Launch of the Panasonic DVD-A720 audio/video player has been delayed due to concerns over music piracy.
Published:
7 December 1999 y., Tuesday
The exploits of a Norwegian hacker against a prominent Japanese electronics company have highlighted a major fear of record companies: New digital technology could make it easier than ever to distribute pirated music over the Internet. Copy-protection concerns forced Japan_s biggest consumer-electronics company this week to delay by up to six months what it touts as a state-of-the-art stereo system. Matsushita Electric Industrial Co., which makes Panasonic products, had planned to start selling its DVD Audio system in mid-December. A Matsushita subsidiary, JVC, also postponed its DVD Audio launch from December until May or June 2000.
Matsushita has promoted DVD Audio as a better-sounding successor to the conventional compact-disk player. The new audio players are based on the same digital technology as digital videodisk players, which have boomed in popularity recently as a way of playing back videos at home because DVDs boast picture quality that is superior to that of standard videocassette recorders.
In early October, according to Matsushita officials, a Norwegian hacker posted on the Internet a way to break the copy protection of digital videodisks. The hacker_s method required playing the DVD on the DVD drive found in some personal computers. Normally the computer software that reads DVDs would prevent the disk_s data from being copied
But a defect in a version of the disk-reading software published by a U.S. company enabled the hacker to download the DVD data to his hard drive, the officials said. They declined to identify the hacker.
Matsushita spokesman Yoshihiro Kitadeya said it wouldn_t be commercially viable for someone using the hacker_s method to make illegal copies of DVDs and sell them, although it would be theoretically possible. However, Mr. Kitadeya said, since music requires much less data than video, it would be easier to transfer individual songs from a DVD Audio disk into a computer file and distribute them cheaply over the Internet. Unlike analog media such as cassette tapes, digital data can be copied countless times without degradation.
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.
The most popular articles
Software company announced new structure_ of it_s business.
more »
Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) announced enhancements to its Baggage Reconciliation System (BRS) featuring more detailed information about baggage handling requirements for incoming flights, real-time monitoring and alerts of service level agreements (SLAs), and a mobile app to provide passengers with live updates on when and where to collect their bags.
more »
Samsung doubled its share of the tablet PC market in the last three months of 2012, research firm IDC has said.
more »
Facebook boss Mark Zuckerberg has strongly denied the social network is planning to release its own phone.
more »
The OnLive gaming service is to be made available to Google TV users, following a deal with electronics firm LG. One of a handful of firms making hardware for Google TV. LG's G2 series sets have Google's TV service built in.
more »
Blackberry has become the latest smartphone to offer free wi-fi calls to users via its own software. Research In Motion (RIM) has added the facility to its Blackberry Messenger (BBM) app, which already offered an alternative to text messages.
more »
We are delighted to announce that on 26th of January SafeNet Sentinel Cloud was awarded the SiiA 2012 Best Digital Rights Management Solution!
more »
The Spanish government has approved tough new legislation which could see websites deemed to be trading in pirated material blocked within ten days.
more »
The Los Angeles World Airports (LAWA), which oversees airport operations for the city of Los Angeles, has awarded a contract modification to Unisys (NYSE: UIS) to upgrade its access control and alarm monitoring system, used to identify the 45,000 airport employees, contractors, police and others who work at the organization’s three airports.
more »
Unisys Corporation (NYSE: UIS) today announced Version 2 of its Unisys Secure Private Cloud Solution, the company’s flagship cloud solution for clients’ and cloud service providers’ data centers.
more »
An American blogger has discovered three fake Apple stores operating in Kunming city, China.
more »