AMD Opteron to support Palladium 477
Jim Norton writes "This article is just a reminder that AMD is just as guilty as Intel in supporting TCPA / Palladium. AMD has announced that Opteron will be compatible with the Palladium Initiative and that AMD is part of the 'Trusted Computing Alliance'."
Mostly a political gesture (Score:5, Insightful)
You're kidding, right? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:5, Insightful)
"Intellectual property politics" may be too complicated and confusing for most people to understand, but when it's sitting on their desktop, they will figure it out quick.
Customers (especially home users) may resist buying the new equipment, which both Intel and AMD are in a poor position to afford. Apple (which has, by the way, put a large amount of effort into promoting open media - rip/mix/burn, ipod, etc) might not play ball with trusted computing, and reap huge rewards in new marketshare. Finally, free operating systems, especially Linux, might be catalyzed by the vast new community of people looking to take advantage of the next generation hardware without the restrictions of "Trusted" Windows (talk about an oxymoron).
Finally, lest we forget, palladium security will be broken, perhaps even before it is released. DRM is only a cage. Things only need to escape once.
Palladium is a giant loser, except possibly for Microsoft, who will use it to invoke the DMCA against open source authors who attempt to interoperate with their "secure" system. Against that, we can only hope the anti-trust judge is up enough on the issues to head off the issue with meaningful requirements (and enforcement) of an interoperability policy.
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:2)
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:You're kidding, right? (Score:2)
are you saying that sun will also have to implement this? somehow, I doubt it. I can't believe IMPORTANT content will be allowed only to wintel cartel members..
Re:Mostly a political gesture (Score:2)
AFAIK, the Trusted PC started as a project for business use. Software developers could move security checks to the client if it's "trusted" without getting grilled by those strange security people who might accidentally look at the code. So there was (and still is) some market demand.
It just happened that you can sell the same technology to the copyright industry (as "copy control") and to the consumer (as "virus prevention"). I doubt that the technology will match such requirements, but we'll see.
The free market *will* live (Score:2)
It does live on.
Suppose someone comes up with truly unstoppable, unbreakable DRM. (It sure as hell isn't TCPA unless the deadline gets pushed way the hell back. Hardware manufacturers are *not* used to, and many engineers are not inclined to lose sleep over implementing TCPA securely.) Then it just means that consumers have to pay for a given product. If a product costs too much...then guess what? No one busy it, the company goes out of business. Goods priced at zero will still have a benefit, and if that's really what the consumer wants, it'll be what the consumer ends up getting.
Time to unleash our tech powers...w/reverse buzz! (Score:3, Insightful)
The hardware makers are in a cage too, if either one of them DOESN'T support it, they could hand the market share to the one that does. They're both FORCED by the margins to go along!...
The only answer lays with the consumer....DON'T BUY THIS PRODUCT....EVER!...
DONT EVEN LET IT GET A FOOTHOLD!.....
YOU!...the person reading this...use your influence as a tech person reading this list....tell everyone you know that
that "this Paladium thing sucks!"
tell anyone asking you for tech advice..."...this Paladium thing sucks..."...
Work it into casual conversation..."..yeah, you know that this new Paladium thing REALLY sucks...."..
Need to kill this thing now...and we shouldn't take our collective power for granted on this one....you can bet that MS and RIAA are working up the "positive" buzz for this right now. I imagine that there will be a media campaign for this after Christmas season....
Nothing kills a new product faster than "consumer apathy," and for good measure, a heaping helping of distrust/dislike.
We need to start buzzing about this thing rather than quietly accepting defeat/takaway of our rights.
Needs to be said.... (Score:3, Funny)
But every one should switch to the bunny foo-foo Macintosh.
*pats G4*
Re:Needs to be said.... (Score:2, Interesting)
Here, this'll ease the pain.
Re:Needs to be said.... (Score:3, Insightful)
Riiiight (Score:2)
After all the time Apple's spent doing their own thing despite exactly this being true -- massive compatibility issues with the rest of the PC market -- you honestly think that TCPA will drive them back into the flock of sheep? Give me a break.
