Windows Vista Content Protection - Twenty Questions (and Answers)

A conversation has cropped up since the recent publication of a paper scrutinizing how Windows handles digital rights management, especially for HD video.  I've since looped back with Dave Marsh, a Lead Program Manager responsible for Windows' handling of video, to learn from him the implications involved and to learn to what extent the paper's assertions are accurate.  The following is an article Dave has put together to address the misconceptions in the paper, followed by answers to what we expect will be the most frequent questions in the minds of our customers.  Leave us a comment to let us know what you think.  -- Nick

Over the holidays, a paper was distributed that raised questions about the content protection features in Windows Vista.  The paper draws sharp conclusions about the implications of those features for our customers.  As one of the Lead Program Managers for the technologies in question, I would like to share our views on these questions.

Windows Vista includes content protection infrastructure specifically designed to help ensure that protected commercial audiovisual content, such as newly released HD-DVD or Blu-Ray discs, can be enjoyed on Windows Vista PCs.  In many cases this content has policies associated with its use that must be enforced by playback devices.  The policies associated with such content are applicable to all types of devices including Windows Vista PCs, computers running non-Windows operating systems, and standalone consumer electronics devices such as DVD players.  If the policies required protections that Windows Vista couldn't support, then the content would not be able to play at all on Windows Vista PCs.  Clearly that isn't a good scenario for consumers who are looking to enjoy great next generation content experiences on their PCs.

Associating usage policies with commercial content is not new to Windows Vista, or to the industry.  In fact, much of the functionality discussed in the paper has been part of previous versions of Windows, and hasn’t resulted in significant consumer problems – as evidenced by the widespread consumer use of digital media in Windows XP.  For example:

  • Standard definition DVD playback has required selective use of Macrovision ACP on analog television outputs since it was introduced in the 1990s.  DVD playback on and in Windows has always supported this.
  • The ability to restrict audio outputs (e.g., S/PDIF) for certain types of content has been available since Windows Millennium Edition (ME) and has been available in all subsequent versions of Windows.
  • The Certified Output Protection Protocol (COPP) was released over 2 years ago for Windows XP, and provides applications with the ability to detect output types and enable certain protections on video outputs such as HDCP, CGMS-A, and Macrovision ACP.

It's important to emphasize that while Windows Vista has the necessary infrastructure to support commercial content scenarios, this infrastructure is designed to minimize impact on other types of content and other activities on the same PC.  For example, if a user were viewing medical imagery concurrently with playback of video which required image constraint, only the commercial video would be constrained -- not the medical image or other things on the user's desktop.  Similarly, if someone was listening to commercial audio content while viewing medical imagery, none of the video protection mechanisms would be activated and the displayed images would again be unaffected.

Contrary to claims made in the paper, the content protection mechanisms do not make Windows Vista PCs less reliable than they would be otherwise -- if anything they will have the opposite effect, for example because they will lead to better driver quality control.

The paper implies that Microsoft decides which protections should be active at any given time.  This is not the case.  The content protection infrastructure in Windows Vista provides a range of à la carte options that allows applications playing back protected content to properly enable the protections required by the policies established for such content by the content owner or service provider.  In this way, the PC functions the same as any other consumer electronics device.

With that introduction, here are the top twenty questions, and answers, that aim to address some of the other points raised in the paper.

Dave Marsh - Lead Program Manager for Video

Twenty Questions and Answers

Do these content protection requirements apply equally to the Consumer Electronics industry supplied player devices such as an HD-DVD or Blu-Ray player?

Generally the requirements are equivalent for all devices.  For example, an HD-DVD or Blu-Ray disc always requires HDCP protection for DVI/HDMI outputs regardless of the type of device playing the disc.  There are some cases, such as DVD-Video, where PCs have slightly different protection requirements than CE devices, but these differences are mainly historical and as dictated by the licenses associated with the systems providing access to the content (e.g., CSS for DVD).

When are Windows Vista's content protection features actually used?

Windows Vista's content protection mechanisms are only used when required by the policy associated with the content being played.  For Windows Vista experiences, if the content does not require a particular protection, then that protection mechanism is not used.

Will the playback quality be reduced on some video output types?

