MPAA Wants To Prevent Recording Movies On DVRs 225
I_am_Rambi writes "At the request of theatrical film makers, the Federal Communications Commission on Friday quietly launched a proceeding on whether to let video program distributors remotely block consumers from recording recently released movies on their DVRs. The technology that does this is called Selectable Output Control (SOC), but the FCC restricts its use. The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) wants a waiver on that restriction in the case of high-definition movies broadcast prior to their release as DVDs."
The FCC is soliciting comments until June 25th.
Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
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(well, not grown up but they have them now)
G
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, and they also want to make people into criminals for exercising Fair Use rights so they can continue to reap huge margins on plastic discs.
Re:Good luck with that - the foot in the door (Score:2, Insightful)
This is a strategy to eliminate DVR recording as fair use. First they get the right to block the recording of recently released HD movies, then they blur the definition of HD, and pretty soon they are claiming that they should be able to block pretty much any DVR recording...
Just say no. Personal use is fair use.
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Now that our televisions and our cable/satellite service and our movie rentals have all evolved to high-definition, you say that we're expected to move backwards and accept the hands of the media companies to control what we can timeshift and when?
There's nothing revolutionary about HD-PVRs. It's just a
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And a pony.
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
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Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
Now I realise that that, from now on in, it can only impede my access to artists, and their access to my cash.
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
I learned that the studios are only interested in playing underhanded so Im not giving them the money to file lawsuits.
http://thepiratebay.org/ [thepiratebay.org]
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Re:Good luck with that (Score:4, Interesting)
Likewise not and not (Score:5, Interesting)
Ironically, in the RIAA's analysis of the situation, I must almost certainly be accounted as someone who's stopped buying CD's because of illegal downloading, when in fact it is directly due to the actions of the recording industry itself.
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Re:Good luck with that (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Informative)
Hear, hear. Copy protection is the reason why I can't play The Battle for Middle-Earth II on my Vista pc, the damn game can't see the legitimate CD through the WinXP compatibility mode.
Has copy protection stopped pirate games? No.
Has DRM stopped downloading? No.
Such measures just punish the folks who actually pay for their content...
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Informative)
One person... (Score:2, Insightful)
I don't NEED to record (Score:2)
But, of course, "enough people" in this case means *one* person. The others can copy the recording [btjunkie.org].
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Re:If anyone tried to strip me of anything... (Score:5, Funny)
Informative??? (Score:3, Informative)
A theater is not a government, the search warrant nonsense is just that, nonsense.
He wouldn't have a leg to stand on in a court challenge, either.
In fact, if there were a clearly posted "no outside food or beverages" sign along with another about "backpacks subject to search," he would have no entitlement to a refund when he refused to comply with the terms.
If he were to take this to court, he would either be representing himself or using a lawyer so incompet
Re:Informative??? (Score:5, Informative)
The only thing a private property owner can force you to do is leave. However because of that, they can put almost any condition they like on your continued presence. The only exceptions are for things like racial discrimination.
If a store or other place of business wants to inspect all of your bags before they let you in, that is entirely within their rights. Note that if they want to inspect everything before you leave then they have essentially no way to enforce this, since you're leaving anyway. But if the movie theater says that as a condition of entering their business and seeing their movie, you will submit all bags to a search, you will wear a large floppy purple hat, and you will dance about singing Amazing Grace, then your choice is to do this or leave.
Re:Good luck with that (Score:5, Insightful)
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I also didn't say it would be cost effective or that it wouldn't be time consuming. I just said that where there is a will there is a way.
I'm not the naive one here.
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Why not just invest in a nice upgrade of a video card for your Myth box? It is much easier than ripping out a motherboard, disconnecting/reconnecting everything....and running risks that something or chipset somewhere else on the mb might be incompatible with Myth.
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Frankly the DVR Firmware is in Control and can be placed in control at the option of the cable provider , it can do anything they want !
. . . so does this "Provider" also pick out which programs you watch? Sounds like great service to me! No more arguing with my girlfriend over what to watch; our "Provider" knows what is best for us . . .
. . . um, does your "Provider" address you as "Thrall", and does He seem to have a gambling problem with "Quatloos"? . . . I have a sneaky suspicion . . .
If you can watch it on a computer (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If you can watch it on a computer (Score:5, Insightful)
Honestly the FCC needs to get some balls and FORCE cable companies to have all the channels available UNENCRYPTED. but it will never happen.
