HDCP
Posted: Tue Mar 21, 2006 6:26 am
Here's an article about the few LCDs that currently support HDCP:
http://www.firingsquad.com/hardware/win ... d_roundup/
Apparently, the new Windows is gonna require new LCDs with this HDCP built in. If you want to see HD on your computer, you'll have to replace your monitors and get one with HDCP. Of course, you could still watch the content on your current monitors, but at reduced resolution which defeats the point of paying for an HD-DVD. Also, video cards don't support it yet either, go figure.
Anyone else think that HDCP is gonna fail in the end just like DVD encryption failed? Just because the links from the player to the displays and speakers are secured doesn't mean that the content on the disk can't be attacked directly. Even if the DVD drive has protections built in, someone's likely to make a DVD drive which can have the firmware "upgraded" to allow digital copying of the content on an HD-DVD. Once it's bits on a HD, it's going to be fair game for transcoding.
Anyways, between the extra cost of buying a new LCD and the futility of actually trying to protect the content, I don't see working in the next few years, and only minimally possible in the longer term. I think manufacturers should save their half-penny per screen for HDCP and thumb their noses at the MPAA.
Oh yeah, if Windows strongly supports the protections on the software level, I think it's going to push more and more people towards linux and other OS's to get around the limitations. I think that MythTV will also get much more popular if this is the road MS chooses.
http://www.firingsquad.com/hardware/win ... d_roundup/
Apparently, the new Windows is gonna require new LCDs with this HDCP built in. If you want to see HD on your computer, you'll have to replace your monitors and get one with HDCP. Of course, you could still watch the content on your current monitors, but at reduced resolution which defeats the point of paying for an HD-DVD. Also, video cards don't support it yet either, go figure.
Anyone else think that HDCP is gonna fail in the end just like DVD encryption failed? Just because the links from the player to the displays and speakers are secured doesn't mean that the content on the disk can't be attacked directly. Even if the DVD drive has protections built in, someone's likely to make a DVD drive which can have the firmware "upgraded" to allow digital copying of the content on an HD-DVD. Once it's bits on a HD, it's going to be fair game for transcoding.
Anyways, between the extra cost of buying a new LCD and the futility of actually trying to protect the content, I don't see working in the next few years, and only minimally possible in the longer term. I think manufacturers should save their half-penny per screen for HDCP and thumb their noses at the MPAA.
Oh yeah, if Windows strongly supports the protections on the software level, I think it's going to push more and more people towards linux and other OS's to get around the limitations. I think that MythTV will also get much more popular if this is the road MS chooses.