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Television Media Encryption Security The Almighty Buck Your Rights Online

Who Controls Your Television? 245

Nurgled writes "The EFF, reportedly the only consumer rights organization to be granted membership of the Digital Video Broadcasting consortium, reports that TV and movie industry representatives have been pushing for DRM in the DVB technologies. This in itself is not entirely unexpected, but these talks have been going on in closed meetings. The EFF itself has been blocked from reporting on this until now as a condition of being allowed to attend. The proposed technologies allow rights-holders and broadcasters to severely hamper your ability to make use of broadcast television content, including the ability to retroactively blacklist any devices that consumers may already own that act in ways undesirable to the rights-holder or broadcaster. The EFF concludes that public interest and consumer rights advocates must fight back."
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Who Controls Your Television?

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  • by the_rajah ( 749499 ) * on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:16PM (#18336021) Homepage
    I control the "OFF" switch. TV is less and less important to me with each passing day.
    • by dave562 ( 969951 )
      +1. I stopped watching television not long after I got into NLP and various forms of persuasion about six or seven years ago. These days the only time I sit down in front of the idiot box is to watch movies with my girlfriend.
      • Agreed - I have little time for television, and my wife never watches it anyway (she paints and sketches when she's not teaching or taking care of our daughter). If we like a television show, we buy it on DVD, but for the most part, we own movies - basically, we control what is seen in our house through our wallets. Our only television comes through rabbit ears.
      • I don't actually watch anything other than Simpsons and Amazing Race, but pay attention to the point implied by EFF et. al.:

        The reason TV sucks is because established "content providers" have a stranglehold on entry into the market, and will do anything (including, yes, make the Off switch illegal) to keep that hold.

        Free the hardware platform for broadcast, and the possibilities for quality TV will explode
        • by fotbr ( 855184 )
          They can make the off switch illegal if they want. There's the other option of removing the plug from the outlet.

          Or failing that, a pair of insulated wire cutters. Or a large hammer. Or....

          Hell, doesn't bother me any, I have two 13" tvs, one of which is having issues and about to be tossed. Its not being replaced. When the other one dies or is made obsolete by the final switch to hdtv only, it too will find a dumpster and not be replaced.
          • by Surt ( 22457 )
            What will you do when the television police come to install your always on TVs in all the rooms in your house? Will you really use the hammer when it means going to jail?

            This vision of your nightmare future was brought to you by the letter S, and the numbers 8 and 4.
    • by Target Drone ( 546651 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:29PM (#18336259)

      Reminds me of an old Max Headroom episode [wikipedia.org]

      [Janie Crane presses a button on a television, turning it off.]
      Janie Crane: "An off switch?"
      Metrocop: "She'll get years for that. Off switches are illegal!"
      • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:50PM (#18336605)
        Damn, beaten by one minute to the Max Headroom list.

        Might as well finish the list of episodes. The second season has only two (out of eight) episodes that can still be safely considered fiction:

        Episode 2.1 - Academy - The "zipping" (hijacking of satellite feeds) in this episode was inspired by the real-world Captain Midnight [wikipedia.org] hack against HBO. More recently, Falun Gong types have done the same thing against Chinese TV stations.
        Episode 2.2 - Deities - We've got fake TV evangelist hucksters hawking all sorts of crap (as we did in 1987), but only now do we have web pages as electronic gravestones. Probably only a matter of time before someone claims they can store your soul in a webpage.
        Episode 2.3 - Grossberg's Return - "boost ratings by hacking people's TVs to watch a rival station while their owners sleep" sounds an awful lot like hiring a botnet to perform click fraud against online advertisers.
        Episode 2.4 - Dream Thieves - OK, we don't have the tech to record dreams, and even fMRI isn't going to give us such technology within the immediate future, so that one's still in the "fiction" column. Finally!
        Episode 2.5 - Whacketts - A "video narcotic" causing people to keep their TVs on 24/7... well... that's what TV's for. True, but almost redundant.
        Episode 2.6 - Neurostim - "Zik-Zak introduces Neurostim, a device to directly stimulate the brain and bypass the need to use television for advertising." - we're not at the point of stimulating the brain to desire product, but neuroscience is being used to analyze [futurepundit.com] the effectiveness of advertising.
        Episode 2.8 - Baby Grobags - is still fiction, since we can't grow humans outside a womb.

