Flash Memory with Copy Protection 365
Castar writes "Mercury News is reporting that SanDisk has created a new type of flash memory with copy-protection logic built in. From the article: "Today, much of a consumer's digital content is held hostage on a particular kind of device, such as an iPod or a PC, because that is the only way to prevent massive piracy. But with the SanDisk flash memory card, a consumer can move the digital content to another device. If the music company insists the data can only be copied five times, the memory card itself enforces that policy in the new device, be it a cell phone or music player." Rejoice that your data can be "liberated" from the confines of your PC or iPod!"
Hooray! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Hooray! (Score:5, Insightful)
Hooray! One day we'll pay for "advanced" devices that let us do novel things such as "Duplicate" and "Read" (more than 5 times, and over my 30 day limit, and without a $14.95 a month license until the end of time aggreement.)
Re:Hooray! (Score:5, Funny)
What's next in your silly little worker's paradise... buildings full of books, DVDs, and CDs you can borrow for free? A system like the one you describe would cause our entire economy to collapse.
Re:Hooray! (Score:3, Funny)
Write Only Memory [triticom.com]
Just think of the DRM possiblities!!! No copying out of this device, ever!
BTW if you want to convert any RAM you have into WOM... just scuff you feet on the carpet a few times and then touch your fingers to the chips.
Orwellian madness (Score:5, Insightful)
We get a bad feeling about all this because so much money and resources is going into developing a technology that no one who is actually buying the technology actually wants. The chip designer firm is working with the chip manufacturer who is negotiating with the global entertainment corporation who is linking with the agent who interfaces with the artist who toots up with the liaison of the technology company.
So who's missing here? How about the people who are actually putting out the money to actually pay for this stuff. One person buys an entertainment product and a little while later discovers that they can't do the simple and obvious things that they had come to expect that they could do with it; like backing it up or moving it to another medium like the car stereo. Suddenly the perceived value of this entertainment item drops to half or less of its previous value. So the consumer is only willing to pay $8 for the same CD that they were willing to previously buy at $16 when the CD or CD player has copy prevention technology built into it.
Now the entertainment corporation is raising the price to pay for the development of this new technology and also raising the price because the competition (from easy copies) is now restrained. So the perceived value (and price) is going down at the same time that the price for the entertainment product is shooting up. How exactly is this supposed to be good for the entertainment company or the artist? It must be that they fundamentally assume that because they are so cool and beautiful that the vast dork masses will buy the product regardless of how much it costs or difficult it is to use. This is what happens when entertainment people start talking business with computer people. The greed goes recursive and you end up with the worst mentalities of both industries in one package.
In the long run (10 years plus) this mentality will only act to reduce the importance and viability of the entertainment corporations. The board of directors will look to spin off the entertainment divisions in the way that everyone is now trying to dump their record companies. Maybe DRM is nothing more than a long term plan on the part of the technology companies to seriously depress the value of the entertainment companies so that ten years from now (when all the ultra-fast download-entertainment-directly-to-the-home technology is in place) they will be able to buy the entertainment companies for a tiny fraction of what they are worth now. Or maybe it's just the fantasy of immature greedheaded yuppies with too much access to other people's money.
Re:Orwellian madness (Score:5, Interesting)
Would you please stop using this example?
Most people don't make backups. It's a fact of life, and it's well known. That means every time you break out the "backups argument" it's automatically parsed into the piracy argument by practically everybody. From the point you mention backups on, you've lost all credibility with everbody except for the people who already agree with you.
When you're talking about music, talk about using it in your car. Talk about mix CDs. Talk about the iPod... Don't talk about backups!
When you're talking about images or video, talk about watching them in the car. Talk about watching them on your computer. Talk about getting a print made at the local photo shop. Talk about sharing home video made on your camcorder with the family. Don't use the word backups!
Whooo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Whooo (Score:5, Informative)
My last motherboard, an ASUS, had an in-BIOS MP3 player. That qualifies as "unnecessary, reliability-decreasing feature", in my opinion.
