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Copy-proof CDs Vs. Markers : Markers Win!

 
 
Matthew Fluxington
15:43 / 21.05.02
Sony's plot to prevent copying of their cds foiled by pens.

Sony's 'copy-proof' CD fails to silence hackers

LONDON (Reuters) — Technology buffs have cracked music publishing giant Sony Music's elaborate disc copy-protection technology with a decidedly low-tech method — scribbling around the rim of a disc with a felt-tip marker.

Internet newsgroups have been circulating news of the discovery for the past week, and in typical newsgroup style, users have pilloried Sony for deploying "hi-tech" copy protection that can be defeated by paying a visit to a stationery store.

"I wonder what type of copy protection will come next?" one posting on alt.music.prince read. "Maybe they'll ban markers."

Sony did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

Major music labels, including Sony and Universal Music, have begun selling the "copy-proof" discs as a means of tackling the rampant spread of music piracy, which they claim is eating into sales.

The new technology aims to prevent consumers from copying, or "burning", music onto recordable CDs or onto their computer hard drives, which can then be shared with other users over file-sharing Internet services such as Kazaa or Morpheus MusicCity.

On Monday, Reuters obtained an ordinary copy of Celine Dion's newest release A New Day Has Come, which comes embedded with Sony's "Key2Audio" technology.

After an initial attempt to play the disc on a PC resulted in failure, the edge of the shiny side of the disc was blackened out with a felt tip marker. The second attempt with the marked-up CD played and copied to the hard drive without a hitch.

Internet postings claim that tape or even a sticky note can also be used to cover the security track, typically located on the outer rim of the disc. And there are suggestions that copy protection schemes used by other music labels can also be circumvented in a similar way.

Sony's proprietary technology, deployed on many recent releases, works by adding a track to the copy-protected disc that contains bogus data.

Because computer hard drives are programmed to read data files first, the computer will continuously try to play the bogus track first. It never gets to play the music tracks located elsewhere on the compact disc.

The effect is that the copy-protected disc will play on standard CD players but not on computer CD-Rom drives, some portable devices and even some car stereo systems.

Some Apple Macintosh users have reported that playing the disc in the computer's CD drive causes the computer to crash. The cover of the copy-protected discs contain a warning that the album will not play on Macintoshes or other personal computers.

Apple has since posted a warning on its Web site.

Sony Music Europe has taken the most aggressive anti-piracy stance in the business. Since last fall, the label has shipped more than 11 million copy-protected discs in Europe, with the largest proportion going to Germany, a market label executives claim is rife with illegal CD-burning.

Copyright 2002 Reuters Limited


This makes me smile.
 
 
MJ-12
16:27 / 21.05.02
can't find who sent this to me, but

------------------

HOLLYWOOD, CALIFORNIA - May 13, 2002 - RIAA TEAMS UP WITH MPAA TO URGE BAN OF "SHARPIE" STYLE MARKERS.

Local busineses were shocked today when all 2.5 million office supply stores were simultaneously served with a cease and desist order from the RIAA and MPAA banning the sale of any type of felt tip marker. Lobbyists for the media industry successfully bribed and/or threatened a number of local politician, who in turn passed legislation banning the manufacture, sale, or possession of any device on grounds that it violates the Digital Millenium Copyright Act.

"This is a great day for freedom in this country", stated I. P. Freely, chairman of the House Committee On Media Graft and Campaign Finance. "No longer will reckless hoodlums and terrorist be able to hold our great media industries down! Already these 'media terrorists' have been implicated in causing a downturn in music sales, a deepening of the U.S. recession, balding, impotence, and dandruff. These terrorists are a threat to the very foundation of this nation. Have I said terrorist enough yet? Terrorist terrorist terrorist!"

A small group of bewildered secretaries and office workers were rounded up by jackbooted thugs and herded into "terrorist containment vehicles" (which resemble black vans) as they went into office supply stores in downtown L.A. to buy Sharpies. "Obviously these media terrorists were bent on destroying Sony Music with these devices", said one S.W.A.T. team captain as he twirled a Sharpie in front of cameras. "Don't worry folks", he said, "you're safe now."

When interviewed on the street, many people expressed delight at the actions of the MPAA and RIAA.

