educational

Implementing DRM

Digital Rights Management has become a new and somewhat wondrous invention for those who have taken the time to truly understand the capability that it can afford you. Trial and error is not necessary as many have done the work for you.

In the next few months, it is my hope that you will learn from some of the lessons that we at PlayaDRM and our clients have defined as useful tools and easily implemented uses of DRM. The result is more revenue to you and additional performance from your online properties.

DRM is simply a system that encrypts digital media content and limits access to only those people who have acquired a proper license to play the content.

The models that can be created out of this simple process are almost limitless. Please understand that it is not a time-consuming process to encrypt media. You can encrypt files in the same amount of time as it would take for you to copy one file to another on your desktop.

Microsoft has the best DRM system. Although Real Media and DIVX provide their own versions, they are not as deployed or as functional as the one embedded in Windows Media Player, not to mention the cost factor associated with non-Microsoft solutions.

On the competitive web, webmasters have to do whatever it takes to provide a clear and easy user experience coupled with ways to get every penny you can out of the end user.

At the same time, you need to make sure that you are protecting your assets from the distribution mechanism that no previous civilization has ever known.

One person can easily devalue your entire property just by sharing it with the masses, but that same person can help you make money if you have the right tools in place. Confused? Don't worry, we are in this together and we are here to help.

Using DRM In Your Members Area
If you have any exclusive or licensed video content, you should be thinking about ways to keep it under your control. Members Area content, when offered on a downloadable basis, has benefits including the ability to allow members to "take the content with them." It offers instant gratification to the end user, and once again, you ultimately retain control.

Some say that members should have total access to the members areas once they have paid for the membership.

I agree with this thought with one exception: you should only be able to view content when you are a member. If you are no longer a member, you should not have the right to access or view the content. A real-life example is as simple as looking at the experience of going to a movie theater: You watch a movie and leave, and you don't leave with a copy of the movie for later viewing.

The result of only giving access to those who have active memberships allows you to potentially recapture expired members by offering a discounted rate or your best creative sales pitch and is also a cheap way of also promoting other products or sites through several mechanisms including traditional console pops.

If the content was traded by a member, that new viewer will be offered a chance to join before they can access the content, which can help you pick up new members. People share videos, don't be mistaken, and they are your videos so you should be paid for it. Again, this model simply allows you the ability to turn theft or cancelled memberships into a possible marketing opportunity and/or rebills.

An application of this model in technical terms would go as follows:

STEP 1: Upload, encrypt and replace the raw WMV or WMA files with the now secured DRM files. Note that you can change the names or any other variables as often as you like, so don't worry about being locked in to file naming conventions, they don't matter.

STEP 2: Login and group the content under one license as Members Content. Then set the rules to prompt the end user for their username and password the first time they play a file in any given calendar month and set the rule to issue them a license for the period of time that their membership is for, trial or monthly.

You can also create rules by time, amount of plays, dates or anything else you come up with.

If they have a five-day trial membership, the system will issue them a five-day unlimited license. The end user can now watch any of your members area videos for five days without being prompted again. At the end of the five days, they will once again be prompted. If their membership is up-to-date, they can play the video. If not, you can redirect them to a tour/join page, or that creative pitch you came up with.

If content leaves your members area, those users will be directed to a sales pitch.

STEP 3: Congratulate yourself because if you get three joins a month out of this, you not only just captured back traffic from your members area but you paid for the service and made a profit.

The same content you grouped as members could also be offered on a pay-per-view basis by simply adjusting the rules. You could also give away free plays to certain clips to promote your site, all the while knowing that at any time, you can change it out, repurpose it or simple shut it down.

Your content and your sites are yours; put total control in your hands.

For more information about DRM, visit the Microsoft website.

Jason Tucker is a partner and president of Falcon Foto and Playa Solutions.

Copyright © 2025 Adnet Media. All Rights Reserved. XBIZ is a trademark of Adnet Media.
Reproduction in whole or in part in any form or medium without express written permission is prohibited.

More Articles

opinion

Building Sustainable Revenue Without Opt-Out Cross-Sales

Over the past year, we’ve seen growing pushback from acquirers on merchants using opt-out cross-sales — also known as negative option offers. This has been especially noticeable in the U.S. In fact, one of our acquirers now declines new merchants during onboarding if an opt-out flow is detected. Existing merchants submitting new URLs with opt-out cross-sales are being asked to remove them.

Cathy Beardsley ·
trends

How to Handle Payment Disputes Without Sacrificing Trust

You can run the best-managed and most compliant website out there, but that still doesn’t completely shield you from the risks tied to payment disputes. Buyer’s remorse, an unclear billing description or even a simple misunderstanding can lead a customer to dispute a transaction. Accumulate enough disputes, and both your reputation and revenue could be at risk.

Jonathan Corona ·
profile

Sienna Day Talks Creator Life, Longevity and Loving the Work

When Sienna Day heard her name called onstage at the Euro XMAs in Amsterdam, the newly crowned 2025 MILF Creator of the Year froze — then floated.

Jackie Backman ·
trends

WIA Profile: Taylor Moore

With a 70-person team and a growing slate of tools for content creators, the Teasy Agency has developed a reputation for putting talent first. That commitment owes a lot to co-founder Taylor Moore’s own experiences as a cam model.

Jackie Backman ·
profile

WIA Profile: Cathy Turns Creator Platform Experience Into a Model-First Playbook

As both a model and industry executive, Cathy lives in two worlds at once. “Since I do both things, I can act as the liaison between the model community and the rest of the SextPanther team,” she tells XBIZ.

Jackie Backman ·
opinion

From Compliance to Confidence: The Future of Safety in Adult Platforms

In numerous countries and U.S. states, laws now require platforms to prevent minors from accessing age-inappropriate material. But the need for safeguarding doesn’t end with age verification. Today’s online landscape also places adult companies at uniquely high risk for inadvertently facilitating exploitation, abuse or reputational harm, or of being accused of doing so.

Andy Lulham ·
opinion

What Adult Businesses Need to Know About Florida's Age Verification Law

The rise and proliferation of age verification laws has changed the landscape for the online adult industry. A recent and compelling example is the state of Florida, where Attorney General James Uthmeier has filed multiple complaints against major platforms as well as affiliates accused of violating the state’s AV law.

Corey D. Silverstein ·
opinion

Maintaining Brand Trust in the Face of Negative Press

Over the last year, several of our merchants have found themselves caught up in litigation over compliance with state age verification laws. Recently, Segpay itself was pulled into the spotlight, facing scrutiny over Florida’s AV statute, HB 3. These stories inevitably get picked up by both industry and mainstream news outlets.

Cathy Beardsley ·
opinion

How to Switch Payment Processors Without Disrupting Business

For many merchants, the idea of switching payment processors can feel pretty overwhelming. That’s understandable. After all, downtime can stall sales, recurring subscriptions can suddenly fail, or compliance gaps can put accounts at risk. Operating in a high-risk sector like the adult industry can further amplify the stress of transition.

Jonathan Corona ·
profile

WIA Profile: Katie

Katie is the ultimate girl’s girl. As community manager at Chaturbate, she answers DMs, remembers names, and shows up for creators and fellow businesswomen when it counts. She’s quick to credit the people around her, and careful to make space for others in every room she enters.

Women in Adult ·
Show More