'Ultraviolet' Movie cloud vs other digital copies thread

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UltraViolet streaming cloud-based Blu-ray and DVD video is coming
By Sebastian Anthony on July 15, 2011 at 10:23 am9 Comments

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A vice president of 20th Century Fox, speaking to Pocket-lint, has confirmed that UltraViolet, the cloud-based Blu ray-and-DVD video streaming service, will launch “very soon.” The same Fox executive also says that every major movie studio has signed onto the program, except Disney, and that the only big consumer electronics holdout — Apple — will soon toe the purple line.

But what is UltraViolet exactly? You’d be forgiven for having never heard of it — but once I tell you what it is, you’re either going to dribble with anticipation, or curse like a hippie libertarian who’s just had a bunch of human rights sucked out from underneath him. Basically, UltraViolet is a cloud-based library of your digital possessions. When you buy your first UltraViolet Blu-ray disc and slot it into your Blu-ray player at home, it will connect to the internet and ask you to make an account. This Blu-ray disc will then be forever connected to your UltraViolet account.

Now, there are a slew of seriously useful benefits associated with such a system. If you lose the original disc, don’t worry: just log into UltraViolet and download a copy — or simply stream it from the web. You can also pair multiple devices with your UV account — register the Blu-ray disc at home, and then stream it to your office computer, or your smartphone. This will also be the first ever fully-legal way to download TV shows and movies, too: log into the UV online store, purchase a license, and start watching right away. You’ll even be able to download your online purchase and burn it to DVD or Blu-ray — but of course, for many people, UltraViolet will be a way of finally getting rid of discs and their unsightly plastic cases.

Yes, UltraViolet is awesome — but now take a long, hard look at the caveats. For a start, UltraViolet isn’t just a cloud-based digital library — it’s DRM. To play UV Blu-ray and DVD discs, you need to access your digital library to download your license key — and if you’re not connected to the internet, the TV show or movie simply won’t start. Next, think about this for a second: your entire library of movies and TV shows will be stored in the cloud. There isn’t a single mention on the UltraViolet website that your library will be private — and with almost every major studio, broadcaster, ISP, and tech company on board, you can be guaranteed that they’ll be very interested in the contents of your digital library.

Because UltraViolet media cannot be played without internet access, Big Brother will see exactly what you watch and when you watch it. The powers that be will know exactly what kind of advertisements to show you, both on TV and on the web — and they’ll even be able to turn to companies like Coca-Cola or Verizon and tell them exactly which shows and movies they should buy product placement in.

The truly terrifying thing, though, is that there’s no guarantee that UltraViolet will be around for ever — and like Assassin’s Creed 2 and its infamous, web-based DRM system, what happens if your internet connection goes down when you want to watch a movie? Worse yet, what if UltraViolet is the target of a DDoS attack?

Finally, there will almost certainly be an atrocious Terms of Service that includes a variety of cunning ways for the UV consortium to ban you from their service. Imagine this: the cloud-based UV service will log your IP address when you request an UltraViolet movie or TV show. Now, if you go and torrent a movie, and the UV consortium finds your IP address in the torrent swarm, how much do you want to bet that they’ll disable your UltraViolet account?
 
The problem I'm having is I forgot my password and went though their hoops of getting a new one. Answered all the questions right, and it said contact technical support. They keep unlocking it but they won't send me a password reset. It sucks. Nice now been working on this for 5 months and haven't gotten anywhere. No live people and the don't contact you back sometimes. I want to chock one of them out.
 
I jumped through hoops using UV and after Flixster and each movie studio, I will say there is a possible easier alternative. VUDU.com. If you reddem the movie on that site, you can stream it through PS3, XBOX 360 and some blu ray players. The VUDU app allows you to view the movie with 1080P goodness (it's still not as good as the actual BD, but close) and it even supports 5.1 surround. Watching it on PC or smartphones, will make the quality go to SD. VUDU supports SD (480P), HD (720P) and HDX (1080P). You can downgrade the playing quality and if you reddem it through VUDU, it's easier that jumping through hoops. You also get an added bonus. It's connected to Wal-Mart. If you have the Blu-ray of specific movies, you can pay $2 for HDX version. If you have the DVD, you pay $2 for SD version and if you upgrade to 720 or 1080, you pay $5. Not super bad, but easy, except for bringing in the movies physically to Wal-Mart.