Ebook security - protection of your copyright
by: Pierce Alice
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Word Count: 653
Digital Rights Management is a method of protecting content so that only valid and licensed owners of the content can access the content. DRM (digital rights management) is one of the leading ways to protect music, video and documents on the internet. In fact the concept of digital rights management is very simple and has constantly evolved to protect content. To illustrate how digital rights management works lets take an example, lets say I have written an e-book and want to sell it online, the first thing I need to do is protect my hard work so that no one can copy and distribute it freely.
I can upload an e-book online and ensure that only people who pay for the book can download it, but this does not stop anyone from making copies and distributing it freely. A common work around this problem is to password protect the e-book. So after a customer pays for the book and downloads it, he then receives a mail with the password to open the e-book he has just downloaded. Unfortunately that is no protection at all; the user who has just downloaded the file can actually copy the file and attach the password with each copy he makes. So in essence password protecting a file is no good.
So then what else can I do to protect my e-book? This is where DRM came up with a new method of protecting documents and other files. Whenever a user downloads my e-book, in the background he will also download a file that will contain the password to my e-book in encrypted format. The file downloaded in the background is called a voucher or certificate, and every time a user tries to open my e-book, the e-book will look for the voucher; if the voucher is not present on the computer the e-book will not open assuming that the copy of my e-book is illegal.
So does using vouchers make DRM more effective? Partly, smart users can make out which file is being accessed when they try to open the e-book, and just like the password they can actually send the voucher with the e-book as well. The only thing in favour of vouchers is that a majority of users are not savvy enough to figure out which files are being accessed whenever the e-book is accessed. With the number of internet and computer users increasing, the number of computer savvy users has increased, so my e-book is only partially protected.
So then what is the latest and the most effective in DRM? Well the idea is to tie my e-book into something that cannot be transferred from one computer to another, the hardware of the computer. DRM protection today actually generates a file that uses the hardware on the computer to generate a unique ID. This file uses the CPU id or other distinctive hardware features to protect the e-book. So even if the e-book and the voucher file are sent to another user, obviously the hardware will not match and the e-book will not open on any other computer.
Today using hardware specific DRM is the most effective way of protecting e-books and files. The only downside of using hardware specific protection is that a person who has upgraded his computer cannot access the file even after paying for the file; the problem is that once the hardware on the computer changes, the user will not have access to the e-book. Since there is no way for my website to generate a new id key without knowing for sure who the valid owner of the file is, the only option left for the user is to pay for a new license to use the file. This is the biggest criticism of using DRM and the only fool proof method of protecting a file using DRM is to associate a file with the person itself.
Author:Alice Pierce
www.TheWritersOnline.com
(Read or Write Your Way to Big Success)
About the Author
Alice Pierce is the author of this article on ebook security.
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