Sparc or similar (Score:2)
Then all the Windows people are locked onto Intel/AMD, but Linux/Unix users with source code won't have a problem compiling for a Sparc (or whatever).
Re:Needs to be said.... (Score:2, Insightful)
It depends on the magnitude and the quality of the content offered. The mythical Joe Sixpack just might go out and buy a new computer if he could watch every new feature film for the low, low price of $3 a viewing, or put together custom CDs for half the price of CDs he picks up in stores; that is, he might if he's a big enough consumer.
This whole process will happen over such a long period of time that it is completely consevable that it will take Apple just as much time to gain a signifigant percentage of market share then it would DRM enabled computer to catch on en mass.
To paraphrase, it's also completely conceivable that monkeys could fly out of my butt.
Apple computers are not yet at the "commodity" price point, whereas PCs are. Is Joe Sixpack going to go out and buy a $999 eMac/iMac when Gateway has a Profile 4 for $699? Is he going to bother learning Mac OS X, then get pissed off when none of his Windows apps work, or buy another Windows box and neatly get out of having to buy new software? (Remember, Joe Sixpack has heard of neither Linux nor BSD, and he has no clue what open-source software is.)
Where does that leave us? Media vendors will be selling content to too few people and end up folding purely due to the fact that there is not enough demand for the conent.
If a significant fraction of 95% of the consumer retail market switches to the Mac platform for no reason other than they look pretty (and lack this "DRM" thing that's going to get rid of hackers and terrorists.) If you can somehow convince that market that this "Palladium" thing is morally wrong, even though it allows them to watch TV on their computers.
This whole situation hinges on two things:
1) Palladium gets introduced as a major trend in computers.
2) Microsoft royally fucks something up.
3) Both 1) and 2) occur before Apple/IBM/Motorola/the Trilateral Commission succumb to market pressures and come up with a TCPA/Palladium-compliant DRM implementation.
If, and only if, these things happen, and people see that their Wintel boxen aren't running all the things they used to, will people switch to unencumbered platforms. Pray that they do.
Re:Needs to be said.... (Score:2)
Or he could just save the money for a new computer, save the money for the movie and the CDs and continue to download everything from edonkey/napster/gnutella.
In what world are you living?
Re:Not really a law issue. (Score:2)
Re:Not really a law issue. (Score:2)
Transmeta had something interesting in their code morphing software, but they didn't make use of it. Instead all they ever managed to produced is a butt-slow x86 processor that used an ass-backwards way of getting x86 compatability.
Their only saving grace was that, for a while, they had lower powered chips then the other companies out there, however even that has been eliminated with the ULV PIIIs and the VIA C3 chips. Once Intel's Banias chip is available, that'll be the final stake in Transmeta's coffin if someone hasn't bought them up by that time.
Ohh, and yes, I am aware that I have been speaking of Transmeta in the past-tense. They're a dead company. They'll probably be bought out by someone who has some potential uses for their code morphing software. My guess is IBM, but there are other possibilities.
Re:Needs to be said.... (Score:2)
The key item here though, is the PPC, which so far has no DRM in its guts. This has caused me to change my plans re what I design new projects around.
Plus, rumours are flying of new, power-efficient PPCs for desktop and embedded use. As far as I'm concerned, that tears it. As soon as these hit the market, it's goodbye Intel, there no longer is any reason to stay with the bad old bad old. And so long as AMD sticks to their DRM guns, it's goodbye AMD too.
If you RTFA... (Score:3, Redundant)
Re:If you RTFA... (Score:5, Interesting)
We can program the FPGA with Intel instruction set compatibility, where Palladium instructions would be ignored, or design an add-on chip (like the old Pentium Turbo snap-on chips) which would detect the Palladium opcodes on the FSB and skirt around them. Whoa, am I violating the DMCA by suggesting this?
Government + Corporations versus Consumers, Saddam is just a distraction
Re:If you RTFA... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:If you RTFA... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If you RTFA... (Score:3, Interesting)
(FYI, double-blind blackboxing is a process of reverse engineering in which one team of engineers "poke at" an existing system to determine how it operates under certain conditions. A second team, which never actually directly interacts with the system they're trying to copy, then uses a report created by the first team to implement the cloned system.)