As for the latest sky-is-falling-on-copyright-infringement alarmist crap from Slashdot, pay no heed. This whole thing is a lot of horseshit that companies are using to extract money from the publishing industry. Many, many companies try to do this. If you make a commodity device (Flash storage, for instance), you're desperate to do *something* to make more money on it.
So, let's take a look at what this system is probably going to do.
Assume that the engineers *really* knew what they were doing and made *no* errors (and that security in hardware is pretty hard to do and there isn't much of a culture of that in the hardware world).
It's a pretty good bet that if properly designed (*not* necessarily the case), each device has some sort of embedded public-private keypair. They use this to transfer symmetric keypairs to do bulk data transfer between each other.
This means:
* Everything is on one IC, and there is no inter-IC bus involved. Tapping busses between ICs within a DRM-using device is a good way to break the protection. bunny broke the X-Box by using the fact that not everything is on one IC. Probably reasonable for the Flash world, where this is already the case.
* The hardware's pseudorandom number generators (that symmetric key has to come from somewhere) are secure. An attacker can twiddle power to screw up PRNGs...maybe zero them, induce current, screw with the power lines at just the right frequency, whatever. This is not trivial to avoid.
* There are *no* diagnostic interfaces left in the hardware. Trying to make every hardware engineer lose their diagnostics in the release product is like trying to convince a fish to jump out of water and stamp around on land for a bit.
* The crypto algorithm involved doesn't get broken (once it is in lots of products, you are irrevocably committed).
Remember that this is a system that relies on *zero* breaks. Maybe the manufacturer can have an "update key" and release new protected content with hidden "updates" to invalidate existing compromised keys, but this takes a while to propagate around the system. Once such a system is released, the manufacturer is gambling that not a single person, in any lab, with microscopes and the works, anywhere, can break the thing. Once it gets broken, that person can distribute all the protected content (and possibly even create a "modification" to disable the protection on other devices, if the break involves the compromise of a key). The math is *wildly* against the publishing world here. It's a safe assumption that the publishing world will make dire legal penalties, heavily watermark content (and probably tag with the IDs of devices that it passes through) to try to track down any such break, but it's still a seriously long-shot gamble for them -- and a break is likely to happen after they are widely deployed and are committed to the scheme, as happened with DVDs.
And remember that nobody gives a damn about simple data transfer. That data has to go somewhere -- the Flash drive. So now every device that *consumes* this data (sound cards, video cards, etc) has to also be similiarly secure, and not have any breaks. That is a *huge* undertaking. If one consumer is Windows running under Palladium (e.g. a trusted software MP3 player), then you have to secure a vast software system, as well as much of the hardware in a computer system, against any breaks. That means *Windows local kernel security must be airtight*. Every bluescreen you see is a violation of that! Even better, you can't use a single good prepackaged solution, because then you run into the bus-attacks-across-multiple-ICs problem -- every single device needs a custom chip, and that chip has to perform *all* the t
One more hole added to the above (Score:3, Insightful)
So, there is no benefit at all to this technology? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Funny)
Yes, and that's the key to its success! Isn't it nice?
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Insightful)
Hooray for the DMCA.
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:3, Informative)
On the other hand, if they have one private key kept only by the vendor, the public key for this on each device, a serial number on each device, and a unique private key on each device with a certificate, then it won't be cracked. Sure, DVDJon can crack his flash device, and then he could read/write the data off it. However, your device uses a different key. If h
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:5, Insightful)
But remember we consumers have been crying out for a way to move our music around freely and securely. Oh, wait a minute, I have that, its called scp.
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:2)
That's the big reason I kept to regular CF cards whenever possible. Many salesmen brag how much faster a SD card is over a CF card. I've seen the talking points. I also bought a 40X CF card for my camera. (Minolta DiMAGE) Comparing new SD cards to the original CF speed isn't doing CF justice. A buffer in the camera makes up for the old slow card I have.