        I skipped an episode, deliberately, because it's probably the most important one of the series.

        Episode 2.7 - Lessons - "Network 23 censors go a step too far when they try to shut down a secret school in the fringes, because it's using pirated Network 23 instructional programming" could be ripped straight out of today's headlines. The episode is essentially a video version of RMS' famous essay "The Right To Read" [gnu.org], except that Max Headroom predated Stallman's essay by eleven years.

        • we're not at the point of stimulating the brain to desire product, but neuroscience is being used to analyze the effectiveness of advertising.
          Sure we are, but not in the home. Scent consulting companies get paid a fortune to make shoppers spend more via olfactory stimulation.
    • by Tackhead ( 54550 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:30PM (#18336267)
      > I control the "OFF" switch. TV is less and less important to me with each passing day.

      Janie Crane: "Edison... an off switch!"
      Metrocop: "She'll get years for that. Off switches are illegal!"

      - from Max Headroom, Episode 1.6, Blanks [maxheadroom.com]

      Every year, another episode of Max Headroom comes true.

      1.1: Blipverts - now we have ads designed to look OK at both regular speed, and at DVR-fast-forward "2 seconds" speeds.
      1.2: Rakers - what's the difference between Raking and other "extreme sports" or "Wildest Police Videos"?
      1.3: Body Banks - we now purchase organs harvested from Chinese prisoners
      1.4: Security Systems - live, real-time monitoring of citizens, walled communities, etc.
      1.5: War - both the Yugoslavian unpleasantness and Gulf War II appear to have been engineered for purposes of getting good ratings
      1.6: Blanks - anyone without papers is "blank", and subject to arbitrary arrest, detention, and disappearance.

      Anyone want to take on the last 6-7 episodes?

    • Wasn't there a Philips patent which tried to disable this?
    • As O'Brien passed the telescreen a thought seemed to strike him. He stopped, turned aside and pressed a switch on the wall. There was a sharp snap. The voice had stopped.

      'You can turn it off!' he said.

      'Yes,' said O'Brien, 'we can turn it off. We have that privilege.'
    • TV is less and less important to me with each passing day.

      About a year ago I realized that I had come to watch almost no TV. I never made any conscious decision to do so. It's just been a gradual progression. I do have Tivo and a lifetime subscription to it, and about the only thing I now watch is Lost, and only if my wife happens to be watching it at the same time. I tried watching Battlestar Galactica, and enjoyed it, but just couldn't keep up with the episodes and gave up on it.

      I get my news from XM radio during my commute, and, besides, both national and loca

    • Parent hits the nail on the head.

      It is the revenue stream that controls TV. That revenue stream comes from either subscribers or advertisers. Both depend on viewership/marketshare, so you control the revenue stream.

      Is MCDonalds made a TurdBurger and nobody bought it, they'd soon cut it from the menu. If TV viewership dropped by 50% the TV industry would soon change their tune.

      Most people, however, just won't care and will take whatever is thrown at them.

      You don't need TV. I have not had TV for approx 10 yea

      • Re: (Score:3, Funny)

        by Myopic ( 18616 )
        Is MCDonalds made a TurdBurger and nobody bought it, they'd soon cut it from the menu.

        Oh, come on, man, the Arch Deluxe wasn't that bad.
        • Is MCDonalds made a TurdBurger and nobody bought it, they'd soon cut it from the menu.

          Oh, come on, man, the Arch Deluxe wasn't that bad.

          Ironically, I stopped going to McDonalds when they stopped selling the Arch Deluxe - it was the only thing on their menu that was worth getting. All of their other products were the same as every other fast-food burger joint, only not as good. I don't think I've set foot in a McDonalds in at least eight or ten years, so maybe things have changed (I seriously doubt it, though).

    • by Sandbags ( 964742 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:55PM (#18336689) Journal
      Broadcast signals are free. They are required by current FCC mandates to be backwards compatible to existing color TV sets. All one has to do it get a decoder, provided free by federal funds, and they can decode OTA digital HDTV broadcasts and play them back on standard HDTV sets. If we can do this, we can redirect that signal and record it in any form we want. Broadcast media, once sent, and recorded by a person can be used for any purpose excluding profit or public display. I can make LEGALLY as many copies of broadcast material as I want and give it away free to as many people as I want who were also within broadcast range under existing FCC rules. It is only illegal to do so for content that I am required to pay for to receive.

