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- Newsgroups: sci.crypt
- Path: sparky!uunet!wupost!csus.edu!netcom.com!strnlght
- From: strnlght@netcom.com (David Sternlight)
- Subject: Re: Any way to *CREATE* Vcr+ (VCR PLUS) codes??? (please read)
- Message-ID: <1993Jan5.191138.16420@netcom.com>
- Keywords: VCR+ patent
- Organization: Netcom - Online Communication Services (408 241-9760 guest)
- References: <1iaa91INNhgr@agate.berkeley.edu> <1993Jan04.223520.29065@rchland.ibm.com> <a_rubin.726253952@dn66>
- Date: Tue, 5 Jan 1993 19:11:38 GMT
- Lines: 44
-
-
- As I understand things from my conversations with the inventor of the
- VCR+ (they are down the street from me and make another wonderful
- American success story--he's a very young recent Cal Tech graduate of
- Chinese extraction who had a brilliant idea and seems to have done
- everything right--the next American self-made multi-millionaire),
- they provide the program to the stations on very stringent security
- terms, to compute the codes. That was my info as of six months
- ago--it may have changed--dunno. Back then, I noticed that two
- sources of published codes, the L.A. Times and TV guide occasionally
- had different codes for the same program, which suggests other
- than a central source. (They weren't typos, and both worked.)
-
- I don't know what his motives are on refusing to publish or give out
- the algorithm, but if I were he, I'd behave that way in order to
- avoid the legal costs and niusance of having to take infringers
- to court. if that makes life harder for innocents who simply want
- a few codes for personal use, that's unfortunate.
-
- Further, the 900 number (it works by touch tones) MIGHT be a source
- of revenue, though my guess is that it's run at a loss. I say that
- because it isn't very highly publicized.
-
- By the way, the local PBS station has now gotten on the bandwagon, and
- their monthly program guide (KCET) carries the codes.
-
- Finally, there seem to be two sets of codes. One, of up to six digits,
- is for the standard start times (on the half-hour) and lengths (multiples
- of 30 minutes). A second, of more digits, seems to be for the exception
- cases. The first set has now been broken and a convenient pair of
- "c" routines is making its way around the world. The second has not
- yet been broken, as far as I can tell, but is mostly of interest only to
- make sure the recordings of cable movies with odd ending times are
- correctly stopped to avoid wasting tape.
-
- Either the primary code is a table look-up in the chip, or it has been
- broken by trial and error--the c routines work by table look-up.
- Since there aren't as many published canonical instances of the
- secondary code, it may be a while before it is broken.
-
- --
- David Sternlight
- RIPEM Public Key on server -- Consider it an envelope for your e-mail
-
-