Image quality constraints are only active when required by the policy associated with the content being played, and then only apply to that specific content -- not to any other content on the user's desktop.  As a practical matter, image constraint will typically result in content being played at no worse than standard definition television resolution.  In the case of HD optical media formats such as HD-DVD and Blu-Ray, the constraint requirement is 520K pixels per frame (i.e., roughly 960x540), which is still higher than the native resolution of content distributed in the DVD-Video format.  We feel that this is still yields a great user experience, even when using a high definition screen.

Will this affect things like medical imagery applications?

Image constraints only apply to protected content being played and not to the desktop as a whole; therefore, the resolution of other non-protected media, such as medical images, is not affected.

Do things such as HFS (Hardware Functionality Scan) affect the ability of the open-source community to write a driver?

No.  HFS uses additional chip characteristics other than those needed to write a driver.  HFS requirements should not prevent the disclosure of all the information needed to write drivers.

Will the Windows Vista content protection board robustness recommendations increase the cost of graphics cards and reduce the number of build options?

Everything was moving to be integrated on the one chip anyway and this is independent of content protection recommendations.  Given that cost (particularly chip cost) is most heavily influenced by volume, it is actually better to avoid making things optional through the use of external chips.  It is a happy side effect that this technology trend also reduces the number of vulnerable tracks on the board.

Will Windows Vista content protection features increase CPU resource consumption?

Yes.  However, the use of additional CPU cycles is inevitable, as the PC provides consumers with additional functionality.  Windows Vista's content protection features were developed to carefully balance the need to provide robust protection from commercial content while still enabling great new experiences such as HD-DVD or Blu-Ray playback.

Aren't there already output content protection features in Windows XP?

Yes.  Output content protections are not new requirements for commercial content.  The CSS content protection system for DVD-video discs requires output protections such as Macrovision ACP and limiting the resolution on component video outputs to standard definition.  Windows XP has supported these requirements for some time.

Is content protection something that is tied to High Definition video?

While HD content has some unique content protection requirements, many of the requirements apply to commercial content generally, independent of resolution.

What about S/PDIF audio connections?

Windows Vista does not require S/PDIF to be turned off, but Windows Vista continues to support the ability to turn it off for certain content -- a capability that has been present on the Windows platform for many years.  Additionally, in order to support the requirements of some types of content, Windows Vista supports the ability to constrain the quality of the audio component of that content.  Similar to image constraint for video, this quality constraint only applies to the audio from content whose policy requires the constraint, not to any other audio being played concurrently on the system.  As a practical matter, these audio restrictions are not widely used today.

Will Component (YPbPr) video outputs be disabled by Windows Vista's content protection?

Similar to S/PDIF, Windows Vista does not require component video outputs to be disabled, but rather enables the enforcement of the usage policy set by content owners or service providers, including with respect to output restrictions and image constraint.

Will echo cancellation work less well for premium content?

We believe that Windows Vista provides applications with access to sufficient information to successfully build high quality echo cancellation functionality.

Will it mean that there will no longer be unified graphics drivers?

The Windows Vista content protection requirements for graphics drivers will not lead to movement away from unified drivers.  In fact, all graphics drivers shipped with Windows Vista are unified drivers.

Will Windows Vista audio content protection mean that HDMI outputs can't be shown as S/PDIF outputs?

It is better if they show as different codec types, as it allows the difference to be reflected in the UI, thus providing the user help with their configuration and creating a better user experience.  The user wants to know the difference between HDMI and S/PDIF, as they are different physical connectors.

What is revocation and where is it used?

Renewal and revocation mechanisms are an important part of providing robust protection for commercial audiovisual content.  In the rare event that a revocation is required, Microsoft will work with the affected IHV to ensure that a new driver is made available, ideally in advance of the actual revocation.  Revocation only impacts a graphics driver's ability to receive certain commercial audiovisual content; otherwise, the revoked driver will continue to function normally.

Does this complicate the process of writing graphics drivers?

Adding new functionality usually introduces new complexity.  In this case, additional complexity is added to the graphics driver, but that complexity comes with the direct consumer benefit of new scenarios such as HD-DVD or Blu-Ray playback.

Will the 'tilt bit' mechanism cause problems even when the driver is not under attack from a hacker, e.g., when there are voltage spikes?

It is pure speculation to say that things like voltage fluctuations might cause a driver to think it is under attack from a hacker.  It is up to a graphics IHV to determine what they regard as an attack.  Even if such an event did cause playback to stop, the user could just press 'play' again and carry on watching the movie (after the driver has re-initialized, which takes about a second).  Again, it is important to note that this could only occur in the case of watching the highest-grade premium content, such as HD-DVD or Blu-Ray.  In practice I doubt it would ever actually happen.

