|
The Digital Media Project |
|||
|
Source |
L. Chiariglione |
||
|
Title |
A table of requirements derived from Traditional Rights and Usages (TRU) of Media Users |
No. |
040306dmp01 |
The table below is gives the list of requirements developed by the 1st General Assembly of the Digital Media Project. Each entry in the table starts with "DMP shall support".
|
RQ# |
Description |
TRU# |
|
|
creation of DMP quotes by a user |
1. |
|
|
automatic notification to a DMP right holder that a portion of his piece of DMP content is being quoted |
1. |
|
|
making accessible quotes from a piece of DMP content by an anonymous DMP user to other DMP users |
1. |
|
|
filtering/suppression of quotes from a piece of DMP content, within a given circle of DMP users, especially based on criteria such as assigned ratings or an excessive number emanating from an anonymous DMP user |
1. |
|
|
preservation of a stable DMP content rendering to be quoted |
1. |
|
|
attribution of a piece of DMP content to a DMP creator |
1., 11. |
|
|
sectional reference to specific portions of a piece of DMP content (e.g. chapter-and-verse with text, timecode start-stop with linear audio and audiovisual material, geometrical sections of 2D/3D art, references to the state of the piece of DMP content) |
1. |
|
|
fully enjoying the referenced sections of a quote by DMP users who have rights to the referenced DMP content |
1. |
|
|
means to locate/purchase/rent full access to DMP content or else to obtain limited access to rendered references |
1. |
|
|
continuous access to DMP content by DMP users |
2., 19, 20. |
|
|
space-shifted use of DMP content according to the rules of the place in which it is used (Add/cover restricting this) |
3. |
|
|
time-shifted use of DMP content (Add/cover restricting this) |
4. |
|
|
the manufacturing of DMP devices by a manufacturer |
5. |
|
|
the users' free choice of DMP devices |
6. |
|
|
access and use DMP content whose copyright has expired |
7. |
|
|
the ability of a DMP user to allow certain DMP users to receive DMP content and to prevent other DMP users from receiving it |
8., 48. |
|
|
making available a piece of DMP content by an anonymous creator to DMP users |
9. |
|
|
anonymous use of a piece of DMP content by a DMP end-user |
10., 30. |
|
|
editing of a piece of DMP content by a DMP user |
13., 14., 15. |
|
|
checking by a DMP right holder that a piece of DMP content released to another DMP user is being used according to the law of the jurisdiction of the DMP user and usage rules |
13., 14., 15., 16 |
|
|
placing of links to a piece of DMP content by a DMP user |
18. |
|
|
inhibiting the making accessible to a DMP user a modification of a piece of DMP content made by a DMP user who is not the creator |
24. |
|
|
temporary/permanent revocation of one's rights to a piece of DMP content and temporary/permanent transfer of those rights to another DMP end-user |
25., 49. |
|
|
transcoding of a piece of DMP content from one format to another |
26. |
|
|
moving a piece of DMP content from one device to another |
26. |
|
|
removal of a piece of DMP content that has been declared prohibited by a DMP user with the appropriate authority from public access |
27. |
|
|
insertion of a non-removable piece of DMP content at a given time in another piece of DMP content by a DMP user |
28. |
|
|
making a piece of content available to a community of DMP users at a time that is different from another community |
29. |
|
|
withdrawal of a piece of DMP content by the DMP creator |
32. |
|
|
making accessible DMP content of authenticated origin |
52. |
|
|
access to published DMP content |
55., 57. |
|
|
guarantee given to a DMP user that a piece of DMP content is what it says it is |
56. |
|
|
the creation and introduction in the platform of governed content |
67. |
|
|
access content of an end-user choice |
69. |
|
|
running applications chosen by an end-user on his content consumption device |
70. |
|
|
attaching content-consumption devices of end-user's choice to a delivery systems |
71. |
|
|
interoperable end-user devices (IEDs) to receive and provide access to content from multiple sources and services. |
6., 36. |
|
|
a DMP compliant bitstream/file shall be transmission-agnostic, able to exist as a file or be transmitted by wire or wireless. |
6. |
|
|
the persistent association of rights expressions and conditions to DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files. |
? |
|
|
the persistent and unique identification of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files and their derivatives. |
? |
|
|
the persistent binding or association of an individual person, user or other entity with DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files. |
22., 23 |
|
|
extensibility of rights expressions and conditions for DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files such that new, trusted and duly authorized semantics and syntax can be introduced periodically over time. |