#include
Re:If you RTFA... (Score:3, Informative)
Comments that looked like they were from Pat Moorhead on an Aussie Web site are not from Pat Moorhead, the firm has just told us.In fact, according to an AMD UK representative, AMD's Opteron products will run any kind of content in the future -- contrary to the report in The Age, on which our original report, below, was based.
Part of the content in The Age failed to distinguish between comments Moorhead made and conjecture, AMD said. AMD, in fact, claims it is the "good guy", and even though it is a member of the "trusted computing" initiative, will allow users to opt in whether to use this type of technology or not. "There is nothing [in Hammer] that could actually prevent a user running unlicensed content," the representative from AMD said MM.
Re:Damnit -- should of used the preview button (Score:2)
Hollywood and the music industry are lobbying hard to make DRM mandatory in all new devices, and existing laws here and in the US make it a crime to switch it off.
Not all documents are locked documents (Score:5, Informative)
Hollywood and the music industry are lobbying hard to make DRM mandatory in all new devices
Once the TCPA system becomes more widespread, Hollywood will have less room to bitch because there will be a Secure Memory Space(tm)(patent) in the most popular consumer operating system, and Hollywood studios will be able to provide Video On Demand services within that space.
and existing laws here and in the US make it a crime to switch it off.
Not exactly. The Palladium and TCPA systems simply provide a way to lock down data such that only specific applications running on one machine can use it. In order for Palladium or TCPA to actually restrict anything, the content provider must make the choice to lock down the data (conforming Compact Discs are not considered locked down). This doesn't give the RIAA labels an absolute oligopoly, as it's still possible for artists to Not Lock Down(tm) their .ogg files.
The public TCPA information stresses that only TCPA apps will use the TCPA memory space. Microsoft's Palladium materials make the same claim. And you'll apparently be able to turn off the systems in the BIOS setup, which will have only one effect: apps that use those systems will throw up an alert box to the effect "The locked document 'Love Me Now.wma' could not be opened because Palladium was not found." They do NOT force all documents to be locked documents.
It all goes back to Microsoft. (Score:5, Insightful)
Per usual, the root of the evil sits cackling in Redmond.
Herd mentality on a corporate scale (Score:2)
Re:Herd mentality on a corporate scale (Score:2)
Two problems with that:
1. Both are locked in a death-match. Neither is going to do anything that could put it in a weaker position.
2. If they 'collude', Microshaft could open the 'anti-trust' brand of can-o-whoop-ass.
Recall the Xbox announcement? Microshaft put out a rumor that they were going to use AMD's processors in the Xbox. That was enough to make Intel come grovelling to Redmond and agree to literally give away their Celerons/P-IIIs to the Xbox. Microshaft is very good at playing one against the other, much better than the entire /. crowd combined. There's a reason why Billy G. is depicted as a Borg on /.
Re:Herd mentality on a corporate scale (Score:2)
That's exactly the problem. Neither AMD nor Intel can give up anything they perceive as a POSSIBLE advantage over the other, so they all have to provide the same "support" for whatever comes down the pipe (for practical purposes, meaning whatever M$ wants to market next).
And I'm sure you're right about the how-dare-you-collude-against-Us threat, too -- "you band together to oppose our Gately Might, and we'll whup your asses but good."
Tho I suspect it would take the form of M$ buying their own chip fabrication facility (which they could do from petty cash) and that would soon spell the end of everyone else in the realworld CPU market.
Re:Herd mentality on a corporate scale (Score:2, Insightful)
yup, the good ole prisoner's dilemma rears its destructive head once again
Re:It all goes back to Microsoft. (Score:2)
Not like I'm for DRM by any stretch of the imagination...and I'm no big fan of Microsoft, but is this really Microsoft's doing?
The studios do not want to release their movies on a new digital format like VoD (for some reason, they're particularly weary about streaming). They want some guarentee that their IP is secure. They spent millions on the DVDCCA and it was a total flop. It doesn't take long to search Kazaa to find the number of ripped DVD's out there (I know...not necessarily DVDCCA's/CSS's fault -- its actually the auth token system which is flawed)...Anyway I digress. So there isn't much good (legal, licensed) content for video streaming because the studios are legitamately worried about losing their revenue stream...and it is theirs -- they raised the capital and plunked down millions to make the movies.