      If they embed some kind of flag allowing me them to tell what day/time the show was broadcast, from where, and the ID of my decoder should I decide to illegally distribute my recording of their broadcast, that's fine by me, as long as I don't have to pay for any equipment upgrades to do so and can continue to use my existing TV and computer hardware.

      I have no problem with them trying to protect themselves from blatant illegal internet distribution or rebroadcast without permission of content they charge for, as long as I can easily record, play back, copy, and store anything my receiver can decode without hassle, without additional equipment, and without enforced resolution degradation. I will not be bound to pay $1.99 for each TV show I want to store and playback later from DVD just because they're afraid I might give it to someone else, who could also view the same program for free anyway. If I want to capture a piece of TV footage and add it to a home movie, I have a legally protected right to do so. If I want to record a movie from HBO and watch it later at any point, I have a legally protected right to do that. As long as I don't re broadcast, distribute, or sell copies of it, I'm not doing anything illegal, and will fight vigerously to protect that right.

      I think what they really want is a system for being able to easily back track any distributed content to the location at which it was originally received and recorded. This would make prosecution easy. As long as they do this without impacting my current rights, I'm completely OK with it. If it costs money to make the switch, or I have to trade out any equipment, I expect THEM to foot the bill and provide all the required labor services, cables, etc to replace my current setup.
    • I control the "OFF" switch. TV is less and less important to me with each passing day.

      Is that because you are downloading content (legally or illegally) that is usually viewed as broadcast television or because you have found an alternative source for entertainment to fill the void usually provided by things that are found originally on broadcast television?

      My wife and I spend more time away from broadcast television content (no matter how we receive it) now than we used to. But there are still plenty of things found in the broadcast television library that we both enjoy, which I do not bel

      • For me it was video games. Two years ago I probably watched three to five hours of TV a day, and that's not counting weekends. Now the only thing my TV has been used for for at least the past year has been to display my various video game consoles and the occasional DVD rental.

        Fuck broadcast TV.
    • You don't have young kids do you?

      I went from no TV to cable just to get Dora the Explorer, Bob the Builder, and a host of other kid shows.

      And yea it sucks to have kids watching TV, but when you are the only adult in the house and you need to take a shower, it is nice to have a few minutes as the kid zones into Curious George.
      • and we couldn't keep them away from the TV, so I had it disconected.
        In exchenage I now have the cmoplte pokemon series, bob the builder, dora the explorer.

        I jsut didn't want them changing channels ans seeing the news. This was shortly after 9/11/01.

        I must say that I miss TV terribly. All kinds of great shows popped up. oh well, it's best for the kids.

        • I jsut didn't want them changing channels ans seeing the news. This was shortly after 9/11/01.

          Get a TIVO. After awhile everyone in the house will stop wanting to see shows live.

          Our kids (6 and 3) currently don't understand that their shows have been recorded. They just think that they are there always waiting for them.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by cyberscan ( 676092 ) *
      I can always get my conte3nt through DSL. I see more entertainment on You Tube and other video sites in one hour than I do all week on cartel TV. If the cartels get their technical standard shoved down our throats, it won't affect me. I will cancel my basic satellite subscription, and get other do do the same. Our votes at the polls on election days matter very little. However, our votes with our dollars matter greatly. I used to buy plenty of CD's and DVD's before the **AA's started their lawsuits. S
  • Small scale answer (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Marxist Hacker 42 ( 638312 ) * <seebert42@gmail.com> on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:18PM (#18336069) Homepage Journal
    Hoard recievers and other hardware built before 2003 NOW. Hoard hardware built buy manufacturers outside of this DVB consortium. Then boycott the CONTENT of companies that use the broadcast flag.

    The one good thing about capitalism is that companies that try to grab more rights for themselves than for their customers go out of business and get replaced with companies that don't. There will be pirate stations that will broadcast analog still, and there will be pirate content creators who create digital content without the broadcast flag, or better yet with all the bits turned on.
    • by Lumpy ( 12016 )
      Un-fortunately it's a useless thing to do. They are simply encrypting the signals fircing you to use their systems that protect the content from evil you.

