RIAA wants your fingerprints
Posted: Sat Jun 05, 2004 6:13 pm
Original URL: http://www.theregister.co.uk/2004/06/04/biometric_drm/
RIAA wants your fingerprints
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco (andrew.orlowski@theregister.co.uk)
Published Friday 4th June 2004 21:36 GMT
Not content with asking for an arm and a leg from consumers and artists, the music industry now wants your fingerprints, too. The RIAA is hoping that a new breed of music player which requires biometric authentication will put an end to file sharing.
Established biometric vendor Veritouch has teamed up with Swedish design company to produce iVue: a wireless media player that allows content producers to lock down media files with biometric security. This week Veritouch announced that it had demonstrated the device to the RIAA and MPAA.
"In practical terms, VeriTouch's breakthrough in anti-piracy technology means that no delivered content to a customer may be copied, shared or otherwise distributed because each file is uniquely locked by the customer's live fingerprint scan," claims the company.
iVue has been developed in partnership with Swedish design house Thinking Materials (http://www.thinkingmaterials.com/). Since Veritouch already supplies security authentication systems up to Homeland Defense standards (in partnership with an Israeli defense contractor), we do forsee exciting synergies ahead, should budget cuts force the War on Terror and the War on Piracy to be consolidated into just the one unwinnable "war".
Do you think it will catch on? ®
Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:2389, old post ID:20171
RIAA wants your fingerprints
By Andrew Orlowski in San Francisco (andrew.orlowski@theregister.co.uk)
Published Friday 4th June 2004 21:36 GMT
Not content with asking for an arm and a leg from consumers and artists, the music industry now wants your fingerprints, too. The RIAA is hoping that a new breed of music player which requires biometric authentication will put an end to file sharing.
Established biometric vendor Veritouch has teamed up with Swedish design company to produce iVue: a wireless media player that allows content producers to lock down media files with biometric security. This week Veritouch announced that it had demonstrated the device to the RIAA and MPAA.
"In practical terms, VeriTouch's breakthrough in anti-piracy technology means that no delivered content to a customer may be copied, shared or otherwise distributed because each file is uniquely locked by the customer's live fingerprint scan," claims the company.
iVue has been developed in partnership with Swedish design house Thinking Materials (http://www.thinkingmaterials.com/). Since Veritouch already supplies security authentication systems up to Homeland Defense standards (in partnership with an Israeli defense contractor), we do forsee exciting synergies ahead, should budget cuts force the War on Terror and the War on Piracy to be consolidated into just the one unwinnable "war".
Do you think it will catch on? ®
Archived topic from Iceteks, old topic ID:2389, old post ID:20171