Boing Boing Staging

Sony DRM Debacle Roundup Part V

Here’s the last 2005 installment of the Sony DRM Debacle, posted moments before I leave on vacation — tune in after Jan 1 to see what new disasters Sony can create for itself by deploying technology that punishes people who buy its products instead of downloading them from P2P networks.

Dec 5: Sony rootkit ripped off anti-DRM code to break into iTunes
Code from the Free/Open Source program DRMS was illegally included in the XCP rootkit — and Princeton researchers Felten and Halderman reveal why: in order to sneak Sony music onto the iPod without giving Apple a cut of the sale through the iTunes Music Store.

Dec 6: Sony *finally* releases rookit uninstaller — sort of
65 days after being put on notice about the XCP rootkit on 50+ of its CD Sony releases an “uninstaller,” but the fine-print makes it clear that this doesn’t really uninstall anything.

Dec 6: Musician: DRM screws my fans, so it screws me
Damien Kulash, the lead singer for the band OK Go, has a great editorial in the NYTimes today, describing why DRM systems are bad for artists.

Dec 6: EFF forces Sony/Suncomm to fix its spyware — UPDATED
After intense pressure from EFF, Sony releases an uninstaller for the Mediamax spyware that comes on music CDs from Sony and other music companies.

Dec 7: Sony’s DRM security fix leaves your computer more vulnerable
Princeton DRM researchers Halderman and Felten publish their investigation into the uninstaller that Sony has provided for the Mediamax spyware — turns out that the uninstaller creates even more vulnerabilities.

Dec 9: EFF to Sunncomm: release a list of all infected CDs!
EFF petititons Sunncomm, makers of the MediaMax spyware, to release a list of all infected CDs and to institute policies for future policies.

Dec 14: Sony Artists offering home-burned CDs to replace spyware-infected discs
Sony refuses to recall CDs infected with Sunncomm’s MediaMax spyware, so some artists are running their own recall programs, offering home-burned CDs to fans who complain that the software prevents them from ripping their CDs.

Dec 15: HOWTO make a DRM CD
Alex Halderman, one of the Princeton researchers who’s been doggedly revealing the tricks, nastiness, cheating and lies in the Sony DRM Debacle, has published a detailed HOWTO explaining how to make your own malicious “industrial strength” DRM CD, just like Sony’s. The perfect project for your holiday break!


Previous installments of the Sony DRM Debacle Roundup: Part I, Part II, Part III, Part IV, Part VI

(Cool Sony CD image courtesy of Collapsibletank)

Exit mobile version