      Have that ATSC tuner that ignores broadcast flag? great works for the 5 channels over the air, does not work on the 300 cable TV channels. you need cablecard tuner to get those. and only blessed vista systems can have that installed as they make sure that the evil user cant get to it outside their restrictions.... Oops that TV show has a self expire!
      • I'm happy just using the Composite out on my cable box to record all my channels on my Hauppauge PVR 150. I don't care if it's not high-def. I can record whatever I want, whenever I want. It will be a long time before they have digital cable boxes without composite connections.
    • "Currently, DVB standards are limited to getting TV signals to your house, but they do not limit what you do with those signals after they've entered the privacy of your home"

      I agree we need a policy that whatever two consenting devices do in the privacy of *my #$^$#%ing house is their own business.
    • Hoard recievers and other hardware built before 2003 NOW. Hoard hardware built buy manufacturers outside of this DVB consortium.

      This is a great idea, and "NOW" is the key word. Governments can always stop you by implementing even harsher restrictions than they recently did in Japan, banning second-hand sales of certain electronics made before 2001:

      http://www.akihabaranews.com/en/news-11230-2nd+ h and+electronics+sales+will+soon+be+illegal+in+Japa n.html

      (Also covered on Slashdot, if you want to search

    • Hoard receivers and other hardware built before 2003 NOW.

      Because they will be so useful when broadcasting goes all-digital. Feds unveil digital-TV subsidy details [zdnet.com], HD Radio rising [eastvalleytribune.com]

      • I already have an HDMI reciever that I'm using with a low-def composite input card. The key is to not have the recording equipment understand the DRM.
  • by garcia ( 6573 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:18PM (#18336075)
    The taxpayers [zdnet.com] will own your TV set in 2009 if you are still watching OTA Broadcast.

    Yay for the continued fleecing of Americans over this shift all of which benefits the coffers of the government when they resell the spectrum for billions.
    • by SteveXE ( 641833 )
      i wish i had mod points to mod you up, that was a great article and I did not know we would be wasting tax payer money on something so..stupid.
    • Wow, are we a communist country now? Television Welfare? Why can't the free market decide?

      --jeffk++
    • Thank God we've got a vibrant corporate sector to protect our interests as consumers. Or maybe government is merely their tool these days?
  • artisan chapbook makers, live children puppet-shows, and, of course, Linux.

    Seriously, if this crap goes down, I'm going back to reading Victorian novels -- and maybe watching the occasional episode of Entourage at a friends' house.
  • retroactive (Score:5, Interesting)

    by thegameiam ( 671961 ) <thegameiam&yahoo,com> on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:20PM (#18336101) Homepage
    Is it me, or is "retroactively blacklist" the most unpleasant piece of this? So if I am a good-user who does nothing untoward, I would risk having my TV no longer speak to my DVR because a nephew came over and had had his X-box-cum-torrent-seed plugged in? Yuck.

    I prefer technology which makes it easier to do what one wants to do, rather than harder.
    • Re:retroactive (Score:5, Insightful)

      by voice_of_all_reason ( 926702 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:31PM (#18336285)
      Um, it's even worse than you think.

      They mean to blacklist devices that do not support DRM. Eventually your cable company would have to turn off your signal under penalty of law and tell you that they are not allowed to serve a customer that is using a device which allows recording.

      Not only would the act be illegal, but allowing the act to be possible would also be
      • Yuck! If we're going to treat "allowing a computer to operate in an unapproved way" as grounds for shutting off service (whether or not the computer does in fact operate in an unapproved way), wouldn't that imply that anyone running Windows XPSP2 (or for that matter, most versions of Windows in general) should be summarily disconnect

        *click*

        %^&&*&$#%^^&&$^^^$$$...NO CARRIER
      • Not only would the act be illegal, but allowing the act to be possible would also be

        There's still the good old a-hole. By which I mean a camcorder recording the front of my TV, since they'll be able to prevent normal analog interception.

        For that matter, I could just tell my friends the plot of the show. Is that infringing? Will I not be allowed to go out in public unless I wear a ball gag?

