Blu-Ray To Punish Users for Modifying Hardware 557
datemenatalie writes "As reported on Engadget, consumers should expect punishment for tinkering with their Blu-ray players, as many have done with current DVD players, for instance to remove regional coding. The new, Internet-connected and secure players will report any "hack" and the device can be disabled remotely. As the article asks, "Are they talking about PVP-OPM techniques and rejected HDMI keys, or something else far more sinister? Because apparently "A hacked player is any player that is doing something it's not supposed to do," which open to a pretty fair amount of interpretation--most of which egregious.""
I'm sorry dave (Score:5, Funny)
Enjoy bambi!
Re:I'm sorry dave (Score:5, Funny)
Bambi!!! Bambi Woods... [adult-pornstar-mall.com] mmmmm....
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:I'm sorry dave (Score:5, Interesting)
Granted, the parent post is making a joke, and whether you think it's funny or not, it speaks to the fact that once we relinquish control of our hardware to a 3rd party, there's a precident for things this silly.
If your Blu-Ray player can tell on you and disable itself because you've violated some sort of EULA, that same sort of mechanism could enable governments to turn off your hardware when they decide your doing something with it they don't think is kosher.
"Gosh honey, I shouldn't have tried to play that Fahrenheit 9/11 Blu-Ray disk. GD Patriot Act 3."
Re:I'm sorry dave (Score:3, Funny)
No one uses laser sights anymore.
I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:5, Insightful)
Savage times, those were.
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:5, Funny)
We do have the records, but DRM prohibits us from showing them.
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:5, Insightful)
What would happen if say, a company that made toasters could detect what you were toasting. Toast an english bagel in the morning, come home at night and find out someone has come into your home and cut the power cord off your toaster.
I, for one, think it is criminal act for a company to destroy *my* property because they didn't like what I was using it for. I can only hope the courts will find likewise.
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:3, Funny)
"Project Mayham" (from Fight Club) is looking more and more sane every day...
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:5, Insightful)
Seem to recall that in some state where radar detectors are (or were) illegal, state troopers used to destroy the illegal devices on the spot, when found. But later on, this was challenged in court as punishment without due process, and won.
Allowing this summary punishment seems to send the message that vigilantism is OK, so long as you are a big company. The same behavior on the part of individuals (such as defacing a website whose political views you don't like) usually gets them some quiet time behind bars.
The other message: justice is not blind.
Well you won't have to (Score:5, Insightful)
Well, an effective consumer boycott was organized. People were informed about how much Divx sucked, and so they didn't buy it. Their VHS tapes were good enough and they stuck with that. In the end, Circut City took a bath to the tune of $100 million and Divx died.
The same can be done here. DVDs are good enough for most people. Those without HDTVs really couldn't give two shits and even for those with, it's not like DVDs are an eyesore. Yes, I'd love to have more HD content, but I don't cry when I have to watch a DVD.
So work to convince consumers you know to boycott Blu-ray, they can keep buying DVDs, just no Blu-ray discs or players. Most importantly, convince the videophiles you know. These are the ones who will spend the money on the inital players that will allow the price to lower for the mass market. If the videophile community decides not to buy it, it'll be a major financial hardhsip.
That's all it will take. The electronics companies are happy to play ball with the media companies when it doesn't affect their bottom line. However if they are producing devices no one will buy, they'll get pissed and stop making them. They are also the ones with the real power, the electronics industry is FAR larger than the entertainment industry.
Depends (Score:3, Interesting)
Well what you explain to them is that in the case of ANY mod it might get disabled, espically mods they like to do.
The media industry is paranoid abo
Re:Well you won't have to (Score:5, Insightful)
They market towards the high-ends, and in this case, the videophiles. My guess is Blu-Ray players will not be that much less expensive than a PS3 which can play Blu-Ray.
"Mom and Dad" or "that guy from accounting" wouldn't know the difference between Blu-Ray and DVD. They would say "but I just switched over to DVD from VHS not long ago."
No, this technology is definitely geared towards the tech-savvy and high-end videophiles, until (if) it replaces DVD and becomes a simple standard. That is unless HD-DVD doesn't beat it, and it probably will. And these people tend to be people who know what DRM is, and what Sony is doing with it for Blu-Ray.