(Disclaimer: I do not want any legally mandated DRM anywhere near my computer...that stuff is evil...its my computer, and my data....damnit)
If you want the streaming media industry to move forward, you need better content. For the *AA to give us better content, their content needs to be better protected. Microsoft just seems to be addressing this in their own way (by trying to own that segment). If Microsoft didn't do it, someone else would. Do you expect Microsoft to just roll over and withdraw from the PC industry? The only way that they can stay alive in this industry is to keep acquiring new shit. I'm not waying that I really want this, but what are you gonna do? I'd stop running MS and stop complaining (and calling Microsoft evil).
Lastly, since when has Microsoft's security ever been any good? Granted, its illegal to circumvent that security -- but that hasn't stopped anyone from actually doing it yet.
Re:It all goes back to Microsoft. (Score:2)
Re:It all goes back to Microsoft. (Score:2)
With the current social structure of the US, the only way to stop the DMCA is to piss off all the jocks, 'cos the Senators listen when they boycott the football and baseball matches. That's how to change laws, not to send some pointless email to some guy who'll instantly delete it anyway.
C coders, etc. are quiet which is a weakness, so the legislature is gonna walk all over us and we're not gonna say a damn thing as usual. I guess we're all secretly hoping maybe C++ or STL will save us because RMS or Steve Gibson will do uhhhh something like reprogram an interrupt vector to make Palladium useless.
Addendum (Score:5, Informative)
no shit einstein. (Score:2)
Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:5, Informative)
still not clear then. (Score:2)
Ok, so it sounds like it STILL HAS PALLADIUM in it. This is how palladium hardware works, it can also run unsecured content, but not in secure mode.
WISE the fuck up folks. This is how palladium is designed to work at first. IT'S OPTIONAL. That's how they want to fuck us over, by getting most people without them even knowing.
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:2)
I hope that they define 'Opt-In' policy as a choice the consumer can make at purchase whether to include the DRM chip at all. I personally do not want any DRM chips on my future processors... disabled or not!
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:2)
I hope that they define 'Opt-In' policy as a choice the consumer can make at purchase whether to include the DRM chip at all. I personally do not want any DRM chips on my future processors... disabled or not!
Having a pin on the processor that you can tie low/high (eg, with a jumper on the mobo or whatever) would be sufficient. AMD can't just leave a big hole in a CPU. They probably have to redesign. Even if they didn't, AMD would have to change their assembly line to support double of everything. It's simply not going to happen.
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps)-"opt-in" (Score:2)
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:2)
Comments that looked like they were from Pat Moorhead on an Aussie Web site are not from Pat Moorhead, the firm has just told us.In fact, according to an AMD UK representative, AMD's Opteron products will run any kind of content in the future -- contrary to the report in The Age, on which our original report, below, was based.
Part of the content in The Age failed to distinguish between comments Moorhead made and conjecture, AMD said. AMD, in fact, claims it is the "good guy", and even though it is a member of the "trusted computing" initiative, will allow users to opt in whether to use this type of technology or not. "There is nothing [in Hammer] that could actually prevent a user running unlicensed content," the representative from AMD said MM.
Read the content...AMD == Intel (Score:2)
This is not news. Both AMD and Intel are supporting TCPA, both let you disable it.
Re:Story is Incorrect (perhaps) (Score:2)
Sad (Score:2, Interesting)
OS support? (Score:2)
Unless there is some killer feature Palladium has that makes unenabled OS's useless.
Support is optional (Score:3, Informative)
do like me (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:do like me (Score:4, Insightful)
The mirror in history is almost beautiful.
Re: It *was* somewhat insightful.... that's why! (Score:2)
The point is, the expected lifetime of a modern CPU should be plenty long enough to outlast the next couple generations of new chips. If you need more processor power and refuse to move to the newer generation of CPU, you could very well add more of the older systems to a cluster instead. By the time they all reached their "end of life" - you'd probably be at the point where things changed so dramatically, DRM was the least of your concerns.
