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David Parrott

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The full response submitted by Reuters on 1 June 2001 can be found at http://www. ... Reuters accepts no responsibility for the consequences of any reliance placed on ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: David Parrott


1
Report on Reuters Response to MPEG-21 CfRReport
to XACML Committee Face-to-Face Meeting
David Parrott Reuters/Chief Technology Office18
July 2001
This presentation is a report of a meeting
between Dr David Parrott of the Reuters Chief
Technology Office and the XACML Committee which
took place on 18 July 2001. The contents of this
presentation relate to a fuller paper submitted
as Reuters response to the MPEG-21 call for
requirements (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC29/WG11 N4044
"Reissue of the Call for Requirements for a
Rights Data Dictionary and a Rights Expression
Language" dated March 2001) on 1 June 2001. The
full MPEG submission contains greater detail of
the issues, and the context in which the
statements contained in the presentation are
made. The full response submitted by Reuters on
1 June 2001 can be found at http//www.oasis-open.
org/committees/xacml/docs/response-v1.0-public.doc
. This presentation and the statements contained
within it do not necessarily reflect Reuters
current or future policy, position or plans in
relation to the topics discussed, nor does it
purport to cover all the relevant topics in this
area. Reuters accepts no responsibility for the
consequences of any reliance placed on the
contents of this presentation.
2
The Permissioning Problem
Reuters Today
  • Private networks give tight access control
  • Reuters client-site components allow fine-grained
    permissions
  • Control is reduced on satellite feeds
  • Many data types, all with different permissioning
    models and implementations
  • Heavyweight subscription contracts.

3
Digital Rights Management (DRM)
  • Managing
  • Rights (IPRs, Permissions, Access Controls,
    Usage, etc)
  • Obligations
  • Audit trails
  • across the entire value chain (of IPR creators,
    publishers, distributors, consumers)
  • Electronic, machine-readable contracts
  • In equal measures
  • Legal Infrastructure
  • Business Infrastructure
  • Technology Infrastructure.

4
Many Approaches to DRM
  • Standardised Markup for Expressing Rights and
    Obligations
  • Detection of IPR Infringement
  • Watermarking
  • Fingerprinting/Traitor Tracing
  • Tracking/Searching
  • Rights and Obligations Enforcement
  • Permissioning and Access Control (encryption
    technologies if appropriate)
  • Licensing and contracts
  • Sandboxes (protected environments).

5
Why are we Interested in Digital Rights
Management?
Reuters needs to permission its data and protect
its IPR
  • Data is inherently valuable
  • Unified approach across Slice and dice service
    offerings
  • Unified approach across flexible and varied
    distribution channels
  • e.g., proprietary networks, satellite broadcast,
    public Internet
  • Broadcast mode delivery is required in many cases
    for scalability
  • permissioning restricts access to just those
    parts paid for
  • Third party content comes with complex and
    exacting distribution rules
  • plus regulatory requirements
  • Data flows are multi-directional and include
    contribution rights.

6
What Digital Rights Management is NOT
(i) It is not just enforcement by locking up
content in a layer of encryption
  • Restricted Actions
  • View, Print, Save,
  • No fair use
  • B2C dominated
  • Security/Trust Problems
  • Software inherently unsafe
  • Trusted applications restrictive
  • Vulnerable to systematic attack
  • Proprietary Implementations
  • Lacking interoperability
  • Closed user-base
  • Risk backing the wrong player

7
What Digital Rights Management is NOT
(ii) It is NOT the exclusive domain of Eyes and
Ears B2C data delivery
Vs
8
Content, Permissions, Obligations, and Trust
Permissions The most you can do with content
Obligations The least you must do in order to
gain access
9
MPEG-21
  • Intellectual Property Management and Protection
  • Financial Management
  • User Privacy
  • Resource Abstraction
  • Event Reporting
  • Content
  • Creation and Production
  • Distribution
  • Consumption and Usage
  • Packaging
  • Identification and Description
  • Representation

10
Rights Expressions Everywhere
Contributors
Reuters Systems And Products
Distributors
Network Service Providers
Customers
11
Straight-Through Rules Processing
Contributors
Reuters Systems And Products
Distributors
Network Service Providers
Customers
Rules
12
Unified Rules Definitions
Contributors
Reuters Systems And Products
Distributors
Network Service Providers
Customers
Policies and Rules
13
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.1 REQUIREMENTS FOR THE STRUCTURE OF THE STANDARD
  • 3.1.1 Division of the Standard into an Extensible
    Core and Standard Prelude
  • 3.1.2 Inclusivity

14
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.2 REQUIREMENTS FOR RIGHTS STRUCTURE AND
MANAGEMENT
  • 3.2.1 The Relationships between Rights and
    Obligations
  • 3.2.2 Rights and Obligations Transfer
    (Inheritance)
  • 3.2.3 Rights and Content Independence
  • 3.2.4 The Types of Content over which Rights and
    Obligations Apply
  • 3.2.5 Matching Rights and Obligations to Digital
    Objects
  • 3.2.6 Matching Rights to Contexts
  • 3.2.7 Location, Form, and Access Control of Data
    Dictionaries
  • 3.2.8 Management of Issued Rights and Obligations
  • 3.2.9 Fail-Over and Behaviour Modification
  • 3.2.10 Privacy of Terms Expressed in the Language
    and Data Dictionary
  • 3.2.11 Expression Evaluation

15
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.3 REQUIREMENTS FOR RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS
DEFINITIONS
  • 3.3.1 Operational Specifications
  • 3.3.2 Reporting
  • 3.3.3 Acknowledgement of Source
  • 3.3.4 Rights and Obligations for Real-Time Data
  • 3.3.5 Rights and Obligations for a Stream of
    Digital Objects
  • 3.3.6 Rights and Obligations for Transactional
    Data
  • 3.3.7 Rights and Obligations for Database or
    Server Access
  • 3.3.8 Usage Rights
  • 3.3.9 Managing Communities
  • 3.3.10 Contract Management
  • 3.3.11 Business Models

16
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.4 ATTRIBUTES ON WHICH RIGHTS AND OBLIGATIONS
ARE PREDICATED
  • 3.4.1 Temporal
  • 3.4.2 Geographic
  • 3.4.3 Environmental

17
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.5 REQUIREMENTS PERTAINING TO TRUST
  • 3.5.1 Identification of Trusted Entities
  • 3.5.2 Trusted Time Services
  • 3.5.3 Trusted Applications and Environments
  • 3.5.4 Certifiable Audit Trails
  • 3.5.5 Agent Authentication
  • 3.5.6 Data Integrity
  • 3.5.7 Agent Mandated Privacy
  • 3.5.8 Confidentiality

18
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
3.6 ADDITIONAL FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS
  • 3.6.1 Specialised Support for Business to
    Business (B2B) Commerce
  • 3.6.2 Machine Processing of Digital Objects

19
Requirements for Rights Data Dictionary Rights
Expression Language
4 OTHER AREAS FOR CONSIDERATION IN BUILDING THE
STANDARD
  • 4.1 CHANNEL DEFINITION
  • 4.2 OBJECT MODELS
  • 4.3 WORKFLOW
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