Sorry Sony, but it looks like Blu-Ray is going to join your other list of winners: Betamax, Atrac, Minidisc, PSP, PSX, etc...
Any way you look at it, it seems the PSP, PS3 and Blu-Ray are going to be the end of Sony.
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:3, Interesting)
Soon we'll need power, content, internet
Oh, and special eye-stabber headmounted units just in case we do see un-paid for content.
Re:I hope we have a solid record for the future (Score:5, Funny)
Yeah (Score:3, Insightful)
Or what about the seriously disabled? They just don't want to work, right? It couldn't have anything to do with the fact that no one in their right mind would ever hire them.
Americans are such monstrous, horrible people.
hack hack hack (Score:5, Funny)
Re:hack hack hack (Score:5, Interesting)
Not even that. (Score:5, Interesting)
Then you re-route their lookups to your own site.
Then all of them download the destruct code.
Re:hack hack hack (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Hack it the way they want, including completely disableing the internet protection.
2. Buy one from a company that doesn't HAVE the dial home stuff. You honestly think there aren't going to be a million asian knockoffs that work just as well but without the built in assholeness?
Wouldn't it be trivial to packet sniff the DVD player's "All's good, go play the DVD!" packets, then set up an emulator on a LAN and outsmart the player?
Or if you REALLY wanted to nip this asinine practice in the bud, DDOS the idiots' servers, so suddenly all these people wanting to play their new Blue Ray DVD players get a "Timeout error. Authentication cannot be accessed. Please try again later." error. Enough times of THAT happening and the public will be out for blood -- the company's blood.
So.... (Score:5, Interesting)
Verification systems that require any work on the consumer end will never work 100%. It's just too easy to get around.
And why am I buying the assinine secured player instead of the grey market Chinese one, exactly?
Re:So.... (Score:2)
Re:So.... (Score:2)
Re:So.... (Score:3, Interesting)
Comment removed (Score:5, Funny)
Re:So.... (Score:5, Funny)
If they did it right, they'd get you (Score:4, Insightful)
If the transactions are encrypted for each individual player, you wouldn't know from traffic analysis exactly what the player was retrieving. It might be pulling back an applet to test whether it was hacked or not. If the proper response does not come back, you never get another disc key ever again.
This is not to say that the manufacturers aren't likely to screw things up again (or even several more times), but after a few cycles of lockdown and hiring some decent crypto experts they're likely to wind up with something like that.
Guess this is where it has to be stopped !! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Guess this is where it has to be stopped !! (Score:3, Interesting)
Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:2)
Re:Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:2)
Re:Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:2, Insightful)
Why not pick at BOTH? (Score:5, Insightful)
The entertainment industry is running around shooting at people, and Microsoft just happens to be selling them guns
Re:Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:5, Interesting)
KFG
Re:Ahhh...more Entertainment industry fun (Score:5, Funny)
Wait a moment... (Score:5, Insightful)
And why, if your going to be tinkering in the first place, you don't just remove the internet connection? Does it serve a purpose? Or is it more like the DirectTV systems, making sure your only getting what you paid for?
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:2)
This is insane. This DRM stuff has to stop!
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Interesting)
#37:
#7:
Between 'em, these two posters say it all.
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:2)
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's about modifying it. Whether or not you use it for illegal purposes doesn't matter. I could use the car mods for speeding, but I could use the car mods to make it more responsive. It depends on how it's used.
As for affecting the company.....so if you use non-company parts in your car, are you doing something illegal? So I buy a DVD recorder, and mod it with different firmware. Isn't it the same thing as modding your car to do something that might be construded as "illegal"? Is buying a gun for sport shooting (not that I like guns, I don't) mean that you are going to use it for illegal endeavours?
I think once you BUY something, you can do whatever you want with it. You can take it apart, whatever. Not that it matters, but people will mod their Blu-Ray players. I'll be one of them.
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Insightful)
Nonsense. If, as a result of a dangerous engine hack, (modded) Fords started to explode on every street corner, you think Ford's share price wouldn't fall?
Modifying your Blu-ray player to play region locked discs or pirated discs however, has a (imaginary or real, not the point of this post) negative influence for the people selling movies.
