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DIGITAL DIGEST  | LiveUpdate Newsletter - Issue 208
25 July, 2010
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INDEX:
1. Introduction
2. Weekly News Roundup
3. Weekly Software Roundup
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1. Introduction
No mid week blog or guide as I've been busy moving mid-week, to my new place. Hardly anything is where it's supposed to be, as half of my stuff is still at the old place, and the stuff at the new place is everywhere except where they should be. But at least I managed to get my computer connected to the new Samsung 3D TV, and get Blu-ray 3D going, if only for a little while as I had to put my computer back where it belongs, in the home office.
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 2. Weekly News Roundup
Hello. I've finally completed moving house, by completed, I of course mean  that there's still tons of stuff that needs to be moved over. But this is the  first WNR at the new place. But the roundup must go on, as they say, despite  aching limbs and a sleep deprived brain. One good thing about the move was that  I was finally able to test Blu-ray 3D playback via PowerDVD 10 Mark II to my  Samsung 3D plasma. More on that later.
 
 Let's start with copyright news. The US Copyright Group is in the news again  this week as they step up their campaign targeting thousands of web users  accused of downloading pirated movies.
 The latest development sees the USCG hiring the  services of smaller law firms signalling the next phase of their plans   going to court. It was always understood that firms like the USCG would avoid  going to court whenever possible, since the costs are higher and so are the risk  (of losing, and hence, setting a precedent that could hurt future business). But  it appears the USCG is pressing ahead anyway, no doubt going after those that  are easy to beat in court. It may also be their way of showing that they do  intend to go to court, a criticism that critics have used in the past to attack  similar actions, and if they can get a few easy victories under their belt,  maybe a high profile one, then this can be used to scare more people  into  paying up. And as for working with the EFF to draft a user friendlier notice to  send to suspected pirates, it  seems the two sides just can't get along and both may have to go and see the  judge again to see how they can get things moving. This isn't the biggest  surprise in the world, as one side wants to make the notices are serious as  possible to get people to pay up, while the other want the notice to be  informative enough to allow people to defend themselves  it was always  difficult, if not impossible, to meet both objectives.
  While the USCG aren't winning friends with web users, ISPs and rights groups,  they are making friends in other media circles, and at least one law firm is now  copying their strategy, except going after those who pirate newspaper articles,  rather than movies. Suing hundreds of  websites and blogs is Las Vegas based Righthaven, representing the owners of  the Las Vegas Review-Journal. While most newspapers use DMCA takedown notices to  get their full articles removed from forums and blogs, there is no money that  can be made by taking this approach. But if the threat of a lawsuit, and the  request for a pre-trial settlement works for the USCG on movie downloaders, then  the thinking is that website owners will do the same as well, even when the  offending content was posted by one of its users, not the website itself. The  recent Viacom versus YouTube action showed that user generated websites do have  protection from the safe harbor provisions under the DMCA, as long as they have  a clear anti copyright infringement policy in place and enforces this policy  consistently. So one might think this would apply to forums where users have  posted full articles against forum rules, or blogs where users have made the  same post in the comments. But the fear of an expensive lawsuit means that many  will simply pay the settlement fee to avoid the trouble, although others are  willing to challenge the claims in court. If this model works, expect all other  newspaper owners to follow suit, as most of them are struggling to keep profits  from dropping in what many calls a dying industry.
  Moving to Europe now, it appears ISPs  in many countries are not happy at their respective government's three-strikes  policies, and are going to court to fight it. Three-Strikes, or similar  laws, may appear to be aimed at users who download pirated content, but it is in  fact aimed at ISPs, making them responsible for monitoring and "sentencing", for  want of a better word, their own subscribers. The cost of the operation will  have to be absorbed by the ISP, and mistaken identifies or other errors could  even see the ISPs sued. The ISPs argue that since the music labels and movie  studios are the one that will supposedly benefit from piracy being reduced,  they're the ones that should play a more active role in enforcing three-strikes.  The content owners, however, will argue that they're the victims in this and  that ISPs should just pass on the cost to subscribers. The big question is if  this wasn't about the Internet, would government, who are normally clueless  about Cyberspace, be so willing to give in to the demands of copyright holders?  If people were committing copyright infringement via the telelphone, let's say  something silly like reading out loud books or newspaper articles to the person  on the other end, should the telephone company then be tasked with spying on  users' conversations so they can put a stop to this illegal practice? Should the  government then help to make spying legal and part of the copyright laws? ISPs  are nothing more than utility companies, like the gas, electricity or telephone  companies, and making them responsible for what their subscribers do with the  service just doesn't seem right. And if there are any technical advantage that  make ISP level "spying" easier, then it would still be unfair to make ISPs bare  the entire cost of the operation. It's forcing one industry, and tax payer  money,  to protect another industry's revenue stream for no reason other than  it's the easy thing to do.
