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http://www.inside.com/story/Story_Cached/0,2770,11418_9_16_1,00.html
                     Are SDMI Technologies All Hacked?
                     Chiariglione Says No One Knows Yet 
                     By Jon O'Hara 

                     Saturday , October 14 01:05 a.m. 
                     As members of the Secure Digital Music Initiative, or
                     SDMI, prepared for their October meeting in Los
                     Angeles on Friday afternoon, executive director
                     Leonardo Chiariglione had some harsh words for
                     those claiming an early victory for the hackers in the
                     organization's public challenge to defeat its selected
                     security technologies.

                     ''When a publication makes such a completely wrong,
                     unfounded, anonymous slander, I think it deserves a
                     very strong answer,'' Chariglione told Inside, referring
                     to a report appearing on Salon.com Thursday citing
                     anonymous sources that claimed each of the six
                     technologies offered up for hacking by the SDMI had
                     been compromised. ''It's simply not true, because we,
                     ourselves, don't have that information. We have about
                     450 files, with 450 descriptions of methods -- you
      
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On Sun, Oct 15, 2000 at 08:56:21PM +0200, Axel H Horns wrote:
> http://www.salon.com/tech/log/2000/10/12/sdmi_hacked/index.html
> 
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> 
> SDMI cracked! 
> 
> Hackers break the recording industry's vaunted music protection 
> system.  
> 
> By Janelle Brown  
> 
> Oct. 12, 2000 | Watch out -- recording industry executives are about 
> to start running for cover. All of the Secure Digital Music 
> Initiative's watermarks -- its much ballyhooed music protection 
> scheme -- have been broken. A spokesperson for SDMI has denied the 
> reports, but according to three off-the-record sources, the results 
> of the Hack SDMI contest are in and not one single watermark resisted 
> attack.  
> 
> [...]
> 
> Is there an alternate solution, though? Many SDMI members think there 
> isn't one -- and that this could mean that SDMI will now implode for 
> lack of any plausible ideas for how to meet the recording industry's 
> demands for secure music.  
> 
> [...]
> 
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> 
> 
> 
> 

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