Sun DReaM Finds Home In IPTV 68
An anonymous reader writes "The Register has a story reporting that Sun's DRM will find a home in a Korean IPTV system. From the article: "This week Sun released the source code for two components of DReaM, its DReaM-CAS (Conditional Access System) and DReaMMMI (Mother May I) the underlying mechanism for always asking a central resource for permission to access content. In papers that Sun put out this week it has described both of these processes. DReaMCAS or D-CAS currently only manages access to content in the MPEG-2 format."
MPEG-4 content, MPEG-2 transport (Score:3, Informative)
Re:WHHYHHYHY! (Score:2, Informative)
Sure you can't make bits uncopyable, BUT you can make it very difficult for people to copy the bits. This is all that DRM attempts to do. Microsoft actually came out with an interesting paper on this several years ago. They called it the dark networks I think. It referred to the perpetual group of people that will copy software/movies/mp3s/etc without permission. This group of people is less than 5% of the population. The goal of companies that produce content that they would like to control the rights to, is to keep this group as small as possible.
Re:WHHYHHYHY! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:DRM and GNOME (Score:3, Informative)
That being said, I can't deny that the work is being done. If anyone's interested, here's a link to the announcement [gnome.org]. The short version seems to be that "we have no control over if people will be using DRM anyway, so we're implementing it in the hopes that it will never be used, just so that GStreamer won't be dumped over lack of DRM support".
Re:Open Source DRM is like... (Score:5, Informative)