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[PDAs/Phones]| Friday 10th October 2008 |
Like iPlayer downloads for Windows PCs, the new mobile version relies on Microsoft’s DRM technology, which is not supported in OS X. With that unlikely to change, Mac, iPod and iPhone users will remain restricted to the streaming version of the BBC’s catch up service.
Anthony Rose, the BBC’s head of Digital Media Technology, said that downloads to Apple devices would possible, if Apple was to licence its own FairPlay DRM technology.
Unfortunately, Apple keeps its DRM technology close to its chest and has so far not licensed that technology to third parties,” Rose wrote on the BBC Internet Blog. “This means that as of today, it’s not technically possible for us to make rights-protected BBC iPlayer
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Apple has always refused to license FairPlay, which it uses to restrict the copying of movies and some music bought from the iTunes Store, arguing that to do so would risk the security of the DRM, potentially breaching Apple‘s contracts with content providers.
So for the foreseeable future, iPlayer downloads will only be possible on portable media players from Sony, Archos, Philips, Samsung and Nokia.
In Nokia’s case, the BBC is deploying an alternative DRM technology from the Open Mobile Alliance, which is supported on the N96.
“We’ve now added OMA to the list of rights protection technologies supported by the BBC iPlayer, which should allow us to, in due course and where technically feasible, make BBC iPlayer programmes available on a whole new class of mobile phones and other devices that support the OMA content protection standard,” Rose wrote.
For a full list of supported devices, see Where to get BBC iPlayer.
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