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Open Caption Law in DC

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  • #16
    I wouldn't advise cinemas getting into the privacy filter/screen thing either, Harold. Whatever they supply won't fit or will be blamed for damaging the phone...etc. There should be standards developed for such filters so that the usual channels of accessories for consumer gear can make/supply them. Theatres could sell them, for those that forgot, I suppose.

    What would be cool is if we could have invisible captions such that only those wanting them will see them. Sort of like you don't see IR LEDs but your camera does.

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    • #17
      Originally posted by Steve Guttag View Post
      What would be cool is if we could have invisible captions such that only those wanting them will see them. Sort of like you don't see IR LEDs but your camera does.
      Maybe once we all have neural implants that have outside connectivity. ;-)

      But less jokingly... you can't quite get there, but there is interesting rather old-school tech used to create very very narrow field of view steerable screens. The big executives at annual industrial tradeshows often use "privacy teleprompters", an alternative to the visually distracting presidential style glass ones that require you to be stationary, or monitors that make you look away from your audience.

      They are basically a big plastic Fresnel lens used as a rear projection screen in the back of the house. Then an operator "follows" the executive with the whole contraption sort of like a follow spot. Only those very close to where the speaker is standing can read the projected text, screen just kinda looks dimly illuminated for everyone else.

      Another silly thought along those lines is baffled/louvered direct view screens. Sort of like how they hide auxiliary traffic lights from your view when you should be looking at the correct one. I can imagine a subtitles screen that is only visible from a certain region of seating using something like that.

      But all academic, as all those concepts are cinema installed equipment, which we would rather avoid.

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      • #18
        A personal devices approach is a bit of a double edged sword. Audiences aren't responsible enough to fully charge their devices before such extended use. And installing USB charging ports in seating itself is a cinema upgrade, and encourages device use by others. But I could see cinemas having a handful of ready to deploy battery banks to augment personal device batteries... much more manageable than maintaining and sanitizing head-worn gear, or installing more elaborate solutions.

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        • #19
          Originally posted by Steve Guttag View Post

          What would be cool is if we could have invisible captions such that only those wanting them will see them. Sort of like you don't see IR LEDs but your camera does.
          Consumers could buy their own night vision goggles, and we could project IR captions. Or, there this was this system by USL that theaters did not like because of the dim green bar below the screen: https://patentimages.storage.googlea...70216868A1.pdf

          Harold

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          • #20
            I think with laws requiring captions, in some form, will soften theatres to a green bar below the image. I don't know if they need full-on night vision goggles...since it would make the movie image also difficult. But, perhaps a means to, again, let a patron have prescription glasses with the feature...just like people get prescription sunglasses.

            I'm not too worried about cell phone battery life...people have been able to go cross country on planes, without issue. The biggest drain is the backlight and that should be in the dimmest setting if using it for captions and the display isn't even on for just audio.

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            • #21
              Makes it tough to jump on someone who yanks out his phone in the middle of the movie and starts texting. Maybe he'd tell you he's checking the captions. (Yeah, right, but what could you do?)

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              • #22
                Originally posted by Steve Guttag View Post
                I think with laws requiring captions, in some form, will soften theatres to a green bar below the image. I don't know if they need full-on night vision goggles...since it would make the movie image also difficult. But, perhaps a means to, again, let a patron have prescription glasses with the feature...just like people get prescription sunglasses.
                The night vision goggles was in reference to someone suggesting the captions be projected onto the screen in IR. The green bar is in reference to the previously posted USL patent.

                Harold

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                • #23
                  I would like to remind everyone here about the target audience and their perspective. It is well known, those with disabilities like to be treated like everyone else.
                  If they can purchase a device that makes them equal to the next person in any respect. They are keen to obtain that technology.

                  If we can sync without any hardware in the cinema (Which I feel we can, or at a level the user will accept), these devices can be used anywhere.
                  The users known how to look after a device like they know how to look after a car and keep it on the road. Predownload assets etc.
                  This removes the need for external services or feeds to work. (no IR, WiFi, 5G. Can be in air plain mode. Only needs microphone and Blu-tooth to talk to headphones or AR-glasses)

                  The main reason this has not become the norm yet is that the producers have made it difficult to get the assets to implement the service. That's really all that is needed.

                  If they allow it, this will be the iPhone moment for accessibility in Cinema.