Re:do like me (Score:2)
Although I've never seen a processor 'die'... I still have 10-years old computers and processors running fine.
Nice try though.
Just Another Reason (Score:3, Insightful)
TCPA I can live with but palladium?? (Score:3, Informative)
TCPA is already secretly installed by default on most IBM machines [ibm.com] but the good news is you can turn it off and run linux on them. IBM is one of the biggest investors of TCPA and has also invested more then a billion into linux. They will make sure linux will run on TCPA hardware or that TCOA can easily be turned off. However microsoft's palladium will be built into memory modules and the cpu itself. Ouch. I do not know if you can turn these off. Microsoft's palladium faq [microsoft.com] states that you can still run old non trusted apps but admits linux can not run due ot legal rather then technical reasons. TCPA is more strict from a technical standpoint but it has proven itself that it can be easily disabled and I trust IBM a hell of alot more then Microsoft concerning my interests.
If worse comes to worse macs are always an option. It will take forever before apple is done designing motherboards with the new IBM powerpc chip's( last quarter 2003) which means g4's will stay for another year or two with slow memory access(sdram). Sure the new macs come with ddr but the internal chipset slows it down to sdram 133 speeds because the g4's suck so much.
Re:uhh..... (Score:2, Insightful)
Q: Can Linux, FreeBSD or another open source OS run on "Palladium" hardware?
A: Virtually anything that runs on a Windows-based machine today will still run on a "Palladium" machine (there are some esoteric exceptions[1]). If you currently have a machine that runs both Linux and Windows, you would be able to have that same functionality on a "Palladium" machine.
[1] These exceptions include the following:
Some debuggers may need to be updated to work in the "Palladium" environment, but they can still work.
Some special performance tools may need to be updated.
Software that writes directly to TCPA hardware will need to be updated.
Memory scrub routines (at the hardware level) will need attention.
Third-party crash dump software may need to be updated.
BIOS mode hibernation features will need to be updated to work with "Palladium."
Re:TCPA I can live with but palladium?? (Score:2)
Maybe you should read your own links.. From the link you provided:
Q: Can Linux, FreeBSD or another open source OS run on "Palladium" hardware?
A: Virtually anything that runs on a Windows-based machine today will still run on a "Palladium" machine (there are some esoteric exceptions[1]). If you currently have a machine that runs both Linux and Windows, you would be able to have that same functionality on a "Palladium" machine.
What the FAQ does say is that it would be hard to create a similar trust architecture under Linux, due to patents and other legal reasons. Which is something I don't think most Linux users are gonna be missing anyway.
There's still hope... (Score:2, Interesting)
But it will also refuse to play certain content if it is not digitally signed by Microsoft or an authorised party.
I'm still very perplex by these assertions, since really, playing an mp3 has no tie to the kernel (you decode in user mode, you send to a wave device).
That implies that a) the chip will restrict access to the wave device, b) it will restrict access to files...
Both sound kinda ludicrous to me... Would that mean games will have to digitally sign their sound fx? If not, will the kernel have some way of knowing *what* a file contains (semantically)? CPUs are simple devices, they don't do stuff like "POUR cupofcoffe in eax IF coffeemaker = full" ... no they do simple stuff like "INC eax".
I really think there will be ways to circumvent this thing pretty fast. What scares me is the fact that they think having such a chip will somehow assert the OS currently running has not been tampered with, and hence it can't be a malicsious OS... and at that point send in work loads from different users (basically making a big trusted network). This is just an invitation for mass viruses and global chaos.
So... (Score:5, Funny)
I'll get my coat.
Re:So... (Score:2)
ah-hmm.
That doesn't even make sense in the context!
Article is old and incorrect (Score:4, Insightful)
"Comments that looked like they were from Pat Moorhead on an Aussie Web site are not from Pat Moorhead, the firm has just told us.
In fact, according to an AMD UK representative, AMD's Opteron products will run any kind of content in the future -- contrary to the report in The Age, on which our original report, below, was based.
Part of the content in The Age failed to distinguish between comments Moorhead made and conjecture, AMD said.
AMD, in fact, claims it is the "good guy", and even though it is a member of the "trusted computing" initiative, will allow users to opt in whether to use this type of technology or not.
