Digital Transmission Content Protection, or DTCP, is a digital rights management (DRM) technology that restrict "digital home" technologies including DVD players and televisions by encrypting interconnections between devices. In theory this allows the content to be distributed through other devices such as personal computers or portable media players, if they also implement the DTCP standards. DTCP has also been referred to as "5C" content protection, a reference to the five companies who created DTCP; Hitachi, Intel, Matsushita, Sony, and Toshiba.
The standard was originally proposed in February 1998 when the five companies presented the system to the Copy Protection Technical Working Group (CPTWG), an ad hoc body organized to evaluate DRM technologies. The five companies subsequently established the Digital Transmission Licensing Administrator (DTLA) in June 1998 to simplify licensing procedures and promote acceptance of the DTCP method by content providers, electronics manufacturers, and broadcast service providers. They also released the 5C Digital Transmission Content Protection White Paper describing the system. The paper specifies Hitachi's M6 cipher as the baseline encryption system, which was already in widespread use in the Japanese cable industry.
Waiting for a perfect breeze to come
For a change, no matter where from
Pushing the clouds away
Bringing better day
For too long, too long, the sky's been gray
A silent motion to a new life
Wind direction's holding me back...
Replacing winter by summertime
We will never change, we know it,
but we could try...
The entire world in a single tear
After the rain the sun reveals what real
Life's crystal clear, remaining
what we've been
Let's get the sun to ignite our skins.
A silent motion to a new life
Wind direction's holding me back...
Replacing winter by summertime
We will never change, we know it,
but we could try...
Replacing winter by summertime
We will never change, we know it,
but we could try...
Let's erase everyting from our past
Just to see it something somehow...
Let's erase everything
Something, somehow, anything...
I don't want us to die...
Replacing winter by summertime
We will never change, we know it,
but we could try...
Replacing winter by summertime
We will never change, we know it,
Digital Transmission Content Protection, or DTCP, is a digital rights management (DRM) technology that restrict "digital home" technologies including DVD players and televisions by encrypting interconnections between devices. In theory this allows the content to be distributed through other devices such as personal computers or portable media players, if they also implement the DTCP standards. DTCP has also been referred to as "5C" content protection, a reference to the five companies who created DTCP; Hitachi, Intel, Matsushita, Sony, and Toshiba.
The standard was originally proposed in February 1998 when the five companies presented the system to the Copy Protection Technical Working Group (CPTWG), an ad hoc body organized to evaluate DRM technologies. The five companies subsequently established the Digital Transmission Licensing Administrator (DTLA) in June 1998 to simplify licensing procedures and promote acceptance of the DTCP method by content providers, electronics manufacturers, and broadcast service providers. They also released the 5C Digital Transmission Content Protection White Paper describing the system. The paper specifies Hitachi's M6 cipher as the baseline encryption system, which was already in widespread use in the Japanese cable industry.
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