History
When Philips and Sony got together to develop CD,
there were just the two companies talking primarily about a
replacement for the LP. Decisions about how the system would
work were carried out largely by engineers and all went very
smoothly. The specification for the CD's successor went
entirely the other way, with arguments, confusions,
half-truths and Machiavellian intrigue behind the
scenes.
It all
started badly with Matsushita Electric, Toshiba and the
movie-makers Time/Warner in one corner, with their Super Disc
(SD) technology, and Sony and Philips in the other, pushing
their Multimedia CD (MMCD) technology. The two disc formats
were totally incompatible, creating the possibility of a
VHS/Betamax-type battle. Under pressure from the computer
industry, the major manufacturers formed a DVD Consortium to
develop a single standard. The DVD-ROM standard that resulted
at the end of 1995 was a compromise between the two
technologies but relied heavily on SD. The likes of Microsoft,
Intel, Apple and IBM gave both sides a simple ultimatum:
produce a single standard, quickly, or don' t expect any
support from the computer world. The major developers, 11 in
all, created an uneasy alliance under what later became known
as the DVD Forum, continuing to bicker over each element of
technology being incorporated in the final specification.
The
reasons for the continued rearguard actions was simple. For
every item of original technology put into DVD, a license fee
has to be paid to the owners of the technology. These license
fees may only be a few cents per drive but when the market
amounts to millions of drives a year, it is well worth arguing
over. If this didn't make matters bad enough, in waded the
movie industry.
Paranoid about losing all its DVD-Video material to
universal pirating, Hollywood first decided it wanted an
anti-copying system along the same lines as the SCMS system
introduced for DAT tapes. Just as that was being sorted out,
Hollywood became aware of the possibility of a computer being
used for bit-for-bit file copying from a DVD disc to some
other medium. The consequence was an attempt to have the U.S.
Congress pass legislation similar to the Audio Home Recording
Act (the draft was called "Digital Video Recording Act") and
to insist that the computer industry be covered by the
proposed new law.
Whilst
their efforts to force legislation failed, the movie studios
did succeed in forcing a deeper copy protection requirement
into the DVD-Video standard, and the resultant Content
Scrambling System (CSS) was finalised toward the end of 1996.
Subsequent to this, many other content protection systems have
been developed.
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