Next DVD spec. adds online and DRM features but sticks with current DVD storage standard

Quakester2000 and GristyMcFisty both used our news submit to let us know that the DVD Forum which handles DVD specifications has decided to stick with current red-laser DVD storage technology for the next optical disk standard.  It has decided to focus on interactive online connectivity as well as DRM improvements.  The next generation DVD specifications are expected to appear in DVD players from next year.

 

This next generation Enhanced DVD's will include digital keys to allow customers to access extra online features only available to DVD owners using their DVD player.  The current DVD standard only provides online extras using a PC.  For improved anti-piracy measures, the DVDs also support authentication features where if used the owner must allow their system to authenticate its ID along with the DVD's ID before playback.  Should the consumer try playing it or a copy elsewhere, the authentication server may refuse playback from a different location.  The final specifications have not been fully decided and may still change vastly between now and next year.

The DVD Forum, the body that oversees the DVD specification, has decided to stick with red laser technology and current storage capacities rather than make the move to blue light and more capacious discs.

Instead, it will offer Internet integration to tempt upgrade-hungry consuemrs.

The Forum, which counts consumer electronics companies as well as music and movie industry giants among its 216 members, last week laid down its plans for the next generation of the DVD standard.

While Toshiba and NEC had been pitching a blue light technology that would have considerably increased the space available for movie and other data, the Forum has decided to stick with the existing laser specifications, NE Asia Online reports
, presumably for greater backward compatibility.

As it stands, the next generation of DVD will work just like today's format, but with greater Internet integration. Many DVDs already include links to web sites, but they're included in a separate DVD-ROM partition on the disc that can only be read by a computer-hosted DVD drive.

The next version of the spec. will allow content creators to build those links directly into the scripts that tell a DVD player how to show the movie. The idea is that 'Enhanced DVD' players will have Net access built-in, either directly or via a home network, enabling consumers to access extra material at will.

The format will also support the use of "digital keys", as the report puts it, to authorise the connection to web sites.

Both technologies are expected to appear in product next year, which means the spec. isn't that far off completion.

Put them together and it's clear the move is about shifting the DVD spec. away from a simple storage medium to a kind of
digital theatre ticket where purchasing the DVD buys you entry to the content - which will almost certainly be stored someplace else .

Today, broadband take-up is growing, but it remains a primarily PC technology. But presumably there will come a time when most homes have it, and it will feed a broader local network comprising not only computers but games consoles and other home entertainment devices. While a DVD is likely to prove the best medium for movies for the next few years, if not further out, there's still plenty of supplemental content that punters are going to want, and the movie industry is going to want to sell them.

But how to provide it without it being ripped off? Full-scale DRM is an option, but one consumers are unlikely to support, even those who aren't in the habit of filching films off
the Internet. The solution then is to provide content on the Net, but through a controlled access system. Playing an 'Enhanced DVD' for the first time might begin a background process that links a disc ID to a player ID and records the connection on a server somewhere. Play the disc elsewhere and the system spots the fact and blocks access to the content.

Read the full article here.

 

So far, it is not clear if the next DVD specification will also continue to use the existing MPEG2 standard and resolution or use higher quality MPEG4 with HDTV resolution.  I would not be interested in replacing my DVD player for extra online and anti-piracy features if there is no improvement in the video resolution or quality.  If content providers make use of the extra DVD authentication features, it would mean that one could no longer lend their DVDs to neighbours or friends. 

 

It looks like the DVD Forum may be just following the FCC requirements in order to support broadcast flags and are adding the interactive online DVD extra's support to try and make the next DVD specification look superior to the current DVD standard.


 


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Source: The Register

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