I can fully see them trying to add something like this to a DVD so you couldn’t watch it more than X times or as a built in self destruct if someone tried to do a 100% bit-rip of the disk.
If they could come up with one that reacts with air or light then “right to repair” isn’t even an option.
You just need to think bigger and there’s unlimited options to protect IP from people who would misuse it for things like that pesky freedom they go on and on about.
>I can fully see them trying to add something like this to a DVD so you couldn’t watch it more than X times or as a built in self destruct if someone tried to do a 100% bit-rip of the disk.
that would be as effective as current DRM measures then, i.e. their shit is going to end up on a russian torrent tracker within hours after someone gets a copy, just as usual
DRM for hardware products, where tech like this would make sense, can already be made virtually unbreakable with existing cryptography and on-chip logic/ROM
Like self destructing object that is provable secure after a read x times seems interesting outside DRM.
For example a lot newer military hardware uses software to be more effective. So if the gear has to be abandoned for some reason a secure erase sounds useful.
How much better than is than current solution of a chip on a glass substrate storing a crypto key with a heating elements or explosive to shatter it dunno. Although glass being brittle makes making sure it does not break accidentally has design challenges.
I can fully see them trying to add something like this to a DVD so you couldn’t watch it more than X times or as a built in self destruct if someone tried to do a 100% bit-rip of the disk.
If they could come up with one that reacts with air or light then “right to repair” isn’t even an option.
You just need to think bigger and there’s unlimited options to protect IP from people who would misuse it for things like that pesky freedom they go on and on about.