Skip to main content

New Approach to Digital Rights Management

Copy protection, watermarks, digital fingerprinting, and conditional access are all Digital Rights Management (DRM) technologies used with the intent to enforce copyright protection of video content. However, the problem is, typically they don't.

Apparently, efforts to stop the reported 12 billion peer-to-peer (P2P) downloads occurring annually in the U.S. have come up short, according to the latest market study by In-Stat.

In-Stat believes content owners and service providers need to shift from content protection to a two-pronged content monetization strategy consisting of digital rights information management and offering a better user experience than consumer P2P services.

"What is needed is a new approach to monetizing digital content including moving a relatively small group of consumer households that do the bulk of P2P downloading (power users), to legal services," says Keith Nissen, In-Stat analyst.

The question is whether the big media companies in the video industry wishes to control its own destiny, or get crushed by technological change, similar to what is occurring in the record labels within the music business.

In-Stat's market study found the following:

- U.S. broadband households download 14 billion videos copies each year; 85 percent are not licensed.

- In-Stat sees watermarking becoming a growing technology to track licensed usage rights.

- A migration of power user households from P2P to legal video services would potentially generate $1.4 billion in subscription revenue and $1.1 billion in advertising revenue.

Popular posts from this blog

How WLAN Transforms Industrial Automation

The industrial sector is on the eve of a wireless transformation, driven by an urgent demand for greater network capacity, reliability, and deterministic performance. Historically, manufacturers and mission-critical operations have relied on wired networks — favoring their predictability — because spectrum congestion in legacy 2.4GHz and 5GHz bands limited confidence in wireless for operational technology (OT) environments. However, with the introduction and rapid adoption of the 6GHz spectrum, compounded by significant advances in Wi-Fi standards, industrial facilities are now poised to embrace wireless LANs as the backbone for automation and digital innovation. Industrial WLAN Market Development Recent research from ABI Research forecasts that over 70 percent of industrial-grade wireless LAN access points (WLAN APs) shipped in 2030 will support the 6GHz band. This is a leap from 2 percent in 2023, highlighting a rapid and profound technological shift. The market for ruggedized indust...