Good idea - but probably heavily DRM'd #
Posted Friday 4th May 2007 12:58 GMT
So, for 300 bucks you have some sort of embedded OS on a PC.
For video streaming, you do not need much RAM and power, and the fact that you become a sharing node means that the distrubuting company does not need gigabits of bandwidth to stream films... Cheaper to run.
To get all of Hollywood bar Sony onboard, I would guess that these fims are not unprotected, and if they are touting a closed "black box", I would guess that the DRM encryption is new and linked to each paying subscriber and box serial number, and in that way, avoiding the creation of an open PC software download and display client (until some crackers breaks open the box and reverse engineers it). Also, being a connected machine, this would enable the user to download new keys after it's drm keys get revoked.
Now, that's fine until John Q. Cracker finds a way to transform all of these boxes into zombies or does a firmware remote-reflash and kills all of the boxes in north amercia...


