7 comments

[ 2.3 ms ] story [ 23.9 ms ] thread
This is just sad.
So I take it you won't be in on their ICO presale?
I dunno, sounds kind of interesting. Imagine the pain that creators feel when their images get reposted without credit or permission. Sometimes this can even lead to financial losses for the creator.

A lot depends on how this is implemented, but it would be great to have more options than a watermark and low resolution as ways of protecting your work.

Right. So that's a DRM argument which is a whole extra world of pain. But using blockchain? Really? Especially since DRM's of various varieties are well understood, standardised and implemented - can't they just use one of those?

And... if it 'aint broke...

[author here] The mooted plan is to reuse the DRM from JPEG 2000 part 8 - to generalise it to just-plain-JPEG.

As I note in the piece:

> I have heard of one case of someone trying to use JPEG 2000 DRM — a pornographic site selling DRMed pictures around 2009. Customers had to run a Java applet in their web browser. It didn’t work well, and was a tech support nightmare — I was told about it by one of said tech support people. The porn site gave up on this terrible idea very quickly. The Java applet company apparently went bust a few months later.

JPEG 2000 has a few niche users, who are very happy with it - but they hardly ever go past JPEG 2000 Part 1, the bit that's all about better-compressed images.

Real talk, what is wrong with you HN guys?

Do you really not understand this new tech to the degree you pretend to, or do you are a real argument against the use of block chains?

Really, you sound like an idiot.

Why stop there? Why not emoji?

Why not deprecate sub-32-bit data types? Maybe we should push for chipsets that refuse to print "Hello World" because, as with the Happy Birthday song, someone needs to get their cut.