This section will describe the commonalities and differences between these three specifications.
6.4.1 Blank disc structure
Figure 6 shows the specified characteristics of the different types of blank discs. From the figure we can see that the DVD-R for General, for consumer applications, and the DVD-RW discs have the same structure. That is, the recording laser wavelength and distribution of recording addresses included in the land pre-pit data are the same, and both require playback-only areas (areas which cannot be written) for use in preventing the recording of copy-protected data. Further, these discs contain an area near the center of the disc for (optional) NBCA copy generation management data (the details of which will be explained below). The main difference between these and DVD-R for Authoring is in whether or not copy management mechanisms physically exist on the disc. The professional and consumer discs also use different laser wavelengths and addressing schemes so that the each types of disc is not compatible with the other style of recorder. The means of creating a read-only region on the surface of the recording disc is currently different for DVD-R and DVD-RW. Since DVD-R for General is a write-once medium, the disc manufacturer creates the read-only area by writing to that area as part of the manufacturing process. DVD-RW, on the other hand, is a rewritable medium. In DVD-RW, the read-only area is pre-recorded with embossed pits. The quality of the signal read from the embossed pits was not specified in the DVD-RW version 1.0 specification. In revising the specification to version 1.1 it was determined that to complete the copy management mechanism that signal quality should follow suit with that of the DVD-ROM specification. As a result, the modification to the specification also helped maintain compatibility with DVD-ROM discs.

Figure 6 Structure of Blank Discs
6.4.2 Copy management technology
As described in the previous section, consumer-oriented DVD-R for General discs and DVD-RW version 1.1 discs are provided with a copy management mechanism that exists physically on the disc. The details of the copy management mechanism are described in Figure 7. To begin with, each DVD specification provides a mechanism for recognizing the recording media, and this is common to the entire DVD family. That is, each disc contains a flag called Book Type which indicates to which specification the disc is compliant. Recordable DVD media have a particular wobbling track, which is used as a means to recognize the recordable media. Detection of this wobbling track allows the player to reject media with an illegal Book Type; that is, media that has been recorded improperly. Besides this, discs also are specified to have a read-only area, as has was described above, as another mechanism for preventing the recording of copy-protected information. In DVD-R for General and DVD-RW version 1.1, by recording specified data (a Media Block Key, or MKB) to this read-only area, and by further adding a bar code style signal (called NBCA) to the disc's inner tracks, allows the disc to support a copy generation management scheme (with support for copy-once media) called Content Protection for Recordable Media, or CPRM. This additional generation management information is placed on the disc by the disc manufacturer, and is an optional feature of the specifications.
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