Standards set for digital media rights

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The world's four biggest consumer electronics companies have agreed to start using a common method to protect digital music and video against piracy and illegal copying.

The world's four biggest consumer electronics companies have agreed to start using a common method to protect digital music and video against piracy and illegal copying, they said on Thursday.

Japan's Sony Corp and Panasonic-brand owner Matsushita Electric Industrial, South Korea's Samsung Electronics and Dutch Philips Electronics formed the alliance because they want buyers of their products to watch or listen to "appropriately licensed video and music on any device, independent of how they originally obtained that content," they said in a joint statement.

Such interoperability does not exist at the moment. Songs bought in Sony's Connect store on the Internet, for example, can only be played on portable music players from Sony or companies that license its digital rights management (DRM) system.

Digital encoding and decoding formats also differ per store, with Apple using AAC in its iTunes Music Store and Microsoft using Windows Media. The lack of interoperability slows down the success of digital entertainment and the subsequent sales of devices, they feel.

If they do not offer their own protection system, as Sony does, the consumer electronics makers have to chose sides and license someone's DRM system for inclusion into products. Together, the companies sell consumer electronics worth tens of billions of dollars every year.

The alliance, called the Marlin Joint Development Association (Marlin JDA), gives the companies standard specifications to build DRM functions into their devices that support commonly used modes of content distribution.

"(This) promotes interoperability while maximizing efficiency (when creating new products)," they said.

Intertrust Technologies, a small United States-based company which owns many of the crucial patents for digital anti-piracy protection, is also part of the alliance.

The technology can be used in all products that get their content via the Internet, broadcast or mobile phone networks.

The Marlin-based DRM systems will be offered alongside existing systems. The statement did not say if members such as Sony would give up their proprietary systems, but senior Sony executives have said in the past they favor interoperability in order to accelerate sales of digital electronics.

A first version will come out by the summer of 2005, and it will support another, longer-term initiative, called Coral, which is aimed at developing a set of DRM-neutral agreements to ensure interoperability between all DRM systems and standards.

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