Eh? The iPlayer content is WMV format, WMA 9.1 and WMV9 with the MS DRM
implementation. I always thought because WMV files are ASF-based, and
streamable, they were discrete audio and video streams within the WMV
wrapper?


  _____  

From: Brian Butterworth [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: 19 June 2007 15:43
To: backstage@lists.bbc.co.uk
Subject: Re: [backstage] www.FreeTheBBC.info


David,
 
The files transferred using iPlayer are just .AVI wrappers of MPEG-4 type
content.   The DRM is inside the AVI wrapper, outside of the MPEG-4.  

 
On 19/06/07, David Woodhouse <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: 

On Tue, 2007-06-19 at 12:50 +0100, David Greaves wrote:
> DRM, being technological, cannot turn a blind eye to the law. The law 
> is supposed to be a bit fuzzy.

DRM doesn't even cope with the clear-cut cases without screwing the
consumer over, let alone the 'fuzz'.

My partner is a high school teacher, and is therefore covered by the ERA 
licensing scheme¹ -- effectively she's allowed to record BBC (and other)
content and use it for educational purposes without many restrictions at
all.

>From DVB this is nice and easy -- I stream MPEG to a file and she can do 
what she likes with it. (Well, I then do what she tells me she'd like.)

Does the misguided iPlayer DRM scheme allow this? I'm not on the trial
(perhaps my Linux/PowerPC hosts weren't considered suitable?) but I 
strongly suspect not.

--
dwmw2

¹ http://www.era.org.uk/about_era.html

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-- 
Please email me back if you need any more help.

Brian Butterworth
www.ukfree.tv  <http://www.ukfree.tv> 

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