 The Swedish Pirate Party wants to do something about ISP snooping though, and  they are  planning to launch their "Pirate ISP", which will ensure no data about users  if kept, so that their privacy is protected. The idea is nice, but I can already  see the lawsuits and search, arrest warranty being typed up, probably before the  ISP is even launched.
 And when Hollywood is finished getting the government and ISPs to do their  bidding, for free, they will turn their targets on those that try to innovate  too much. Because innovation could eventually lead content being published  without having to be controlled by publishers, and that spells bad news for  revenue. Google TV is next in Hollywood's cross-hairs it seems, as the new  proposed system which aims to present a common interface for viewing media,  online and offline, on TVs may just be too innovative for Hollywood's liking. In  their submission to the FTC, Hollywood studios  claims that Google TV could potentially allow users to interact with both legal  and illegal media, in the same interface, and that's will encourage users to  all become pirates. Instead of seeing how such an innovation could revolutionize  the way people buy content on the Internet, and instead of supporting Google, a  company with a history of knowing how to get money out of the Internet and its  users, they yet again focus on the piracy issue and the issue alone. Just like  how music labels refused to work with digital music retailers and instead  focused on more and more complicated layers of DRM, and then having the likes of  Apple iTunes swallow up a huge chunk of Internet related profit that otherwise  would have gone to the labels, Hollywood appears to be making the same  mistake.
  Instead, their solutions is, you guessed it, more DRM. Hollywood's new fairer  DRM scheme, supported by pretty much all the studios expect Disney (who have  their own proprietary system in the works), is now called  UltraViolet. How is it friendlier? Well, it plans to make DRM protected  files more portable, working in more players and systems, but it still has the  stench of DRM all over it, and thus, all the same usual problems: lack of  universal compatibility, the need for online authentication, and don't expect  the files to work forever as there is no guarantee whatsoever that any DRM  system will be kept supported and updated (at high cost by the DRM operators)  forever. The IEEE is also working on their own "fairer" DRM, which will make  digital files more like physical objects, in that ownership can be transferred,  so sharing something with a friend could mean that you lose the ability to use  the file forever if your friend do not return ownership back to you. The scheme,  called  P1817, could even work in conjunction with the monster that is UltraViolet,  to make everything a bit fairer you see. The funny thing is that by  acknowledging the need to make things fairer, content owners have just  acknowledged that DRM, at least in past forms, have not been fair to users. I  would go one step further and say that DRM is always unfair to users, so if you  want them to accept it, make sure you give them back something in return.  Whether's that lower prices, better services, or even just less hoops to jump  through, it is needed. Content owners should not take users for granted, as they  may just go elsewhere (and if there's no legal alternative, guess where they  will be, and have been, heading to?)
 
 In HD/3D news, as mentioned in the introduction, I managed to get PowerDVD 10  Ultra 3D with the Mark II patch to play a Blu-ray 3D movie and have it  display as proper 3D on my new Samsung 3D plasma TV.
 It took a bit of work trying to get it to work, but I've posted the  instructions here  for those that want to give it a go. The 3D effects are great, even if you're  not getting full 1080p resolution, but that will only be possible when updated  drivers are available for my ATI Radeon HD card. For now, it means I can play  Blu-ray 3D movies in 3D without a standalone Blu-ray 3D player (although my free  bonus one, part of a promotion Samsung were running here in Australia, should be  on its way from Samsung, hopefully arriving before the PS3 gets its Blu-ray 3D  update).
  But while I wait for my Blu-ray 3D player to arrive, it may already be  obsolete, thanks to the idea of "upgradeable hardware" introduced by the Blu-ray  format. The idea says that, like software, there may be a new version out every  year and you would need to pay to get the new version, if you want the latest  features. We've already had Profile 1.0, 1.1 and 2.0 players, and I guess  Blu-ray 3D counts as 2.5 or something. And when BDXL movie  discs arrive (if they arrive), then we'll all need new players again (4.0,  since 3.0 is already taken by the fairly unused Blu-ray audio format). It's nice  having 128GB capacity, but not so nice when I have to yet again upgrade my  Blu-ray player, despite how cheap players have become. Even the always versatile  PS3 won't be able to support BDXL, since the only thing that the PS3 can't  update through software, the Blu-ray drive itself, will need to be updated. And  soon after Blu-ray 4.0, we'll have Super-Blu-ray 1.0, with Sony promising a  1TB disc using an even more powerful laser. Downloads, streaming, storage  lockers 
 if only everyone had the bandwidth to make download a Blu-ray quality  movie a matter of minutes, rather than hours (or weeks, in certain Internet  backwaters,  like Australia), then we could get rid of the disc altogether, or  burn our own discs by only replacing the optical drive in your computer, as  opposed to an entire standalone player. It's bad for the environment, bad for  our wallets, and it's just annoying.
