MP3 coalition wants to watermark MP3's 90
Fang wrote
in to send us a link to a CNN article that talks about
the MP3 coalition's new plan to
WaterMark MP3s
so that they can be better protected by the owners. Hopefully
this is a step closer to online music distribution, but it
doesn't look like a leap. Will someone leap already?
how does that work?? (Score:1)
alex
---
You miserable lamer (Score:1)
Problems with this method (Score:1)
2) How do they prove in court it was me that pirated the CD? How do they know it wasn't my brother? Or one of my friends that I let borrow the CD?
watermarking (Score:1)
is an invention of the devil
watermarking??? (Score:1)
they're going to do THAT?
why not brand'em in iron?
Fine, call it what it is. (Score:1)
The RIAA have won (Score:1)
It's also the only way for a composer to make money. The song writer, who is not a performer, cannot go out and make money without getting paid for a song.
In the current system, the copyright holder gets half of the money from ASCAP or BMI everytime the song is aired or performed publically. The convenience of this is that songwriters cannot create licenses for the songs. Anyone can cover any song, and while the songwriter will get paid, he cannot stop the song from being performed.
But getting back to where I came in, how, in a make-money-by-performing-it model, does a song writer make money? Nobody wants me to sing an R&B ballad, but maybe, I want to write one and sell to somebody. Should I just not bother, since I won't be performing the song?
So what? (Score:1)
Better protection, means better crooks (Score:1)
Not necessarily. It's quite possible that what you'd find if you did this is that all of the bits are different. (Well, not *all*, really, just randomly setting bits won't generate more than a 50% difference. I just mean that the entire data stream may be different. Not just a few bits in a header.)
The point is that the meta-data about your identity will be merged holographically into the audio data stream.
By "holographically", I don't mean "with lasers" or anything like that. I'm referring to the fact that removing a chunk of a hologram does not remove a chunk of the holographic image it can create, it merely degrades its resolution. You can't mask out part of a holographic image by masking part of the hologram, you have to affect the entire hologram in a way that's difficult to calculate. The same type of data storage could be done digitally with mp3.
The watermark will be much more like analog data storage than digital. It could be really hard to filter it out.
watermarks require watermarking everything (Score:1)
Not everyone in the world is ready to switch from CD's to mp3's. There's still a hell of a lot of audio equipment out there which is built to play non-compressed CD's and there's still a demand for traditional compact discs.
The problem is that the entire music distribution industry isn't set up for this. CD's are stamped im mass production. Making each CD unique would drive up the cost immensely, and getting and recording a valid ID from all the teens buying CD's in the mall seems like an impossible task.
But if this is not done, if there is an easy source of non-watermarked data, then pirates will be just as easily able to create non-watermarked mp3's for trade as they are today. Warez site and piracy will not be thwarted in the least.
Forget about trying to remove the watermark. Just buy one CD, compress, upload/download to your heart's content.
Any good MP3 music? (Score:1)
I listen to a lot of music from mp3.com [mp3.com]. Here are my Python scripts to manage my MP3 collection: http://wildgoose.tandu.com/~zooko/ PythonHacking/ [tandu.com]
Of course, 90% of the music on mp3.com is crap, but then, 90% [tuxedo.org] of everything [vt.edu] is crap. [hycyber.com].
Among the best mp3 selections are Goss [mp3.com] amer [idrecords.com] and Manifest [mp3.com] Vision [manifestvision.com].
Regards,
Zooko [xs4all.nl]
watermarking destroys quality (and so does MP3) (Score:1)
Anyway, a digital watermark doesn't have to be audible. It could be a 1 bit difference in the amplitude of a signal at certain instances, which would be a 1/65536th difference in volume.
This is pretty similar to steganography, the technique of imposing a piece of information in another piece of information. Like hiding a secret message in an audio stream, or an image etc. Steganography wouldn't work if it was obvious that 'something was amiss' about the audio stream or image.
Any artifacts of the watermarks in DIVX is only proof that the engineers behind that particular implementation are morons and should be retrained as 'custodial engineers'
To repeat the obvious: (Score:1)
I think you can do the same in Windows - don't the "MP3 radio stations" work by intercepting sound from any player on the system?
Exactly how do these "secure MP3's" plan to do the technically impossible, in spite of the fact that "audio I can play once" == "audio I can record (or recompress) and redistribute/play as often as my conscience lets me?"?
The RIAA have won (Score:1)
Theft implies the loss of the item being stolen from the possession of its rightful owner. The owner does not lose music when it is copied with or without permission.
Piracy combines theft with personal violence. There is no violence involved when music is copied with or without permission.
By accepting those emotive words in a context to which they do not naturally apply, you have in large measure already lost the battle for unrestricted online distribution for which so many are fighting.
In a community that appreciates the benefits of OSS and regularly comments on the harm caused by IPR and patents, that really sucks.
The RIAA model is not the only way for musicians to make money. It is the only way for the *studios* that the RIAA represents to make money in the huge amounts that they do as middlemen. There is a difference between those two things, but that difference is obscured quite effectively once the music-buying sheep can be made to think in terms of piracy and theft as if those terms were at all valid in this area.
I expected better from the folks here.
Think about it, don't just quote (Score:1)
> if someone creates something, they should be
> able to do whatever they want from it: give it
> away for free or charge a billion dollars
I agree. Unfortunately, that does *NOT* happen with music, because the middleman acquires the rights and then feeds the musicians peanuts, and of course the musician has NO say as to whether it can be given away for free or for billions, and there is NO possibility of passing on copies along with the same rights we acquired when we obtained our own copy. The entire structure is contrary to the freedoms that seem so natural on the net.
Car is unavailable to its owner (Score:1)
> around the block and return it to the exact
> same position should I be in trouble?