Does Windows Vista's use of OMAC-authenticated communication impact graphics driver performance?

The authenticated communication mechanisms used for Protected Video Path in Windows Vista are only actively used while commercial content is playing.  This means that while there is a performance impact, it is limited to the scenarios where it is required to provide robust protection for commercial content.

Do content protection requirements mean that graphics chips have to provide hardware acceleration for video decode?

No.  The Windows Vista content protection requirements do not require that graphics hardware include hardware acceleration for decode for many years, but such support is highly recommended to improve the user experience for HD content.

Will the video and audio content protection mechanisms affect gaming on the PC?

The Windows Vista content protection features were design for commercial audiovisual content and are typically not used in game applications.  A game author would have to specifically request these features for them to impact game performance.


Comments

  1. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 3:06PM  

    I read Peter Gutman's analysis and I just finished reading David Marsh's response.

    I have to say that David has mastered the art of spin to respond to the questions.

    Here is another example of David Marsh's prowess at spin doctor:

    Will the 'tilt bit' mechanism cause problems even when the driver is not under attack from a hacker, e.g., when there are voltage spikes?

    "Even if such an event did cause playback to stop, the user could just press 'play' again and carry on watching the movie (after the driver has re-initialized, which takes about a second)."

    So Peter is right about the tilt bits and David thinks it is just Ducky that Vista is able to be "re-initialized". That is a exactly what Gutman predicted for people that know better.

    I would like to know if MS ever thought to ask customers if we wanted our computers turned into an "Appliance" as David Marsh said in his Power Point presentation at HEC. Vista is taking computers a step closer towards set top devices like the cable companies provide to us.

    David Marsh even hinted that MS has even more drastic Measures PAP,(PUMA), HFS, PVP-UAB and Encryption of the PCIe Bus that it plans to implement after consumers have accepted their computer has been turned into an Appliance like Device. Slide #6 from HEC

    It seems to me that Vista is not consumer friendly but is an attempt to re-define the PC into a content delivery device sacrificing the customers own equipment in the process.

    As it stands right now, I have no intention of buying and installing Vista. Why on earth would I want to turn my PC into an Appliance. MS has lost touch with its Customers and turned over development to the “computer experts” in Hollywood. This is so sad from a company I used to respect and love.

    If I want an appliance, I will get the $50 box from China.

  2. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 3:22PM  

    Nick,

    There is a fundamental problem with Microsoft's decision to add enhanced DRM that most have overlooked thus far.  There are essentially 2 different core issues here.  1) DRM enforcement itself and 2) Microsoft's inclusion of the DRM "feature".

    Assuming that all of your answers are completely accurate and that Microsoft can be trusted to implement all of these "features" properly without any unintended "features" (aka bugs); one HARD COLD PROBLEM STILL REMAINS.

    You assume that EVERY single one of your customers wants your enhanced DRM as a feature.  Therefore extending the costs of enforcing/granting those features to EVERY single customer.  This is a blatantly error in judgement on Microsoft's part.

    You should take into account that a customer might NOT EVER WANT to run HD/premium content, but like it or not, all of your customers MUST NOW HAVE IT--no choices.  How does this align with Microsoft's projected image of "balancing customer desires with partner desires"?

    Why not simply package all of this "mandatory content protection" into just another downloadable update that is only installed when a user EXPRESSLY DESIRES TO PLAY PREMIUM CONTENT?  Then, those that want to play HD/premium content on their Vista system can pay the price just like they would expect when going out to purchase a standalone HD-DVD/Blu-ray player.  Why force all of your users to pay for this "functionality".  Seriously, wasn't that the whole purpose of "Minimum System Requirements"--why not have a little "Microsoft HD pack required" logo just like the while "PlaysForSure" thing?

    Since you have drawn the comparison to consumer electronic devices, let me apply the same logic to that market segment.  "Premium content" is expensive to deliver, therefore, everyone that only wants a DVD player must now pay extra because some people want to play "premium content".  Somehow, this increase in cost is justifiable to the DVD player customer?