"There is nothing [in Hammer] that could actually prevent a user running unlicensed content," the representative from AMD said."
Make damn sure to check the most current of facts before posting FUD, fellow
Ya know... (Score:2, Insightful)
-jhon
This is just silly (Score:3, Interesting)
That's up to the OS and individual applications to (try to) determine and enforce.
The only thing that changes in a "secure" CPU is the fact that programs and (especially) the operating system will be able to identify that CPU uniquely (by a serial number), similar to what the Pentium III already does (but you can turn it off on the PIII, and I think also on the P4). Then some programs will probably refuse to play certain files if they're not tagged with that CPU id. Ex., if you buy a "secure" song on-line, or if you rip one of your CD's, it probably won't play on your friend's computer (or on yours if you change the CPU, and that's why MS needs to work with CPU makers, to make sure the CPU id can be managed by the OS).
The rest is just a lot of marketing hype to get money out of the RIAA and similar associations. "See, we are working on this 'secure' hardware that won't play copyrighted music, but it's very expensive to develop and we really don't have enough money, what with this recession and everything, so if you could fork over a couple of million, we'd appreciate it..."
It's a potential gold mine for (some) IT companies, just like the Y2K bug.
RMN
~~~
Re:Yet another troll... (Score:3, Insightful)
This system is very bad news. Opt-out will be very short lived, as I'm sure MicroSoft expects Windows and many Windows apps to be broken very quickly, and the hackers will tell people to turn off TCPA to run the hacked binaries. Then the RIAA/MPAA will insist that the government make a regulation that requires people to stop making chips where it can be turned off.
Other options (Score:2)
cleetus
Re:Other options (Score:2)
Which all means I won't be buying THEIR motherboards or CPUs.
I wonder ? (Score:2)
Re:I wonder ? (Score:2)
Opt-out, open source and the rest of the world (Score:2, Insightful)
Ok, so the US gets all this restrictive legislation passed - the cabal has their way and implements hardware DRM to enforce it while the rest of the world has a good belly laugh. The arrogance to think that there won't be alternative hardware available from Asia - or anywhere else for that matter - is stupifying.
The emerging markets for new technology is not the US but the parts of the world that don't have it now. If MS, Intel, etc are only selling locked down software on 4GHZ chips, why wouldn't a consumer in say China choose Linux/BSD/etc on a say a VIA processor and chipset that doesn't implement DRM?
This is all such a waste... and economic suicide for US technology companies. To think they can impose their self interests outside their borders - after they thumb their nose at organizations such as the world court - is inexplicable.
This nonsense can't be enforced and in the end the 'bootleg' companies will win.
Prohabition, speakeasys and organized crime - funny how history repeats itself.
What I would like to know is ... (Score:2)
I may end up buying a LOT of P4s in a big, big hurry.
Strange? (Score:2)
The only thing which this could cause problems with would be if I downloaded movies and MP3s off of kazaa, but since I have a 56k connection, I don't bother.
I can't blame the evil powers that be for trying *something* to protect their interests, and to be honest, I'd rather have it so I need the new kickass AMD processor than have it so the MPAA and RIAA can DoS everyone they please or suing the creators of a GPL'd DVD Player.
So who wants to do something about the latter measures?
Let 'em know ... (Score:5, Informative)
that you won't buy processors that support Palladium.
Intel backed-off CPU-ID's (for the Pentium III) quickly when
they realized that it would cost them sales. In general,
pissing off your best customers is not a smart long term
business practice.
If you write - remember: be concise and polite:
Intel:
Chairman: Andy S. Grove
CEO: Craig R. Barrett
Corporate Offices:
2200 Mission College Blvd.
Santa Clara, California 95052, USA
AMD:
Chairman: W. J. Sanders III
CEO: Hector de J. Ruiz
Corporate Offices:
One AMD Place
P.O. Box 3453
Sunnyvale CA 94088, USA
Won't help (Score:3, Insightful)
This may be different but (Score:2)
Transmeta (Score:2)
Regect corporate content! (Score:2)
Support garage bands. See local shows with local talent. See an indie film at your local arthouse or the MFA. By a PowerPC, Alpha, or Sparc. Download a free or opensource MMORPG/RTS/MUD on the internet and spend a few hours making friends with humans all over the world, and in the process create your own DRM-free content!
