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The Dark Side of HDCP - Why is My PS3 Blinking?
Posted by
Zonk
on Thu Jan 18, 2007 02:18 PM
from the we-have-the-machine-that-goes-ping dept.
from the we-have-the-machine-that-goes-ping dept.
FloatsomNJetsom writes "High Definition Content Protection is supposed to make sure you're not playing pirated content, but sometimes your devices screw up the HDCP 'handshake' (over an HDMI cable) and nothing works. This happens with some regularity with the PS3, and Popular Mechanics investigated and found a quick and dirty workaround. From the article: 'We then checked with Leslie Chard, president of HDMI Licensing, which owns the rights to the standard, who told us that HDCP is one component of HDMI that has been plagued with interoperability issues. HDCP (high-bandwidth digital content protection) is designed to prevent the interception of data — specifically copyrighted Hollywood movies — between an output component and a display. As Steve Balough, the president of Digital Content Protection, the licensing company for HDCP explains, the two pieces of hardware must exchange a key, a sort of certificate of authenticity unique to each individual device, to verify a secure connection.' The problem isn't limited to the PS3 — many HDTV cable boxes and have the same problem. The fix there? Unplugging the power cable."
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Blame Gaming - Is the Blinking PS3 Sony's Fault? 103 comments
mattnyc99 writes "After discovering a blinking problem associated with the HDCP handshake from an HDMI cable to the PlayStation 3, then solving it, Popular Mechanics has now set off a mini-war between Westinghouse and Sony. The 1080p TV set maker appears to be blaming Sony as the source of the blinking PS3, and the two powerhouse companies have organized a meeting to settle the score. From the article: '[Westinghouse had] one suggestion for PS3 owners with blinking Westinghouse televisions: Purchasing an HDMI to DVI adapter to bypass HDCP. Average cost of an adapter: $30. As we reported last week, Popular Mechanics has found an even easier solution: Unplugging the HDMI cable, and then plugging it back in'"
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why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's a pity -- the articles roll in every day about yet another speedbump in the DRM saga and how DRM and "protection" in general makes consumers' lives miserable. Of course it's no surprise (to me), just a disappointment. Imagine if the energy spent trying to hogtie the general (and 99%+ totally honest and willing to purchase) consumer were instead applied to making the technology even better?
Making the technology even better rather than harder would only improve the landscape for everyone. TV would look better, content would be easier to deliver and use. Bang for the buck would be better. Access to everyone for things like "high-def" (pick your favorite pseudo-standard) would not be limited to just those with $5-10,000 to toss (with no guarantee your picture will be better, or even viewable).
Instead it's just one more betrayal.
Consider the very first CD player I purchased in 1983. I paid, well, I won't say how much I played for player that could only play one CD at at time. But it was heady stuff even back then. The player had a "pitch" slider to change the pitch of the music (though it also correspondingly sped up and slowed down the track to accommodate). It had the ability to program the songs in any order, and even program the starting time offset into a track, and stopping offset into a track.
And!, on the back, a 9-pin DIN out (I think that was the configuration), with the only mention in the user's manual for that output as "reserved for future use"! I couldn't have been more excited. I brought friends over and showed them the exciting new technology... they just drooled at the sight.
And I always saved the "for future use" output as the hook... I described digital output where liner notes, lyrics, all kinds cool things (of course including the de rigeur track information) would be output in some form that could be put up on a display, TV or otherwise. I 'splained how the digital format worked and how much storage there was available for all kinds of "future use" enhancements.
And, it never happened. The promise of excellent technology, never delivered. And (I've posted on this before), the notion of track info associated with CD technology didn't emerge until we, the people, did it ourselves! with CDDB!
Instead, newer generations of technology included increasingly large percentages of "slice" dedicated to controlling our use of the media, not improving the quality of our experience.
I say fork 'em.
Maybe one good thing will come of all of this -- people may get so fed up and annoyed with trying to get their newfangled entertainment setups to work right (or at all), they give up, buy a bicycle, or some hiking shoes, and get outdoors and see a different world... maybe even one with more return on investment.
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I think you misspelled "fuck." If you're going to curse, do it properly!
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
No, "Fork them". As in, take a fork and repeatedly stab it into a sensitive portion of their anatomy.
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
I'd rather not Fork DRM.
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
It seems that a Frenchman, an Englishman and an American were captured by cannibals. The chief explained that they were going to be killed, skinned, eaten and that a canoe would be made from their tanned hides. BUT they could have one last wish.
So the Frenchman wanted a last cigarette. As soon as he was done with it, they killed him, they skinned him, they cooked him and ate him and they made a canoe from his hide.
The Englishman wanted a last cuppa tea. As soon as he was done with it, they killed him, they skinned him, they cooked him and ate him and they made a canoe from his hide.
