Hi all,
This is quite interesting!
Founded at
http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthread.php?33118-Digital-Cinema-Package/pa…
You can obtain doremi certificates with an ftp access:
ftp://doremilabs.com/dcp2000/Certificates/
user: service,
pass: t3chn1c1an
sorted by serial numbers
and dolby:
ftp.dolby.co.uk
user: dolbyrootcertificates
pass: houro61l
sorted by countries/cities/cinemas
I asked the same thing to Christie but they only opened me a personal
access.
GDC does not give any access. They answered me you have to ask each
certificate one by one, by mail...
Charbon Studio in Belgium already has a huge data base with an online
generating tool:
https://www.charbon-studio.com/DCP_mastering_portal/kdm?login=demo
It contains some few errors for French servers.
For French certificates, the CNC
(
https://www.cnc-arcene.fr/index;jsessionid=13AFF5A28606CA0CEE2293889BED8F6B…)
references almost all cinemas with their certificates. Their are some
errors (the same than charbon as they got them on this web site) and
certificates have a bad coding but this is a good way to get
certificates city by city. Some certificates are missing as they are
only referencing specific cinemas.
Lilian
Le 16/05/2014 14:44, Carsten Kurz a écrit :
Am 16.05.2014 um 14:15 schrieb Carl Hetherington:
Hi all,
This is interesting. It would be good to run an open database of
cinema certificates so that indies etc. can generate keys (or we can
generate keys for them). I guess the hard part is keeping the database
updated...
Yes. There are quite a few discussions now in various forums about creating encrypted
DCPs for dedicated screens/servers. On some servers, it is quite easy to download a
certificate and email it to anyone in need. On some systems, it is complicated. Not every
cinema has skilled stuff, most would probably not even know what a 'certificate'
is and how to obtain it. Some only know about equipment serial numbers.
In germany we have received more and more inquiries from new DCP and KDM issuing
companies during the last year.
It becomes obvious that a properly maintained certificate database is a trade secret and
an instrument to keep competition at distance, as all these companies are fighting for
business with the distributors while prices for DCP and KDM generation are decreasing.
A public database or automated system would change that completely. It is not clear,
however, how things like FLMx or TKR will evolve in short term. I have been to the
Motionpicturesolutions-Site recently and it seems they are also working on tools to change
booking and key retrieval. What they are trying to do is offering a content catalog where
cinemas can book content and retrieve keys automatically, upon confirmation through the
license holder. While that will probably mean some manual intervention by the studios
booking department in the beginning, it can easily be seen that at least for classic
titles this will become a fully automated video-rental-shop-type system rather sooner than
later. Other companies like Sony are working on similiar systems.
The best thing of course would be if every cinema/equipment operator would have a
certificate stored for easy access. You could even put it up on a website and simply mail
the link to any interested party.
But for now, the major issue is, if someone want's to issue an encrypted DCP, how
does he actually get the certificate for the equipment intended for screening.
Maybe this could also be something we could put up on the DCP-o-matic site as a help,
like the list of tested equipment.
E.G. the GUI of our Sony 515 allows to download the certificate to a connected computer
through the web interface. I know it's the same for Christies IMB and Doremis IMS.
Doremi has an online service and FTP site to retrieve certificates by serial number. I
know Dolby has an FTP site as well, but I think it is not open.
- Carsten
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