"par, TTRE has both, software and hardware solutions. 1st - It is the opinion of many that the hardware solution is no solution at all in the real fight against piracy, but rather a deterrent to the average law abiding Joe."
"2nd - Please read the following which is a very brief, not too detailed overview of TTRE technologies. Please note the following sentence "But any copy of this CD will abort or be unacceptably inferior to the original" in the 4th paragraph below. I can go to the MP3 site right now and listen to FREE music, but that too would be "unacceptably inferior to the original". SunnComm would not allow this AT ALL."
By: TonyCthatsme $$$ Reply To: 1264 by par442k $$$ Thursday, 30 Nov 2000 at 11:56 AM EST Post # of 1418
par, TTRE has both, software and hardware solutions. 1st - It is the opinion of many that the hardware solution is no solution at all in the real fight against piracy, but rather a deterrent to the average law abiding Joe.
2nd - Please read the following which is a very brief, not too detailed overview of TTRE technologies. Please note the following sentence "But any copy of this CD will abort or be unacceptably inferior to the original" in the 4th paragraph below. I can go to the MP3 site right now and listen to FREE music, but that too would be "unacceptably inferior to the original". SunnComm would not allow this AT ALL.
TTRE Technologies:
Software anti-piracy technology:
TTR's proprietary anti-piracy software solution embeds a non-reproduceable digital signature on CD-ROMs that prevents unauthorized copies from operating. Designed for software publishers, TTR's anti-piracy solution is secure and transparent to the end user.
Music anti-piracy technology:
TTR's music anti-piracy technology is a unique hardware-based solution that prevents unauthorized copying of CDs. In 1999, TTR signed an agreement with Macrovision Corp. to jointly develop and market this technology. The demand for music copy-protection is very strong and promises enormous growth potential
Music anti-piracy technology
The Problem: The recording industry loses about $5 billion annually to global piracy of recorded music. Recently, this problem has become particularly acute for two reasons: First, because the cost of reproducing CDs has dropped to an easily affordable level, and second, because the widespread use of MP3 compression technology allows the easy downloading of pirated recordings.
The Answer: TTR's music anti-piracy technology provides an effective answer. There are software based technologies on the market that claim to protect music during electronic transmission, but they are easily overcome. TTR's protection is imprinted on the CD itself during the production process.
How it Works: During the glass mastering process, a specially modified CD encoder introduces selective alterations to the EFM data stream, without affecting the audio quality of the recording. This protection is transparent to the end user and the protected CD plays normally on any CD/DVD player. But any copy of this CD will abort or be unacceptably inferior to the original. Attempts to produce an MP3 file from a protected CD will result in an unusable audio.
TTR's music anti-piracy technology is easy to use. A recording studio would provide data in the normal manner, while requesting the mastering facility to apply anti-piracy protection. The glass mastering facility can easily update their encoders to enable the application of TTR's music anti-piracy technology.
Regards,
TonyC
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