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:2, Insightful)
No, it can do more, the new functionality just isn't something most consumers will find beneficial. In my opinion, products like this are inevitable. Media companies will eventually have to tap the enormous potential of electronic distribution. Does anybody believe they're going to do this without some system in place to control access to their premium content? I just hope when the time comes it will run on an
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:2)
No encryption scheme will ever work for the entertainment industry. Thats why they bought laws.
Re:So, there is no benefit at all to this technolo (Score:3, Interesting)
And the next step will be the "copy X times byte" and all flash drives will be required to honor it. And a bill will put up to congress over and over again to enforce it.
Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Step 2) Remove protection from your new copy
Step 3) No more DRM.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Burn a CD
2. Rip the CD
3. Enjoy!!!!
They just don't realise that a mere recording from line-out to line-in in any half-decent sound card will sound as good as the original to 99.% of the users. So they should try and prevent that as well.
But I think what they are really up to is to try and prevent users to enjoy their music. Next thing to come, you won't be able to play it either, so there! No more copy protection problems.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Interesting)
They understand that perfectly well. They also understand that sound cards and speakers can be chipped to refuse to reproduce the sound of a file that does not have a valid license code. See DVD players. See the current issue of the broadcast flag.
They're working on chips for your ears and brain. I think they're just going to duct tape mittens on your hands and a super ball in your mouth. Don't even think about nose flute, if you know what's good for you. You won't like the solution with mittens on your hands and that super ball already in your mouth.
KFG
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
1. People have to have the ability to play a recording they made themself
2. People have to have the ability to play a recording somebody else made
With those two requirements, it's just a matter of piping, really.
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
MadCow.
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
Vista will support it via all sorts of restrictions.
XP and/or Linux will have to as well, or not support it at all.
It's not exactly like XP and Linux will freely be able to play the negatively affected content in Vista.
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
If you make it complex, you will have to make better music/movies for someone to want to jump through these hoops. But they want to make cheaper movies and sell you junk music.
Re:Sigh (Score:3, Interesting)
I haven't installed a Microsoft product on one of my systems in a long time, but Windows used to arbitrarily refuse to install on a system that had a partition type it didn't recognize. Back when I was working OS/2 tech support we had no end of customers who installed OS/2 first and then wanted to install DOS/Windows on a separate partition. Turns out there wasn't an easy way to do that and naturally IBM took a lot of blame for this.
I wouldn't put it past Microsoft to add some code to Windo
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Informative)
Uh, they do [microsoft.com].
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
Recently, I tried to play some discs on a JVC mini-stereo and some media refused to play. While they won't play in my computer they will play on other CD players in the house. At this point, as far as I can tell the JVC player is "broken" and it should be replaced - but the replacement syste
Re:Sigh (Score:3, Insightful)
I think there is a flaw in your logic here. If the JVC system plays standard CDs just fine, then its the new CD that is broken - not your hardware. Return the CD and let them know exactly why - because its broken as far as you're concerned. If they refuse
"enjoy your music"??? (Score:2)
DMCA (Score:2)
Re:DMCA (Score:2)
Re:Sigh (Score:5, Insightful)
Try again. This memory won't work in a nuTrusted(TM) device. You might be able to rig up a recorder to your headphone jack, but you are going to get a really crappy copy. Worse, any computer capable of playing this trusted crap will then refuse to play your crappy copy. Welcome to the lock down [slashdot.org].
Re:Sigh (Score:4, Informative)
Step 2) Remove protection from your new copy
Step 3) No more DRM.
The way I've seen it work for some digital marine charts is;
1) Copy once
2) Strange unrecognised binary file
3) copy to second device
4) works in original device but not in another device.
The chart is married to the card. Copying to a PC is OK. Copying back to the original card is OK. Copying to a second card is rejected by the boat nav. Original card only please.
You can use the chart in another boat, but only if it is on it's original card. This is hardware level DRM.
