Wired: Pay Once, Share Often With LWDRM

For the music industry, LWDRM means that its copyrights can still be violated when consumers bypass the digital certificate. However, adoption of the system could be a PR victory for an industry that suffers not only from piracy, but also from a lack of goodwill from most consumers.

Pay Once, Share Often With LWDRM

This idea is from the Fraunhofer Institute, the same people that originally invented MP3. They actually developed the technology for MPEG4, but are essentially back-porting it to be used with MP3. It looks like it's a ways from actually being implemented, and somehow I think that this is just one more attempt to put the genie back in the bottle.

Fraunhofer also talks about having a full turn-key solution, with micro-payments and an online store for sale along with the technology for anyone that wants to implement it.

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  • Freedom to Tinker: Lightweight

    It's hard to see much that's new in this proposal. If we ignore the newly coined LWDRM buzzword and the accompanying marketing spin, we're left with a fairly standard looking DRM scheme, of the type I call mark-and-trace.

Comments

DOA

The basic idea of LWDRM is that the consumer will be allowed to copy music clips within a framework of fair use. - hey just like many other DRM.

At the same time, the consumer will be totally responsible for anything that happens with the music file once the certificate is attached to it. - not bloody likely.

In a sense, LWDRM is capable of turning back the clock to the time before Napster and Kazaa came along. - yeah they might as well buy a time machine.