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CFT, that's exactly the problem: If I understand you correctly, you're saying that there's a sort of digital censorship by obfuscating the data. Well, the truth is you just can't trust a censor. If they claim they have it all, they might as well make copies of it. Even if they don't, you'll just have no idea of the eventual quality of the copy. If the homes have recording equipment, they'll know exactly the quality they'll get for any given encrypted copy.On the other hand, if everyone has the necessary equipment (which I doubt, if people would invest that much money, they'd invest more to have the equipment), they'll quickly figure out that with no encryption, they can easily watch a whole (big!) film (even 4K, it's simply a matter of speed, maybe the effects are processed, but those can be inserted later, after the 'capturing' stage)I'm not sure, but I understand a future where it's just completely impossible to record a movie you're watching, not even by editing them into the video file.As for the worst thing that could happen, it's that the power goes out. When that happens, all HDs are still perfectly good. No need for decryption, just dump the data to tape.RMS brings up a good point here. Who's to say if that will be the case in the future, and if it's possible to do that, it'll be done by someone else, for a larger group, and nobody will be encumbered? But there will be a market for such a service, as already happens with camcorders. And another, smaller, market on the other side, for movie producers who want to turn all the 'pirates' into customers.
I've watched and recorded a lot of f*cking encounter attacks, and I get the impression that even if we want to watch a movie today, not much can be done about it besides, viewingI remember at TechEd 2007 I saw an underground library system in use, and they had one game record playing on a screen, and everyone else was playing a different game. d2c66b5586