> Assuming I refilled the gas tank to the same
> level, I have done no damage to you.
You're totally missing the point that the car is no longer available to its owner once you've "borrowed" it. Material and intellectual "properties" are utterly different in this respect. In fact the term "property" is downright misleading when applied to something that can be copied for free without loss of the original, and may be the source of so many of these problems.
Alternative channels on the rise, you can help (Score:1)
It's happening, but very slowly because of the inertia of a century of doing things the old way.
Meanwhile, it doesn't help when folks that are vastly more clued up on things like OSS and on the potential of the net still fall for the RIAA's use of emotive words that simply do not apply here.
RIAA studios protective instead of competitive (Score:1)
If the free market were working normally here, the studios would have dropped their prices to the point where they could view MP3s as a highly effective channel of popularization, just like broadcasting. *Everyone* likes jewel cases and sleeve notes of their favorite artists; they just don't like being ripped off by an industry that feels it is above market pressure.
RE: Any good MP3 music? (Score:1)
There are several sites dedicated to promoting small or unsigned bands on the web; you just have to look for them.
Scary? (Score:1)
Thanks. (Score:1)
Watermarking MP3's. (Score:1)
What's to stop someone from lifting an MP3 device that has MP3's on it tagged to someone's credit card number, and then blasting *these* all over the net?
Why would they encode credit card numbers in it?! It'd be more like how cookies are used on web sites; a seemingly random string that identifies the download.
Any good MP3 music? (Score:1)
...check out http://curvedspace.org
in particular, the
What if.. (Score:1)
how watermarking works (Score:1)
Firstly, we want it to be transformation-proof. I'd say turning it into analog and back should preserve the watermark, though it might "smudge" it. So what do we do? We create some piece of data that is seemingly random and forward-error-correct (introduce redundancy so that it can be perfectly reconstructed in the presence of errors
Then we encode it into the "analog" data. How do you encode info? You modulate it. Frequency modulation and amplitude modulation are familiar from the radio, phase modulation is in every modem. Pick and choose, I'm not an expert, so I don't know what would work best with music.
Now add this to your music and encode the music as an mp3. This could pose a problem, since mp3 uses compression, knowing what the ear (and psyche) pick up on and leave out the bits we don't notice so much. So some of the info might get lost, but if you try to encode 128 bits, which FEC-ed turn into maybe 2k, into something that is uncompressed maybe 20mb, that should be quite well spread, un-noticable, unless you know what you're looking for and fairly indestructible (depending on your FEC you might be able to chop parts off or out
Now how would you go about extracting this? You turn the mp3 back into 20mb of raw data and perfrom some signal processing. U-Boats are found by doing a convolution of the data against itself, GPS uses similar techniques to extract the spread-spectrum very-low-bitrate data from the noisy background.
Once you have it, extract the original data and hey presto.
Now, I'm into databases, not security. I'm just trying to apply *from memory* what I *should have learned* half a decade ago.
Please excuse any inaccuracies and those cryptographers, please feel free to correct me.
I now hope people see how this could be used, un-noticeably, to identify some signature. My scheme depends on a secret, making it impossible for users to detect forgeries. I don't know whether that would be useful, but it should be enough to get a litigation going.
watermarking destroys quality (Score:1)
Not a believer... (Score:1)
my dad has a saying "Locks only keep honest people from taking your stuff".
and secondly will I be able to sign the tracks that i rip off my own CD?
--
Ever heard of...cash? (Score:1)
The RIAA have won (Score:1)
I do not want to spend the time to try to convince you to stop unlawfully distributing songs, but please do not suggest that the use of OSS is similar to your illegal copying of songs.
Why it is being fought against (Score:1)
I think you've got this completely backward. The reason it's being fought against is because people ARE using it to gain ground in an entrenched industry.
This author... (Score:1)
once again (Score:1)
MP3 (Score:1)
Better protection, means better crooks (Score:1)
This watermarking scheme is no different. As well (from my knowledge on the subject) it would be incredibly irritating just to try and keep track of all of them and where they went and whom they were licensed to. MP3 may very well be a valid medium for musical distribution (ignoring the fact that at aroun 2 MB a song I wouldn't have near as many as I do CDs), but a strategy like this.... doomed to failure
Prosecution? (Score:1)
this be? despite the watermarking,
it would seem to be one huge job
to simply *find* who's breaking
the law, let alone do anything
about it.
Watermarking MP3's. (Score:1)
MP4, on the other hand, apparantly uses a one-time decrypt key as part of the copy-protect standard. You get the file for free, but each one-time-use decode key costs, like, $0.50 or so. It would not surprise me in the least if the RIAA companies are spending billions to make this happen.
-C
RE: Any good MP3 music? (Score:1)
Just to mention few.
http://www.unsigned-music.com
http://www.rockband.com/
http://www.pe.net/~unison/showcase.htm
http://members.theglobe.com/buzzer23/mp3.html
And of course last but not least
http://www.iki.fi/tav/prudence/
Cheers
Any good MP3 music? (Score:1)
As such all the music I listen too is well represented on CD, and the only impetus to switch to MP3 is to store all my music on 1 or 2 CDs, as opposed to 10 or 15, but there are otherwise no real advantages; none in sound quality, none in value, none in pc friendliness, just convenience. Why would established artists even care about the MP3 standard if the current industry works for them? Only the disgruntled and the newcomers would care, and they don't have the resources or the 'quality' to be comfortable with the mainstream industry, because if they were, they wouldn't be trying to push MP3 or something...
Any comments? Is the garage band dead? Are there modern equivalents in this digital age? Midi Rock? =)
-Twinkie
Cash (Score:1)
Better protection, means better crooks (Score:1)