SAN FRANCISCO -- A computer scientist testified in federal court here Tuesday that RealNetworks' DVD copying software circumvents encryption technology, an assertion bolstering Hollywood' claims that ...
SAN JOSE, Calif.-- In a rare retreat, a film industry coalition has dropped its trade secret court battle against a San Francisco computer programmer who in 1999 posted on the Internet code that ...
MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching ...
The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences is moving forward with a plan to offer Academy members DVD players free of charge that will play specially encrypted DVD screeners. But many of the ...
We all know that encryption and DRM are the keys to a secure future, because they work flawlessly and keep away the miscreants. Or, not. Copy Protection for Pre-Recorded Media (CPPM for short) has ...
A Norwegian appeals court threw out a criminal copyright case against a programmer accused of breaking Hollywood's DVD encryption scheme. Norwegian authorities tried Jon Johansen on criminal charges ...
New software is now making it possible to remove Advanced Access Content System (AACS) encryption from HD DVDs, enabling users to play discs on non-HDCP (High-Bandwidth Digital Content Protection) ...
A poster named arnezami on the Doom9 forums has claimed to have found a method of extracting the Volume ID signatures from both HD DVD and Blu-ray discs, which could make it easier for hackers to ...
If you build it, it will be cracked. That's been the story behind most encryption, and the latest generation of media formats seem no different. Last year, Microsoft's HD-DVD encryption was cracked by ...
The fight over DVD (digital versatile disc) descrambling and the legal issues involved will seemingly not go away, as the fight gained a new participant this week when a tool to help decrypt DVDs was ...
LOS ANGELES - The organization behind the Academy Awards is eyeing new technology to prevent a sequel to last year's embarrassing attempt to protect films by not distributing them to Oscar voters at ...
MIT student Keith Winstein and alum Marc Horowitz say they're out to prove a point: Publishing code that decrypts and plays DVD movies is not a crime. In their case, they assert it's about teaching ...
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