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                  • #24
                    You mean the studios that feel the need to encrypt the captions in cinema servers (because you'd have the script, in a sense with the raw text) on the movies that they release, just about day-and-date with cinemas? Those studios?

                    So, if such a technology were used, what stops the app from just running the show while their at home. Yeah, you lose the picture but you are getting the script. And if you are including the hearing assistance/Descriptive Audio in that package, then you are releasing your $100M+ content into the wild (which will have to be available day-and-date with the movie's release). And, who is at fault if it doesn't hit someone's servers/phone in time? I can see concern with that. If the DCP itself carries the necessary data (audio/text...data), then the distribution is controlled. Plus, for non-DCP content, including Power Point rentals, one is going to need Hearing Assistance anyway. And, while mere text could possibly be done on the fly fast enough, it wouldn't satisfy Audio Description, which needs knowledge of the picture. On-the-fly would also be susceptible to noisy neighbors. At least, if the information is coming from the DCP itself, you are getting what the filmmaker intended you to see/hear/know.

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                    • #25
                      There has been some discussion of security requirements for these applications. I don't know who would approve them. Does DCI want to specify security requirements for cell phone applications? With Interop distribution, captions were not encrypted on the delivery drive. As I recall, this resulted in the entire dialog for a movie (I think it was a Star Wars movie) making it to the web before opening day. With SMPTE distribution, the captions are encrypted during distribution. I THINK they are decrypted when the show is loaded (assuming it is within the allowed playout time) and stored in an http accessible directory. The server builds a Resource Presentation List that the captioning equipment uses to locate the files for each reel, the timeline offset, and other attributes. There is no encryption between external captioning servers ("auxiliary content servers") and the digital Cinema server. Some captioning systems encrypt the link from the ACS to the in-auditorium display devices, but not all systems do.

                      As far as downloading the content and playing it at home, I SUSPECT auditorium audio sync could be used to avoid that. The application would keep waiting for the fingerprint indicating where it is in the movie and would never find it.

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                      • #26
                        As Harold has indicated. There are ways to make it difficult. But ultimately, even with a DCP, there are many ways to strip off this data. But yes, without the audio fingerprint being present. Meaning, you have better access to perform any form of side attack anyway (i.e. its on a screen in front of you). The relative security you can obtain with these tools are as good if not better than historical. (If implemented right.) Encryption is not hard these days as its mostly open source based. The studios name the encryption standards to use. And the App creators just implement it. (Just like DCPs.) Plus it's not using HDCP or any other standardised protocol to send it to another device. That is the easy way to get to the unencrypted data. HDCP tends to be cracked very quickly every time they improve it. It's why once a film goes to streaming, typically relying on HDCP. Its pirated.) These personal devices will be completely self-contained. Attack vector very small/difficult. Everything encrypted until milliseconds before it's required, in memory.
                        It could even have forensic marking (For audio), but I doubt it as the licensing costs are too high, and I don't think it is worth the effort myself. But the studios may. The subtitle implementation, I see AR glasses being the path. Custom and likely encrypted signal from device to glasses. i.e. like CineLink(I think it was called, don't remember) in the series 1 projectors.

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                        • #27
                          Honestly I think Dolby is on the correct technology "path" with their latest implementation. It's basically what we are describing except it uses proprietary hardware/software. But it's really just a PC acting as the server/transmitter, a Wifi network, and a bunch of customized android devices. The missing link is making it app driven so anyone's phone could do it, and then adding the layer of the user supplied AR connected glasses. But for latency reasons it made some sense for them to design the app around known hardware (with an aux-battery case, and HAVING a 3.5mm audio jack). Wired headphones are still the way to go... though they did solve the delay/latency issue from the server to the device over wifi at least.

                          But to get from that to what we are talking about with a more open hardware agnostic model, requires an industry cultural shift, not a technological one. We are basically there on the technology front. Just add Android/iOS proper, and then let there be an ecosystem to develop for a host of paired glasses. The captions and audio tracks could have the same level of encryption/security that the Dolby devices are providing, if any.

                          WordWatch's implementation doesn't appear to be all that fundamentally different, and also good, except they went ahead and developed a pair of HUD glasses to go with it. And their targeting non-film events already too. Dolby's is strictly about what's coming out of the DCP. But both are very much "venue buys into this system" (or subscribes to a license), and hardware is handed to patrons, and all the woes that come with that approach.
                          Last edited by Ryan Gallagher; Yesterday, 07:48 PM.

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