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View Full Version : Your days of watching pirated live streams may be over, thanks to Cisco



nobodyspecial
10-24-2016, 01:09 PM
Cisco has plans to stop you in your tracks — if you’re illegally watching a pirated stream, that is. The San Jose-based company recently introduced a new technology known as Streaming Piracy Prevention, which”utilizes technology to locate illegal redistribution of content on the open internet and closed pirate networks.” And apparently, it’ll help Cisco deny access to illegal live streams, even if you’re in the middle of watching it.

Streaming Piracy Prevention, or SPP, works using a “forensic watermark,” which “identifies the subscriptions/sessions used to source the content, and shuts down the source through the video security system — all in real-time,” Cisco wrote in a blog post announcement earlier this week. And because the technology is completely automated, Cisco ensures “a timely response to incidents of piracy.” That means there’s no need for third parties to interfere, and that there’s now “an unmatched level of cross-device retransmission prevention and allowing service providers to take back control of their channels, to maximize their revenue.” Great news for service providers, potentially bad news for you (if you’ve a penchant for watching free TV).

Cisco is hoping to go wide with its SPP technology, and has partnered with Friend MTS (FMTS) in order to tackle as much of the web as possible. As the tech company notes, “FMTS’s market leading piracy monitoring capabilities feed the Cisco SPP service with real-time pirated video feeds found on the open Internet, which are used by SPP to locate the source of the leak and shut it down.”

So if you had big plans in the coming months to watch all that college football via an illegal live stream, or have been enjoying all your favorite shows in a not-so-kosher capacity, consider this the end of days. Streaming Piracy Prevention just may make you an honest television viewer.

runamok
10-24-2016, 01:47 PM
So you say they will be able to disrupt a stream from the server to my house?

The Noof
10-24-2016, 02:34 PM
Who is/will be comissioning them to do this, or are they the "Dudley Duright" of the internet???

fn59
10-24-2016, 08:15 PM
I don't think Cisco will be doing this for free, they're in business to make money. They might demonstrate the technology for free, but in the end the providers will have to pay to stop streaming piracy.

bigbadbrother
10-24-2016, 08:37 PM
Some other hack will pop up , as my brother always said " if man can make it, man can brake it"

c8rbk1ng
10-24-2016, 11:11 PM
Sounds threatening at first, but how are they going to stop streams from overseas that carry legally licensed programming. Can't watch ESPN? There's overseas streams that carry the ESPN programming as well as other PPV events and programming.

c8rbk1ng
10-24-2016, 11:15 PM
Some other hack will pop up , as my brother always said " if man can make it, man can brake it"

Reverse engineering :)

The Noof
10-25-2016, 01:17 AM
Some other hack will pop up , as my brother always said " if man can make it, man can brake it"

Where are the D1/nagra 4 hacks?Your "brother" is full of it...lol

c8rbk1ng
10-25-2016, 03:57 AM
Where are the D1/nagra 4 hacks?Your "brother" is full of it...lol

Really? You don't think it's hacked? It's not public because there's no money to be made...yet. As long as IKS and IPTV are around you'll not see it. Sats are coming to an end anyway. ATT will be eliminating Direct TV satellite service for other methods of delivery. How long will it take Dish and Bell to do the same thing?

kenkell1
10-25-2016, 03:59 AM
Really? You don't think it's hacked? It's not public because there's no money to be made...yet. As long as IKS and IPTV are around you'll not see it. Sats are coming to an end anyway. ATT will be eliminating Direct TV satellite service for other methods of delivery. How long will it take Dish and Bell to do the same thing?

Exactly!.....................

TLG
10-25-2016, 11:56 AM
I agree that methods of delivery are changing ,, but at the same time
unless there are plans for the replacement of power line infrastructure with an upgraded Internet supply,
We are still far away from eliminating satellite service.

Satellite service was introduced to supply services to rural America,,, as of today a large percentage of
rural America is still on 1 Meg download running through telephone lines. There are some exceptions
where companies are supplying high speed wireless rural service, but the service is choppy, weak, unreliable
and expensive.

Some solutions include upgrading rural power lines with fiberoptic services and also companies such as
qualcomm and Virgin are close to supplying wifi to cities through satellite service. (the service is much like the
one Facebook wanted to supply to Africa that exploded on the launchpad) Both solutions are still a couple of
years away at best. Eliminating sattelite will happen, when the last house on the planet is equipped with a new
service solution. JMHO

nob0dy
11-20-2016, 03:20 PM
https://www.technologyreview.com/s/602440/atts-plan-to-hack-the-electrical-grid-to-provide-cheap-wireless-broadband/they are ........

jvvh5897
11-20-2016, 08:40 PM
A "large percentage of rural population in America" still just means a few percent of the total population--about 15%. There has been satellite delivery IP for lots of years (HughesNet is one). The reason that TV spectrum is decreased and is in for further decreases is so that around cities they can use the bandwidth for high-speed wifi. The need for satellite services is not going away, but the need to use it for TV is steadily going down.