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To: VINTHO who wrote (38986)2/19/1999 10:55:00 AM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (3) | Respond to of 50808
 
Digital copyright protection.....
eetimes.com

Galaxy group narrows down copy protection efforts

By Yoshiko Hara
EE Times
(02/18/99, 5:15 p.m. EDT)

TOKYO - Five companies, labeling themselves the Galaxy Group, have
agreed to merge their digital-watermarking technologies to gain the upper
hand in a competition to set the standard for safeguards against video piracy.

The move by Hitachi Ltd., IBM Corp., NEC Corp., Pioneer Electronic Corp.
and Sony Corp. cuts the number of competing protection schemes to two.

Since September 1997, when the Copy Protection Technical Working Group
(CPTWG) began considering ways to check illegal copies of digital video
contents, 11 proposals by 11 companies have been squeezed down to three
by groups comprising IBM/

NEC, Hitachi/Pioneer/Sony and Digimark/Macrovision/Philips. Now the first
two groups have allied under the Galaxy banner, leaving only two coalitions
to champion opposing digital watermarking standards.

An NEC spokesman said the IBM/NEC and Hitachi/Pioneer/Sony
architectures had enough similarities "that the two groups could think about
integration."

But the Galaxy group does not expect a similar merger to take place anytime
soon between the Digimark/Macrovision/Philips group because its proposal is
based on a different architecture.

The five companies will unify their digital watermark technologies and plan a
new proposal, perhaps as early as April, to CPTWG, a panel composed of
experts from movie studios and the computer and consumer-electronics
industries.

Using proposed NEC/IBM technology as a base, "consumer electronics
technology, especially video-related ones, will be added to the PC-based
technology," said a spokesman for Sony.

"The integrated digital-watermark technology will have better coverage of
both computer and consumer-electronics arena," said a spokesman at IBM
Japan.

A Hitachi spokesman called video software the main target of the
technology, but said "it will also be useful to protect contents of coming data
broadcasting as well."

The IBM/NEC proposal features "remarking" and high durability of its
watermark. Remarking, originally developed by NEC, is to remark
copy-control information through copy generations. When a digital content
allows onetime copy, the copy-control information will be changed to prohibit
any further copy and will be remarked on the copied generation. Durability of
the watermark, developed at IBM Japan's Tokyo Research Laboratory,
means that it stands through repeated compression and decompression.

The five companies expect DVD to be the first application for the digital
watermarking technology. The Galaxy group expects its watermarking
technology to supplement current DVD copy-protection measures. "If the
technology is adopted at CPTWG, the DVD Forum will adopt it," a forum
spokesman said.

Galaxy's watermarking technology will also be submitted to the Watermark
Review Panel. WaRP is an evaluation body for Content Scrambling System
(CSS) license holders, which will soon become an independent entity.



To: VINTHO who wrote (38986)2/19/1999 6:00:00 PM
From: VidiVici  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Expiry day isn't? If so, I expect either a close at near 20 or near 22 1/2!!

Would you settle for halfway between?

Purely coincidental, of course...