SQ wrote:Do you think, if this bill is passed, it may also effect the new format DVDs(whichever format they chose to go with? BluRay or ... HD)?
I'm a dumbass, I've read this whole thread and I'm really not understanding.
Analog -> Computer is like tapes to computer, but then you guys said it would affect more.. X|
Here's a recap (as I understand it):
So far there has always been one major problem with copy protection, called the 'analog hole'. Take audio, no matter how clever their copy protection is, if you can play it back, then you can record it, and once you record your way the copy protection is gone. The same goes for video, if push comes to shove, you can just plug the cable that normally goes into your tv, into your VCR, tivo or capture card and you can record the analog signal. As soon as it becomes analog, the *AA are powerless, right? Wrong. Imagine everything they would need to control to stop people from working this way. They would need every company that manufactures recording devices (think VCR, computer, radio mp3 player) to comply with a system of their design where when they say "don't record this" it won't record it. And that's what they're proposing.
One example of this is the broadcast flag. Nevermind that VCR owners have been able to record television broadcasts for over thirty years without limiting the entertainment industry's profits in any way, the MPAA now wants people to stop doing it if they say so. They want all tivo's to stop their owners from recording television if the broadcasting station decides to flag the broadcast.
And now they've just decided to go for the whole pie. They want to control all recording hardware. But it'll get cracked, right? Doesn't it always get cracked? Well, it always got cracked, because it was always software. This time they've decided to control our hardware, and that's very nearly impossible to crack. So forget about using DVD's for footage, your new DVD drive will only let you play it back to your cerified monitor with a certified media player (certification of software will require a small fee, but nothing any multimillion dollar software house can't afford. We'll just have to do without all those pesky freeware and open source programs, the MPAA's profits are at stake!). Forget about using VHS footage, your new capture card won't let you capture, and your new VCR will only let you play it back to a certified television, certainly not another VCR. Forget about using fansubs, because if the ripping groups can't capture a live broadcast or rip a DVD, there'll be no more fansubs.
This may be a worst case scenario, but it's important to realize that it's the best case scenario for the RIAA and the MPAA. These organisations exist because we give them money. We're their clients and this is what they're selling us.