"I'm so glad that these hideous terr'rist folks have been rounded up", says Eva Beaver. "Who knows what they might've blown up with their terror weapons. Next it could be planes slamming into buildings!"

Opposition to this new law is expected to be light, say prominent Washington lawmakers. Naysayers will be rounded up and shot on sight, further adding to the desire to keep people from pirating music and movies with felt tip pens.

Spokesmen for Sanford, the company that manufactures the Fully Automatic Terrorist Media Stealing Assault Weapon (formerly known as a Sharpie Marker) could not be reached following a disastrous fire and explosion at every single one of their manufacturing plants.
 
 
Margin Walker
06:46 / 22.05.02
I love how they put all of this copy-protection on a goddamn Celene Dion CD. As if there's teens and college kids all over the country just scouring the net for that phat, off the hook remix of "My Heart Will Go On".
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
12:01 / 22.05.02
Actually, you shouldn't underestimate Celine Dion's appeal to high school and college age kids - there's a LOT of squares out there.
 
 
Grey Area
12:59 / 22.05.02
So does anyone have a link to a page where they explain how to mark your CD? Is a 1mm-wide strip enough, or do you have to go wider?
 
 
Matthew Fluxington
13:30 / 22.05.02
I don't know where the newsgroups that detail the specifics, but there is more on this topic here, here, and here.
 
 
Our Lady of The Two Towers
16:22 / 22.05.02
Tell me the felt tip plan doesn't work on the Apple Mac problem, we must save our kids from the menace of Celine Dion CDs!
 
 
Baz Auckland
15:17 / 10.10.03
Less than a month(?) after the new copy-protection CDs were released...

Holding down 'shift' will bypass the copy-protection!

Three days after a Princeton graduate student posted a paper on his Web site detailing how to defeat the copy-protection software on a new music CD by pressing a single computer key, the maker of the software said on Thursday it would sue him.

In a statement, SunnComm Technologies Inc. said it would sue Alex Halderman over the paper, which said SunnComm's MediaMax CD-3 software could be blocked by holding down the "Shift" key on a computer keyboard as a CD using the software was inserted into a disc drive. "SunnComm believes that by making erroneous assumptions in putting together his critical review of the MediaMax CD-3 technology, Halderman came to false conclusions concerning the robustness and efficacy of SunnComm's MediaMax technology," it said.

The software was used on a CD, Anthony Hamilton's "Comin' From Where I'm From," released last month. Halderman, who has done research in the past on other CD protection technologies, said the software could also be disabled by stopping a driver the software loads on the computer when the CD is played. SunnComm alleged Halderman violated criminal provisions of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (news - web sites) in disclosing the existence of those driver files.

Halderman -- who received an undergraduate degree from Princeton earlier this year and is now pursuing a doctorate in computer science with an emphasis on computer security -- said he had not yet heard directly from SunnComm in regards to litigation but was unconcerned. "I'm still not very worried about litigation under the DMCA, I don't think there's any case," he told Reuters. "I don't think telling people to press the 'Shift' key is a violation of the DMCA."

 
 
FinderWolf
18:26 / 10.10.03
>> SunnComm believes that by making erroneous assumptions in putting together his critical review of the MediaMax CD-3 technology, Halderman came to false conclusions concerning the robustness and efficacy of SunnComm's MediaMax technology,"

This is BS - their legal argument is that he's come to false OPINIONS about the 'robustness' of their product? A far better argument for them would be he's providing information for people to illegally bypass their explicitly stated copyright and copy protection laws, rules and policies.

But to be honest, I don't think it can be illegal to post the secret code to bypass a security device, esp. if it's not a federal instituion you're hacking into. Or can it be? Is it illegal in principle to tell people on a website how to hack into a bank's records and finances? Yes. But somehow this just doesn't seem illegal to me.
 
 
Linus Dunce
19:18 / 10.10.03
As I understand the DMCA, not only is it illegal to tell people how to do it, it's illegal to just do it. They're not actually suing over the shift key thing itself, apparently, I guess because even they don't have that amount of bald-faced cheek, but they're suing him over his conclusions and some other information he wrote about the drivers that SunnComm protection uses. I'm thinking Halderman will have to play the "fair use" card to save his ass -- after all, he has admitted doing it on paper and has therefore already confessed his "guilt."
 
  
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