Widevine announced an integration with
Origin Digital. Through this partnership, Widevine and Origin Digital deliver the necessary encoding, content protection and content management to securely distribute ad-supported and other monetized media services from any source to any destination.
Content owners and content service providers using the Odaptor platform can now rapidly deploy and provide both subscription-based media and ad-supported content directly to consumers and online video users regardless of their browser, operating system or computing platform. Widevine's Cypher for Internet Digital Media security solution seamlessly integrates into the Odaptor platform for secure delivery of all video formats, including Adobe Flash, to both PCs and Macs.
Upon consumption, Widevine's PC client invokes an additional level of post-decryption digital copy protection to thwart the hundreds of screen scraping and recording utilities that have become a considerable piracy threat worldwide. Able to record streams and remove valuable online ad inventory, the programs make it easy to distribute premium content across the Internet. The Widevine client monitors, detects and blocks the piracy for complete protection of the business model associated with the delivery of Origin Digital encoded digital media.
Origin Digital's Odaptor is a flexible, Web-based platform that combines powerful media management and transformation capabilities into a single product. Delivering solutions for live, on-demand and mobile broadcasting, with advertising and user generated content to rapidly enabling business models from social networking to new channels 24x7 for immediate delivery, Odaptor encompasses multiple workflow and distribution scenarios, including transformation, content management system, UGC and mobile.
Widevine's content protection solution provides both the encryption and key management to ensure secure delivery during storage and distribution. Additionally it protects content post-decryption, where any number of widely available software applications commonly target content after decryption with an intent to pirate.