Retailers
in France, Italy and Scandinavia have introduced disposable DVD movies
that can be viewed up for 48 hours, then self-destruct. German retailer
DVD-D Germany Ltd is the latest to enter the fray with its 'Einmal'
(German for 'once') line of titles.
DVD-D is the brainchild of a French company, based on Swiss technology.
The marketing intention driving this development is the provision
of an alternative to consumer disc rentals that require the return
of a disc to a store, or by mail.
DVD-D is made of polycarbonate that contains an extra layer of coating
that reacts to an oxidisation process that begins as soon as the disc
is are removed from its vacuum-sealed packaging and exposed to air.
The self-destruct process can be pre-set to occur between eight to
48 hours. Afterward, the DVD gives a 'No disc' error when put into
a DVD player or PC. There appears to be no DRM (digital rights management).
The DVDs will sell for €3.99 and are available at kiosks, bookstores
and gas stations.
The short-life DVD-D disc was launched back in 2004 at the Cannes
Film Festival, which DVD Intelligence reported at the time. The first
commercial release of the so-called ‘suicide platter’
was Denys Arcand's The Barbarian Invasions,
which won two prizes in Cannes 2003 and the 2004 Oscar of the Best
Foreign Film.
Indeed, self-destruct DVDs are not a new idea. In 2003 Flexplay, an
Atlanta, Georgia technology company, introduced disposable DVDs using
its own self-destruct technology, dubbed EZ-D. This was met with fierce
criticism from environmental groups, who slammed the notion of throwaway
DVDs, though Buena Vista Home Entertainment, Flexplay's content partner
at the time, had a recycling programme in place when it launched the
initial test.
Flexplay stills offers disposable DVDs in the US – new releases
include Beowulf – but its products
seem pretty low-profile.
The makers of the DVD-D claim their product is much cheaper than Flexplay's
EZ-D to produce. The company also says there are no ways to repair
the disc after the weathering process has made it unreadable.
There are recordable DVD-D discs available which can be recorded at
up to 8x speed and DVD-5 capacity. After ordering the blanks, the
client can then specify how long the data is to remain, having the
option of one-time viewing only, or a time period of 8 hours, 48 hours
or otherwise.