (i.e. consumer) interest by allowing usage of part of the copyrighted materials without the copyright owners permission.
The problem with the DMCA and most of the planned DRM implementations is that insuring the availability of "fair use" via reverse engineered technology became a federal offense.
So in effect a content producer can say "you have no rights to any of my digitally protected content which I do not explicitly grant, otherwise I sick the government prosecutors on you...", as opposed to "you only have the right to fair use, and I as a copyright holder have legal recourse if I believe you have gone beyond a reasonable level."
This is one aspect of the DMCA that should cause the US Congress to through the whole thing out and start over -- the DMCA has public attorneys (prosecutors) treating a potential copyright infringement as a crime, rather than a civil matter where the MPAA, RIAA, etc. company laywers have to do the work and charge their own industry for their services.
The state should only step in where the copyright violations extend to "fraud" and other large scale enterprises that most of us would agree have criminal intent.