All of this created the conditions for one of the weirdest, most surreal tech policy proposals I've ever encountered, before or since: the Broadcast Flag. Here was the pitch: the broadcasters and studios would conspire with the consumer electronics and tech companies studios to create a "standard" for preventing "piracy" (the Broadcast Flag).
The Broadcast Flag would be a single bit (a 0 or 1) in the header of a video.
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The "standard" required any compliant device to look for this bit, and if it found a "1," to *pretend that the video it was receiving was scrambled.* It would then have to *actually* scramble the video before saving it, using a DRM that would be licensed on terms that required that the video remain scrambled before it was output - either as a picture, or to another drive, or over a network.
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