        Something tells me that the low-tech counterculture is going to be going through a huge upswing in the next generat

    • I think that stores like best buy, walmart , circuit city, and so on would press for no blacking of devices as they are the ones that will have to deal with the consumers taking back the blacking devices that don't work any more and look bad the as all that needs to happen is some one to hack one player or tv for all the same tv or player to be blacked list or force to have a firmware update. there will be a lot people out there who may have a hard time doing it for them selfs and will ask the store to do f
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:22PM (#18336115)
    Well, some mysterious guy keeps telling me that he controls both the horizontal and the vertical.
  • Piracy Always Wins (Score:4, Informative)

    by webheaded ( 997188 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:23PM (#18336141) Homepage
    Idiots. The more they push people away with their DRM bullshit, the more people are going to pirate shit off the internet. I can absolutely guarantee the MOMENT any of this is implemented, I will not be watching any of the TV shows that use it. I will simply download ALL my TV shows (instead of just some of them) and the TV people can kiss my ass. :)
    • Yes. Steve Jobs' thoughts on music apply to DRM content in general.

      The problem, of course, is that there are many smart people in the world, some with a lot of time on their hands, who love to discover such secrets and publish a way for everyone to get free (and stolen) music. They are often successful in doing just that, so any company trying to protect content using a DRM must frequently update it with new and harder to discover secrets. It is a cat-and-mouse game.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by compro01 ( 777531 )
        It is a cat-and-mouse game.

        and the mice have the cats massively outnumbered, though the cats have more money, so that might level the field.
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      that is so true. cory doctorow wrote a great paper [craphound.com] on that very argument.

  • by NDPTAL85 ( 260093 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:29PM (#18336261)
    Why not let the market take care of it? If these overly restrictive DRM terms turn off enough people then the market itself will force these companies to open up their systems more. Why is this something we need to fight? If these DRM terms do NOT lead to lower sales then it reflects the people don't really care about their media being free in the first place.

    Is this a case of "fair use" activists trying to genuinely protect our rights or perhaps thinking they speak for everyone when they really don't?

    Which is it?
    • Why not let the market take care of it?

      Why let the market take care of it when you can try and control the market through legislation?
    • Collusion (Score:3, Insightful)

      by weston ( 16146 )
      Markets only work when there are choices and there's no collusion between those you can choose between. The consortium reported on here is all about colluding to avoid market forces.

      I think it's possible that new content providers and models will provide competition, and there's all kinds of completely different media now capturing attention share that television used to command, and so I suspect that if net neutrality isn't destroyed that there will be enough alternatives to keep markets working, if slowly
    • by Sciros ( 986030 )
      People in general are far more passive than some of us would like to think. I don't know how many examples of people willingly accepting stuff far more damaging/extreme than DRM there have been in history (including recent), but I know that number is too huge to be optimistic.

      The market doesn't always take care of everything. The better product doesn't always come out on top. The fair laws don't always get voted in favor of. One who dislikes Bush (compared to Kerry) can say "look at the president we voted
    • Why not let the market take care of it? If these overly restrictive DRM terms turn off enough people then the market itself will force these companies to open up their systems more.

      Because, if they do this the way they're doing it, it will have been foisted upon us and become a legal framework ... the market will no longer be able to do anything about it.

      From TFA ...

      Hollywood also likes to say that CPCM is meant to protect its legal rights. But national laws have never given content providers such comprehen

    • Why not let the market take care of it?

      If we truly had a "free market" then we wouldn't have the DMCA making illegal to bypass DRM.
    • the content providers are monopolies for each show.. they formed an oligopolistic trade group, and they have the dmca.

      they apparently successfully perpetrated the bluff that they'd refuse broadcasters who didnt adopt DRM.. thus all broadcasted media is DRM encumbered.

      because of this DRM and the dmca, any electronics maker that wants to enter the cable market (80% or so of the TV market in general) has to comply with hollywood's every monopolistic whim.

      this is clearly a case of abuse of a monopoly position i
    • Why not let the market take care of it? If these overly restrictive DRM terms turn off enough people then the market itself will force these companies to open up their systems more.

      My cynical self believes that the market will be put in jail before its allowed to decide what they want. People make noise and senators don't seem to care, after all your taxes don't compare to their sponsorship.
  • THEY control the vertical. You know, THEM. THOSE guys in the black helicopters.

    But I control the power switch! MUAHAHAHAHAHA!

  • by fair_n_hite_451 ( 712393 ) <crsteel.shaw@ca> on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:34PM (#18336337)
    Given that governments routinely roll over to this group (and groups like it), you can't fault them for trying for the whole enchilada. Why wouldn't they, when they've yet to be smacked down over all their requests, and as corporations, they have incredible patience to keep pushing the same requests over and over again.