    Right now, I can voice my feelings about DRM by simply avoiding all DRM laiden content.  Personally, I have done just this.  I also avoid media players that enforce the crippling of my Fair Use rights.  In Windows Vista, it is no longer possible to avoid these players as the functionality is built into the operating system.  And even if I never purchased any DRM content, by simply paying for Microsoft Vista I end up supporting the very companies and technologies I am trying to avoid.  No thanks.  And the same concept applies to the costs of hardware.

    You side-stepped the whole hardware cost issue, but I can understand because you don't make most hardware.  One of the largest hardware manufactures has spoken up about the costs though, and you can't side-step that fact.  By your own admissions, being "Vista capable" does indeed increase the costs of hardware, which will be handed down to the consumer regardless of their chosen operating system.

    The simplest explanation for mandating the DRM feature is simply that about adoption.  If you didn't pre-package this "update", no one would download, much less pay for it.  If that happened, how could all of the licensing and intellectual property costs that are necessary to implement the DRM "features" be properly "passed on to consumers"?

    The sole benefactors of this decision are obvious--the consumer loses. Ever since it became possible to execute Fair Use rights on DVDs, the Content Cartell have been looking at better ways to mandate viewing/listening privileges from their crystal palaces.  Vista embodies all their wildest dreams.

    From your very words, you are telling me that the primary purpose of Vista is to bring HD/Blu-Ray to consumers -- isn't this a gross miscalculation as to how the majority of your customers use their computer?  Aren't you being a bit optimistic about the adoption of HD/Blue-Ray in a hugely saturated DVD market?  Sure, some want the functionality of Media Center and will want the ability to play their overpriced and limited content, but not all of your customers; why mandate this on everyone?

    Quite frankly, I am not interested in HD DRM content and the fact that Linux won't be able to play it in no way detracts from the attractiveness of being able to decide what my computer does.

    -Court

  3. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 4:13PM  

    How is Vista, and by proxy, Microsoft, able to arbitrate between our congressionally and constitutionally-mandated rights, and the reduction/violations of said rights by content providers?

    Why doesn't Microsoft go to the courts in order to get a directed verdict on behalf of consumers with regards to content?

  4. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 4:14PM  

    Lot of very excited people here. And yes, it's a controversial subject.

    Have any of those of you who are so against the content protection measures in Vista stopped to consider that MS might not have a choice? If the alternative option was to not provide any way to play back Blu-Ray or HD-DVD in Vista, then what choice is there? Because I'm certain the content providers could prevent MS if they wanted to.

    Many of you also have failed to read what was said. In no way will other applications on your system be affected if you're using protected content. That would defeat the object. David says that several times throughout this post, yet most of the commenters are still convinced that it does.

    At the end of the day, if you're not happy, don't use Vista. Leave the rest of us to it!

  5. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 4:30PM  

    If I want to run software that requires old hardware where there isn't any signed driver available. My understanding is that I can't install these drivers.

    Since I need to run these programs, I could use a dual boot system or virtualization.

    I think the only thing that Vista is qualified for is to run as a secondary os and not a primary. This seems the only way to work around the issues discussed.

    Vista will never run as a primary os for anyone with the issues that I face. I think when consumers realize the only way of getting around this is to do the same.

  6. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 6:06PM  

    MrTuffy,

    I have indeed read ALL of the original post.  It is not that Microsoft made it possible to allow a customer to consume HD/Blu-Ray content, just that MICROSOFT IS FORCING IT ON EVERYONE WITHOUT LETTING THE CUSTOMER DECIDE IF THEY *WANT* HD/Blue-Ray content to display on their PC.  

    You are extremely naive if you assume that the only costs involved with DRM are tied to the media that employ DRM.  The largest and most expensive part of DRM is what is required to enforce the DRM on the player side.

    If a consumer wants to avoid DRM content, it is not right to still make them pay the hardware and software costs involved in enforcing DRM.  When will companies stop assuming their customers are criminals?

    Don't assume that everyone wants HD/Blu-Ray support.  It should be optional--and don't give me that whole Business/Premier/Ultimate non-sense about the activation of these features.  Personally, I wonder what the hardware requirements of Vista would be for a version that does not contain all the draconian "features" mandated by the content barrons--would it be that the hardware requirements would decrease?  

    Seriously, why do I need or want a process running on my computer that polls every hardware device every 30 seconds just to see if Windows should re-initialize my equipment?  And don't give me that nonsense about a dual core processor and that the process will be neglible; ANY time spent performing any such activity is UNWANTED and UNDESIRABLE.

