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New ARM CPU comes with Trustzone – anti piracy in a chip

Manticore

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The Mali-V500 chip from ARM has built-in anti-piracy measures. The British chip manufacturer announced the new Mali chips on Computex and according to the Financial Times they contain anti-piracy measures. The TrustZone technology, as ARM calls it, should support secure video decoding. TrustZone was first used to protect software against malware but can now also be used to protect content.


As movie studios continue to find ways to prevent users from copying they are calling for ways to protect it. With ARM TrustZone it should be possible to protect their content from download to display. While it’s not entirely clear how that should work it appears that the chip can use its hardware to encode and decode videos. To protect content it will reject to decode copyright protected videos.Besides that, it should also no longer be possible to store protected streams in any way to the device. This becomes more important with Android and Linux becoming more popular. Both are open source operating systems on which tools to circumvent protections can be easily installed.With the new ARM TrustZone technology the way is open for content producers to make their content available for mobile devices. But while Hollywood thinks they can safely sleep, hackers are probably finding new ways of freeing content.


New ARM CPU comes with Trustzone – anti piracy in a chip | Myce.com
 
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They already use a similar method with Music if I remember correctly.

Didn't work of course.

The only thing they achieve with these silly methods, is to make the pirated version superior, since the pirated version has no restrictions and can be played on any device.

They should be working on making the genuine versions a superior product, for example by attaching online features to the genuine versions that improve their end-user value. They are already doing this with the Steam platform in online gaming, and it is wildly successful.
 
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They already use a similar method with Music if I remember correctly.

Didn't work of course.

The only thing they achieve with these silly methods, is to make the pirated version superior, since the pirated version has no restrictions and can be played on any device.

They should be working on making the genuine versions a superior product, for example by attaching online features to the genuine versions that improve their end-user value. They are already doing this with the Steam platform in online gaming, and it is wildly successful.

iTunes uses protected format for songs, I thinks that's it (AAC?)
 
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Not ARM, it is too mainstream to go into this whole Anti-Piracy thing.:angry:
 
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