Then they camne to the American. "I want a fork," he said.
Incredulous, they asked "A fork? Like you eat with?"
"Yes, a fork," he insisted. So they brought him a fork.
As soon as he received the fork, he started wildly stabbing himself all over his body.
"Canoe?" he shouted, "Here's your fucking canoe!"
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:4, Insightful)
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
If everyone who reads it knows what was meant, what is the harm?
Don't be a rectal orifice.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes, but as we see, the "work" that goes into DRM is rather craptastic, and tends to make things that fail horribly at what they are designed to do. I think we are better off with these brilliant minds workign on DRM then things that actualy matter (say firmware, codecs, drivers, whatever).
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:4, Insightful)
Well, people want to be more immersed in their games, and that's as good an idea as any. The way people drive these days, being outdoors is like being on the sidelines of a Burnout game. And the resolution is much better than 1080p.
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Funny)
Isn't the logical and absurd conclusion of that going to be a smallish curvy box (with several hundred listed features that aren't yet enabled) with a single button on it, that when pressed will do nothing...and it might actually fail to do that right? The one greatest achievement however, is that it'll be really tough for pirates to duplicate the remarkable ability for the device to do absolutely nothing. As a real twist, once it is cracked by the pirates, it'll perform better than the consumer version by far...even though it still doesn't do anything.
Hmm, add a couple another button, a video screen, and that somebody will put linux on it someday, and it's a Zune!
Parent
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Informative)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
You're absolutely right... And, I already knew about this, but didn't want to bog down more than I'd already done in my post..
Here's what's interesting about the CD-Text, and why it really goes to my original point: It showed up in 1996, about 13 years after my first CD player! I'm pretty sure those doing the inventing could've cobbled together a text for CD a little earlier.
I, too bought some CDs excited about the new text format. But the players that could display were few and far between, and I fin
Re:why so onerous, technology? (Score:5, Interesting)
No not at all, and perhaps that's a misconception. People aren't concerned about ridiculous copy protection just as a theoretical exercise, it's more practical than that.
Copy Protection (so called DRM) exists to segment the market artificially. If you buy a CD, the record company would strongly prefer that the only thing you do to it is listen to it in a CD player. In their view, putting the music on an iPod, on a home network, etc is against their use rules and they feel you should pay more for it. After all, you're getting more use without them getting more money. DRM is a way to make sure you only use it where they intend.
Same way with DVD's. While people would buy VHS and DVD to watch movies at home, the use is more complex with computers, iPod video players (zunes!), and home networking. Again, to them, this is a way to segment the market and create scarcity where none exists.
There is a multi-billion dollar industry around ringtones! Imagine if you could just rip your CD and put it on your phone! Why...that would be more money the consumer would have and less the record company would have!
To the record companies, the CD was a big blunder. Not only does it have excellent sound (which they are already charging us extra!) but you can repurpose the music to suit your needs from home stereo, to cars, to personal music players to phones, to what else is new next week. And they don't get any more money.
Yes yes, people will make illegal copies, but this loss is peanuts compared to what they see as new markets made possible by stopping you from copying your own music to another medium.
and, I don't have a problem with them trying to get more money for the same music over and over. I do have a problem when we have the government essentially on the take to support this model. It certainly doesn't benefit me as a consumer, and apparently it doesn't benefit the artist either (http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2004-05-
So your argument is superficially convincing, nonetheless, I think it's not the real reason for copy protection and DRM.
Parent
Yup (Score:5, Informative)
The PJ and deck are about three years old. I assumed these handshake issues had long been dealt with. Apparently not. So... the DRM is more than just a PITA. It's plain broken.
The hilarious part... (Score:5, Insightful)
Parent
I refuse to believe this. (Score:5, Funny)
*gasp* Who'd have guessed?
You want to have your movies and play them too?! (Score:5, Funny)
news flash: cheap product has problems (Score:4, Interesting)
News Flash: This SHOULDN'T BE. (Score:3, Insightful)
Heh... Good thing I have little desire for most TV and most movies these days, eh?
Re:news flash: cheap product has problems (Score:5, Insightful)
Case in point; I bought a Linksys WRK-54G 8 months ago (VERY cheap), and later discovered that despite paying good money for it the product was totally worthless as a router. Wireless connections dropped every hour or so, the box needed a hard reset every day and it wouldn't cope with any more then about 250 pipes without crashing. Needless to say it got returned a week later.
As consumers why should we accept that cheap automatically means defective? Have our standards dropped so far that we don't even expect our money to go supply functional products without paying a premium?
Parent
Re:news flash: cheap product has problems (Score:5, Insightful)
Part of me dreams that in a world with a minimum standard of full functionality, the prices would not be much higher, but I begin to doubt that.
