MESSAGE
DATE | 2002-09-20 |
FROM | Jonathan Bober
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SUBJECT | Re: [hangout] Now, it's getting scary, and FAST
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What is the source on this story?
On Fri, 20 Sep 2002 13:41:15 -0400 Ray Connolly wrote:
> > This is getting out of hand bretheren. It's a sad day when this American > hopes a foriegn company will see the light and save us. What is this country > coming too!!!! > > Palladium: Now AMD joins the party > Date: Friday, September 20 -at- 10:07:32 EDT > Topic: News > > Advanced Micro Devices will include Microsoft's Palladium "trusted" -- > meaning Microsoft-approved software only -- support in its next generation > of chips, according to published reports. > > The Opteron chip, to be released in 2003, will refuse to run applications or > display content that has not been digitally signed by Microsoft or one if > its designees. This, Microsoft says, will increase security. Certainly it > will increase the security of Microsoft Corporation and its shareholders. > > While a Microsoft project, Palladium is nominally under the control of the > Trusted Computing Platform Alliance, of which AMD is a member. > > AMD has been working toward Palladium compliance for some time as a result > of pressure from the motion picture and music industries. It has worked with > Wave Systems Corporation to achieve this end; Wave published a report (pdf > file) on the subject more than two years ago. > > In a report in The Age entitled "Bit by bit, digital freedom disappears", > writer Nathan Cochrane notes that Palladium will be all-encompassing: > > "For the end-to-end security features to work as envisioned by the TCPA, all > parties along the network chain must build in complementary security > features. Chips from the likes of AMD and Intel will only decode > information, such as audio and video, if it comes with an unlocking key. > Hard-drive makers will make drives that won't record certain types of > information, and so on." > > But, Cochrane says, it scarcely stops there, as if that were not bad enough: > > "It is envisaged that once the TCPA system is fully functioning, our PCs > would quietly report to authorities any unauthorised content on our > machines. PCs and other devices would also refuse to play content, such as a > music CD, tied to another device, and may be instructed by a remote server > to delete information from the owner's hard drive." > > At issue, of course, is what constitutes "content," and what Palladium will > do with applications that do not accept instructions from the motion picture > and recording industries and, of course, from Microsoft itself. Microsoft > has already released a Media Player update that allows the company to delete > files from user machines. > > AMD's "vice president of consumer advocacy," Patrick Moorhead, says that > concerns over privacy in connection with Palladium are overrated. But, he > says, users should be able to defeat Palladium if they choose. > > That might not be so easy. If legislation sponsored by Sen. Ernest Hollings, > Democrat of South Carolina, is approved, there could be federal prison time > awaiting anyone who disables "security" features his legislation would > mandate. The bill calls for adoption of whatever is the "industry standard" > technology for protecting the copyrighted work of movie and music companies, > which more and more looks as if it will be Palladium. (An analysis of > Hollings's proposal is here.) > > If AMD persists in including Palladium in its new chips, the leading safe > haven for those who run non-Microsoft software will disappear. Unknown is > whether European and other nations, who have increasingly rejected the > Microsoft monopoly, will enact legislation that pre-empts Palladium. > > Let your voice be heard, here's an email address at AMD: hw.support-at-amd.com > > If somebody finds a better one please post it. > ____________________________ > New Yorker Free Software Users Scene > Fair Use - > because it's either fair use or useless....
-- Ten years from now, your children will ask you, "Daddy, where were you when they took libraries away?" What will YOUR answer be? Fight Draconian Media Copyright Abuse. ____________________________ New Yorker Free Software Users Scene Fair Use - because it's either fair use or useless....
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