I know this is slashdot, and we only care about freedom/justice/rights until Blizzard puts out a new game, Disney imports some anime, or George Lucas belches, but come on. There is so much good content available out there. You don't *have* to buy/rent your entertainment from Viacom. If you don't buy DRM enabled content, you don't have to worry about owning a DRM enabled machine. I am sure I will always have a unixy (Linux/BSD/whatever) box on which to run my indie content.
Of course, you can just ignore this message, and go back to downloading your Divx rip of AOTC on kazaa while bitching that your "rights" are being trampled.
Please WAKE UP people. (Score:2)
There is no fucking way someone who works at AMD says by accident that they're including palladium. They either are or they're not and theres no internal confusion. It's a BFD.
The opteron still has palladium. Don't be fooled by comments carefully crafted to confuse you into thinking there's no palladium. When they say "it will still run unsecured content." They are just playing off the fact that palladium hardware allows you to run unsecured content when it runs in usecured mode.
Don't fool yourselves, most windows lusers will be running longhorn with secure mode on. That's how it all starts.
If you like your fair use rights, free software, competition in the software market, low prices, commodity computing... Get ready to bend over and be thoroughly pounded by the big devil in redmond for the rest of your breathing existance.
Maybe it's time for PC architecture to die (Score:2)
The only thing that the PC has going for it is that it's cheap, open, and completely commoditized.
After Palladium, I doubt very much that PCs will be continue to drop in price, and they definitely won't be open.
I'm willing to bet significant amounts of users will switch to alternative platforms, including, I imagine, the entire open-source community and many nations outside the US.
Intel and AMD have shot themselves in the foot, as well as all other hardware vendors who depend on making parts for PC's.
Possible reason for the delay? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Opt out (Score:5, Insightful)
Law 1) Make it illegal to disable DRM unless the companies say you can (this is already in place).
Law 2) Make DRM mandatory in all hardware devices (currently being pushed hard by the ??AA).
Law 3) Require DRM hardware to ONLY run DRM-compliant software (not too hard to imagine).
Boom. That's the end of legal free (and Free) software in the USA. It would also be the end of programming as a hobby; programming would require expensive signatures in order to be allowed to run.
Re:Opt out (Score:2)
and only in USA.
Unless US Government would pass export laws that forbidden export of non-DRM electronics, like they did to cryptos.
This is unlikely to happen, but in view of its track records...hmm...
Two-thirds of the studios run free software (Score:2)
Law 3) Require DRM hardware to ONLY run DRM-compliant software (not too hard to imagine).
Neither TCPA nor Palladium does this.
That's the end of legal free (and Free) software in the USA.
The federal government uses Free software. The news media use Free software (largely in BSD and Linux based web servers). Heck, two-thirds of the Big Nine media publishers (MPAA studios and RIAA labels), such as AOL Time Warner, Sony, BMG, Fox, Paramount, and Universal, run free web server software such as Apache or AOLserver on their web sites. (Disney and EMI run IIS, and MGM runs Netscape Enterprise Server.)
OOO flamebait! I'll respond! (Score:3, Insightful)
I have one: AMD wants to stay in business. M$ is THE ONLY OS that works with most every peripheral and software package on a consistant basis. Why? Because M$ is a monopoly and everyone knows it. I want to be a Linux fan but there is no Linux company that will get off their ass and make a version where I don't have to compile shit. The end user should not have to recompile the kernel. Linux has a great future but that is the FUTURE. AMD needs an OS NOW. Since linux can't do it who else will? M$. Businesses are here to make money and to stay afloat AMD went ahead an sold their souls. Would you have it that Intel was the only processor company out there? I certainly wouldn't.
Re:OOO flamebait! I'll respond! (Score:2)
OK, goofball. I actually hope you don't want to be a Linux fan, because you obviously don't know what in the hell you are talking about...
