from the article: "Everything works the same, except that the key isn't owned by U.S. cable or CableLabs."
I'm not sure I quite understand what this is about, but would this somehow bypass the current requirement that forces HTPC owners to use CableLabs certified prefab PC's?
Could we, for instance, finally build our own HTPC's with VueKey Cablecards that would subsequently work with FIOS?
In theory, Verizon customers could just have to download a VueKey application, which can decode/descramble the encrypted QAM signals. Also Verizon could release an API which is VueKey compatible, and SageTV, Myth, VMC, etc can plug into. Even tivo can hop in on this with a firmware update so tivo users won't need a cablecard.
Authorization can be handled on the Verizon side by with random keys, and the VueKey calls home to make sure that the customer has the OK to descramble the content, thus making it safe for Verizon to allow any HTPC owner to use (even Macs or Linux users). Also Verizon owns the wire going to the home and the ONT box, so any unauthorized person can simply be turned off from a physical standpoint.
Then again, Verizon doesn't have to do anything to make it easier for HTPC users, so while this might make it great, they could make it a greater barrier to entry than cablecard.
“An engineer explained to us that hundreds of ear impressions were gathered in the name of research, and while each one obviously boasted its own unique shape and size, one single characteristic remained uniform across the board: the entrance into the ear canal is not a perfect circle, it's an oval.”
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from the article:
"Everything works the same, except that the key isn't owned by U.S. cable or CableLabs."
I'm not sure I quite understand what this is about, but would this somehow bypass the current requirement that forces HTPC owners to use CableLabs certified prefab PC's?
Could we, for instance, finally build our own HTPC's with VueKey Cablecards that would subsequently work with FIOS?
/confused
In theory, Verizon customers could just have to download a VueKey application, which can decode/descramble the encrypted QAM signals. Also Verizon could release an API which is VueKey compatible, and SageTV, Myth, VMC, etc can plug into. Even tivo can hop in on this with a firmware update so tivo users won't need a cablecard.
Authorization can be handled on the Verizon side by with random keys, and the VueKey calls home to make sure that the customer has the OK to descramble the content, thus making it safe for Verizon to allow any HTPC owner to use (even Macs or Linux users). Also Verizon owns the wire going to the home and the ONT box, so any unauthorized person can simply be turned off from a physical standpoint.
Then again, Verizon doesn't have to do anything to make it easier for HTPC users, so while this might make it great, they could make it a greater barrier to entry than cablecard.