raypenj wrote: Mon Apr 28, 2025 8:18 pm
Reminder to all:
Public comment on DRM encryption is open with FCC.
Thanks for the reminder! Remember, the deadline to submit comments is coming up quickly, midnight Eastern Time on May 7 (it's unclear if this means that you actually need your comments submitted by 23:59:59 PM on May 6, but there's no better time than the present anyway).
I just took 20 minutes and submitted mine; the gist of what I submitted was that the NAB and A3SA are not only trying to use technology to reverse 4 decades of legal precedent in which time-shifting for personal viewing is considered "fair use", they've also rendered live viewing impossible with the equipment that I own. Moreover, requiring an Internet connection to receive an encryption key is all of a privacy, reliability, and emergency hazard concern. (ie, it could mean providers could effectively tell what you're trying to view based on which encryption key you're trying to download, in the event of an Internet outage it could mean you can't watch TV, and in the event of a dire emergency where there might be major disruptions to communication or power, it could mean that broadcast TV is no longer a means of informing the public). I also briefly touched on the weird choice of ISOBMFF fMP4 over MPEG-TS for the container format, which makes it take 2 seconds to change the channel or to recover from even transient interference.
The above-mentioned Lon TV video is a great primer. It's worth taking some time out of your day to watch it and to submit your comments. Just go do it!