Technology Review - Published By MIT
Advertisement

Will Windows Upgrade Hand Power to Big Media?

The Electronic Frontier Foundation is questioning who will benefit from the copy-protection technologies in Windows Vista.

By Andy Patrizio

September 19, 2005

smaller text tool iconmedium text tool iconlarger text tool icon


Microsoft's successor to the Windows XP operating system, known as Windows Vista, will come with new technologies meant to provide a secure digital media environment. The idea is to make it easier to download HDTV-quality video to your desktop or laptop. But, in the process, critics fear you will lose something: the freedom to use whatever hardware or software you want.

So what you'll hear about Vista depends on whom you ask. According to Microsoft representatives, the new operating system (which was known until recently by its Microsoft code name, Longhorn, and is now scheduled to ship in late-2006) will be a vastly more secure platform for delivering high-quality entertainment content.

But ask analysts at the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), the well-known Internet civil-rights organization based in San Francisco, and you'll hear talk of Vista turning into a highly restrictive sandbox--where only the major movie studios decide who can play.

What's certain is that the new content protections in Vista have been designed in cooperation with media companies such as Disney and 20th Century Fox--a first for Microsoft. Understandably, these firms have a vested interest in improved security. After all, music CDs have no effective copy protection and the content scrambling system in DVD players was cracked by hackers in 1999.

"We're trying to offer a platform that understands the concerns of a lot of stakeholders to protect the content," says Marcus Matthias, product manager for Microsoft's Windows Digital Media division. "If it can't be protected, there is no incentive to make content available."

Story continues below

Part of Microsoft's new digital rights management (DRM) system is an improved method for identifying and authenticating external devices attached to PCs. Plug-n-Play technology has been around for years--but it's hit-or-miss, as anyone who's installed a new piece of hardware knows. Microsoft's new authentication solution, called Protected Media Path (PMP), is being developed in partnership with the entertainment companies. The technology allows a PC to determine whether a newly-attached hardware device--such as a monitor, DVD player, or video card--really is from the same manufacturer, or has the same make, model, and serial number, as it claims. Devices from manufacturers who haven't adopted the PMP system may not work with PCs running Vista.

Seth Schoen, a staff technologist at EFF, has published several articles critical of PMP and other DRM features in Vista (see Notebook). He argues that they amount to restrictions on consumers' freedom of choice--for example, by preventing PC owners from using hardware brands that the entertainment industry hasn't approved.

Comments

  • windows vista
    How windows vista is differ from windows xp and server 2000?

    What r main features of windows vista?
    Rate this comment: 12345
    Guest (priya)
    03/22/2006
    Posts:1
    • difference
      The main feature is to get u pay once again for the same windows.
      Rate this comment: 12345
      Guest (john)
      07/08/2006
      Posts:1
    • Re: windows vista
      Yup its a Big Hand to Big Media.  Ok, so they made it more secure, add some cool search features,  an better firewall and some parental controls.  Oh, and its 64bit.  All this has been in Mac OS X for 2 years.  Linux has had everything except the parental controls for a year or two  Guess what., Mac OS X and Linux dont' require high end video cards and 1 G Byte of RAM to perform there basic functions.  Yeah, some Apps may need it, but the OS doesn't.  VIsta seems to be a bloated OS with security features that may equal but not exceed its competitors. Microsoft did add an onerous licensing scheme plus its highly restrictive DRM which will play well to the industry Moguls (BTW< I am a big fan of iTunes and paying for my music through a well thought out plan .. which iTunes is the closet to... Zune is a sleeper).  Microsoft just seems to be playing into the hands of the industry moguls,. who because their heads were in the sand, couldn't figue out how to make profitable music work in the digital age.  It took Steve Jobs to figure that out.  Vista... YAWN.  I have been enjoying its benefits incrementaly for 4 years on Mac OS X and all of its benefits for 1 year on Mac  Tiger. 
      Rate this comment: 12345

      jimn
      01/26/2007
      Posts:2
      Avg Rating:
      5/5
  • hej
    hej
    Rate this comment: 12345

    roobbaann
    01/23/2007
    Posts:1
    Avg Rating:
    1/5

Log In

Forgot your password?     Register »
Advertisement
Technology Review July/August 2009

Current Issue

Search Me
Inside the launch of Stephen Wolfram’s new “computational knowledge engine.”
•  Subscribe
Save 41%
•  Table of Contents
•  MIT News
Advertisement

Follow us on Twitter

Twitter

Get Technology Review updates via the web, cellphone, or Instant Messager – Follow techreview on Twitter!

Advertisement
Subscribe to Technology Review's daily e-mail update. Enter your e-mail address

Advertisement
TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES

More Technology News from Forbes

Advertisement
MIT Massachusetts Institute of Technology © 2009 Technology Review. All Rights Reserved.