Digital TV is a step backwards. Quality sucks because they compress it hard. plus they remove your ability to record it or use anything advanced to watch it. you have to use that piece of crap cable box of theirs.
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the real reason is different. Being a cable insider I know the real reason. it's to FORCE you to have a cable box. the cable TV company DESPERATELY wants to force you to have that box. Because then most of their employees can be laid off as they can
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Digital TV is a step backwards. Quality sucks because they compress it hard. plus they remove your ability to record it or use anything advanced to watch it. you have to use that piece of crap cable box of theirs.
It is also why today I still don't have digital TV. I have the old style analog. In fact, the only reason I have cable TV is for the internet. They have sent me tons of offers, but I do not intend to change. Even to the point when analog is dead, I figure Internet TV will bloom and I can skip digital TV all together.... or in a least for cable.
I might retire sometime in the next few years to my country home, if I do, I need satellite Internet more than TV. My favorite show is on the Internet, I can
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Why bother broadcasting when you can charge someone if they decide that they don't like your show, and want to change to another channel? You need to get that "lost" advertising back somehow. And in this scenario, you simply pay a bit more for the archive of older shows, so if you miss an episode you can still see it.
Why pay MORE for a DVR? We archive all s
Re:If you can watch it on a computer (Score:4, Interesting)
The cable companies do not encrypt the digital stream unless the channel is on a pay tier, or the content provider mandates it. My employer had been carrying ESPN HD, Discovery HD, History HD, and a few other national channels in the clear for almost a year. Contract renegotiations have come up, and those channels now must be encrypted for us to retain the rights to carry them. As a result, the cable co looks like the bad guy when we must tell our subs that they now must lease a converter box or CableCard to decrypt the channels we previously could send in the clear.
In regards to being forced into using the company's cable box, the FCC has mandated this to be illegal. Simply go down to your local electronics store and pickup a CableCard enabled converter...which according to the FCC, should be available nationwide. Oh wait...no manufacturer has started making them in the last 3 years. Go FCC! There's always TiVo, I suppose...
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Most of the stuff they broadcast is crap anyway, and they won't let you buy only the one or two good channels, you have to buy a whole bunch of other crap too...
It ain't worth what they ask for it, especially when they cripple it, so don't buy it.
If no one paid for the crap, they'd have to become customer-friendly in order to stay in business.
But, as I said, the problem is that way too many people act
draconian bulloni! (Score:4, Insightful)
Vote with your wallet!
Re:draconian bulloni! (Score:5, Informative)
Re:draconian bulloni! (Score:5, Informative)
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The MPAA dosn't have a column in their spreadsheet for people like you.
They just put you in the "stopped buying due to piracy" column, to sh
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The *AA is just going to pick the reason as they see fit. And so far they only think that illegal do
Yeah... right (Score:2, Interesting)
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Surprisingly however, those whom you think are not technically literate are very likely to know how to do this type of thing. Movies, Music, Entertainment in general is *their thing*... so they actually take the time to learn how to get at it. They just aren't interested in *how it works*, as long as it works.
Pointless? (Score:2)
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But remember, "Slippery slope" isn't just a logical fallacy, it's also instructions for a viable method of accomplishing unpopular legislation.
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It's all about market segmentation. When selling a product, it's always desirable to get the customers who are willing to pay more to actually pay more money. This is hard, though, because you generally advertise the same price to everyone. So companies come up with various tactics to avoid this, such as multiple editions of a product with different prices, or charging a premium early and then lowering the price late
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it's called Pay-per-view. and they will air a movie right after a theater release so you can watch it on your home cable TV or sattelite service. the MPAA wants to enable the nasties in the HDMI spec so that they can make it impossible to record it.
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Re:Pointless? (Score:4, Interesting)
Huh? The movie industry raping its own distribution partners, movies and rentals? Duh, thought they'd only do it with their customers?
This will never work. (Score:2)
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But you may record those ads. Well, for now.
Re:This will never work. (Score:5, Informative)
your HDMI capture card, the only way I know of to capture an encrypted HD signal from the cable or sattelite box, has thise "feature" for you.
I cant find any component capture cards that exist that will capture HD resolutions so you are stuck with hdmi/dvi.
BTW: notice how nobody has made a linux driver for those cards? only OSX and Windows... because the driver has the "screw the user" code in it.
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1. Remove AACS (including flag for HDCP)
2. Play Blu-Ray out over HDMI (using closed source BD+ decoding player)
3. Capture raw HDMI
4. Reencode
If you have a HDMI/HDCP capture card, wouldn't that kinda ruin the point of HDCP in the first place?