    -Court

  7. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 6:07PM  

    For those who missed Lorenzo Barbieri's post because it was "accidentally" deleted, here is a link to the original essay:

    http://www.cs.auckland.ac.nz/~pgut001/pubs/vista_cost.html

    I hope it will not be also "accidentally" deleted...

  8. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 6:42PM  

    I'm reading a lot of these responses and just shaking my head.  So, I thought I'd chime in with a few of my own Q&A's, since there seems to be so much confusion about what to me seems an extremely simple topic.

    Q: If I run Linux, or the Mac OS (let's pretend for a moment that OSX has no internal DRM --which it does, but that's another story), or any other OS sans *any DRM at all*, will I be able to play the *protected content* I buy or purchase for download with no worries about the DRM policy restrictions built into Microsoft's OS'es?

    A: Absolutely not. It seems to me obvious that regardless of OS employed, if the content you are trying to display with that OS requires DRM policies of some kind or another--you simply *will not be able to display that content.* Period. The OS you choose is not the issue--the DRM support required by the owners of the content you wish to display is precisely the issue.

    Q: Who owns the content which demands DRM support before it will run?

    A: In every significant case that I can think of, everybody *except* Microsoft.

    Q: Was DRM Microsoft's idea?

    A: Unless Microsoft was and is trying to shoot itself in the foot or the head, I cannot imagine this to be the case.  Why? Because DRM support of the kind the content providers are mandating is an extremely expensive undertaking for Microsoft and doubtless requires huge expenses for Microsoft in terms of time and money that could much better be applied elsewhere if at all. Clearly, Microsoft would much have preferred to stay out of the DRM business.

    Q: So why did Microsoft implement DRM in the first place?

    A: Well, let's imagine for a moment that Microsoft wants to provide a wide range of functionality to the people who it hopes to persuade to buy its OS software. Given a choice of supporting DRM to allow users to playback such formats as HD-DVD or BluRay movies on their PCs, or of denying potential customers the ability to playback such movies when running Windows by abandoning DRM, I think it is obvious that Microsoft feels that providing this functionality for its customer base is the  lesser of two evils.

    Q: If I am a physician, and the proprietary and very expensive medical imaging software I am using saves image files in a custom format supported only by the medical imaging software company I bought the program from, am I yet another victom of DRM?

    A: Absolutely not. This has nothing to do with DRM, but rather is an example of poor support from the software company you have chosen to provide your imaging software. I would suggest ringing them up on the phone and demanding a file conversion program so that you can convert your image files from the company's proprietary format into something else displayable by a wide variety of common display programs, such as jpeg, etc. I would strongly hint to this company that if they do not comply you will henceforth in the future not be buying their very expensive medical imaging software.

    If you do decide in the future to buy from a different company then I suggest you assure yourself of the capabilities you want and expect before you write the checks.  This of course has nothing to do with the topic of DRM inside Microsoft's OSes, but I thought I'd pass along this advice just the same.

    Q: Why doesn't Microsoft "stand up" to the RIAA/MPAA and just say "Hell, no, we won't go!"...?

    A: Two reasons occur to me:

    1) In that event the RIAA/MPAA would just go around Microsoft completely and implement their standards anyway.  It is of critical importance to understand the RIAA/MPAA knows full well that its demands for DRM inside 3rd-party distribution networks are a roadblock to wider consumer participation in the products the RIAA/MPAA are selling. These entities simply do not care at all whether any of their content is workable under digital formats of any kind. The RIAA/MPAA has been brought literally kicking and screaming into the digital age and they *obviously* do not like it one little bit, since it erodes the traditional distribution channels the RIAA/MPAA have controlled utterly for decades.  It would suit them just fine if nobody wanted any of their products in a digital format. These entities represent companies who would be more than happy--and are eager, even--to go back to the analog-only distribution formats and channels of the past.  

    Ironically, Microsoft's willingness to jump through the DRM hoops these entities mandate actually contravenes the basic thrust of what these entities are after--which is the dissolution of the digital format for the distribution of their products.  In a very real sense, Microsoft has called their bluff and placed these entities in a situation they had hoped to avoid--the mainstreaming of their content via digital distribution. But I fear that irony is lost on many of the respondents here.

    2) The other "option" that I see obliquely referred to here is the idea that Microsoft should be actively working to subvert the goals of the RIAA/MPAA by openly trying to use Windows as a vehicle to render the DRM mandates of the RIAA/MPAA ineffectual and inconsequential.  IE, that Microsoft should use Windows to hack the DRM policies of the RIAA/MPAA and render them ineffectual.