 But at least one thing to do with Blu-ray is going disc-less. Netflix  streaming on the PS3 will finally work without a Blu-ray disc, and it only took a year after Netflix  was first available on the PS3, and several after the Netflix was originally  launched on the Xbox 360 (which had disc-less streaming from the get go). Better  late than never, I suppose.
 
 And finally in the ever rarer gaming section, Microsoft has finally revealed the official Kinect pricing.  Which is exactly the same as the unofficial pricing all the retailers have been  using for months.
 The only surprise, and a good one, is that the $149.99 price includes a free  game, Kinect Adventures. But it was Microsoft's other announcement which were a  bit more interesting, like the new "Arcade", the Xbox 360 4GB, which is  basically the same piece of hardware as the new "Slim" Xbox 360 250GB, except  without the 250GB HDD of course. The price for this new console is $199, but if  you buy it with Kinect in a bundle, it will be $299, so that's another $50 off  Kinect's pricing if you buy it with the new console. Some will say that this  attempt to compete with the Wii is doomed to failure, because the Wii will be  much cheaper. But the Xbox 360 doesn't need to be the same price as the Wii,  since it's a much better console (certainly plays more types of games than the  Wii, in HD too). There's no Xbox 360 250GB Kinect bundle, which is a shame  because that's the one I would like to buy. Kinect pre-orders on Amazon jumped  back to the top 5 after the pricing announcement on Wednesday, but has since  dropped down to 21. The Move bundle is at 49th.
 And that's the news I have for this week. Sorry about the rushed nature of  this WNR, what with all the mistakes and mindless rambling, moving house takes a  lot out of a person. You didn't notice any differences? That's good then. What  do you mean "it's same crap as usual"? Huh? Anyway, here's to a less crappy WNR  next week.
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 3. Weekly Software Roundup
| July 25, 2010 | Jaksta 4.0.0  | 
  | July 25, 2010 | BDtoAVCHD 1.1.2 Freeware | 
  | July 25, 2010 | Ut Video Codec Suite 8.0.0 Freeware | 
  | July 25, 2010 | TFM Audio Tool 1.2 beta Freeware | 
  | July 24, 2010 | VDownloader 2.9.462 | 
  | July 24, 2010 | CamStudio 2.6 Beta Freeware | 
  | July 24, 2010 | LoiLoScope 1.8.2  | 
  | July 24, 2010 | ProgDVB 6.45.3  Freeware | 
  | July 24, 2010 | MediaPortal 1.1.0 Freeware | 
  | July 24, 2010 | ReClock DirectShow Filter  1.8.7.1 beta Freeware | 
  | July 23, 2010 | GOM Encoder 1.0.0.35 | 
  | July 23, 2010 | multiAVCHD 4.1  build 761 Freeware | 
  | July 23, 2010 | x264  r1683 Freeware | 
  | July 23, 2010 | BSplayer Pro 2.55 | 
  | July 23, 2010 | BSplayer 2.55 Freeware | 
  | July 22, 2010 | Quick  Media Converter 4.0.0.30 HD Beta | 
  | July 22, 2010 | MediaCoder 0.7.5 Build 4703 Freeware | 
  | July 22, 2010 | DVD  Swarm 0.9.10.721 Beta Freeware | 
  | July 22, 2010 | Free AVCHD Editor 0.2.1.258 Freeware | 
  | July 22, 2010 | VideoLAN (VLC) 1.1.1      Freeware | 
  | July 21, 2010 | WinFF 1.3.0    Freeware | 
  | July 21, 2010 | DV Scheduler 5.55 Freeware | 
  | July 20, 2010 | BluRip  0.5.0 Freeware | 
  | July 20, 2010 | Replay Media Catcher 4.0.2.0 | 
  | July 19, 2010 | BD Rebuilder 0.34.05 Beta Freeware | 
  | July 19, 2010 | DVDAuthorGUI  1.025c test Freeware | 
  | July 19, 2010 | XMedia Recode 2.2.4.7 Freeware | 
  | July 18, 2010 | TVersity Free  Edition 1.9.1 Freeware | 
  | July 18, 2010 | DVD slideshow GUI  0.9.3.7 Freeware | 
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