n+1 |
|
|
trust relationships to be determined as existing between DMP DRM compliant devices, applications, services, and DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files. |
5., 36., 37., 39-51., 56., 60., 62-66., 73., 75. |
|
|
the secure transfer of governed DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files in cleartext over unsecure channels. |
5., 6., 8., 9., 10., 15., 23., 24., 27., 28-30., 32., 34-45., 47-66., 71., 73., 75. |
|
|
a DMP bitstream/file to exist in a DRM governed state unless stored in or accessed from a DMP DRM compliant device or virtual environment. |
5., 6., 8., 9., 10., 15., 23., 24., 27., 28-30., 32., 34-45., 47-66., 71., 73., 75. |
|
|
the transfer and use of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files between one given DMP DRM compliant DRM implementation and another DMP DRM compliant DRM implementation. |
2., 3., 5., 6., 10., 25., 26., 34., 36., 55., 57., 58., 62., 65., 71., 75. |
|
|
the storage, transfer and use of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files on non-DMP DRM compliant devices. |
5. |
|
|
the transfer of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files from one DMP DRM compliant device to another with the secure removal from the first device. |
25. |
|
|
the implementation of the loan, transfer by intent (including but not limited to by inheritance or last will and testament), or deletion of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files. |
25, 33-37., 42., 48-50., 62., 73. |
|
|
the acquisition and use of DMP DRM compliant bitstreams/files anonymously. (Needs additional TRU) |
10. |
|
|
efficient access control. |
27., 62., 45., 48. |
|
|
and motivate license respect and royalty payment. |
37. |
|
|
tools for assistance in law enforcing. |
? |
|
|
the prevention of illegal access to the protected media. |
48. |
|
|
association of legal access to media with payment mechanisms. |
37(?) |
|
|
elimination of the proliferation of unprotected copyrighted media. |
69. |
|
|
assurance that digital media consumers enjoy at least the same rights and usages as they had with traditional media. |
? |
|
|
assurance of access to protected media is as easy and as simple as to unprotected media. |
? |
|
|
anonymity of the consumers. |
12. |
|
|
avoidance of adding extra encumbrance to the cost of the media creation, distribution and consumption. |
? |
|
|
free choice of services independently of the media item and the license. |
57., 5. |
|
|
assuring consumers that remuneration is distributed fairly. |
?42. |
|
|
innocent consumers aware when the media is pirated. |
? |
|
|
tracing the media source and trail. |
? |
|
|
making it difficult for violators to stay anonymous. On-line/off-line? |
? |
|
|
key for decryption/unscrambling being distributed to authenticated license holders only. |
? |
|
|
the decryption/unscrambling key enabling only operations authorized in the license. |
? |
|
|
the key being used in automated operations only. Users shall not have direct access to the key. |
? |
|
|
the system being resistant to tampering as much as possible. |
? |
|
|
monitoring each usage or transit of media that is subject to authorization or fiscal transaction. |
? |
|
|
reporting of such events (76) to management systems. The reports shall identify the operation, the media item and the license involved in the event. |
? |
|
|
reporting of violations to management systems. The reports should include as much details as possible for identifying the violators. |
? |
|
|
protection of media all the way from creation (mastering) to consumption (playback) so that at no middle stage it is available as clear text. |
? |
|
|
prevention of keys from being stolen and used for operations that are not allowed by the license terms. |
? |
|
|
an in individual key for each media item, so that if one key is exposed only the single associated media item is endangered. |
? |
|
|
a standard algorithm to encrypt/scramble the media. |
? |
|
|
use of standard signaling. |
? |
|
|
use of standard environment for key management. |
? |
|
|
The use of proprietary or renewable algorithms to be softly loadable into the devices through a standard framework. |
? |
|
|
to be authenticated through a virtual identity (VI) |
10 |
|
|
licenses being granted to media items independently of the format the items are represented in, the network type it is delivered through or the way it is consumed by. |
? |
|
|
scalable media coding without hindering the full potential of that technology. |
? |
|
|
To easily access the media with no further manual operation after the license is obtained for the first time |
57 58 69 |
|
|
To provide mechanisms for license trade |
35? |
|
|
To provide mechanisms for enabling the licenses on devices |