Wait, you're saying that whether the effect is imaginary or real is irrelevant for your point? Whoa. So if Ford's lawyers stood up and said that painting racing stripes on your car would attract the attention of hostile aliens from Saturn, suddenly it would be reasonable for them to object to you painting them, because they had an (imaginary or real, not the point of this post) explanation for why it was bad?
This isn't like adding a new motor to the disc drive to make the disc spin faster, its modding it to do something illegal.
Except that everyone I know has removed the region coding from their DVD player, and not one of them owns a single pirated disk. Instead, they own a lot of perfectly legal and legitimate disks that they have purchased at the full retail price. Just from countries they happen not to live in. So, no - in my experience, modding DVD players is not done to do something illegal. The act of modding itself may have been illegal under the DMCA or local equivalents, but that's the only law anyone I know has broken. They certainly haven't stolen any movies...
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you ever heard of a Homeowner's Association?
That's a little different (Score:5, Insightful)
The difference here is that consumers have no vote, no control. They are told "Here is how it is and there's nothing you can do." They won't give you your money back for your disabled unit, and since it's disabled you can't sell it, you have no recourse.
I'm not a huge HOA fan, but they really are different. If I have a complaint with my HOA, it's usually not that hard to come to a compramise. If I have a complaint with Sony, they'll tell me to pack sand.
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Insightful)
Can someone explaine to me why its not illegal for a company to punish a consumer for tinkering with a product that that consumer had purchased?
You've touched on what may be the most ominous thing about this. We're living in the age of the EULA, and it looks like they're trying to set a precedent for extending that model ("You're not purchasing it, you're paying for the right to use it as long as we feel like letting you") from software to hardware.
"Under the terms of this License Agreement, Ford Motor Co. may revoke your right to drive this automobile if you buy parts or seek service from any person or entity not officially licensed by Ford to provide such parts or services..."
It's a Brave New World...
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:3, Interesting)
"Under the terms of this License Agreement, Ford Motor Co. may revoke your right to drive this automobile if you buy parts or seek service from any person or entity not officially licensed by Ford to provide such parts or services..."
This is nothing new. Nor, for that matter, is it new for the entertainment industry to seek control not only over the content of the media but also the physical equipment upon which the media was played.
Along the Camden, New Jersey riverfront once strode a mighty giant: T
Re:Wait a moment... (Score:5, Interesting)
Because the companies are the ones who buy the laws, not the consumers.
This is why it is, in fact, illegal for the consumer to tinker with the product that that consumer has purchased. [copyright.gov] (So long as you aren't a believer in that whole "a legislative act contrary to the Constitution is not law" thing.)
The companies can do things like write a law which completely alters the fundamental balance of copyright law, and pass it directly to Jesse Helms who drops it into congress where it passes unanimously on a voice vote because not one single member of congress has read it. The consumers... well, maybe if they write enough letters and make enough noise for enough months they can convince a congressman to give a speech in their favor, which will be written into the congressional record and then forgotten about. If the same group makes enough noise for over a decade maybe a law on the subject they've been agitating about will be put up for debate, though God knows what it will look like by the time it gets through committee.
I mean, okay, in theory the consumers are the ones 'buying' the laws, because the consumers are the ones who vote. However
emulate the player with other hardware (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:emulate the player with other hardware (Score:2)
Or you could do it the other way around and emulate the manufacturer's server for the player.
They need to look into the history of Divx (Score:2, Insightful)
Any tethered, DRM-laden DVD player will be about as successful in the marketplace as a 220-volt rubber duck.
Do they just not care if they sell any of these, or what?
Re:They need to look into the history of Divx (Score:4, Insightful)
Must they keep up this futile effort? (Score:2)
Re:Must they keep up this futile effort? (Score:2)
Region Coding = Irony (Score:5, Interesting)
As a person keen on foreign films, I know I won't be buying a Blu-Ray that can't be made region-free. If no such player exists, I'll just end up pirating films released exclusively on Blu-Ray.
Re:Region Coding = Irony (Score:2, Insightful)
Frankly I think they see most of the world market (e.g., China) as a burden rather than a benefit. Especially given the piracy which originates from that front...
