Wednesday, June 16, 2010

New technology could help squelch digital music piracy

A group of technology companies is creating a set of industry standards that could help put digital piracy protections directly into portable disk drives as soon as this summer.

The plans are initially likely to affect removable data storage, such as Zip drives or the Flash memory cards used in MP3 players. But the standards could ultimately serve as a way to keep consumers from copying copyrighted files directly onto their hard drives, a daunting prospect for those who download music or videos from the Net though programs such as Napster or Gnutella.
Any hardware device that limits what consumers can do with their music or video files will face steep hurdles before being adopted. Previous devices with built-in copy protection have reached the market only to disappear under the weight of consumer indifference.

Current efforts are coming in two parts. An industry body that oversees hardware technologies is creating the new set of standards designed to let individual manufacturers add their own copy-protection schemes. Waiting in the wings to take advantage of the standards body's proposal is a specific technology jointly created by Intel, IBM, Matsushita Electric and Toshiba, dubbed Content Protection for Recordable Media (CPRM).
At least two big computer companies, IBM and SanDisk, are considering implementing CPRM, according to developers. If adopted widely, it and other hardware-based copy protection ideas stand a chance of easing fears among record labels and movie studios about selling content online.
http://news.cnet.com/2100-1023-250340.html


As we can see day by day the new technology is developing by new tools, and these new tool could be used in different ways. In this content the new technology helps digital piracy protection into portable disk drives. This thing is using for keeping consumer consumers from copying copyrighted files directly onto their hard drives, a daunting prospect for those who download music or videos from the Net though programs such as Napster or Gnutella. This is what we call it positive use from technology to help copyright and overcome the other side that provide easy way to copy things into flash memory cards, pen drives and so on. Also by this way any individual manufacturer can design its own protection schem.

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