Looking more deeply into it, I have found that they are indeed working on the technology and it might be inthe Sony DRU500 or maybe one of those strange upgrades.
I don't intend to go down the car boot sale with lots of DVDs. I deserve to be arrested in that case.
I have no problems with the industry copy protecting their material BUT I do have a problem with your id being stamped onto any DVD you press, your own personal data, that is an invasion of privacy. Especially as it is not publised if such watermarking is taking place.
Comparing the DVDs would take some expensive hardware and some tricky mathemetical techniques but is achieavble.
If someone found such a code before Sony went public with it then this would be very bad press for them. Maybe they feel confident that noone would find such a code.
Pradeep wrote:Interesting theory. But even assuming it's true, unless you are trying to sell your DVD copies on the streets of Manhattan I don't think it's anything to stay up at night worrying about.
There's two things that have to happen in any case.
1) You have to be churning out DVDs and selling them to others, already an illegal act.
2) Law enforcement gets a warrant and comes and takes your burner and computer and you away, you spend a couple of years in the big house.
How to avoid such a trajedy? Don't commit piracy.
Sony is also heavily into the computer industry, they make a lot of money from it, no company in their right mind is going to give upmarketshare to competing companies if they can avoid it. They were first with a combo product, and the marketplace was waiting for such a device.
Surely you could just compare the burnt Sony DVD against the original?