- From: <piranna@gmail.com>
- Date: Sun, 19 May 2013 20:14:56 +0200
- To: Mark Watson <watsonm@netflix.com>
- Cc: public-restrictedmedia@w3.org, Jeff Jaffe <jeff@w3.org>, Emmanuel Revah <stsil@manurevah.com>
- Message-ID: <CAKfGGh3_uSgjHuk9GaPM2ywciQijjsRyNt3OKPGMHGRyo16yRg@mail.gmail.com>
> It would certainly be bad if services like Netflix were available only in Chrome and IE and not in Firefox. What do you think the W3C should do to help avoid that outcome ? This is a fairly intelligent question. Honestly, I think W3C should _nothing_, that's the source of all this debate. I think that an open, public and free DRM system wouldn't be a bad thing (supossing that thing exists, that I doubt), but it should be discussed and developed on an outside organism or consortium, and developed as an external plugin that users can choose to add or not, and not recommended by a public organization like W3C. It should abstense and delegate the discussion and design of such system to others. > As far as I know, POSIX does not specify a media player. But OS APIs that do provide media playback are a perfectly reasonable place to add DRM support, for example Windows Media Foundation or Android media APIs. We've considered proposing something like EME for OpenMAX AL. > >From a strategic point they are the perfect places to implement them so you can filter everything, but just for this reason architecturally it's a catastrophe since it would be abused. It's a bussiness model thing, so it should be one or two levels up in the application stack. > In practice, DRM is often implemented by the platform. On mobile phones and increasingly on TVs there are Trusted Execution Environments running a separate OS which provide decryption, decoding and rendering. In these cases, EME just exposes to the web platform what the (main) OS already exposes to apps. If you want the Web Platform > to be a competitive OS, you need parity with the competition. > I think they are not playing the same game, and if so, the rules are inherently bad, so I don't want to play that game. Mobile phones and TVs are mainly closed platforms, while you can change your browser and also disable EME on ChromeOS just entering Developer Mode. Do you really think it wouldn't be dificult to change to a patched one? Or better than that: supose this goes forward and EME is really efective and, unluckily, it's severily abused so you need an EME-enabled browser the same way it was almost mandatory to have Flash installed on your computer, so almost all audio and video transfers go throught a secure and priviledges pipeline, and also the ACTION 11 topics are implemented so I can't be able to download them easily to my harddisk. What prevent to me to use a patched browser with it disabled? Browser executable checksums? This start to conflict seriouly with personal rights and intimacy, since I should be allowed to compile my own browsers and also develop them from scratch, and the patch would also remove the checking code. Will be the next movement to require to use signed binaries? Check the signatures to an external server? Come on guys, this start to gets crazy, it's like the recently surrealist situation of needing to sign the Linux kernel images by a Microsoft-owned authentication server just they could boot on secure UEFI enabled machines...
Received on Sunday, 19 May 2013 18:15:28 UTC