    If I wasn't sadly jaded, I'd have put the article down to outrageous hyperbole ... but I'm guessing it's pretty accurate.

    However, I think they are missing the big point. YouTube is successful not because it has clips and full shows of copyrighted material, but because it's chock full of stuff - amateur and professionally done - that's free.

    I've watched how my kids use it (9 & 12, and the next big consumer generation) and they watch stuff that people posted that they'd done themselves.

    TV is becoming less relevant to us old folks, who grew up on it ... if I was the majors, I'd fear the next generation who doesn't care one whit about "their" content.

    Kids aren't "into" shows as they have been in the past, and will skip or watch an episode of something they see in passing on TV on a whim - when they bother to have it on at all.
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by kabocox ( 199019 )
      I've watched how my kids use it (9 & 12, and the next big consumer generation) and they watch stuff that people posted that they'd done themselves.
      TV is becoming less relevant to us old folks, who grew up on it ... if I was the majors, I'd fear the next generation who doesn't care one whit about "their" content.
      Kids aren't "into" shows as they have been in the past, and will skip or watch an episode of something they see in passing on TV on a whim - when they bother to have it on at all.


      Talk about the d
  • Complaints about this kind of stuff are ridiculous. It's like the complaints about Walmart. Sure, people complain before it comes to down, but then they shop there anyway. You know, if no one shops there, they will not be there for very long. Same thing with content. If the terms of use are so bad, then do not use it. If enough people do not use it, then the content will either go away (generally not a bad thing considering that almost all of it sucks anyway), or the terms of use will become more favourable
    • Says you. I don't shop there, my parents don't shop there, nor do most of my friends. We'll go out of our way to go to a Target or some other place that gives us at least fashionable cheaply made crap, instead of just cheap cheaply made crap. And Target's wares really aren't that bad.
    • by nasch ( 598556 )
      Why should those be our only choices? They're talking about making it illegal to sell a device that ignores their broadcast flags - ie doesn't revoke your fair use rights. If this all works out the way the broadcasters want, your choices will be exactly what you state: watch our stuff on our terms (including paying again for each time, place and method of watching it if that's what we choose) or don't watch it at all. I should be allowed to say "no thank you, I'll record your shows with my MythTV box and
  • Correct me if I am wrong but this is all about the broadcast flag and how it can be used to enforce the draconian copyright laws for televised content? If so, I remember having a very similar conversation with a friend back when all the talk about government taking back analogue channels back.

    My thoughts were if the gov. takes back the analogue channels and the content providers only sent us digital information, they could then easily control exactly what is done with content by forcing all said devices to
  • We all D/L our shows anyways, right? Let 'em dig a whole so deep when they they lose customers in droves they will never be able to climb back out.

    Q: How to stay in business?
    A: Give the customer what they want.

    Q: How to put yourself and your entire industry put of business?
    A: Screw the customer in every possible way.
    • by cdrguru ( 88047 )
      Let's see, what would be a better way to go out of business than to give product away? What "free product" does is essentially make the market value zero. No more advertising, no more distribution rights, no more anything.

      The problem is trying to figure a way out of the "download everything for free" mentality that seems to have come up. There are lots of bad ways out of it, but not very many good ones. Actually making everything free isn't one of them.
      • Huh? TV was free for 50 years, and some of it still is. That works just fine. Most of Google's products are free. I'd say that the chances are pretty good someone could come up with a scheme to make money giving away their product, considering it's been done already and continues to be done now.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:39PM (#18337331)
      Until a couple of weeks ago, I was an honest downloader. By that I mean I applied the shareware ideals to the content I downloaded via torrents. What do I mean by this?

      Let's look at two TV shows I enjoy very much, 'Lost' and 'Heroes'. For the past couple of years I would watch a TV program on my TiVo and then download the episode via torrent for reference if needed further on in the season. If I enjoyed the show "that" much, once the DVD set would come out, I would purchase said DVD set and delete the downloaded files. This was until a couple of weeks ago when my ISP informed me that an agent of NBC Universal was whining that I was downloading/sharing a torrent of an episode of Heroes. You bet I posted this anonymously. Those bastards are relentless in their pursuit of my misery.

