ROM Mark

In computing, ROM Mark or BD-ROM Mark is a serialization technology designed to guard against mass production piracy or the mass duplication and sale of unauthorized copies of pre-recorded Blu-ray Discs. Only licensed BD-ROM manufacturers have access to the equipment that can make these unique ROM Marks, thus allowing authentic BD-ROM media like movies and music to be identified.[1]

The ROM Mark contains the Volume ID required to decrypt content encrypted using AACS.[2]

See also

  • Burst Cutting Area

Notes

  1. ^ Blu-ray Disc Association Agrees on Copy Protection System
  2. ^ Digital Content Protection Status Report

References

  • Panasonic, Philips, Sony. 3C BD-ROM Mark Specification.
  • Edmonds, Robert A.; (Saratoga, CA); McDonnell, Kevin J.; (Pleasanton, CA); Meulder, Johan De; (Kessel, BE). "Method and apparatus for identifying a digital recording source".
  • MPAA. "Digital Content Protection Status Report". IRMA Annual Recording Media Forum. (PowerPoint file, via The Internet Archive)
  • CDRInfo. "Blu-ray Disc Marking System Explained".
  • CDRInfo. "DaTARIUS DaTABANK Reads BD-ROM Mark".
  • v
  • t
  • e
High-definition media
Media formats
PromoterInteractivityRecordable formatsComparisonCopy prevention
Blu-ray playersUltra HD Blu-ray playersHD DVD players


Stub icon

This computer-storage-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it.

  • v
  • t
  • e