New Recommendations for Free-to-air
Key content industry members of the Asia Pacific Centre for Content Protection(CCP) have launched recommendations for outputs on free-to-air(FTA) receiver units.
Key content industry members of the Asia Pacific Centre for Content Protection(CCP) have launched recommendations for outputs on free-to-air(FTA) receiver units.
Protecting the Digital Video Broadcasting(DVB) Common Interface and ensuring High Bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) for digital display outputs, disabling analogue outputs for High Definition (HD) content and adopting the latest version of broadcast signaling for DVB were best practices recommended.
CCP participated in the International Telecommunication Union - Asia-Pacific Institute for Broadcasting Development(ITU-AIBD) workshop, and at Broadcast Asia, in Singapore June 16-17, where the recommendations were first presented.
Despite the proliferation of media, a bright future was predicted for FTA television broadcasters, with well-managed and protected HD digital broadcasts. Says CCP Director Isa Seow, “The industry is set to flourish but there are challenges in ensuring the availability of high-value content in Free-to-Air, particularly HD content. Content protection must be in place for HD content.”
CCP members, including HBO, Irdeto, SecureMedia, NDS and Nagravision, were at Broadcast Asia to talk broadcast content protection developments and the role of government.
Low-cost Protection Choices for Free-to-air
Earlier, at the ITU-AIBD workshop on digital terrestrial television broadcasting June 16, Motion Picture Association of America(MPAA) CTO Jim Williams recommended terrestrial broadcasters tap low-cost content protection choices. Broadcasters at the workshop were engaged by CCP members Nagravision, NDS, ASTRO, MPA, Microsoft and Conax who provided updates and a panel discussion on the latest issues in relation to broadcast and content protection
Participants discussed why free-to-air(FTA) broadcasters may
need to make content-protection choices, especially at the set-top box.
"It's a really exciting time for us as the digital
transition begins," says Seow
Jim Williams called it digital emancipation when US
broadcasters turned off analog signals June 12
this year. He invited delegates from different countries to identify which
stage of the digital transition they each were in, and adopt appropriate types
of content protection. "Protect your free TV," he exhorted.
”Content protection helps broadcasters obtain high-value entertainment. Content owners can be more confident of channels that they will be licensing content,” says Isa Seow, who is also a consultant at Motion Picture Association. CCP’s Recommended Outputs Publication is a reference for many device manufacturers and broadcasters seeking clarifications for free-to-air set-top box outputs design.
Williams recommended low-cost alternatives such as High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP), where
discounts on royalties are available. "Not many organisations are focused
on low-cost alternatives," he said. "One that is focused is the CCP."
In Korea, a
country with one of the highest broadband penetration rates, 47% of the 33.5
mill users admitted to illegally downloading movies once a week. "If this
goes on, we're going to face what happened to the music industry," says
Graham Stephens, CTO, Astro All Asia Networks plc.
He concurred that it might seem strange to talk about FTA and content
protection in the same breath, but don't just go out with open-architecture set-top boxes, he warned, and instead use the
opportunity to think about how to do the digital transition
well.
NDS Asia-Pac Chief Engineer Paul
Jackson described a new broadcast business model that his
company supports in Turkey. The Turkish model requires people
to purchase a content-protected set top box and register for free
access to additional "free-to-view" content. Advertising is
targeted to users of these set top
boxes. An enhanced version of
the service for digital video recorders could in
future allow for targeted advertising by demographics.
Jackson advised against
subsidising unprotected set-top boxes, which may be "effectively
subsidising your neighbours' set-tops," if your set-tops are compatible
with neighbouring countries' transmissions. He recommended minimum
security features in hardware, common to all boxes, as a means both to enable
more potential business models and also
to discourage unintended cross subsidy.
In the crowd was the Indian
regulator amongst the Singapore,
Malaysia and other
regulators who flew in for the BCA related events.
Jim Beveridge, Director, International Media Policy, Microsoft, said the company had several new innovations where high-value content was one
constant. The idea of Multiple screens on Media Room, Media Centre and X-Box require content protection, he said, which requires
Microsoft to interact with broadcasters on this platform.
Vidar Sandvik, International Product Marketing Manager at Conax
AS, advocated “scrambling" for FTA
broadcasting. He cited Netherlands
and Poland
where 100% cable saturation did not prevent terrestrial television from
thriving. In Poland
where FTA had 30% of the market, FTA broadcasters added video-on-demand in HD,
increasing value for consumers, and ensuring no leaks to the Net. Let the
pay-TV operator subsidise the set-top box, he said, and then control box
quality for content protection. As for cost, set-top box vendors paid nothing
for Conax hardware, he said.
Licensing set-top box production and preventing consumers from becoming broadcasters,
but enabling them to receive, store and do home networking are some rules that regulators should lay down to protect content,
concluded Williams. He recommended making content protection cheaper by going
completely digital. "Why do you need analog outputs?" he asks. The combined
cost of HDMI (High-definition Multimedia Interface) and content protection on a
set-top box was cheaper than content protection alone, he pointed out.
The ITU-AIBD workshop saw 40-50 Asian broadcast regulators in the room. Among the regulators were Singapore, Malaysia, India, Indonesia, and others.
Event: ITU-AIBD Regional Seminar on Digital Terrestrial Television
Broadcasting - Making the Right Choices
Location: Suntec Convention Centre, Singapore
Date: June 16, 2009
Event: Digital Future Seminar Series, Broadcast Asia
Speakers: Bob Zitter, Chief Technology Officer, HBO * Jim Williams, CTO, Microsoft* Christophe Nicolas, Chief Technology Officer, Nagravision * Vidar Sandvik, Intl Product Marketing Manager, Conax * Paul Jackson, Chief Technology Officer, NDS * Dr. Benjamin Lian, Director of Technology, Irdeto * Paul Osbourne, General Manager, R&D, Securemedia* John Enoch, VP, Asia Risk* * Isa Seow, Managing Director, Centre for Content Protection (CCP)
Location: Singapore Expo
Date: June 17, 2009
About CCP: An initiative of the Motion Picture Association of America MPAA, it is a consortium of industry stakeholders dedicated to the advancement of secure digital media distribution in Asia-Pacific. The CCP serves as a neutral clearinghouse of information on standards and innovation throughout the region. The CCP aims to promote the research and implementation of technological solutions for the protection and exploitation of digital and analog media content. Launched in 2007 the organization's members comprise content producers, content protection companies, other industry groups and/or academia serving their overall mandate to promote content protection.
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2009-06-30 17:20:01

