The invention relates to an apparatus provided with communication means for obtaining an electromagnetic coupling with an antenna on an information carrier, and provided with a carrier body and a pressure body between which said information carrier can be clamped, a bridge in which the pressure body can move freely, and a second antenna which is connected to the communication means.
The invention further relates to a system comprising an information carrier, which information carrier is provided with a reflecting metal layer, an integrated circuit, and an antenna connected to the integrated circuit; and comprising an apparatus provided with communication means for obtaining an electromagnetic coupling with an antenna on an information carrier, and provided with a carrier body and a pressure body between which said information carrier can be clamped, a bridge in which the pressure body can move freely, and a second antenna which is connected to the communication means.
Many information carriers are on the market nowadays on which data can be distributed. These information carriers are often optical discs such as CDs, CD-ROMs, or DVD-ROMs nowadays. Such discs may be used for storing and filing comparatively large quantities of data in a simple manner, for example digital photos, films, and music albums. A sufficient amount of equipment is available on the consumer market by this time enabling individuals to create their own CD compilations, but also to make copies of existing CD, CD-ROM, or DVD-ROM discs. The data, the digital file, on the CDs is often protected by copyright. Royalties are normally paid to the owner of the digital work stored on the relevant information carrier for each CD that is sold. The illegal copying and distributing of these digital works has the result that, for example, artists, producers, and software developers are bereft of much income. Digital media publishers raise the alarm for counteracting the illegal copying of these items protected by copyright.
One of the systems devised as a solution to the above copying problem is the encoding of the digital work by means of coding keys and the addition of digital user rights. The digital user rights, for example, impose restrictions on the maximum number of times a CD can be copied, or the maximum number of times a CD can be played back. It is not possible to reproduce the digital work on an apparatus suitable for this without the correct user rights and decoding keys.
The decoding keys and the user rights are supplied along with the digital work during purchase. These keys and user rights may be stored in the wobble of the information carrier, so that copying of the key is not possible. It is also possible to hide these keys in so-termed hidden channels of the information carrier.
Another possibility that is increasingly taken into consideration is the storage of the decoding keys and the user rights for the digital work in a separate memory which is fastened on the information carrier. This separate memory is, for example, an integrated circuit which can communicate via communication means with the player of the information carrier so as to transmit the correct decoding key. The information in the integrated circuit is specific to the digital work stored on the information carrier.
Such a system, in which an integrated circuit or chip is provided on an information carrier with the object of storing additional information, such as user rights, separately from the actual information, is known from U.S. Pat. No. 6,044,046. This chip is provided with electromagnetic receiver means for obtaining the energy required for the operation of the chip. Furthermore, electromagnetic transmitter and receiver means are present on the chip of the information carrier so as to render possible a communication between the chip and the playback device.
Communication means rendering possible this communication are present in the playback apparatus. The communication means in the apparatus comprise an integrated circuit, a so-called read-out IC, and an antenna.
The apparatus further comprises optical reading means which are capable of reading the information from the information carrier. These reading means in the known system of an optical information carrier are formed by a laser source and the necessary optics and processing means.
It is a disadvantage of the known information carrier that the electromagnetic communication between the chip and the IC present in the playback apparatus is not optimal.
It is an object of the invention to provide an apparatus of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph which promotes a good communication between the chip and the read-out IC.
This object is achieved in that the bridge is at least partly free from metal axially opposite the second antenna.
The invention is based on the recognition that eddy currents arise in the metal bridge adjacent the antenna of the communication means in the apparatus provided with the communication means for achieving an electromagnetic coupling with the chip on the information carrier.
The coiled antenna of the communication means generates a magnetic field when it passes a current. The change in magnetic flux generates an electric field in accordance with Faraday's law. This electric field is also induced in the metal layer immediately above the antenna. This results in a movement of free charge carriers in the metal following the direction of the electric field. Circular currents are generated in this manner, the eddy currents. These currents create a magnetic field in opposite direction (Lenz's law), which causes the total magnetic flux to decrease significantly.
The eddy currents adversely affect the coupling and thus the communication between the chip and the read-out IC. This can be partly prevented in that the metal layer of the bridge is at least partly removed at the level of the antenna, so that no eddy currents can arise in this region.
The system of the kind mentioned in the opening paragraph is characterized in that the bridge is at least partly free from metal at the level of the second antenna.
These and other aspects of the apparatus and the system according to the invention will be explained in more detail below with reference to drawings, in which:
The Figures are diagrammatic and not drawn to scale, and corresponding components have been given the same reference numerals. Furthermore, the mutual dimensional ratios of the components have not been necessarily exactly depicted in the Figures for reasons of clarity, where applicable. It will be clear to those skilled in the art that alternative but equivalent embodiments of the invention are possible without departing from the essence of the invention, and that the scope of the invention is limited by the claims only. Thus the embodiments described below relate to an information carrier with an integrated circuit, such as a CD. It will be obvious that the principles of the invention may be equally well applied to other rotating information carriers such as CD-R, DVD, DVD+RW, CD-I, and other members of the family of optical information carriers. It will also be obvious to those skilled in the art that the description given below of embodiments of a playback apparatus is also applicable to a recording apparatus for writing on the optical storage unit.
The optical information carrier 1 further comprises an integrated circuit 21 and an antenna 22 which is connected to the integrated circuit (denoted chip hereinafter) 21. An embodiment of the information carrier with the chip and the antenna shown in the CiD region can be seen in
The chip provides the possibility of storing information. This information may be, for example, a decoding key for decoding the digital work stored in coded form on the information carrier. The illegal copying and distribution of the digital work on the information carrier is rendered more difficult through the provision of the decoding keys in a separate memory, and not on the information carrier itself. Another example of the use of the storage capacity in the chip is the storage of a table of contents. This table of contents may comprise all titles and performing artists of musical numbers stored on the information carrier in the case in which the digital work comprises, for example, a plurality of music albums. This information in the chip may then be read out, for example, and displayed on a screen.
The chip and the antenna are capable of achieving an electromagnetic coupling to another antenna connected to a read-out IC in a playback apparatus, as will be explained in more detail in the discussion of the system.
To promote the communication between the chip on the disc and the read-out IC, no metal layer is present in the CiD region. The metal layer is shown hatched in the plan view of an embodiment of the information carrier in
The apparatus further comprises communication means for establishing an electromagnetic coupling with an information carrier I provided with an antenna and a chip as described above and shown in
The antenna 66 of the communication means of the apparatus is preferably arranged perpendicularly above the antenna on the information carrier so as to obtain an optimum coupling. This coupling must be achieved inter alia when the information carrier is in the apparatus and the optical storage unit of the information carrier is being read out. The antenna in the apparatus may be fastened, for example, to the bridge 63 perpendicularly above the antenna on the information carrier as shown in
The changing magnetic flux in the antenna 66 connected to the read-out IC 65 induces a voltage in the antenna 22 connected to the chip 21 on the information carrier 1 owing to the mutual induction. Communication can thus take place between the chip on the information carrier and the read-out IC in the apparatus by means of electromagnetic coupling.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02077714.0 | Jul 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind | 371c Date |
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PCT/IB03/02727 | 6/27/2003 | WO | 1/4/2005 |