UHD Blu-ray Denies Your Freedom

The Anatomy of an Authoritarian Subjugation System

The UHD (Ultra High Definition, also known as 4K) Blu-ray standard involves several types of restrictions, both at the hardware and the software levels, which make “legitimate” playback of UHD Blu-ray media impossible on a PC with free/libre software.

Companies that restrict your freedom

The main DRM that restricts playback of Blu-ray media is the Advanced Access Content System (AACS). It is developed and enforced by AACS LA, a consortium of megacorporations that want to achieve total control over the distribution and playback of high-definition optical disks. The founding members are IBM, Intel, Microsoft, Panasonic, Sony, Toshiba, Walt Disney and Warner Bros.

As it travels across connections, the audio/video data is subjected to the High-bandwidth Digital Content Protection (HDCP) DRM, which is developed by Intel.

Hardware requirements

Playing a UHD Blu-ray disk on a PC requires (1) an AACS-certified optical drive, (2) an Intel CPU made between 2015 and 2022, with integrated graphics (not found in every model) and a number of DRM-imposing or otherwise malicious anti-features, and (3) support for HDCP, the sole purpose of which is to make exact copying of the audio/video stream impossible. Such a computer does not respect users' freedom, and denies them control over it.

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The AACS DRM

AACS is a set of cryptographically complex standards for encrypting high-definition media and restricting their playback, which currently applies to HD DVD, Blu-ray, and UHD Blu-ray disks. The flavor of AACS used by UHD Blu-ray further attacks users' freedom (and possibly privacy) by forcing them to connect to a company server to download the decryption keys.

Decryption proceeds in several steps, the first one being the mutual authentication of the player and optical drive to make sure they both carry valid certificates, issued by AACS LA. This organization can arbitrarily revoke certificates, making the affected devices or software unusable with AACS-restricted media.

But the worst blow to users' freedom is that certification requires the developers of software players to sign a license agreement that prohibits free sofware.

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In short, the UHD Blu-ray standard is fundamentally incompatible with user freedom. Therefore, we need to take action to defend this freedom: we must boycott media, services, and players that implement AACS or other forms of DRM, and call for legislation to prohibit these.