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Westinghouse models are cheap as dirt (comparatively). Their picture quality also seemed more washed out and less crisp than other higher priced models. (i.e. most other models)
I ended up getting the Samsung LN-S3251D (of course its in the 32" range, so it only goes to 720p).
Its not quite as cheap as the Westinghouse (still half the
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It turns out that the version of it released in the first 2 months had a chipset in it that didn't comply with some specification... so it can't simply be flashed.
HOWEVER, though getting an actual RMA number took a while, the process was very friendly and customer service was helpful. They're even sending me a new box so I can get my new version.
Sadly, some
WTF?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Summary correction (Score:5, Funny)
The Dark Side? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Dark Side? (Score:5, Funny)
There is no dark side of the HDCP really, matter of fact, it's all dark....
*thump*thump.....*thump*thump.....*thump*thump.... .*thump*thump.....
--with apologies to Old Pink
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
But as for the other 99.999% of the population who will be screwed by it...We're out of luck.
-Eric
NES, or "blinking toaster" (Score:5, Funny)
That was copy protection too (Score:5, Informative)
Melissa
Parent
Same probems happen with Cable STBs (Score:3, Informative)
I don't think I'm the only one (Score:4, Interesting)
It is worse than that... (Score:4, Informative)
The bigger problem than handshaking issues is that there are apparently multiple versions of HDMI, the latest being 1.3. Now as a consumer, how the hell am I supposed to know which version of HDMI each of my devices have? Has anyone actually seen a version number in the specs for any device? The PS3, for instance uses the 1.3 spec. If my TV uses the 1.2 spec, anything that needs to use the 1.3 spec won't display content. How are they going to explain that to the user? "well, see, the HDMI port here is actually different than the HDMI port here. They look the same, and have nothing to distinguish one from the other, but TRUST ME, there is a difference." I expect that excuse won't fly in any court should a class action case be filed. If I ever get a PS3 (after it is... oh... half the price), and it refuses to play at full resolution because my TV is only 1.2, I will be mighty pissed off. The whole HDMI/HDCP thing is totally pointless and will end up being a royal pain in the ass to everyone except the content makers.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
The SD television standard has a total of one resolution, and only three real standards which vary by country.
Not exactly. There's 480i and 480p. And other countries "standards" are not just formats, they have different resolutions and refresh rates. NTSC has 525 lines of horizontal resolution at 29.97 frames per second, whereas PAL is 625 lines at 50 frames per second. Face it, electronics will always be confusing to someone. When it works right, HD is stunning and worth the money if you are a TV/movie fan. Sports especially make a HUGE difference when watched in HD vs. SD. Being able to read all the number
Next Week on "24" (Score:4, Funny)
"Yes, the terrorists have a mole in CTU. It can only be
WARNING YOUR HDTV IS NOT COMPATIBLE WITH HDCP!!
"... Paris Hilton. Tonight, on NEWS at 11"
HDCP with games? WTF?? (Score:4, Interesting)
I thought HDCP applied only with certain movies that demand it. Does this mean that everything going through the HDMI port of a PS3 is encrypted? Including what Linux displays?
If that's the case, my appreciation of DRM just went from "I couldn't like less" to "wait, I think I can". It highlights the problem that technology-enforced legislation is bound to be too greedy if it has any hope of being effective.
Cycle the sources (Score:5, Informative)
In this case the issue isn't the PS3 but rather however your television handles the HDCP handshake. As I said, mine doesn't have an issue, but I do see a brief burst of noise when a game handshakes.
Its too bad, because HDMI is a really nice connection. But HDCP is just ass. I hope Sony can do something with the firmware to alleviate the issue on these sets that 'blink'.
It's a known bug in the Westinghouse TV firmware. (Score:5, Informative)
Btw, why is a TV firmware bug in the games section? (or even on Slashdot at all?) The summary even mentions that it happens between the Westinghouse TV and cable boxes and other devices.
Re:It's a known bug in the Westinghouse TV firmwar (Score:4, Interesting)
But why the hell does playing a game require HDCP? If you were playing a movie, then I could understand the paranoia.
"Hey dude, check out this rip of me playing [insert popular game here]."
Why the hell does sony want to stop people copying game footage? It's not like you can clone the game this way.
Parent
Re:Why not just use DVI instead of HDMI (Score:4, Informative)
Parent
Re:Why not just use DVI instead of HDMI (Score:4, Interesting)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:dyslexia (Score:5, Funny)
Parent
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Well, I've had the same thing happen with my Sony TV (HDCP compliant DVI plug) and my cable box. It happens very rarely (blue moons happen more often), but it does happen (
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)