      Based on a lot of searching online, it appears the broadcast networks have stepped up their assault on people downloading broadcast TV episodes. So, this begs the following question: How would the broadcasters feel if the torrent creators left the commercials in the broadcast? Would they shut up and go away? My feeling is no. They want to ensure 100% that we are forced to watch the commercials. Of course we all know it would be very easy to just take them out of the file once we had them or move that slider forward 3-5 minutes.

      I know advertising is main money driver of Television, but these media industries need to realize that society is changing their business model for them and all they are doing is resisting and creating terrible quality online content riddled with DRM which makes their TV episodes completely unwatchable in full screen resolutions.

      I am so sick and tired of all this broadcast flag and control bullshit. All of the media industries have continued to piss me off at various times between 1999 and now. I don't see this stopping anytime soon either.

      Those of us that are downloading TV to keep mid/long term are fans and the companies are doing nothing but ruining the fan experience.

      'Give us what we want, or we'll go away'
      '...and the geeks shall inherit the earth.'

  • by Dop ( 123 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @01:57PM (#18336729)
    My wife. Duh.
  • by sseagle ( 715847 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:05PM (#18336857)
    My wife, of course..
  • Nobody (Score:4, Interesting)

    by bmajik ( 96670 ) <matt@mattevans.org> on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:05PM (#18336859) Homepage Journal
    Because I don't have a TV, and I haven't had one for years.

    Sure, I've got a DLP projector. And I do have an Avermedia A180 ATSC tuner for my Vista Media Center machine.. but that is mostly a "oh.. i guess ATSC kind of works" thing. My wife will watch 1-3 shows per week recorded over ATSC. If it stops working, it stops working.

    Recently, I involved myself in a conversation about IPTV, how long it was taking to roll out, problems with it, and so on.

    Sorry - I've been enjoying IPTV for a while now. I've got an HTPC, and I've got bittorrent. All the TV i care about comes in over IP packet.

    The internet truly routes around defective nodes, irrespective of the reason for the defect. When they're political or social, the internet works just as well.

    Sometimes the ATSC signal is weak enough (poor antenna placement, but fixing it is low-priority) that the recording is unwatchable. my wife will let me know and then i'll go find the torrent (usually within 12 hours of the show airing) and we'll have it in another 2 hours. That is IP TV and that is available today.

    • by cdrguru ( 88047 )
      So you are a leech? What have you created a torrent for lately?

      More to the point, why do you think it is your right to "take" without any "giving"?
      • p2p needs seeders, even if they never create a new file. I have a friend who downloads battlestar galactica and leaves them all seeding 24/7. UL:DL ratio is over 100:1! Whenever a new one comes out she gets insanely fast downloads because of eMule's default configuration to reward uploaders. I'd say she's helping the p2p community. Probably helped the SciFi channel too, considering how many people she's turned on to the show.
  • just like with racism, we can't simply stop pro-flag laws if we want to keep this consumer right, we need to be pushing for one or ideally more than one anti-flag law.

    make it illegal to use such a scheme, period, at the federal level and this problem goes away.
  • dave@ubuntutux:~$ fortune
    No group of professionals meets except to conspire against the public at large.
    -- Mark Twain

    What a coincidence.

  • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:17PM (#18337061)
    short example: the hr20 dvr from direct-tv records (when its not crashing..) HD content from satellite.

    I had problems with mine and wanted to cancel. I called their CSR and asked to disconnect my service since I was sending this POS back.

    now, I had the unit for a few days and there were some unwatched shows on its drive. shows I had planned to see before returning the unit.

    you can guess what happened. as soon as they sent the 'disconnect' signal, AND while my unit was plugged in (key thing) - it proceeded to LOCK UP my saved shows and not let me watch them!

    un freaking believable. and the CSR rep acted like it was a surprise to him. when all along, they knew they were gonna lock up your data if your bill goes unpaid (shows you DID pay for and have a right to still see!). or, if your dish goes down you may ALSO be unable to watch saved shows.

    we are already 'here'. and it sucks.

    and that was one reason why I cancelled. I now have my own HDTV tuner (hdhomerun from silicondust.com) and while I get no premium (hbo, etc) content, I do at least have control over the PURE MPEG shows that I save, with zero drm. in fact, I watch more PBS (in high def) now than I ever watched PBS before. in a way, this whole DRM stuff is probably HELPING free and open networks like PBS get more viewership!

    just remember this issue about direct-tv and probably dish (and cable, too). if your receiver says 'no' then all saved shows are ALSO a 'no'. just know that going into it - if you decide to go in, at all.
  • How is it legal? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Aielman ( 735065 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:18PM (#18337097)
    If you sell someone a product, you don't get to follow them home and monitor their use of it. If they reverse engineer it, good for them. If they reproduce it, good for them. If they distribute or sell their reproductions, sue them. You can't prevent all your customers from using what they bought just to make sure none of them misuse it.

