I
certainly don't think that what AACS is doing is a reasonable move, but it's a move that we've known is coming for some time. I remember hearing about these two steps in the "analog sunset" (the 2010 restriction on component output and the 2013 elimination of component output) last year some time. Stupid? Certainly. Useless for deterring piracy? Completely. Detrimental to consumers? Yep. Surprising? Sadly, not so much so.
The one thing that I wonder about is the possibility of some smart manufacturers exploiting the "loop hole" in the 2010 sunset rules. Take a player like the BDP-80 - relatively modest price, same video processing capabilities for component and HDMI video outputs (aside from restricting DVD output to 480p via component), and a multichannel analog output for folks who don't have support for HDMI audio. It's in production now, and thus exempt from the 2010 analog sunset requirements. In theory, they could keep building and selling that player until the end of 2013. Not only would it let them serve a specific market that AACS is trying to screw, but it would make it less onerous on consumers in general when they start omitting component video outputs on
other products to avoid the hassle of implementing the 2010 sunset rules for component outputs (firmware to control that output separately from the HDMI output) that no one will want to use anyway because of those 2010 sunset rules. Wouldn't
that be funny...
One thing I found odd about the article was this paragraph:
Lest you think that this won't affect existing players, note that after January 1, 2011, the manufacturers of Blu-ray discs will be able (at their option) to insert an Image Constraint Token into any Blu-ray disc. This is a sort of "digital flag" that will turn off the high-definition component video output in the player (effectively turning it into a low-resoluton 480i/576i output). The goal is to make sure that all high-definition video will only be made possible through "secure" digital connections like HDMI.
The ICT has been a "feature" of the Blu-ray format since the format came to market back in 2006. There was endless debate going back to at least 2005 about the ICT and its potential to render the large user-base of component video displays (those without HDMI or DVI-HDCP) "obsolete" for Blu-ray. The studios ended up all promising that they would not be making use of the ICT in their releases, a promise that so far they have kept. Is something changing about ICT after 1/1/11?