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  1. Member
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    http://www.wired.com/news/digiwood/0,1412,64309,00.html?tw=wn_tophead_1

    Group Warns DVRs Endangered

    By Katie Dean

    02:00 AM Jul. 28, 2004 PT

    Television fans who like to choose when and where they watch their favorite programs are in for a rude awakening next year when new copy controls encoded in digital television streams will limit such freedoms.

    Broadcasters have been steadily moving from broadcasting content in analog to digital format over the past several years, as required by the Telecommunications Act of 1996. To protect this digital content from piracy, the Federal Communications Commission adopted a rule that digital television tuners recognize copy controls, called the broadcast flag (PDF), encoded in content streams. Digital video-recording devices would detect the broadcast flag, and the flag would prevent users from making multiple high-quality copies of the programs for illegal distribution. As of July 1, 2005, it would be illegal to manufacture or import devices that can receive digital programming without responding to the broadcast flag.

    To fight the impending rule and to stoke backlash from TV viewers, the Electronic Frontier Foundation earlier this month launched the Digital Television Liberation Project to guide people on how to make their own personal video recorders from off-the-shelf parts. The digital-rights group is encouraging people to buy digital TV, or DTV, tuner cards for their PCs, and is distributing instructions on how to build TiVo-like digital video recorders. The idea is to get people hooked on the charms of time-shifting -- recording a program and then watching it at a later time -- and to help them understand what they would be missing once the broadcast flag rule goes into effect.

    "A tuner that is built today sees the whole stream but just ignores the flag," said Wendy Seltzer, EFF attorney and leader of the Digital Television Liberation Project. "A tuner that is built after the flag goes into effect must recognize and respond to the flag."

    Representatives from the EFF will demonstrate a homemade DTV personal video recorder at Defcon this week in Las Vegas. Seltzer said the EFF hopes to have a stable of devices to demonstrate what people get when they construct their own DTV personal video recorder, and what wouldn't be available when Hollywood dictates what the machines can do.

    "The FCC has required that manufacturers make their devices less capable, and that's all at the urging of Hollywood and the entertainment companies," Seltzer said. "We think this is a ridiculous way to advance digital television."

    She said the broadcast flag would prevent a lot of actions that aren't violations of copyright law. For instance, copying a clip from Fox News might not be possible with the broadcast flag -- even though it's legal. Or time-shifting might become cumbersome with the broadcast flag restrictions, even though it's also perfectly legal.

    To build a DTV PVR, users need a tuner card capable of reading the DTV signal. Once installed, the tuner card can record programs to the hard drive of a PC. Users would then hook their PC to a television or a high-definition monitor for viewing. The PCs also could burn the programming to a DVD and perform TiVo tricks like pausing, replaying and fast-forwarding.

    The EFF uses a software platform called MythTV, written for the Linux operating system, to manage content on its demo machine, but other projects like Freevo and eBox are also available.

    The broadcast flag only applies to over-the-air broadcasts. Cable and satellite companies already have their own digital-rights management in place.

    Raffi Krikorian, a Ph.D. candidate at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology Media Lab and author of TiVo Hacks, has already built his own high-definition PVR. His computer is outfitted with an HDTV tuner card, MythTV software and an HDTV antenna. He watches programs on a high-resolution computer monitor.

    "It's exactly like having a TiVo for HDTV," Krikorian said. "I can record the HDTV broadcast of West Wing and watch it some other time."

    The EFF is also fighting the flag in court. Along with the American Library Association and Public Knowledge, it has challenged the FCC in a lawsuit, arguing that the commission has no right to impose such controls on technology manufacturers or to restrict copying.

    If the broadcast flag proceeds as planned, "We'll be able to (do) less with DTV than we've been able to do with analog television," Seltzer said. "Most disturbing (is) that the new capabilities that could exist will never get the chance to be tested."
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  2. Holy Crap! What the hell is the world coming to?
    This plan is so bad, it must be one of ours.
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  3. I am sure there will be various patches, hacks, and rom updates that will be available to resolve this as soon as the 2006 machines come out.
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  4. Member Snakebyte1's Avatar
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    Mar 2002
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    If given half a chance they will have us living in an exclusively "on-demand" world, where everything like car radio, portable radio, TV will all be on a-pay-per-use basis, where we will have to "subscribe" to everything
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  5. Member The village idiot's Avatar
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    Man they are LATE! People were talking about this 2 years ago. I guess better late than never. Yes people, go out and buy your ATSC card NOW! Do it before the software that drives them must comply with the Broadcast Flag! Then don't update your drivers after the time comes to obey the flag.
    Hope is the trap the world sets for you every night when you go to sleep and the only reason you have to get up in the morning is the hope that this day, things will get better... But they never do, do they?
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