You can't make Linux cross-platform/multi-distribution and not have to compile programs. Every Linux distribution is a little bit different. They all rely on shared libraries for things to get done. If you download a Gnome app, it requires GTK. KDE apps require QT. Other apps have similar needs. You *can* include the libraries with Linux applications, and you won't need to compile the program for architecture or file locations, but that defeats one of Linux's main benefits.
Besides... You must be really damn lazy if you can't type 3 simple commands to compile a program.
Got a better solution? Write your own OS. I personally like compiling my programs. It is simple, and gives me complete control over the finished/installed app. Plus, I know that I can run it on any architecture that I could ever wish to use, with some minor tweaks.
What you are basically asking for is for everyone to support only *one* Linux distribution. Gee... Where does that leave us? With another Microsoft-esque solution? (Insert obligatory Red Hat/Suse/Connectiva/SCO/TurboLinux/UnitedLinux flame here)
Re:*sigh* (Score:2)
Re:Buy a sparc (Score:2, Insightful)
Also, I think the Solaris kernel is really good, better than Linux IMHO, except for the hardware driver availability, which doesn't matter for a sparc box. On the oher hand the rest of the OS takes serious amounts of work before it is usable for anything. RedHat, for instance, is much more complete. Sun should really spend some time integrating the OSS tools, which are far better than the propritary SVR5 sh-t that they are shipping. Why do they ship vi instead of vim? Why Why Why?
They should just download a version of RedHat and use that as a guide of what to include in a modern lunix distro.
One thing that Solaris has that I miss on Linux is a good auditd, but...
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:5, Interesting)
If you turn it on, you will at least have the option--an option I plan not to exercize.
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:5, Insightful)
For some reason I have the strong suspicion that most pirated videos or MP3s will NOT be Palladium protected. . .
Call it a huntch.
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:2)
In a way, it really gives you a reason to dump Windows and invest in an alternative. If the scenario is headed for the bleakness you expect, DRM restrictions are going to cripple Windows usability to such a degree that it will become a rock attached to Microsoft's ankle. I would actually like to see this. It won't happen, though, because Microsoft, whether through incompetence or brilliant design, will make sure that its DRM protections are always hackable just enough to keep warez dudes from switching away.
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:2)
Yeah, but I still don't appreciate being forced to pay for it next time I get a faster CPU. For what it's worth, if either Intel or AMD offers the cheaper non-Palladium chip they've got my bussiness.
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Nope (Score:5, Interesting)
I disagree. He stated that Palladium can be disabled. It's a technical fact, and it also happens to be correct. Not nonsense.
Like playing Quake 3, or Counter-Strike? Better enjoy them while you can...soon you won't be able to play them without palladium enabled.
a) Learn about Quake. Quake's insane success was mostly because of massive online acceptance which was mostly due to piracy. This increased the value of the game, and sold more copies. id admitted as much. Quake is without a doubt the single *worst* example you could have chosen of a piece of software having incentive to have strong DRM. Almost any other piece of software would be a more valid argument.
b) This is tough for Windows warez-playing gamers. I have a tough time feeling sorry for them. It'll never affect Linux -- to do Palladium, you'd need universal blessed, signed binaries of the kernel. That will happen when hell freezes over, because Linus can't even stand distribution of binary code, much less universalized binary code.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:Nope (Score:2)
Re:Well I guess we can't win (Score:2)
This will lead to some restrictions in that you might not be able to run new software, but then you can just go and run the DRM-cracked copies that will take hours to surface. At this stage the ideology of DRM will be valid as the only people not using it are those running warez.
I think that the worries are more potential than real - if DRM is invasively implemented there will be a backlash; it's doubtful it could stand up in court (just show a Linux user running legal software with DRM disabled as a display of the stupidity of it all).
Re:Hopefully ... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Oh great (Score:2)
Really though, I doubt that this will have any real impact on non-Windows software just yet.
Personally, I hope that it stops piracy, so that people will stop pirating Windows programs and use GNU/GPL software instead. Windows wouldn't nearly be as big if people were forced to stop pirating software. Hardly any Windows users that I know actually pay for their stuff. It's kinda ironic, isn't it? I use Linux, yet support my favorite Linux software companies better than most Windows users.
Re:The virtual machine approach will help (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I don't get it (Score:2)