Notice almost any GPS you can buy that uses a map will only take a SD card?
That is for in the future when you buy your boat or aircraft charts, they will come on a card and won't work if copied to another card. The chart and card are married and won't work without it's partner.
Charts for a local waterway won't be shared by a group of fishermen. Each will need to buy their own chart card. That's how the SD feature works.
Re:Sigh (Score:2)
With the TrustedFlash chips, music studios can release albums or whole collections of musical groups on a single memory card that consumers could buy at stores and insert into their phones, MP3 players or laptops.
This is not a buy a blank and burn your own compilation. This is buy a pre-recorded and it is tied to the card. I'll play in your future cell phone, laptop, CF music player, but only from the original card. The file without the card does not work.
This is like old floppy
Copied? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Copied? (Score:3, Interesting)
Or both? But shhhhhhhhhhhh, don't tell anyone. Screwing up regular users (let's get real, they will be the ones screwed with ill-devised devices) seems to be their credo these days, so I say let them do it and we shall see if it proves to be a good business model.
History will tell.
When a copy is not a copy. Dumb future. (Score:3, Insightful)
Sure, it's silly, but that does not mean it won't work. If everything in the chain is non free, you won't be able to do what you think you will be able to do. There will be a differen
Re:When a copy is not a copy. Dumb future. (Score:2)
You see, it only takes ONE person to crack the protection and distribute the file in an unprotected format, and then the genie is out of the bottle.
If Windows won't play unprotected music, I'll run Linux. Oh waaaaaaait, I already run Linux; I haven't owned a Windows box since 2003.
Nice try!
-Z
Re:When a copy is not a copy. Dumb future. (Score:3, Insightful)
O nos! What will I do without new Tittney or Chrislutna Ogle-ara? I think popular music sucks, and I don't think I'm alone. The decline in music sales isn't due to rampant piracy, it's because most new music sucks.
If musicians don't care enough to make sure their product isn't compromised by the distributor, then I don't care to support them. I'll keep listening to the music I already own,
This whole thing is a laugh riot.. (Score:3, Insightful)
As far as video goes, I don't know what to do about that. Data? There are programs out there that can copy everything, bit-for-bit, and burn to another DVD/CD. Therefore the l
Re:Copied? (Score:2)
You buy your music already on a card. You collect cards much like collecting DVD's or CD's. The music file on the card is mated to the card's DRM key. Copying the encrypted file off the card and putting it on another card means the file won't play on the other card. Making a copy of a card to give to a friend to play on his phone simply won't work.
Copy protection, HA! (Score:4, Insightful)
Anything physical science can research and synthesize, physical science can analyze and duplicate
What they apparently don't get is that anything can be cracked, given enough time to research the protection scheme.
Oh, the freedom! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Oh, the freedom! (Score:3, Insightful)
Other than that, I agree. I cannot understand how it can be legal for them to say what I can or cannot do with my hardware (and since all this "IP" is just bits stored on my hard drive, that's basically what they are doing). If I decide that it's mo
But does it run... (Score:2, Insightful)
When SanDisk starts manufacturing DRM-protected thumb drives and PNY or other manufacturers continue to sell unprotected thumb drives, I think the market will do the talking.
Re:Yep, easy solution (Score:2)
Golly I love Copyright Management! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Golly I love Copyright Management! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Golly I love Copyright Management! (Score:3, Informative)
Just what I needed (Score:2, Funny)
This is the general direction of the industry (Score:5, Insightful)
We speak of Freedom as if Linux could provide it, but the question is gradually becoming whether it is better to be the canary in a gilded cage or the crow eating garbage in the snow. Having an isolated "free" system that can't interact with other "non-free" systems is not really how we expected things to turn out, I bet.
Re:This is the general direction of the industry (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:This is the general direction of the industry (Score:5, Interesting)
It the old days, processors with DRM, on board boot flash and encryption didn't exist, because it would have cost too much, the theory wasn't known and it wasn't so obvious that schmucks would pay so much for fucking ringtones.
