Access
Card DirecTV’s means of providing certain Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers
programming to certain households, depending on what is paid for.
The access card has memory on it, which means it can store data. The
card is known as a "Conditional Access Module," or CAM. Each card
has a unique identification number (called the CAM ID) which is how
DirecTV can add or remove programming from each and every individual
card. The cards are very similar to standard smart cards, but they
implore advanced security measures to ensure that the card cannot be
tampered with using a standard Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers smart card reader/writer. In the span
of DIRECTV, there have been 3 different generations, or versions of
the Access Cards, and they are named according to the letter that
precedes the identification number. In chronological order, these
cards were the F, the H, and the HU. If you buy a DIRECTV system
today, it comes with a HU, because the first two generations of
cards were susceptible to security hacks- people found ways of
breaking the cards security, and adding their own programming info.
DirecTV's access cards follow an industry standard in smartcards,
known as ISO7816. Hence, any standard ISO7816 smartcard programmer
can read and write these cards with the proper software.
CAM ID A unique
identification number present on the memory of each and every
DIRECTV Access Card, and also explicitly printed on the back of the
card. IRD The Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers common term for satellite receiver. Receiver’s
also have unique identification numbers.
Marrying When an
access card that has just come hot from the factory (ie brand new,
or "virgin") is activated for programming by DirecTV, the card
writes down the receiver’s identification number into its memory.
The card then uses this number to prevent it's being moved to
different receivers. In essence, the card and receiver have
"married" each other. If you then remove the card and place it into
another receiver, you will get an error message, because the access
card is married to the first receiver is was activated inside.
Datastream (aka Stream, Signal, Satellite Signal) The datastream is
just that- a stream of data. It is specifically the waves of
encrypted (scrambled) data that are sent down from DirecTV’s
satellites up in space. When Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers you tune to a channel, it is encrypted.
The access card then computes the datastream, and if the card says
the channel is authorized, it descrambles the signal for the
television.
Programmer
An ISO7816 smartcard reader/writer that plugs into
your computer’s serial port and permits a hacker to read and write
to any ISO7816 smartcard, such as the access cards.
Update (aka USW) A
change in the code on the access card, usually done to destroy cards
with hacks on them, or to add some fuctionality (such as interactive
TV) to the access card. USW Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers stands for Update Status Word, and
simply counts the number of times the card has been updated. A card
with a USW of 5 has been Armed with that knowledge and the reality that they could not
contain their signal within the geographic boundaries of the US, DTV should have had enough sense to
realize that electronics hobbyists in Canada would inevitably figure out how to use their trespassing signals.
It would have therefore been prudent on the part of DTV to solicit Canada's cooperation from the outset
and perhaps obtain franchise rights north of the border. Perhaps an even a better idea would have been to
focus their signal from the satellite better in the first place so that there was not so much signal bleed across
the border. After all, we are talking line-of-sight transmission, so even if updated 5 times, for example.
H-Cards do not
currently get updated anymore...code changes are done through
something that is a little different, Satellite Dish HU Loaders Unloopers called a dynamic update.For a
more detailed explanation of a dynamic update, see "Dynamic Update"
below in this dictionary.