    Well, does the word "lawsuit" spring into anyone's mind here? How about "Congressional investigation"...?  I think most of us might agree that it is more than likely that Microsoft has had quite enough of courts and government meddling over the last few years. Such conditions never become palatable.  

    Q: What is accomplished by the endless spinning of "voltage spike" yarns and theoretical driver problems that have not yet occurred?

    A: Absolutely nothing. Microsoft's goal here as I reckon it seems to be to provide functionality to the users of its OSes, whether the RIAA/MPAA really wants that to happen or not. In that vein I think you can trust to Microsoft's self interest to believe that such theoretical inconveniences to the users of its products would be completely antithetical to Microsoft's central goal of creating OS software that is attractive to the consumer as opposed to being repulsive. As such it would not be in Microsoft's direct self interest to allow such conditions and circumstances to ever develop. Microsoft is surely aware that you and I do not have to buy VISTA, aren't they?

    In summary, it is my belief that the DRM policies of the RIAA/MPAA will indeed become so arduous and complex that they will ultimately prove unsupportable commercially.  But, contrary to the whimsical belief of the companies behind the RIAA/MPAA, the digital format for content will not suffer as a distribution channel.  What will happen is that piracy of the kind the 'AAs lament will skyrocket as people simply will not be denied the Fair Use of the content they have purchased for their personal enjoyment and use.  Rather than defeating piracy,   everything the 'AAs are attempting to ram down our throats in the way of complex DRM schemes will greatly stimulate it and provoke it. At some point in the future these companies will learn the hard way that trying to force a market to buy their products, over and over again, simply is an unworkable policy.  

    At that time these companies will get smart and realize that pleasing their customers is much more important than trying to control them. I think it is barely possible to please your customers--I think that controlling them is impossible. And at that time I think we can look forward to a much more relaxed policy towards DRM inside any OS we choose to run, and I am certain Microsoft is looking forward to that day as well.

  9. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 6:52PM  

    So let me understand this Microsoft is adding all these new security features to make the movie industry happy but I'm the one who is going to have to pay for it, yep sounds consumer friendly to me.

    So now I have to decided to buy Vista or a Nintendo Wii, heck maybe even an Xbox 360.

    I can see my children in the future having to make a simular decision. Do I buy Vista 3 or a new car.

    Mac's are starting to really look attractive.

    I want to buy a new computer this year but have decided to wait at least 8 months after Vista's release to see what the real truth is. If even just a small percent of what I've read turns out to be true, I'm buying a Mac.

  10. Posted on: January 21, 2007 at 7:16PM  

    KBsoftware:

    We aren't talking about "security features." We are talking about DRM. Big difference.

    OK, I give up...;) Please explain the similarities you see between "Vista or a Nintendo Wii, heck maybe even an Xbox 360."  I don't see any...;)  Also, if you can find a new car that's decent for the price of VISTA, please let me know what it is so that I can take a look...;)

    "Mac's are starting to really look attractive." ??? Macs are loaded with DRM--oh, I get it now! It's not DRM which bothers you--it's *Microsoft's* DRM. Apparently you'll be very happy with Apple's DRM (I guess that even though it will have the same restrictions as Microsoft's, you can stomach it because it's "by Apple.") Try and remember that neither Microsoft nor Apple is responsible for the DRM mandates of the content companies.

    I wouldn't want to discourage you from buying a Mac--but I will mention that if you buy it because you think it's DRM-free you had better think again...:D

Trackbacks

  1. Posted by: Robert McLaws: Windows Vista Edition on January 20, 2007 at 3:53PM

    Dave Marsh, Microsoft's Lead Program Manager for Windows (meaning he heads up the development) explains

  2. Posted by: Lorenzo Barbieri @ UGIblogs! on January 21, 2007 at 5:54AM
  3. Posted by: Donna's SecurityFlash on January 21, 2007 at 10:13AM

    Windows Vista team respond on the recent publication of a research on how Windows handles digital rights

  4. Posted by: JD on EP on January 21, 2007 at 4:31PM

    Vista & media resolution: From this Microsoft staffer's blog, it sounds as though commercial media (like feature-films) will display at lower resolutions on Vista than it would on home-electronics gear, although non-commercial media can still display

  5. Posted by: The Daily Grind on January 22, 2007 at 5:05PM

    I wrote a little about the production problems of high-definition a while ago; now the New York Times has...