Re:DMCA (Score:4, Insightful)
As in all other cases where copy protection of movies or music fails, only one person in the world needs to own the equipment or software necessary for circumventing the copy protection. He can then release it to the public in an unprotected format.
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1. You apparently didn't get the point that such a modified doesn't need to be sold to the public. If you had gotten that point, you would have known that splitting hairs over cable TV territories does not change it.
2. My statement was specifically limited to movies and music. Those are usually no
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It will remain irrelevant to my original response in this thread for ever.
It will probably be relevant in other discussions.
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How about not broadcasting it? (Score:5, Insightful)
It seems that the MPAA is trying to maximize their profit, at the expense of the public in general. We are stuck with technical hassle just because the MPAA wants to use government regulation instead of logical market forces to prevent unauthorized copying.
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Unfortunately under this kind of economic regime, 'consumer' means less 'one who eats' and much more 'one who must be force-fed'.
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Shareholders can change the board of directors in the event that the board is not maximizing profits, but they cannot sue for compensation.
Even if this were true, the company's obligation to maximize profits would be within the realm of the law. There's no way there's a law
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comment system not working @ FCC (Score:4, Informative)
Using the link in the post, the FCC website tells me "CSR-7947-Z" isn't open for comments. DOes anyone know how to submit comments successfully on this proceeding?
Seth
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Please, when posting something like this, it would be helpful to have all the correct information in the summary to begin with (thanks).
Ooh, even more pointlessness (Score:2)
Why? Why would they even bother? The very people this is going to piss off is the legitimate customers, the people downloading (AKA 'Pirates') are going to get around this in about twenty minutes. And even then, they'll get around it by getting the movie at more or
Of course the cable companies will love this! (Score:2)
I'm not sure how relasing movies in HD before the DVD release will benefit the movie houses though. You know that there will be HD-rips from day one on the internet, and once they circulate, who'll want to rent the com
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I don't see that happening, my aftermarket DVR is a PC. It may be a second-class citizen when it comes to pay TV, but I don't see the pay TV companies offering a box with Bittorrent and DivX capability. The reality is
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My machine captures HD signals through a digital tuner so I have no idea what an HDMI capture card costs, but it only takes one person with such a setup to make the recording available on Pirate Bay - hence the reason I was speculating that increased restrictions on recording are more likely to send people clamoring for bittorrent for their fix of pre-recorded H
Enough already.... (Score:2)
Muzak (Score:3, Interesting)
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Let's do something else!
Let's do something else!
Let's do something else!
Let's do something else!
Let's do something else!
Who's with me? (crowd roars)
Right after I watch BSG...
Hey MPAA, walk down the street ... (Score:2)
I predict Oren Hatch will be coming out soon with a statement denouncing movie downloaders as Marxist pedophiles who finance terrorism and support marriage for transexuals.
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I predict Oren Hatch will be coming out soon with a statement denouncing movie downloaders as Marxist pedophiles who finance terrorism and support marriage for transexuals.
Those who forget history are doomed to repeat it (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Those who forget history are doomed to repeat i (Score:2)
In the digital it is technically possible, and once all old machines are phased out it will be practicable too. Will that be tomorrow or even next year? No, but eventually it will happen for most people. If you doubt me, how many people do you know that still have turntables or 8-tracks at this point?
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Same goes for video tape, most of the people i know have had theirs wear out the last decade and that this point it wasn't replaced since they have their DVR's.
For the record, I do happen to agree analog was/is better, but i don't see much of it out here.
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90% ( or more ) of the world are these 'average joe's', and they will be out of luck.
To me, if 90% of the war has been won, we have lost. And yes, i do see a police state eventually forming as this branches out to 'knowledge' not just 'entertainment media'
That's fine with me (Score:2)
(So basically it's not going to happen)
*aa wants to prevent content consumption (Score:5, Insightful)
Comcast already does this... (Score:5, Interesting)
My DVR will buffer these programs, allowing rewind, pause, etc. If I try to record it to the hard drive it refuses to, giving a message of 'protected'. I'm not sure exactly how they do it - I always thought they may be broadcasting Macrovision codes with the signal.
I suppose it could be hacked by a hardware hack like removing the hard drive and collecting the movie from the buffer, but nothing that is being broadcast is worth the effort! It's bad enough that I waste time sitting in front of the tube viewing this 'high value content'. I'm sure as hell not wasting more time trying to copy it. It is nearly summer here - there are much better things to do most days.
