Locking down content…
The BBC released, a while ago, something called “iPlayer”. It lets you view their programming.
Except, it’s windows-only, and your shows go pop after 30 days because of the Windows Media timebombing that third-party TV production firms have negotiated as a condition of shows being downloadable via the official iPlayer desktop client.
Cue up lots of protests by linux owners. Response from the BBC: it’s going to take us two years to write a secure client for those platforms.
Then the iPhone is released…
[Quote:]
Last week, Auntie launched the streaming version of iPlayer for the Jesus Phone and iPod Touch. It’s meant transcoding shows to the H.264 format used by Apple’s QuickTime player - and a whole raft of other players on all platforms - because Steve Jobs doesn’t think Adobe Flash video is good enough to appear on his magnificent tool.
The BBC has “secured” this non-DRM’d stream using the awesome power of browser user agent strings, which are trivial to manipulate. Consequently, penguin fanciers have quickly cobbled together hacks that will grab the whole show as a 512Kb/s video download.
And now everybody gets their shows unprotected…
March 13th, 2008 at 10:32
This isn’t very accurate. The BBC has had a flash based streaming service available since Christmas 2007. The streaming service works fine on macs, and I presume linux machines as well (although I’ve not tried it on linux). Its only the download and play later functionality that is Windows only.
The iPhone support comes in the form of streaming Quicktime wrapped h264 to iPhones instead of a flash video stream - served from exactly the same web site that can be used by PCs/Macs/Linux boxes…
Can’t the flash stream be captured in the same way as the quicktime stream?
March 13th, 2008 at 10:43
Can’t the flash stream be captured in the same way as the quicktime stream?
Apparently not, or the 400 linux users in the UK would have done so.