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![]() "Telamon" wrote in message ... Who can hear the content can be determined by the encoding. People that don't have the "code" will not be able to hear it. Codes could be built into the radios so that they can only decipher some broadcasts similar to DVD players today or pay radio streams on the Internet. Besides codes built into the radios you might have to key in more codes to hear some broadcasts or load in a deciphering program from computer to radio similar to pay satellite TV. Which SW broadcaster would try to limit their audience? Certainly not the propaganda stations. Not the evangalists. Not the conspiratorialists. If you're suggesting that DRM might somehow be part of a pay radio scheme -- well, maybe. But who would actually pay for SW radio programming? Most of us listen for the entertainment or the technical challenge. SW radio is also a secondary news source. Anybody who'd charge for SW radio programming should realize that's there's plenty of free entertainment, free technical challenges and free secondary news sources. Anyway, I sure wouldn't invest one cent in any proposal to try to make money off pay SW radio broadcasting. I'd rather go to one of those firing ranges that lets you shoot bowling pins with a Tommy gun. Not only would that be much more entertaining, it would probably be just as lucrative! Once the ability to control who can hear worldwide broadcasts is created what would lead you to believe it will not be used? -- Telamon Ventura, California Because I don't think that controlling the audience has anything with the reason DRM is being developed. There isn't much of a SW audience as it is, and I don't see how anyone would benefit by slicing it up into even smaller parts. I think DRM is attempt to broaden the appeal of SW radio. This presumed miracle of digital modulation is supposed to bring high quality broadcast sound right into the radios of people who wouldn't have the first clue on what a sync detector or BFO is. By the way, I don't want to give the impression that I'm pro-DRM. I think the DRM scheme is foolish, but not evil. Frank Dresser |
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