The invention relates to a method of copy detection of a record carrier on which table of content (TOC) entries are mastered. The invention relates further to a method of read-out of such a record carrier, to corresponding apparatuses, to such a record carrier itself and to a computer program for implementing said methods.
WO 00/74053 A1 discloses a method of copy protecting a digital audio CD, wherein control data usable by a data reader is encoded on the compact disc. In order to copy protect the disc selected control data is rendered incorrect and/or inaccurate. An audio CD can thus be played normally on an audio player; however, the incorrect data renders the audio CD unplayable by a data reader such as a CD-ROM drive of a PC. In an embodiment disclosed therein, data in the table of contents of the CD is rendered incorrect, e.g. by setting the Atime from the start of the disc program area to lead-out to zero or by identifying audio tracks erroneously as data tracks.
It is often desired to generate a unique identifier of a record carrier by a distributor or sales point of said record carrier which can be used to distinguish between an original record carrier and a copied record carrier in an easy way. It is therefore an object of the present invention to provide a method of copy detection and protection of a record carrier which allows a replay device to distinguish between an original and a copy of a record carrier, but which does not generally render a copy unplayable e.g. by a data reader such as a CD-ROM drive when accessing an audio CD. Further, a corresponding method of read-out of such a record carrier shall be provided.
This object is achieved according to the present invention by a method as claimed in claim 1, wherein said table of content entries are mastered on said record carrier in a detectable non-standard way. This means, that the table of contents itself is accessible and readable by a conventional replay device. However, after a firmware change it will be enabled to detect if the record carrier is an original or a copy by checking if the table of content entries are mastered in the standard or a non-standard way. A conventional replay device accessing a record carrier on which the TOC entries are mastered in a non-standard way will reconstruct the correct TOC table into a standard way so that, when copying said record carrier to a recordable or rewritable record carrier, such as a CD-R/RW, the TOC entries will be written in the standard way. The term “non-standard” thus covers all possibilities of changes to the table of contents which still allow the reading of the table of contents by a conventional replay device, but which is detectable after a firmware change. The term “standard way” in this connection means any way which is conventionally used when mastering TOC entries on a record carrier, i.e. a way which is defined in a corresponding standard such as the Red Book for CD audio or the Yellow Book for CD-ROM or which is agreed upon by manufacturers and users of certain types of record carriers.
Preferred embodiments of the invention are defined in the dependent claims. A method of read-out of a record carrier on which table of content entries are mastered is defined in claim 11, comprising the steps of:
A corresponding apparatus for copy detection and an apparatus for read-out of a record carrier are defined in claims 15 and 16. A record carrier according to the present invention is defined in claim 17. The invention still further relates to a computer program for implementing the methods according to the present invention as claimed in claim 18.
There is hacker software available which enables a user to edit the TOC entries, to change their relative position and to add new TOC entries. According to preferred embodiments of the invention as defined in claims 2 to 4, non-standard ways of mastering the TOC entries on the record carrier are selected, which go beyond the possibilities of such hacking software or which can not be implemented in a straightforward way. For example, such hacking software does not allow to change the number of repeats of TOC entries which is, for CD audio, always three, and does not allow to copy e.g. subcode-Q mode-2 frames. Generally, any modification of the TOC affects the whole lead-in area.
An additional or alternative method of providing the possibility to distinguish between a copy and an original record carrier is defined in claim 5 comprising the steps of:
According to said embodiment an interrupt could be generated as check signal during read-out in response to the detection of said additional synchronization symbols indicating that a synchronization is detected too early. Since such additional synchronization symbols do not correspond to correct subcode byte values, they can not be copied. When a record carrier including such additional synchronization symbols is copied, said additional synchronization symbols are mapped to correct subcode byte values, probably zero. As a result, the copied record carrier does not have additional synchronization symbols which allows to distinguish between an original and a copy. Further preferred embodiments thereof are defined in claims 6 to 10.
The invention will now be explained more in detail with reference to the Figures, in which
When accessing such a record carrier a drive will usually reconstruct the TOC table in the standard way, i.e. when copying such a record carrier, the drive will write the TOC entries in the standard way as shown in the right column.
Other ways of mastering TOC entries in a detectable non-standard way include the usage of a mixing-up pattern which extends over a large number of frames, the repetition of every TOC entry or at least some of the TOC entries for a number different from the standard number, which is three times for CD audio or CD-ROM. Further, the TOC entries may only be mastered in a non-standard way in a confined area, e.g. only in a part of the lead-in of an optical record carrier.
An encoder according to a first embodiment for writing TOC entries in a non-standard way is shown in
With reference to
The detection of additional synchronization symbols can be done by an interrupt saying “synchronization too early” or a similar signal. The firmware of a drive could exploit such an interrupt or a similar signal by only giving the payload, e.g. a UDI (Unique Disc Identifier) or a ROM disc identifier, to the outside if the additional synchronization symbols have been detected.
The resulting 16 bit CRC data have the property that the last two bits (bit 1 and 0) are zero. The first 14 CRC bits of said calculated CRC data are finally placed in the CRC field 28 (14 bits), while the last two subcode bits in the EFM frame are replaced by the additional synchronization symbols S0 and S1 (field 25).
During detection these additional synchronization bits will most probably render 2 bits with value zero in the Q-channel and result in a synchronization-too-early interrupt. When a disc is copied “raw”, the last 2 bits will be zero, but during detection of the copy there will be no synchronization-too-early interrupt. The readout result of the Q-channel content will be the same for the original disc and the disc made with the raw-copy process.
The present invention is not limited to the above-described embodiments. For example, the idea of mastering TOC entries in a non-standard way and the use of additional synchronization symbols can also be used simultaneously to even more increase the security of distinguishing between an original and a copy. Further, the way of embedding additional synchronization symbols, the number thereof and the location within a subcode frame can be different from the shown embodiment.
Number | Date | Country | Kind |
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02076527.7 | Apr 2002 | EP | regional |
Filing Document | Filing Date | Country | Kind |
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PCT/IB03/01256 | 4/1/2003 | WO |