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by contingencies
4849 days ago
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To support Netflix and similar Google plans to implement DRM on these platforms. They have expanded their offices in LA over the last few years. They seem to be using not only conventional DRM as a layer of protection, but also a trusted platform module (TPM) protected boot sequence that validates that the environment has not been tampered with prior to executing the DRM-related code. I believe they are also using operating system level containers via LXC, as a more powerful and language-neutral extension of the Java-centric model on their other mobile platform, Android. Finally, the devices do not have any significant local storage, which means you couldn't really pirate content even if you decrypted it: there's nowhere to put it! http://dev.chromium.org/chromium-os/chromeos-graphics-readin... |
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What all the docs in that link are talking about is the Direct Rendering Manager.
Every single ChromeOS machine also has a developer switch, which will let you put whatever you want on the machine.