Comments on: Movie blackout for P2P networks?
Philips, others are developing ways to identify and block movies being traded on peer-to-peer networks.
Philips, others are developing ways to identify and block movies being traded on peer-to-peer networks.
December 6, 2009 12:05 PM PST
December 6, 2009 11:00 AM PST
December 6, 2009 9:24 AM PST
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From the cNet article:
"A Motion Picture Association of America executive said the group is looking closely at ways of identifying films online, but is focused more specifically on watermarking, a means of embedding extra code that helps track the origin of pirated copies. That technique has been particularly useful in the MPAA's effort to keep Oscar-nominated films offline."
And this:
http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-piracy10feb10.story
"One year after the Motion Picture Assn. of America began its highly publicized campaign against pre-Oscar piracy, the problem is even worse.
There are significantly more Academy Award screeners of movies available on the Internet for downloading than there were last year, according to websites that track online piracy, including all five films nominated for best picture."
I have two words for the MPAA and RIAA and the first one is four letters and starts with an F.
http://offtheshelf.nowis.com/index.cfm?ID=5
1) High level encryption... all countries execpet USA can use incredibly stupidly high encryption algos which cant be cracked within the lifetime of earth (based on current technology).. encryption poses 2 problems
a) the fingerprinter will have to be able to identify the encryption method
b) it will have to have a copy of the key to decrypt it.
this makes it HIGHLY unlikely that any "datapassthroughs" servers are going to pick it up.... if they did .. dont even think about using the internet ever again.. it will have to brute force decrypt everything from html documents to linux isos, just to be shure they're not an advancely encrypted video.
2) "in-cinema rips" -- ie: that made with a camcorder in a movie cinemea.. is it going to detect these as well? analog fingerprinting methods rely on the image being more or less identical visually to the original,.. this is usually done by "tinting" certain regions of the screen at a very low level .. sorta like a very faint over-printed barcode. If you insert too much noise... like shakey hands... pixel missalignments ... these watermarks can become unreadable...
i expect they're gonna need very sophisticated hardware to do this... not only does it have to decode the video, it has to convert a sequence of video frames into RGB images to analyise for patterns...
if they are going to implement this... i hope they have deep pockets... cos its going to either screw the internet... or simply not work without needing scores of paddocks of sophisticated hardware (an effective inverse rendering farm)
- Yahoo2- blocks p2p networks
- by le blogue March 4, 2008 12:38 AM PST
- Yahoo declined to include my website Movie Networks Dot Org ,in their Search Marketing advertising program. The reason is because I have links that open to p2p download sites. The only reason you may see such sites advertised by Yahoo ! Is simply because they have not had the time to expunge them yet.The guidelines changed two months ago and will be implemeted ASAP. Do I blame Yahoo?
- Like this Reply to this comment
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(11 Comments)I blame them for attempting to take $30.00 dollars from me for a failed,declined ,campaign. I do not begrudge them for their actions as I have reservations about the p2p technology , after having my website sabotaged with a triple xxx hardcore porn movie mixed in with cartoons
.this resullted from my copying java script and putting a mini widget on my website. p2p may have seen its better days.