How a Local Server Decides to Save or Degrade Digital Content
A system that checks if incoming digital files are authentic, fake, or unknown, and then either saves them, rejects them, or lowers their quality accordingly.
Patent Number
US 9934408
Status
Active
Filing Date
May 30, 2017
Grant Date
April 3, 2018
Expiration
~May 2037 (estimated)
Claims
20
Assignee
Wistaria Trading Ltd
Inventors
Mike W. Berry, Scott A. Moskowitz
Citations
5 forward · 574 backward
What it covers
This patent describes a Local Content Server (LCS) that acts as a gatekeeper for digital media. When the server receives encrypted or scrambled content, a 'domain processor' inspects it for specific markers of authenticity. If the content is verified as authentic, it is stored in its original form. If the content is flagged as lacking authenticity, the server refuses to store it. If the content is ambiguous—meaning it has no clear authenticity markers—the server automatically degrades the quality of the file before saving it, ensuring that unauthorized or unverified media is less useful.
What it doesn't cover
- —Does not cover systems that lack a mechanism for degrading content quality when authenticity is unknown.
- —Does not cover general-purpose network routers that do not perform content-specific authenticity checks.
- —Does not cover the specific encryption algorithms used to scramble the data.
- —Does not cover content that is received in an unencrypted or unscrambled format.
The clever bit
The innovation is the 'degrade' step for ambiguous content. Instead of a binary choice between allowing or blocking, it creates a middle ground that discourages the use of unverified media by reducing its fidelity.
Why it matters
This technology addresses the challenge of managing digital rights in distributed environments where content might come from unverified sources. It provides a technical framework for automated content moderation and security at the edge of a network, which is critical for protecting intellectual property in media distribution systems.
Real-world examples
- 1.Digital set-top boxes for cable or satellite television
- 2.Secure media storage gateways in home entertainment networks
- 3.Content distribution nodes for subscription-based media services
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US 9934408 · 2026