    It's like selling a sandwich and requiring the buyer to agree not to open it to see what it's made of, and then following them home to make sure they don't open it because you're afraid they might learn how to make it themselves and post the recipe online along with *GASP* a picture of the sandwich! It doesn't matter that they told everyone that you made the sandwich, not them. It doesn't matter that this free publicity drew hundreds of new customers to your little sandwich shop. No, you're a paranoid control freak who thinks his sandwich sales will drop because people can get the recipe online, even though there's no evidence supporting this. In fact, you're considering selling the sandwich in locked lucite boxes that only expose the sandwich one bite at a time, and while you're at it, why don't you collect information on sandwich usage, kitchen appliances, travel habits, and social security numbers? All this security is costing so much, the sandwiches that should cost about $2.25 now cost about $19.95.

    And now you're wondering why you're being outsold by those unprotected sandwich shops charging $2.25.
  • none of it is important to me, I do not watch TV.
  • As long as I have CNN.com and Slashdot.org, they can do what they want. I just won't watch it. I didn't purchase a TV to watch cable (I use MythTV), so if they take away that option, it isn't exactly going to encourage me to give them my money.
  • From the article:

    existing laws already limit evasion of DRM even for lawful purposes.
    "Evasion"? Like if a song is for sale on iTunes, then it's illegal for me to buy it on an unprotected CD? That kind of evasion of DRM?
  • by LittleGuy ( 267282 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @02:56PM (#18337577)
    It was this guy [wikipedia.org].
  • So, the broadcasters want to increase direct and indirect costs and persecute their viewers.

    There is a management speak phrase, "Managing Decline", and that is exactly what they appear to be doing.
  • I haven't watched broadcast TV since 2000.

    There's nothing to watch - it's all ads. The ratio of ads to content is approaching unity every year - on the worse stations there are four minutes of ads for every five minutes of content. Of that content, very very little appeals to me. And ads are creeping into content more and more - ads inserted into the margins.

    I got so damn sick of it that I can't believe more people aren't ditching their TVs. Do people STILL use TV? Still use Geocities? Still use C

  • by mkraft ( 200694 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @03:30PM (#18338027)
    I found this out when I got a TiVo Series 3. I noticed that every show I recorded, including ones that were deemed copyright cleared (eg: cable in the classroom) [history.com] were marked as "Copy Restricted" on my TiVo. This means that the show cannot be saved or copied off the Tivo.

    I found out this was because my cable company was setting the CCI flag to 0x2 for all channels in my cable system with the exception of local broadcast stations. This means my local cable company was overriding the wishes of the content provider (in this case Cable in the Classroom) and copy protecting the content.

    Other people have been restricted from even recording a channel to TiVo [tivocommunity.com] because the CCI flag was set to 0x3.

    When I complained to my cable provider, Comcast, about them blanketly applying the CCI flag of 0x2 to everything they basically told me to shut up and take it.
  • broadcast flag? (Score:3, Informative)

    by gatzke ( 2977 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @03:32PM (#18338057) Homepage Journal
    I assume this is about putting back in the broadcast flag, right?

    After all the equipment that has been sold without the broadcast flag, I assume they can't start encrypting broadcast signals, right?

    This is just their attempt to have all hardware/software respect the broadcast flag.

    I bought a HDTV compatible PC card (http://www.pchdtv.com/) years ago when the broadcast flag was supposed to hit. It got repealed and my wife yelled at me. Now, maybe I should get a spare?

    What do we do? Write our congressman?
  • by EvilSporkMan ( 648878 ) on Tuesday March 13, 2007 @08:49PM (#18342033)
    YOUR TELEVISION CONTROLS YOU!

Software production is assumed to be a line function, but it is run like a staff function. -- Paul Licker

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