  6. Posted by: Chris Lanier's Blog on January 22, 2007 at 5:46PM

    Windows Vista Content Protection - Twenty Questions (and Answers) | In case you missed it, Microsoft...

  7. Posted by: Chris Lanier's Blog on January 22, 2007 at 5:46PM

    Windows Vista Content Protection - Twenty Questions (and Answers) | In case you missed it, Microsoft

  8. Posted by: Geek News Central Podcast on January 23, 2007 at 3:27AM

    Thanks for the new site Feedback and great show inputs. I talk a little about getting Clearwire here at the house to complement cable. Sponsors: [Save 10% off on any order at GoDaddy.com!] Use Code Todd [Try GoToMeeting free for...

  9. Posted by: Geek News Central on January 23, 2007 at 3:30AM

    Thanks for the new site Feedback and great show inputs. I talk a little about getting Clearwire here at the house to complement cable. Upcoming Tech Podcast Round Table Sponsors: [Save 10% off on any order at GoDaddy.com!] Use Code...

  10. Posted by: Doubt's Log on January 23, 2007 at 11:17AM
  11. Posted by: Peering through Windows... on January 24, 2007 at 6:26AM

    Digital Rights Management, or DRM if you are an acronym lover, has caused quite a stir over recent weeks,

  12. Posted by: Stephen Laniel’s Unspecified Bunker on January 25, 2007 at 4:49PM

    Via

    Rugen, a pretty

    insane diagnosis of all the media crippling in MS Vista.

    (Included below the fold.) Some questions: Why is Microsoft doing so much for the content industries? They have billions of dollars; why don’t they fight? Google bough

  13. Posted by: Blog Personnel De Vincent Lagrandmaison on January 27, 2007 at 9:22AM

    A la suite du rapport assassin d'un chercheur sur le système de protection des contenus audiovisuels dans Vista, l'éditeur réplique par une foire aux questions sur un blog. Microsoft vient de publier sur un de ses blogs une liste de questions-réponses

  14. Posted by: JamiePlucinski.com on January 28, 2007 at 2:10AM

    Yes, I'm going back to Windows XP, and yes I've been saying I'm going to do it for a while but have either been too lazy or too occupied with playing WoW to do it. Which really is a shame, considering I had some cool things planned for Vista this year,

  15. Posted by: vista-tecnica on February 08, 2007 at 6:37AM

    Siento tener que poner esto en este blog, pero creo que es importante que todos estemos atentos a este

  16. Posted by: /* basquiat's lovely winter riot */ on February 12, 2007 at 2:12PM

    Windows Vista includes an array of “features” that you don’t want. These features will make your computer less reliable and less secure. They’ll make your computer less stable and run slower. They will cause technical support prob

  17. Posted by: Nicholas' Blog-O-Rama on February 12, 2007 at 11:10PM
  18. Posted by: Voice Capture DSP blog on February 13, 2007 at 3:49AM

    In Professor Peter Gutmann's A Cost Analysis of Windows Vista Content Protection he raised the concern

  19. Posted by: Crazy Blog on February 14, 2007 at 5:52PM

    Hola a todos, primero quiero lanzar una pregunta, ¿pero, que le pasa al ciberespacio?, la verdad es que

  20. Posted by: Comunidade Portuguesa de Profissionais de TI on March 14, 2007 at 8:22AM

    Chegou até nós na Microsoft Portugal, uma mensagem que desde há algum tempo anda a circular de forma

  21. Posted by: blog:C3 on March 15, 2007 at 2:34PM

    De lo poco que estoy leyendo he visto aparecer mucho de esto, y no es que me esté asustando. Sólo estoy pensando cada vez más seriamente en instalar Linux de una vez por todas en la PC de casa. Y...

  22. Posted by: A Ovest di Paperino on March 24, 2007 at 9:35PM

    Vista, DRM e il libero mercato

  23. Posted by: The Coffeehouse on June 13, 2007 at 7:42AM
  24. Posted by: free web page builder on June 09, 2008 at 6:06PM

    [...] ...

  25. Posted by: Lo que se avecina « En vez del psiquiatra… on November 22, 2008 at 10:05PM

    Pingback from  Lo que se avecina « En vez del psiquiatra…