DocumentCode
1201634
Title
Digital rights technology sparks interoperability concerns
Author
Geer, David
Volume
37
Issue
12
fYear
2004
Firstpage
20
Lastpage
22
Abstract
Digital media is a killer application for the Internet. However, concerns about the technology have limited the commercial distribution of digital video, audio, and images. Most notably, content producers worry that purchasers will copy and give away or resell their products in ways that the providers don´t want and that violate their licenses. In light of this, companies have developed digital rights management (DRM) technology for products and media players to let content producers enforce licensing restrictions by limiting the use of their materials. However, this has led to a critical problem for the digital-media industry: most DRM technologies are not interoperable. Most vendors have created proprietary technologies not available for license or use by third-party vendors, thereby making interoperability difficult. With digital content becoming a big business, the industry is concerned about interoperability. A series of initiatives are under way to address DRM interoperability.
Keywords
DP industry; Internet; content management; contracts; copyright; open systems; Internet; digital content; digital rights management; digital-media industry; interoperability; software license; software vendors; Computer hacking; Containers; Dictionaries; File servers; ISO; Licenses; Market research; Packaging; Security; Sparks;
fLanguage
English
Journal_Title
Computer
Publisher
ieee
ISSN
0018-9162
Type
jour
DOI
10.1109/MC.2004.242
Filename
1377038
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