As for this Blu-Ray madness, I think it's more a reflection of the corporate schizophrenia of Sony --- you know
Well shit... (Score:2)
Looks like I won't be getting a Blu-ray.
DVD Jon (Score:2)
And they think this is going to sell... (Score:2)
I know that the vast majority of people are not much more than cattle, but when they are asked to fork over several hundred dollars if not more for an entertainment device that they can do with out but have expensive restrictions built in most will recognize a bad deal for what it is.
If by some amazing
Note to self (Score:2)
Sony
Matsushita
Samsung
Philips
Dell
Hewlett-Packard
Apple
Hitachi
Remember DivX anyone? (not the video codec either) (Score:2, Interesting)
The original Reuters article is pretty light on details though. What happens if you don't have an internet connction? And where will these players be supposedly 'reporting' to? Not to mention who is going to be paying for this whole infrastructure of 'player monitoring'? This is one step away from becoming a 'service' rather than just a piece of hardware.
The Blu-Ray folks should remember why DivX failed in the first place.
Yet Another Reason Not To Upgrade (Score:2)
Dog, I'm happy I'm still managing fine with CD-RWs...
History... (Score:4, Insightful)
Wait a min.. that might be a GOOD thing.
Re:History... (Score:2)
I think you're talking about DIVX (the disk/player format promoted by Circuit City -- not the codec).
Divx players ring a bell? I say it's DOA. (Score:3, Insightful)
Wrong Direction (Score:2)
If users can't get around rediculous, asine and frivolous DRM which everyone is used to ignoring like Region Coding (which in itself is a bad idea for the same reason as this... just not to the same extent) then they are just going to go a
Regional Coding (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't like the idea of hardware that reports back to base. If we go in that direction our TVs will report us when we channel flip to avoid commercials.
YOUR TV HAS BEEN DISABLED. SKIPPING COMMERCIALS IS THEFT!
Re:Regional Coding (Score:5, Informative)
Umm, you do realise that many Digital TV services and ALL IPTV services do this already, right?
Re:Regional Coding (Score:5, Informative)
Sure. Nielson is tracking Tivo usage http://www.koeppeldirect.com/infomercial-media-res ources-pvr-article.htm
OpenTV, the middleware used by DirecTV has audience measurement code http://www.opentv.com/products/middleware_products .html
For IPTV services, the "tuning" is done at the DSLAM end, not in the consumers home, so if they log it, they have every zap you ever make at any time. The best case is a reference in the ToS where they promise (like Tivo) to only use this information anonymously.
So far, there are no consequenses made public for this, but the technology is in place already for the most part.
Old news, incidentally (Score:5, Interesting)
It's worth noting that at the time the last story was run, at least one slashdotter was disputing its veracity [slashdot.org], but I don't know how much credence you can put in that.
Hi-Def XviD (Score:4, Insightful)
AFAIK, Blu-Ray and its equivalent (HD-DVD or whatever) are being developed in order to provide Hi-Definition video and/or longer video per disc.
Why would I want Blu-Ray? As soon as Hi-Def becomes standard (or even before), it'll be available via BitTorrent compressed to less than the size of a standard DVD at HD quality. I can then watch Hi-Def films on my existing hardware.
So if this hack-proof protection is designed to foil copyright infringers, it's going to fail. Copyright infringers will simply use their existing hardware to view Hi-Def on standard DVDs on standard XviD players. Why would we criminals buy Blu-Ray in the first place?
Re:Hi-Def XviD (Score:3, Informative)
I'm sorry, it is *impossible* to encode an MPEG4 (using any presently available encoder) with that resolution and fit 120+ minutes of video in 700MB (i.e. ~750kbit/s) without introducing artifacts. Anyone who says otherwise is welcome to prove it by linking to such a video. For purposes of comparison, source material (unc
Sounds like a class action suit to me. (Score:2)
The first mistake they make, expect a suit.
Also, what about people that dont have internet, i guess they are just out of luck and cant watch movies at some point if blu-ray becomes 'the standard'?
and no i didnt RTFA.. it wouldnt load.
Original Reuters article (Score:2)
Of all the stupid things (Score:5, Interesting)
If I open something up and tinker with it, then fine, I void the warranty. But for companies to think they have the right to monitor what we do with their products to the point that they can deploy countermeasures just has to be stopped.