In the last decade, it has become clear that:
* hardware encryption is key
* schmucks (by the millions) will pay for ringtones
* downloading music is the future
* encryption works -- you can build a good cryptosystem for DRM
* hacker-types are the small, small minority of computer users (as opposed to 1977 -- when they helped make Apple the DRM-king that it is today)
So why would a businessman cut off 99% of the market, just to please a bunch of fat, bearded GNU/Linux fans, or a bunch of old, crabby BSD guys? Billions want their ringtones and pop tunes -- what do they know from freedom anyway? What is freedom, when you live in China/Africa/India and are bascially poor as dirty anyway?
More and more the question is just -- "why not" load it with DRM. The hacker types can either A) use other hardware or B) have a reduced-content experience.
Which makes me think hackers have had it pretty "easy" all along.
Re:This is the general direction of the industry (Score:3, Insightful)
Which is why we need to protest the use of proprietary formats and protocols. Just having the right to reverse-engineer them for interoperability reasons (as we have in the EU, AFAIK, IANAL) is not enough. We need the information required for interoperability to be freely available, or there will be no level playing field, no healthy competition, but rather vendor lo
and hundreds of thousands of end-users... (Score:2)
And I say they can have them be free as in beer.. as soon as my apartment is free as in beer, my utilities are free as in beer, my food is free as in beer and my water is free as in beer.
Until such a time, most of my products are 'free a
"confined??" (Score:2, Insightful)
if i use my PC or iPod, that's not really confining. plus, any idiot can get their music off of their ipod, it's as simple as viewing hidden folders. not to mention the availibility of free (legal) software that has that ability.
so how does this new flash memory free me up when i can just get current flash memory and copy my stuff as much as I want? i'm not really being confined at all. even with DRM, i can still play it on my ipod, my PC, and
NO Mention of iPod (Score:2, Informative)
Otherwise I assume the data will be an encrypted blob and be unusable.
Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:DRM definition files (Score:2)
Speaking of which, what on earth is next?
Mmmm... seems to be a work for Google [managingrights.com]
Re:DRM definition files (Score:2)
Damn... (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Damn... (Score:2)
What? (Score:4, Insightful)
Er, so if I copy a file from the memory card onto, say, an iPod, the memory card alters the way the iPod works? Huh? This makes no sense whatsoever.
One of these days, I wish there'd be an article about copy protection that protected the ability to copy.
Makes Sense (Score:5, Insightful)
There needs to be integration with the processor (e.g. processor starts up, decrypts and runs a boot program using a special key) -- but that's already been done. Secure storage makes those two things work better. Note: if your processor is old school and non-DRM, you just snoop the bus and get the secrets.
Looks like a real home run: this is the "right place" (from an economic standpoint) to put the DRM. It will be cheap and secure.
However, it then becomes a juicy target for attack: if they are selling these chips by the millions, and they are protecting IP worth billions, then it is time to break out the acid and electron microscopes, and figure out how to deactivate it. And then it is busted.
Same as Sony MagicGate (Score:5, Funny)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/MagicGate [wikipedia.org]
The copy protected memory stick from Sony they did as part of the failed SDMI system.
In other COMPLETELY UNRELATED news, Sony plans 10000 job cuts after poor product sales:
http://us.ft.com/ftsuperpage/superpage.php?news_i
Enter Famous Bruce Schneier quote: (Score:5, Insightful)
The sooner people accept this, and build business models that take
this into account, the sooner people will start making money again.
- Bruce Schneier
Re:Enter Famous Bruce Schneier quote: (Score:2)
I just over heard an important conversation... (Score:5, Funny)
Microsoft: Sure.. why not?
RIAA: Let me get this straight. You line all these ones and zeros up and it makes music.
Microsoft: Yep, on a little disk we like to call a MicroDisk TM.
RIAA: And this can be done for 100th of the price of pressing a vinyl record.
