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View Full Version : Pentium 5 - Anti-piracy (again...)


The Therion
09-10-2002, 08:02 PM
"Bracing itself for another potential fight with computer privacy advocates, Intel Corp. said yesterday that its next generation of microchips, due next year, would include anti-piracy features that will protect computers against hackers and viruses while giving digital publishers powerful new tools to control the use of their products.



The technology, code-named LaGrande, was designed to protect computers from viruses and bad-natured hackers. But the feature will also give Hollywood, the recording industry, and software makers much stronger controls over the way consumers use their digital music, films, and computer programs.Publishers, for example, may prevent PCs that run LaGrande and Microsoft Corp.'s software-based Palladium security technology from copying CDs, forwarding certain documents, or running unlicensed software.

Paul Otellini, Intel's president, said the chip maker would include no copyright protections in LaGrande, but he acknowledged that digital publishers could use the technology with software programs such as Palladium to create their own.

Intel intends to include the technology in the Prescott chip design, which will succeed the Pentium 4 as the Santa Clara, Calif., company's flagship PC chip in the second half of 2003."

(source : www.boston.com )


Looks like Intel 's serious again about this thing.Dont know about you, but i dont want THAT much control in my affairs....

Selenium
09-14-2002, 04:33 AM
source (http://www.winsupersite.com/faq/longhorn.asp)

Longhorn will include a database-like file system based on technology from SQL Server 2003 (code-named Yukon). This file system will abstract physical file locations from the user and allow for the sorts of complex data searching that are impossible today. For example, today, your email messages, contacts, Word documents, and music files are all completely separate. That won't be the case in Longhorn.

So if this fabulous master database goes AWOL just hope to god you have a backup ?


Palladium, Microsoft's technology for realizing the Trustworthy Computing vision. Microsoft designed Palladium around the following ideals:

Palladium will tell you who you're dealing with online, and what they're doing. It will uniquely identify you to your PC and can limit what arrives (and runs on) that computer. Information that comes in from the Internet will be verified before you can access it.


A.K.A. I see what they want me to and run what im allowed to ?

Am I the only person that doesnt like these ideas, maybe im misinterpreting them ?

Shep
09-14-2002, 06:40 AM
Easy solution... just stick with AMD, unless they do it too...:confused: