Movie Industry: DRM Is For Customers, Not For Members

Written by Ernesto on December 27, 2007

A DVD-player that has been designed to prevent DVD-screeners from leaking to the public will be phased out because industry insiders say the DRM hurts their viewing pleasure. It seems that DRM is fine when it’s annoying the public but unacceptable when it’s affecting them.

This week several DVD-screeners leaked on BitTorrent. “I Am Legend”, “Gone Baby Gone” and several other movies showed up at BitTorrent sites, presumably leaked with the help of industry insiders.

December is traditionally the month when a lot DVD-screeners are sent out to the Oscar voters, and also the time when a lot of these screeners leak. Unfortunately for some, there are pirates among the members of this elite group of movie industry insiders, and measures have to be taken to make it harder to leak the films.

One of the measures is watermarking where the DVD-screeners all get a unique, hidden watermark, so potential leaks can be traced back to the source. Another, perhaps even more effective preventive measure that was used by some studios is the SV-300, a custom-made DVD player that’s been in use since 2004.

The player is developed by Cinea, a division of Dolby Laboratories, and it is used to play encrypted disks that will only play on this particular player. The SV-300 makes it nearly impossible to copy and leak a screener, but surprisingly, the developer decided to phase out the machine because of the negative feedback from the Academy members. It turns out that the Oscar voters don’t like the DRM-machine because it hurts their viewing pleasure:

The machine operating the S-View software that scored few points for being user-friendly in its brief run. Its user base complained of the impracticality of having to lug the machine around on vacation during the holiday season, the height of the screening period.

So what they basically say is: “We don’t like DRM”. I can’t agree more of course, but it is kind of ironic that they tend to get more aggressive in imposing DRM on their customers because they are afraid of piracy, while they abandon this effective anti-piracy player because the DRM doesn’t allow them to watch the screeners on vacation.

Don’t think that the industry insiders are unaware of this, hypocritical as they are, they try to talk it right with some strange arguments. Industry insiders now say that Oscar screeners are not considered a primary contributor to movie piracy. This is strange because only 4 years ago Hollywood lobbied for a total ban of Oscar screeners.

I guess it’s all different when your personal viewing pleasure is at stake.

Previously: IFPI: ISPs Should Block BitTorrent and The Pirate Bay

Next: LimeWire Not as Popular as Recent Reports Suggest

43 Responses (Add yours or TrackBack)

Pages: « 1 [2] Show All

26 Dec 28, 2007 at 10:47 by Hamster

[quote comment="249996"]Impossible to copy? Sif. You can always capture it in realtime :)[/quote]

Like you said, that’s capturing, not copying.

27 Dec 28, 2007 at 12:14 by Monster_mack

fags

28 Dec 28, 2007 at 12:32 by HoratioDUKEz

Wow….torrentfreak readers are retarded, of the 25 prior posts about 22 of you are retarded, I don’t feel like explaining myself, but if you don’t know what I’m talking about, then you’re one of the retarded people. And no #23, there is no DVDSCR of There Will Be Blood, although I wouldn’t be surprised if one got released in the next couple weeks. Especially since it’s a major Oscar contender.

29 Dec 29, 2007 at 00:42 by haha

does anyone know where i can find a dvd screener for i am legend ?

30 Dec 29, 2007 at 01:21 by no brainer

I don’t suppose any one could point to some english subtitles for LUST, CAUTION? Great looking film, just can’t understand the language…:)

31 Dec 29, 2007 at 20:22 by jack

9

32 Dec 30, 2007 at 10:51 by anon

SOB. The oscar voters get their copies for free and they can choose where and when to play it. We have to pay for a legal copy that is restricted to near unplayability.

Let’s all shove our legally bought media up their arses and DL everything else off the net.

33 Dec 31, 2007 at 04:40 by Axel

[quote comment="249506"]Anyone has any idea how DVD Screeners get leaked if they are watermarked? It’s probably normal that we don’t know(because if there is a method to get the mark out, revealing the method would be dumb)… But you never know I guess :P[/quote]

they blank the text out in the dvd screaner I am ledgend the watermark is blanked out.

34 Jan 01, 2008 at 09:25 by Squeak

I’ll bet my bottom dollar that there will be hacks for these DRM computers like there are hacks for the DRM DVD’s now. I can’t see the sharing community sitting still for the **AA’s under any circumstances…

35 Jan 01, 2008 at 17:16 by DL

i go out and still buy all these movies anyway.i dont think im doing any harm.im not a murderer, or a rapist,or a terroist.what harm our we really doing.they just want to make more money.i think greed is the main theme here.DONT YOU

36 Jan 01, 2008 at 17:26 by bart

[quote comment="249685"]it is the same with the 160gb ipod, or any other mp3 player. Maby if you like, you could say, that the hardware makers are as “guility” for piracy as the suppliers of links to piracy files.

but I life in Holland, and there downloading is legal :)[/quote]
But uploading is illegal…

just like softdrugs in holland huh? :P

37 Jan 01, 2008 at 23:03 by no brainer

Both I’M NOT THERE and CONTROL SCRs are all over the place. THERE WILL BE BLOOD soon?

Pages: « 1 [2] Show All

Add your response

It takes approximately 1 minute for your comment to appear on TorrentFreak after it's posted.