1997-02-19 - Re: Why Digital Video Disks are late to market

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From: azur@netcom.com (Steve Schear)
To: Martin Minow <minow@apple.com>
Message Hash: 917b048ceb2dfbc166514c5e5bd180e7d8acbddd2f9bc8aec03501c5d1d92dec
Message ID: <v02140b02af30656eb77f@[10.0.2.15]>
Reply To: N/A
UTC Datetime: 1997-02-19 08:09:28 UTC
Raw Date: Wed, 19 Feb 1997 00:09:28 -0800 (PST)

Raw message

From: azur@netcom.com (Steve Schear)
Date: Wed, 19 Feb 1997 00:09:28 -0800 (PST)
To: Martin Minow <minow@apple.com>
Subject: Re: Why Digital Video Disks are late to market
Message-ID: <v02140b02af30656eb77f@[10.0.2.15]>
MIME-Version: 1.0
Content-Type: text/plain


Has anyone seen discussions on how these protection mechanisms can be
circumvented?

>http://techweb.cmp.com/eet/news/97/942news/encryp.html
>
>To summarize, the Digital Video Disk standard contains an encryption
>standard for copyright and anti-piracy protection. however, "some U.S.
>PC and silicon vendors have just about abandoned hope of keeping to
>their revised launch schedules for DVD-enabled systems."
[snip]
>A solution may be in the offing within days. Some sources said late last
>week that Matsushita [who owns license rights] and key U.S. computer
>companies may resolve the software-licensing issues by the end of this
>week. The PC industry seeks amendments to the licensing-agreement language
>that would result in equivalent treatment of software- and hardware-based
>CSS decryption.
>
>... there apparently has been some speculation among the U.S. PC community
>that Matsushita may be stonewalling on the software-licensing issue so that
>it can establish its hardware-based decryption solution in the marketplace.
>

--Steve







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