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I guess I shoul
Reading the Article ftw (Score:5, Informative)
So in other words
Theater -> DVD -> TV , won't have the non-record flag set
Theater -> TV -> DVD WILL have the non-record flag set until AFTER it's released on DVD.
Re:Reading the Article ftw (Score:5, Insightful)
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it wants to know if the FCC will create a ruling that would prevent DVR to able to record the movie BEFORE its released to DVD
Is the FCC a higher court than the Supreme Court? Maybe the FCC can also overrule the Supreme Court Beta Max case which ruled consumers have a right to record and time shift content with their VCRs.
This is a fishing expedition for retroactive immunity from the massive civil liability damages the cable companies will be accumulating, if not disabling sold DVRECORDERS isn't considered criminal fraud. If it does end up being considered criminal fraud, remember to confiscate the personal assets of the executiv
Cable Companies (Score:2)
Wait, wait, I've heard this strategy before... (Score:5, Insightful)
In every other kind of industry, I associate "pirates" either with counterfeits or cheap look-a-likes that are vastly inferior to the real product, the kind that street salesmen will sell tourists at a few bucks a piece. Since a digital copy is a perfect copy, I guess digital piracy will be equal. But when pirated goods start looking better and better, so you pay for the privilidge of using and inferior product and the feelgood of being legal, then there's something very, very wrong.
Consumer Freedom Marching On. (Score:2)
Currently, no movies are released on HDTV before DVD (except for some indies on HDNET). So consumers will lose nothing and gain restricted access to movies that they had no access to previously.
Strangely, I have seen no complaints anywhere about the lack of consumer access to movies on HDTV before their DVD release. But propose restrictions on content as an incentive to create content
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This is an attempt to force DRM down the public's throat.
They are trying to employ incrementalism. Today it's HD movies prior to DVD release. Then they expand the definition of "movie" until it includes everything. Then they never make a DVD release. Then they win.
Lotta "if's" (Score:5, Insightful)
IF this technology is used to restrict recording for a LIMITED period of time, until the initial theatrical release has run its course and they have milked the initial profits off the DVD release, THEN I would not have a serious problem with it. After all, unless you are one of those folks that MUST see a new movie as soon as it comes out, you can wait a little while. And even with the restriction, you could still WATCH the flick and even pause/rewind/etc. the thing -- you just wouldn't be able to dump it to a permanent source (disk, hard drive) right away. And hell, most movies will show up on non-PPV TV eventually anyway. By restricting the recording disability to the initial "surge" of the movie's release, the "can't wait" crowd are going to rush to the theater or buy the DVD the first day it's on sale and send the cartel its dough anyway, and the rest of us can just wait until it trickles down to a non-premium source from which we can record and save it if we want.
That's all very speculative, though. Knowing the methods of the MPAA as we do, it's more likely that this is just a way to get a foot in the door to eventually restrict or prevent ALL recording of its releases. That's an old tactic -- you know you can't get EVERYTHING you want right now, so you ask for just a limited option that most people would agree on, then slowly expand the parameters over time. Like the ban on "partial birth abortion." Or just like all the Bush era "anti-terrorist" legislation -- most people accepted it as necessary within the limited scope of "fighting terrorism," but we have already seen these laws starting to be used for things that have little, if anything, to do with terrorism. (Unless you then expand the definition of "terrorism," which is also happening.) The MPAA probably is playing the same game. (As we have often seen, the worlds of business and government are pretty much interchangeable in their more underhanded tactics...)
Go 100% analog (Score:2)
Make the viewer your enemy...good idea...
direct links for easy submittal (Score:3, Informative)
http://hraunfoss.fcc.gov/edocs_public/attachmatch/DA-08-1081A1.txt [fcc.gov]
Go here to file your comment:
http://fjallfoss.fcc.gov/cgi-bin/websql/prod/ecfs/upload_v2.hts?ws_mode=proc_name&proc_id=08-82 [fcc.gov]
Be sure to fill in all the fields marked "(required)" and set your submission as a "comment".
For maximum compatibility and greater chance of serious review, use the "send brief comment" box at the bottom instead of uploading a lengthy DOC file. Keep in mind that they don't care what so much what you personally don't like. Make your comment clear and concise about how this action violates your rights or attempts to defeat the protections the FCC is supposed to defend.
Be sure to click Finish Transaction after submitting.
back to basics (Score:2, Insightful)
copyrights are not about maximizing the media companies' revenue - just about preventing _commercial_ rip-offs.