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Intel quietly ships Pentium D with DRM

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Jeffahn

Member
"Intel quietly ships Pentium D with DRM

Microsoft and the entertainment industry's holy grail of controlling copyright through the motherboard has moved a step closer with Intel now embedding digital rights management within in its latest dual-core processor Pentium D and accompanying 945 chipset.
Officially launched worldwide on the May 26, the new offerings come DRM-enabled and will, at least in theory, allow copyright holders to prevent unauthorized copying and distribution of copyrighted materials from the motherboard rather than through the operating system as is currently the case.

While Intel steered clear of mentioning the new DRM technology at its Australian launch of the new products, Intel's Australian technical manager Graham Tucker publicly confirmed Microsoft-flavoured DRM technology will be a feature of Pentium D and 945.
"[The] 945g [chipset] supports DRM, it helps implement Microsoft's DRM ... but it supports DRM looking forward," Tucker said, adding the DRM technology would not be able to be applied retrospectively to media or files that did not interoperate with the new technology.
However, Tucker ducked questions regarding technical details of how embedded DRM would work saying it was not in the interests of his company to spell out how the technology in the interests of security.

The situation presents an interesting dilemma for IT security managers as they may now be beholden to hardware-embedded security over which they have little say, information or control.

Conversely, Intel is heavily promoting what it calls "active management technology" (AMT) in the new chips as a major plus for system administrators and enterprise IT. Understood to be a sub-operating system residing in the chip's firmware, AMT will allow administrators to both monitor or control individual machines independent of an operating system.
Additionally, AMT also features what Intel calls "IDE redirection" which will allow administrators to remotely enable, disable or format or configure individual drives and reload operating systems and software from remote locations, again independent of operating systems. Both AMT and IDE control are enabled by a new network interface controller.

"We all know our [operating system] friends don't crash that often, but it does happen," Tucker said.

Intel's reticence to speak publicly about what lies under the hood of its latest firmware technology has also prompted calls to come clean from IT security experts, including Queensland University of Technology's assistant dean for strategy and innovation, IT faculty, Bill Caelli."

http://www.zeropaid.com/news/5427/Intel+quietly+ships+Pentium+D+with+DRM/

I guess my Centrino will be the only Intel I ever own.

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Diablos

Member
This marks the beginning of the end of computing as we know it...

AMD 4 LYFE ;)

Seriously though, it's AMD or bust now.
 

Jeffahn

Member
8bit said:
Didn't they try before?

Intel tried to have registration numbers on P3 chips way back. It's good in way if they at least enjoy some 'success' 'coz the MPAA/RIAA will ba happy that the ease of piracy and the effectiveness of p2p are reduced, while those with some know-how can continue as before.

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Phoenix

Member
Unless Dell suddenly starts pushing out volumes of AMD-based machines, I suspect the Windows world (and it will probably spill into the Linux and Mac world over time) will have to deal with a new DRM world in 5-10 years for longhorns successor.... if longhorn has actually shipped by then.
 

Jeffahn

Member
Phoenix said:
Unless Dell suddenly starts pushing out volumes of AMD-based machines, I suspect the Windows world (and it will probably spill into the Linux and Mac world over time) will have to deal with a new DRM world in 5-10 years for longhorns successor.... if longhorn has actually shipped by then.

I don't think DRM will dominate in that way. There'll be workarounds and cracks, the major difference though will be that it won't be as easy for the casual pirate to rip a CD/DVD and put it online.

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I thought AMD was supposed to release their Sledgehammer line of CPU with that DRM feature?

What's happening with this now.



I dunno how DRM works too. how can the CPU tell if the mp3 the dude is burning is payed for?



Makes no frickin sense... Unless they restrict files downloaded from the web?
 

Rorschach

Member
amd.jpg

Don't fail me, AMD!
 

cyberheater

PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 PS4 Xbone PS4 PS4
We'll. Look like i'll never buy another Intel chip again.

I do remember that some motherboards has support for DRM but they were a little more expensive and sold zilch. Thank god.
 

tedtropy

$50/hour, but no kissing on the lips and colors must be pre-separated
The low-level remote access functions sound neat for IT applications. The DRM stuff...not so neat.
 
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