DRM ruins German showing of 'Avatar'
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The following comments relate to this news article:
article published on 18 December, 2009
Avatar, the epic blockbuster from director James Cameron was released today worldwide but some viewers of German midnight showings were foiled by DRM, when the protection system caused the video to not be decoded for the digital 3D showing.
Originally reported by Heise.de, the digital 3D copies sent to German theaters had problems with its encryption and therefore could not be decoded.
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Please read the original article before posting your comments.
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Amak
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18. December 2009 @ 21:46 |
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You can easily play the premiere: get your heads outta your arses and ditch DRM. It doesn't work, and when it does this happens.
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slickwill
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18. December 2009 @ 23:06 |
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It would have been a disaster if the 3D version of the film was cammed and the people watching the film on the internet didn't have their 3D glasses.....LOL
But seriously, to put things in perspective, should the readers' assume that most, if not all, theaters who are making the film available to watch in 3D have to comply with this DRM standard, and out all those theaters, this is just a rare incident that the film was not able to be shown?
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Senior Member
4 product reviews
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18. December 2009 @ 23:38 |
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Ha'Ha, serves you right. why don't you pile some more DRM on there.
Classic Case of the ID10T error.
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2009 @ 00:15 |
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Originally posted by slickwill: It would have been a disaster if the 3D version of the film was cammed and the people watching the film on the internet didn't have their 3D glasses.....LOL
But seriously, to put things in perspective, should the readers' assume that most, if not all, theaters who are making the film available to watch in 3D have to comply with this DRM standard, and out all those theaters, this is just a rare incident that the film was not able to be shown?
I agree...unfortunately this was just an isolated incident.
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Wings13
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19. December 2009 @ 00:18 |
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The theatre i work at just installed digital projectors a week ago for the opening of Avatar. We got our digital keys on time and have had no problems running Avatar in 2D and 3D last night/today. The theatre probably made a mistake with their key.
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2009 @ 00:23 |
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There is an old saying about protection methods..."If it works, it can be cracked"...clearly the studios have found out about this, and have finaly made a DRM that works...or at least the movie does not work.
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Member
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19. December 2009 @ 02:02 |
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Im thinking they need to start running anydvd or dvdfab on their machines at the theaters...
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2009 @ 02:08 |
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Originally posted by engage16: Im thinking they need to start running anydvd or dvdfab on their machines at the theaters...
Second that !
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2009 @ 02:08 |
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edit , double post
This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 19. December 2009 @ 02:09
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Junior Member
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19. December 2009 @ 02:22 |
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The news item didn't mention what actually caused problem, was it operator error, Film distributor sending film without correct code, or was the film's protection faulty and unable to accept the " Correct " code?
warlock
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Senior Member
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19. December 2009 @ 02:27 |
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the cause is the Movie Mafia don't trust anyone with there precious Reels, all about control these days.
Powered By

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Junior Member
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19. December 2009 @ 02:34 |
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Re-read article about the German screening of AVATAR in Germany, The Digital Rights Management could be the problem, It switched between 3D and 2D during screening, the operator/ projectionist couldn't decode all the protection, it would appear he didn't have all the required information codes for full 3D showing.If he/ she could show film at all shows that they knew how to apply codes / keys to screen, nut not enough codes for continuous showing in 3D. So.... whose fault is it?
warlock
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AfterDawn Addict
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19. December 2009 @ 03:09 |
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Originally posted by bmlshane: Re-read article about the German screening of AVATAR in Germany, The Digital Rights Management could be the problem, It switched between 3D and 2D during screening, the operator/ projectionist couldn't decode all the protection, it would appear he didn't have all the required information codes for full 3D showing.If he/ she could show film at all shows that they knew how to apply codes / keys to screen, nut not enough codes for continuous showing in 3D. So.... whose fault is it?
I am guessing it was a date error; they probably designed the DRM to only work durring a specified time on a specified date...and the date&time they used was probably for Pacific Standard Time when it should have been for the local time of the theater. This would explain why part of the movie worked in 3D while the rest was stuck in 2D.
Just goes to show you once again...DRM only hurts paying customers and retailers. Pirates bypass, crack, and remove DRM with ease...and most pirates don't even have to do so because they download pre-cracked media from the internet. Meanwhile, I buy a new movie and it has bad sector protection that crashes my portable DVD player after about an hour of play...I then have to rip it with anydvd and re-burn it minus the "protection".
BTW...I assume you were being sarcastic about AnyDVDhd...it is a great ripper; but I don't think it supports 3D movies yet (though I wouldn't be suprised if they used it to get the 2D version of the movie that they showed).
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Tristan_2
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19. December 2009 @ 10:19 |
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Senior Member
5 product reviews
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19. December 2009 @ 14:05 |
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Originally posted by Tristan_2: This is why DRM is crap.
Yep, that's right. When you can't even view 3D, b/c of DRM's BS requirements, that really sucks. I mean the damn thing wouldn't play cause of the midnight showing was NOT decoded correctly, WTF? It's bad enough DRM is in our music, and now we even see it in the movies. Anyways, I haven't seen it yet, but if i do, I'm sticking to 2D anyway, to avoid the headaches associated w/glasses anyways. - BLUEBOY
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blaster4
Junior Member
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26. December 2009 @ 09:11 |
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EXCELLENT!! I just LOVE it when the paying public is a victim of DRM. The media moguls keep doing this and making the public angry but never seem to learn by it. It isn't as if the "pirates" will be phased by this.
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