What form does the signal to stop decoding the channels you no longer subscribe to take? Is there any way to stop this signal getting to the card in cccam?
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Sly card kill signal
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Re: Sly card kill signal
a channel, it is not as simple blocking this, a control word is also sent as part
of the ECM and that tell the stb to unscramble that word is changed about
every 10 seconds therefore you can't just block ECM once channel unscrambles.
Sorry reread your post I think that in the old days if you stopped the telephone connection
to stb that seemed to do the trick but I don't know if this still works.Liked my post then push the sigpic button. -
Re: Sly card kill signal
I'm sorry I am a noob so don't understand. Does the ecm decide which channels are decoded? I thought it was something to do with emm.Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
Both ECM & EMM are for the card itself. EMM's are management messages to the
card, they arrive at irregular intervals which can vary from every few minutes to
every few months depending on what the messages are managing, typically
they allow key updates. EMM's effectively manage the behaviour and decryption
of ECM's. Both are important for the proper functioning of the card.Liked my post then push the sigpic button.Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
Some receivers have the possibility to block the emms so that the keys are still on the card. But the most systems have a time-counter on the card so that you can use them for a few days or weeks, but then it's over.If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
I had a sly card in a spiderbox and it lasted 6 weeks after being cancelled before being turned offComment
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If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
The signal is an emm which deletes the keys from the card. It doesn't "kill" the card. It removes the keys, but with the correct emm it's possible to write the keys back to the card - e. g. when you subscribe the channels again.
Some receivers have the possibility to block the emms so that the keys are still on the card. But the most systems have a time-counter on the card so that you can use them for a few days or weeks, but then it's over.Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
The keys on the card are "refreshed" regulary every two or three days in the subsciption time. So when it ends (normaly last day) no more refreshing-emms and then the deleting-emm comes. So when you receive the last refresh, the six weeks begin.If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
Yes, block all emms beginning at the last day. And of course for the next 6 weeks.
When the counter is down - blackscreen.If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!Comment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
when signal become weak it means data signal become weak so ecm dont go to card
i dont think have negative effect in card. as i know mistake ecm cause fail cardComment
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Re: Sly card kill signal
I think this is not possible.
An emm is a complete command for the card (with a checksum included).
If the emm is not correct, you have a checksum failure and the card does nothing, if the checksum doesn't fit.If you want to make God laugh, tell him your plans!Comment
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