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District of Columbia
Related: About this forumDigital rights management (DRM) on ATSC 3.0 comes to the DC area.
Last edited Fri Jul 28, 2023, 04:48 PM - Edit history (1)
According to some posts in the last few days, Baltimore TV station WMAR and DC TV station WRC have turned on digital rights management for their ATSC 3.0 transmissions.
Washington, DC / Baltimore, MD - HDTV
keeper · #17,462 · Jul 6, 2023
Looks like WMAR is now content protected. What a joke this 3.0 stuff is. They are not working for me lol.
Looks like WMAR is now content protected. What a joke this 3.0 stuff is. They are not working for me lol.
Foxbat121 · #17,464 · Jul 27, 2023 (Edited)
WRC just turned on DRM on its ATSC 3.0 channel. Hope the others don't follow the suit. That means HDHomerun tuner will not be useful for now.
WRC just turned on DRM on its ATSC 3.0 channel. Hope the others don't follow the suit. That means HDHomerun tuner will not be useful for now.
I don't have a TV or any other equipment that can receive ATSC 3.0 transmissions, so I have to read up on this myself.
This seems to be what's going on:
ATSC 3.0 Was Never About You
May 29, 2023 by Dave Zatz
Due to expanded DRM deployment and associated consumer disruption, Cord Cutters News recently resurfaced the story that various ATSC 3.0 broadcasters had began encrypting their antenna channels beginning early this year. While televisions imbued with so called NextGen TV tuners for direct playback are unaffected, network tuners that relay video content and platforms that record content are suddenly knee-capped. Its CableCARD. All. Over. Again. Except this time were talking about content delivered over FCC-licensed spectrum that supposedly serves the greater good, to some degree anyway.
Specifically, owners of the HDHomeRun Flex 4K continue to lose playback capabilities as the virus spreads. The bad news is delivered via Silicon Dusts generic Content Protection placeholder pictured below, as additional stations move to blot out content and consumer choice. Also potentially disrupting the nations Emergency Alert System.
Photo via Matthew Mello
The good news, if there is any, is that Silicon Dust engineers are working it. Unfortunately, theyre a small company, months into this DRM integration problem, with what sounds like leisurely response times from the certification authority. And even when, or if, they succeed with DRM support it doesnt sound like there are implementation rules the broadcasters will be bound by. As in: its possible some, many, or all may choose to outright prohibit DVR capabilities via a copy-never flag. Taken collectively, this is why another small, innovative company pumped the brakes on bringing their next gen solution, the Tablo ATSC 3.0 Quad Tuner, to market.
While ATSC 3.0 can deliver higher definition video with higher dynamic range, from where Im sitting, industrys motivation to make the substantial investment of time and money required is driven by revenue-generating data mining and targeted advertising. But dont take my word for it as Sinclairs David Smith who had this to say in 2019:
{snip}
May 29, 2023 by Dave Zatz
Due to expanded DRM deployment and associated consumer disruption, Cord Cutters News recently resurfaced the story that various ATSC 3.0 broadcasters had began encrypting their antenna channels beginning early this year. While televisions imbued with so called NextGen TV tuners for direct playback are unaffected, network tuners that relay video content and platforms that record content are suddenly knee-capped. Its CableCARD. All. Over. Again. Except this time were talking about content delivered over FCC-licensed spectrum that supposedly serves the greater good, to some degree anyway.
Specifically, owners of the HDHomeRun Flex 4K continue to lose playback capabilities as the virus spreads. The bad news is delivered via Silicon Dusts generic Content Protection placeholder pictured below, as additional stations move to blot out content and consumer choice. Also potentially disrupting the nations Emergency Alert System.
Photo via Matthew Mello
Link to tweet
The good news, if there is any, is that Silicon Dust engineers are working it. Unfortunately, theyre a small company, months into this DRM integration problem, with what sounds like leisurely response times from the certification authority. And even when, or if, they succeed with DRM support it doesnt sound like there are implementation rules the broadcasters will be bound by. As in: its possible some, many, or all may choose to outright prohibit DVR capabilities via a copy-never flag. Taken collectively, this is why another small, innovative company pumped the brakes on bringing their next gen solution, the Tablo ATSC 3.0 Quad Tuner, to market.
While ATSC 3.0 can deliver higher definition video with higher dynamic range, from where Im sitting, industrys motivation to make the substantial investment of time and money required is driven by revenue-generating data mining and targeted advertising. But dont take my word for it as Sinclairs David Smith who had this to say in 2019:
Smith said the usage data collected from the new standard would be critical for broadcasters and their ability to offer relevant, targeted advertising. The data [from ATSC 3.0] will probably be the sole opportunity that keeps us afloat for the next generation, Smith said, stressing that the broadcast TV industry needs to be more like Google with respect to the collection and marketing of its valuable data. Our world revolves around data.But he acknowledged that theres theres a lot more to like about ATSC 3.0 for broadcasters. Being able to tack-on subscription-based services and reaching all screens fixed and mobile with ATSC 3.0 will also be critical to the industrys future, he said. Broadcasters need to talk to every device in the marketplace, Smith said. We have to be able to talk to cars We need direct access to the consumer who spends the money.
{snip}
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