Microsoft: Sure can. And its easy too. The whole point of digital technology is that you can make zillions of 1s and 0s line up for no money whats so ever. Anyone can do it!
RIAA: Anyone?
Microsoft: Err.... I mean anyone who can remember these magic words (which are a big secret) whilst waving this MicroWand TM can do it.
RIAA: Ah! Theres the catch!... How much is the wand?
New Freedom. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:New Freedom. (Score:2)
Spelling pedant: dude, you mis-spelled "the entire United Kingdom except maybe a bit of Shetland, oh wait, they've got that covered too." Happy to help!
As an aside, UK residents have the right, under the Data Protection Act, to request any video footage of themselves taken by a private body (cost £10). Anyone tried this?
Arrgghhh - the name!! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Arrgghhh - the name!! (Score:2)
You all have the wrong mindset... :-p (Score:4, Funny)
"We think it's a great consumer win, and it's a great industry win, to be able to ensure that with good copy protection, you can have so much functionality for the user", Jordi Rivas, Microsoft Director of Technology. (source) [tomshardware.com]
Would be sig-worthy if it wasn't over 120 bytes.
Just don't buy it (Score:2)
Bye-bye new copy-protected flash memory.
WTF? (Score:3, Interesting)
Fahrenheit 451 (Score:3, Insightful)
Laws of DRM (Score:5, Insightful)
a) Any device encumbered by DRM will fail if there are alternatives available on the market. If there are no alternatives the product might enjoy a limited success until the product becomes so successful that alternatives/clones/ripoffs become inevitable.
b) All forms of drm can be corrupted/broken/negated, and most will be broken within a matter of days or even hours.
c) Most new technology will be used in ways the inventors never imagined. Trying to restrict this behavior with DRM will surely kill your product.
This 'Gruvi' (what a horrible horrible name) probably falls under cat. A, and will disappear soon.
Re:Laws of DRM (Score:3, Interesting)
b: bypassing is the key weakness here, since hard crypto can create a mechanism that isn't easily broken. XBox discs and satellite TV are two examples that come to mind. A crypto arms race goes until the crypto becomes unwieldy enough to deter all but the most-dedicated hacker. A side thought: the UMD drives for Sony PSP are an interesting/comm
RTFA Please (Score:5, Informative)
I do not think, this device is meant for direct marketing to the public in anything resembling the way current flash drives are currently marketed. You would not be buying these and loading the DRM content onto them, the DRM content comes on them when you purchase them. The idea of this is that it will probably allow a set number of devices to read the media. When you insert it into the one device too many you get the cannot read message.
This is how it liberates the 'standard' user from music being stuck on their iPod. Most consumers (and trust me the slashdot community IS NOT most consumers) have no idea how to remove DRM from their iTunes purchases or know how to get the songs on their iPod back off. They have not had the great fortune of hearing about things like ephpod. So now they will have their DRM content on a flash disk that can go into their cell phone, PDA, PC, mp3 player and so on.
So put the foil hats away, and stop contemplating about the demise of SD because this IS NOT targeted for straight sale as a consumer media and WILL NOT replace all the drives and memories that they presently sale.
Not the point at all (Score:5, Interesting)
That's all well-and-good, but does it accomplish the stated objective of detering massive piracy? I submit it does not. As you imply, the people who *can* circumvent the DRM (and there will always be circumvention) will initiate the on-line propagation, and these "regular" citizens of whom you speak will download and continue to further "piracy."
In that case, they are merely providing another inconvenience for the "average" citizen, while not stopping, or even slowing, the massive "piracy" they are constantly whinging on about. As the average citizen can now download the songs they want (and *only* the songs they want, rather than a whole crappy album for a single good song), what is the benefit to the average citizen? What does it gain us, as society? Anything? Anything at all?
