"PCFriendly" doublespeak
Dec. 10th, 2007 12:10 pmI just spent hours yesterday and this morning trying to work out why I couldn't get some of my DVDs to play. They are Region-encoded for this region. (Actually, Australian law has ruled that region-encoding is not applicable in Australia -- it is not illegal to defeat it here, but the spineless worms stopped short of making it illegal to force encoding on the Australians.) I simply couldn't get Linux to recognise the DVD. I know I used to play it on MSWindows, so I booted one of my older machines into MSWIndows. It refused to play the DVD too, though it at least recognised that it was a DVD. This had me puzzled till I noticed a program in the root directory of the DVD, called "PCFriendly". It seems that, in truly Orwellian style, this program lets the movie studio make the disk PC unfriendly. After installing the program, which requires you fill out your details (I always fill out such forms with gibberish), suddenly I was able to access and play the DVD... on my MSWindows machine, but still not on my Linux machine.
I decided to do a little web research on this "PCFriendly" program to find out more about it... and was horrified. It tracks the user, keeping details of all DVD titles played from then on, passing on details through the internet, giving all the user's details away (or more likely selling them) to advertisers and other shadowy organisations so that the user's habits are reported on and they can be targetted with advertisements.
So what this has forced me to do is rip the DVD so that I can watch the content on my main, fast computer which is Linux-only. I almost never use Windows nowadays and I only have it dual boot on an old, slow machine.
This makes me wonder what will happen after Windows goes bankrupt and nobody has copies of the OS anymore? These DVDs will become unwatchable, just as so many of my old documents made with "protected" programs are now unusable.
These people in the film industry are truly disgusting. One wonders how long they will continue to get away with pulling such con-tricks and inconveniencing their customers.
If you want to read more about PCFriendly:
http://www.interhack.net/pubs/pcfriendly/
And now I should get back to writing the last couple of chapters of my story. Slackness, thy name is Miriam.
I decided to do a little web research on this "PCFriendly" program to find out more about it... and was horrified. It tracks the user, keeping details of all DVD titles played from then on, passing on details through the internet, giving all the user's details away (or more likely selling them) to advertisers and other shadowy organisations so that the user's habits are reported on and they can be targetted with advertisements.
So what this has forced me to do is rip the DVD so that I can watch the content on my main, fast computer which is Linux-only. I almost never use Windows nowadays and I only have it dual boot on an old, slow machine.
This makes me wonder what will happen after Windows goes bankrupt and nobody has copies of the OS anymore? These DVDs will become unwatchable, just as so many of my old documents made with "protected" programs are now unusable.
These people in the film industry are truly disgusting. One wonders how long they will continue to get away with pulling such con-tricks and inconveniencing their customers.
If you want to read more about PCFriendly:
http://www.interhack.net/pubs/pcfriendly/
And now I should get back to writing the last couple of chapters of my story. Slackness, thy name is Miriam.
no subject
Date: 2007-12-10 03:34 am (UTC)I gather it was a movie DVD? Did it have 'computer only' interactive content by any chance?
no subject
Date: 2007-12-10 09:59 pm (UTC)Yes, it had computer-only extras. They are the only hint that there was anything evil on the disk. On the back of the DVD box, in the list of mostly non-evil extras (like commentaries, etc), it includes "DVD-ROM content -- screensavers & weblinks". There is no mention on the box of "PCFriendly" or that it works only on Microsoft machines or standalone DVD players.
It has been replaced these days by another program I believe, called "InterActual Player". Both are made by the same shonky company, InterActual. I don't know if "InterActual Player" blocks use of the disk.
no subject
Date: 2008-07-11 10:57 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2008-07-11 10:53 pm (UTC)Another of my favorite movies, "My Neighbor Totoro" is one I also found out about through filesharing. I'd been looking to buy it for some time. After seeing my downloaded copy my sister managed to buy the DVD. I was going to go and buy a copy too (it is such a sweet movie), but when she visited we tried to play it on my computer, and it won't. So looks like I will not be buying that one after all. It is no use to me if I can't play it. The only way I'll be able to watch it is if I rip the video from the DVD.
So there you have filesharing causing people to buy DVDs and heavy protection meaning people need to rip movies if they want to watch them.
Yeah, the hyper-paranoid, coke-addled, movie industry executives has really thought this through.
:/