I think it's time for www.{stop|avoid|donotbuy|FU}blu-ray.com sites to start popping up. As previous posted stated, hopefully this will go the way of divx (the old crippled DVD players divx that is).
Now of course this would have been a nice way to kill off the floppy drive...have it phone home when it detects user-modified DSHD.
Re:Of all the stupid things (Score:5, Funny)
Until this "toy" shorts and you have to bury your wife in a Y-shaped coffin.
Boycott BR (Score:2, Insightful)
what we need to do (Score:2)
First system hacked... (Score:2)
Huh? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Huh? (Score:5, Informative)
Now, what MIGHT happen is that the new players will allow DVDs to run code that checks for modified players and refuse to allow themselves to be played if it finds such a modification. That is more what we need to be concerned about.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Insightful)
This brings up a bigger issue, how are they going to enforce this on portable DVD players? Kind of hard to get network access to validate your DVDs when you are on the road or on an airplane.
This wi
Re:Huh? (Score:4, Insightful)
IMO, they will build the check directly into the DVD, which can be upgraded each time they release a new movie.
Re:Huh? (Score:3, Interesting)
Maybe you wouldn't have to. You'd only have to plug it in to the power outlet...
But seeing how there is major development happening in turning AC power grids into broadband delivery systems as well, it'd be the same thing.
Hell - it's probably going to get to the point of your microwave reporting to a server what brand of RFID tagged popcorn your having at 8:41 PM, Monday.
I wonder if there would be a market fo
Same old Sony Story (Score:3, Insightful)
Do you still respect the laws? (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't.
See, I read stories like this, and regardless how many people tell me I'm wrong, I honestly do feel justification for all the movies I download.
I feel no pity for them. They've done this to themselves, and apparently they haven't learned their lesson.
If they can fuck us, then there's absolutely no reason for us to fuck them harder (ooh dirty).
Just stop buying the DVDs and download them instead. Do your part and fight back since none of us have billions to persuade lawmakers with.
Helping the Black/Grey Market (Score:5, Insightful)
Don't the Major players understand that they are creating a market for for the off-brand Korean/Chinese/Asian manufacturers to sell consumer electronics without all this crap?
Unless the U.S. starts seriously inderdicting consumer electronics that don't meet RIAA/MPAA standards people ARE going to buy these things via mailorder from overseas.
The Chinese already don't respect copyright OR patents. What makes them think they will not see this as an opportunity to make money and jump into the market? They already make practically ALL of the components that go into the "Branded" versions that will go to the U.S. It's gunna be trivial for them to duplicate (in quality) a Blue-Ray DVD player without all the DRM crap on it.
Virii to the rescue! (Score:4, Insightful)
Will there be any early adopters? (Score:4, Interesting)
support nightmare for the hardware manufacter. (Score:5, Insightful)
It's worse than Russia! (Score:5, Funny)
Guess I'll stick with plain old DVD, then (Score:4, Interesting)
It's exactly this kind of paranoid, 'the consumers are our enemy trying to rip us off' thinking that is going to lead to the major electronics corporations losing very large amounts of money for the next several years. And I have no sympathy. They want us to buy new hardware because DVD players have become so cheap they don't really offer much opportunity for profit. Okay, but what reasons are they giving people to want to buy them?
"They have high-definition picture quality!"
So what? 99% of people don't have HD TV, and aren't likely to for at least 5 years, maybe 10, unless HD TV undergoes the same kind of astronomical price-drop that we saw with DVD players. So no advantage there.
"Er, you'll be able to get the definitive versions of your favourite movies!"
So the Original, Special Edition, Director's Cut and Ultimate versions that we've been buying for the past seven or eight years are just chopped liver?
"Oh, um, shit... I know! If you don't buy our pirate-proof new versions of movies you already own on boring old DVD, the terrorists will win!"
And since 9 out of 10 people wouldn't even think to buy pirate copies of DVDs in the first place, they get offended at being accused of being criminals. (And then some of them will think, 'Wait, I can get pirate DVDs? Where?')