It is disingenuous to claim they are doing this to combat piracy. If anything, they are doing it to regain control of the distribution channel, and in the process to further their control over what a citizen can do with the music they lawfully purchased, essentially circumventing the doctrines of fair use and first-sale, two bugaboos of the music industry.
This is a blatant attempt to shore up the industry's control, and nothing more.
Chocoration news... (Score:2)
Proposed changes to the industry (Score:5, Funny)
As a fan of the music industry but not music itself, I wait with great anticipation for the day when we are finally rid of the antiquated notion of personal rights.
I propose a mandatory tithe of 10% of each individual's monthly earnings, that would be put straight into the coffers of music industry to stamp out music piracy once and for all.
Obviously to accomplish this worthy goal we'd have to make some sacrifices, the ability to purchase music online would be one of the first to go. As many slashdotters have pointed out in the past, DRM and similar technologies are always beaten and thus are unenforceable in the long term.
Instead of listening to music in the privacy of your home, I suggest RIAA-run facilities allowing a selected number of people to listen to carefully selected 'Top of the Pops' singles in a structured environment. Obviously a strip-search with full body cavity check, careful screening, drug-testing and metal detectors would be necessary to prevent unauthorized reproduction of the music. Needless to say, RIAA goons would be on hand with truncheons and electroshock equipment to assure proper relaxation and enjoyment.
This utopia can only come about with the help of right-minded individuals such as yourselves. I ask slashdotters to delete their mp3/ogg collections, turn themselves into the RIAA for re-neducation and fight for this glorious future.
101 Ways to Promote Piracy (Score:2)
written by your favorite friends at RIAA and the MPAA.
Reason #88 - Copy Protected Memory
Not only will we be able to control the crappy music we're selling you, but we'll be able to limit your own works as well. We at RIAA do not like to encourage the creation of actual music and must take steps to protect our artists from such actions. This technology allows us to treat our customers like they are two-bit thugs and limit the creation of new works through our special filter software
Interesting, where can I find the rest of it? (Score:2)
Sandisk, I should have guessed! (Score:5, Funny)
Apparently that's not a bug or flaw, it's a feature!
Who writes this crap (Score:2)
Today, much of a consumer's digital content is held hostage on a particular kind of device, such as an iPod or a PC...
This is, without doubt, one of the stupidest things I've ever read. It's storage folks; hostage is something completely different. This is what you get for letting sales try to figure out technology.
This is one of the other stupidest things I've ever read. If I never even opened the CDs from the wrapper, that would reall
Regarding new design... (Score:2, Funny)
Go fuck your selves.
Sincerly,
-turtleAJ + all the people with at least 0.07brain
Submarine DRM (Score:2)
You're not dealing with the subject at hand (Score:2)
Money Pit (Score:2, Interesting)
If the
Hasn't this been done? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or is Sandisk just giving a lot of fanfare and hoping their me-too solution will actually be used by someone?
Maybe it's an urban legend... (Score:3, Interesting)
It seems that computers "work too well" and are "too cheap" by everybody's standards, and they can't jump all over themselves fast enough to break them in every concievable way. One day, you'll hear people saying "Of course you lost your data! That's a USB drive, you only get five uses out of it and it wears out!" Doubtless, they'll only hold 10 Mbs at a time, as well.
All the more reason why I've resolved to never buy anything that's electronic new if there's a used/discarded item available. I have simply gotten too good at fixing old hardware...I never see the time when I'll need to buy a new computer, just spare parts, and even those I usually get used. I'm glad I already did my USB flash drive shopping, while I still had choices.
There are too many flash formats for this to work (Score:3, Insightful)
Not considering other media storage formats like Iomega ZIP, this is just a list of flash-memory media formats that 'I' am aware of to have come out in the 10 years since 1995 when Compact Flash Type 1 was introduced:
That's an average of more than 1 new flash-memory format/year, and I'm sure there are others that I have missed.
If someone buys a Rolling Stones album on a DRM'd SD card, they're making a bet that from now on, every
Re:Copy protected memory? (Score:2)