A New Dawn for DRM? DECE Promises Buy-Once-Play-Anywhere Video Downloads
Posted 01/13/09 at 01:30:07 PM by Will Smith

Odds are you’re carrying at least one or two devices that double as a portable media player. We’d also bet that if you’ve spent any time at all trying to watch video on such a device—be it a cell phone, personal media player, smartphone, laptop, or pretty much any other device that’s not a DVD player—you’ve experienced compatibility problems. Right now, you need a thorough understanding of the codec, resolution, and container capabilities of all your devices in order to perform an advanced task like ripping a video for use on an alternate player or streaming content from your PC to, say, your Xbox 360 (by the way, we show you exactly how to do that here).
If you’re a savvy user, these issues can be mastered. But what about the other 90 percent of people? What about all the folks who buy DVDs and can’t figure out how to convert them to an iPhone-friendly format? That’s where the Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem—DECE for short—comes in. DECE was formed in the summer of 2008 with the sole purpose of creating a standard that allows you to purchase a movie once and play it on all your devices. It sounds simple, but it’s actually an incredibly complex problem, both politically and technically. We’re excited because DECE says it’s going to base its standard on the experience every customer should have instead of profit streams and rights management. “We want to give normal consumers the flexibility to stream content remotely, make copies of content on multiple devices, and even burn physical media,” says Mitch Singer, DECE president.
The promise is this: You purchase a movie, whether it’s a download to your PC, a DVD or Blu-ray disc, or something you buy on your cell phone. Then, based on that purchase, you unlock the ability to download the same content in different, but similar formats for playback on all the other devices in your home. If you buy a DVD, you’ll be able to download other standard-definition versions to stream to your living room as well as versions suitable for portable devices, like the PSP or iPhone. The unifying idea behind DECE is that buying digital content should be as simple as buying DVDs. You never need wonder whether the DVD you bought will work in your player, it just works.
"I think what you’re talking about is scalability. The nice thing about disruptive technologies is that it really enables a massive [number of] users to do what previously only highly skilled users could do, and that’s where technology is starting to drive today," says Singer. "The question for us at DECE is: can you take all the technology that’s out there today and repackage it in a way to that gives consumers the flexibility that early adopters enjoy?"
DECE is in the very early stages today. While the promise is exciting, the partner companies—including Microsoft, Intel, Paramount, NBC Universal, Comcast, Samsung, and HP, to name just a few—have barely begun work on the technical nuts and bolts; the eventual format doesn’t even have a name yet. While the DECE has widespread industry support there are some heavy hitters absent from the group, notably Apple. With a large user base shackled to the iTunes Store by hardware and DRM, Apple has a vested interest in maintaining the status quo. We’ll keep you updated on DECE news as we hear more from the nascent organization.
great
Submitted by BaggerX on Tue, 01/13/2009 - 12:05pm
This is how digital media should be, available in whatever format you want once you've bought it. The problem comes if they decide they want to milk you for each of these additional downloads in other formats, or if you need to re-download something. I want to hear how they're going to handle that. Also whether there are limits to how many other formats you can get or where you can use them. If I buy a movie, can I put a copy of it on both my ipod touch and my wife's? These are the kinds of answers I need.
All that should work. The
Submitted by willsmith on Tue, 01/13/2009 - 12:40pm
All that should work. The idea is that once something comes into your domain (your home) it should be freely available on all the devices in your home. At least that's what their goal seems to be. Whether they're actually able to make that happen or not, I don't know.
Sounds good... maybe
Submitted by MyMojo on Tue, 01/13/2009 - 12:00pm
Although I still prefer the 'nerdy' way of converting my media, such as "backing up" DVDs ;-) this would be nice for digital retards, I mean technophobes... excuse me. It would squelch out some of the "Hey, how do I do that" questions we get!
If humans evolved from monkeys, why are there still monkeys?
Now if only we could...
Submitted by Travis Penner on Thu, 01/15/2009 - 12:40pm
This sounds like a great idea... can we do it with games too? If I buy Fallout 3 for PC, I should be able to play it on 360, PS3 and whatever other cross platforms it goes on. That'd be nice...
Travis
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