- DVB-CI
Digital Video Broadcasting – Common Interface (or
DVB-CI ), is a normative forDTV Receiver in order to enable the add of aconditional access module , CAM, in a Receiver DVB-CI « standard » to adapt it to different kinds of cryptography. Indeed, one of DVB's main strengths is the option of implementing the required conditional access capability on the common interface.This allows broadcasters to use modules containing solutions from different suppliers in the same broadcast system, thus increasing their choice and anti-piracy options.
Technical
A DVB receiver may have one or two slots implementing the common interface. They use the
PCMCIA connector and are conform to theCommon Scrambling Algorithm (CSA), the normative which specify that such a receiver must be able to acceptDES (Data Encryption Standard ) keys in some miliseconds intervals and to use them to decode private channels according to one algorithm.Those algorithms are providers issues. Each one uses his own algorithms and there are no normative for that.
The receiver can send the full MPEG-2 transport data stream as it comes out of the demodulator and error correction units through the card plugged into the Common Interface, before it will be processed by the MPEG demultiplexer in the
DTV Receiver . If several CI cards are present, the MPEG transport data stream will be passed sequentially through all these cards.An embedded CAM may not physically exist as it may be in CPU software. In such as case only the ISO card reader normally in the CAM is fitted and not the PCMCIA type CI slots.
Even if the Common Interface has been created to resolve cryptography issues, it can have other functions using other types of modules such as
Web Browser ,iDTV (Interactive Television )...In Europe, DVB-CI is obligatory in all
iDTV terminals.tandard
The normative DVB-CI has been defined in 1997 by the
CENELEC , European Committee for Electrotechnical Standardization EN 50221.According to the Common Interface scheme::* host : A device where module(s) can be connected, for example : an IRD (
Integrated receiver/decoder ), a VCR, a PC ...:* module : A small device, not working by itself, designed to run specialised tasks in association with a host, for example : a conditional access sub system, an electronic program guide application module, or to provide resources required by an application but not provided directly by the hostThe specification only defines two aspects, two logical interfaces to be included on the same physical interface,. The first interface is the
MPEG-2 Transport Stream.The link and physical layers are defined in this specification and the higher layers are defined in theMPEG-2 specifications. The second interface, the command interface, carries commands between the host (receiver) and the module.The specification does not define the operation or functionality of a conditional access system application on the module. The applications which may be performed by a module communicating across the interface are not limited to conditional access or to those described in this specification. More than one module may be supported concurrently.
ee also
*
Free-to-view
*Common Interface References
* [http://www.lefdata.com/satellite/cam/EN50221.pdf DVB-CI normative.]
*Gerard O'Driscoll, "The essential Guide to Digital Set-Boxes and Interactive TV", reprinted April 2000
*Jerry whitaker, "Television Receivers", 2001External links
* [http://www.dvb.org Consortium DVB]
* [http://www.cenelec.org CENELEC]
* [http://www.lefdata.com/satellite/cam/EN50221.pdf DVB-CI normative.]
* [http://www.linuxtv.org/vdrwiki/index.php/Common_interface Common Interface]
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