Considering the dismal state of cinema at the moment, there's no 'killer app' for BR/HD-DVD. Are millions of people really going to drop the best part of a grand just on a player to watch the new King Kong in HD? I already have all of my favourite movies of all time on DVD. I have no intention of buying some expensive, DRM-crippled, home-phoning piece of kit that won't even offer better image quality without me shelling out thousands of pounds on a new HD TV so that I can watch them again with a sharper picture.
For most people, DVD is 'good enough', and that's how the corporations have made a rod for their own backs. It's the same reason why DVD-A and SACD failed miserably to replace CD. The increase in quality is negligible when weighed against the increase in price. It's not like VHS vs DVD, where all the failings of the old medium (low quality picture, tedious FF and REW, dropout over time, etc) instantly became obvious the first time you watched a DVD. With DVD vs BR/HD-DVD, the only way to tell any difference is to spend the price of a car on a new HD TV set. This may come as a surprise to the electronics companies, but very few people are willing to do that!
Also, slowly but surely, even Joe Public is starting to realise that obtrusive DRM that's there entirely for the studio's benefit is not necessarily a good thing. It might be something as simple as frustration when the tracks he got from Napster don't work on his iPod now, but when he wonders, "Hey, why the hell does my new DVD player need to be connected to the phone line to work? What's that all about? Is it going to add to my bill? What if someone tries to phone when I'm watching a movie?" as well...
And something that the studios don't seem to have considered - right now, they're making a huge amount of unexpected profit from releasing old TV shows on DVD. One problem: they won't be able to do the same on BR/HD, where the selling point is the better picture quality. Most of these shows were edited on video, so bar minor sprucing-up, that's as good as the picture will ever get. Sure, being able to put a whole season of Star Trek or Buffy or whatever on a single disc is convenient... but then trying to charge between 50 and 100 dollars/pounds/euros for just one disc (that looks no better than the DVD version) doesn't look like very good value to the punter, does it?
SHORT /. MEMORY (Score:3, Informative)
The encryption system uses a broad tree of keys and subkeys so that the player can disable an entire subset of media by denying decryption functionality for parts of the tree.
The player can be Internet connected but does not have to be. However the spec IIRC does allow executable code or related commands in part of the DVD, which seems to be protected with a different key.
The player is proposed to have a wireless LAN adapter which may be sold separately, presumably this would simultaneously serve media to clients in your home while providing a keyring and monitor to police usage across the LAN.
The spec as proposed appears to guarantee that there will be events from time to time triggered by media or net connection (or even from media or programs on another pc on the LAN) causing portions of the key tree to be disabled, enabled, or updated. The ultimate thermonuclear threat on this platform is to disable the entire tree which may either render the device unusable completely, or may just let you use DVDs that are unprotected (if any exist in that format).
It sounds like each player will have a unique ID as well. While disablings of keys may not discriminate between IDs in the beginning, it is entirely possible that hacking your player could even end up in your being blacklisted in some way, or "infecting" your entire network with commands destroying functionality.
Personally I despise this introduction of military-grade security into my home by big entertainment companies and will boycott and fight against this any way I can. I already do not buy CDs or DVDs outright and do not feel I suffer unduly. This initiative is sure to make your home a battleground for all kinds of cyberwarfare that make you nostalgic in 10 years for the cute and relatively limited and harmless spyware and spam threats of today.
Re:Internet connected? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Internet connected? (Score:3, Insightful)
Ditto. I have an HDTV camcorder, I'd love to be able to buy HDTV DVDs, but I'm sure not going to do so if they put this kind of crap on them.
I just don't think the early adopters are going to accept this, and if they don't then Joe Sixpack will continue watching his DVDs. To me this seems to be DAT Mark 2, where a good format is destroyed by stupid 'copy protection' nonsense.
Re:Internet connected? (Score:3, Insightful)
Maybe people would even start watching Bollywood and Chinese movies released in that format (if you could just get them used to subtitles) :-)
Re:The secret is.. (Score:2)
Re:Get some priorities!!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Get some priorities!!!! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I wonder about Joe Sixpack (Score:2)
The problem is, from their perspective, Joe Sixpack isn't an early adopter. He already has a DVD player, so he won't buy Blu-Ray until movies don't come out on DVD anymore. Movies still come out on tape, so I'm not too worried about that. He'll need it to play those HDTV-format movies, but one thing that's clear in r