Knowing that it costs roughly three bucks to make a CD, and that the average 
cost of one (at least in Metro Atlanta) is eighteen bucks, they wonder why 
piracy goes rampant among the young?

Keith Johnson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:Anyone hear about this? Sony installed 
software on a few of its CDs to
prevent them from being illegally copied several times. (Full story
here:
http://www.cnn.com/2005/SHOWBIZ/Music/11/11/sony.copyprotection.ap/index
.html ) I understand music companies have the right to protect their
products, but this was the wrong way to go, especially seeing as how it
was so low level it became a serious security risk.  This battle between
companies and consumers is going to escalate, I believe. The increased
ability of companies to use anti-piracy techniques in our high-tech
world will increasingly frustrate consumers, which in turn will probably
make illegal file-sharing technologies more popular. It will also
probably help companies lke Apple, which may limit you to a few music
playing software choices, but at least doesn't install something devious
like this on your PC.

Sony Still On The Hot Seat 

By Antone Gonsalves
TechWeb.com
<http://us.rd.yahoo.com/dailynews/cmp/tc_cmp/byline/173602173/17060256/S
IG=125itfp6e/*http://www.techweb.com/;jsessionid=HXWJDHWBRTEBMQSNDBNCKH0
CJUMEKJVN> Fri Nov 11, 6:27 PM ET 

Despite Sony BMG Music Entertainment's decision to stop using its
controversial copy-protection technology, the anger generated by what
one expert called "inept-ware" is unlikely to subside anytime soon.

Security experts believe that the world's second largest music label
failed to see the ramifications when it chose to install the software
without first seeking permission from PC users, and then using
technology called a "rootkit" to hide its presence. The software came
with 20 music CDs sold by Sony BMG.

But some customers of the record company and its parent, Sony Corp
(NYSE:SNE - news)., were far less forgiving.

"I am personally making it a policy of mine that from this point on,
Sony won't be able to sell me anything," Dennis Barr, Kansas City, Mo.,
said. "My family has a PS2 (PlayStation 2) plus some games, and I have a
Sony CD player in my stereo rack. But no more -- no Sony music, no Sony
appliances, no Sony gadgets of any kind. They've lost my business for
life, because they were too damn dumb to realize just what they were
doing."

Besides the hit Sony has taken among customers, its brand appears to
have also been tainted.

"I don't condone piracy, but the unbridled greed of Sony is disgusting,"
Michael King, Salinas, Calif., said. "They are saying what the others
(record companies) think - they own the information forever, even if you
buy it, and have the unlimited right to control the information,
including its use no matter what or where."

While not under-playing the seriousness of Sony's technology, which
hackers have exploited in an attempt to hide malicous software, security
experts believe the company made a bad decision in trying to do
something right, which is protect its property.

Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant for Sophos Plc, called the
technology, which was developed by U.K.-based First4Internet,
"inept-ware."

"I don't think it was malicious in its intent," Cluley said.

However, a poll of systems administrators by Sophos found a far stronger
opinion, which Cluley called "typical."

"Sony are dirty, rotten scumbags for secretly installing their crap on
people's computers," a respondent said. "These big media giants are
going the way of the dinosaur, and not all the copy protection in the
universe will save them."

As more music is available on the Web, much of it illegally through
file-sharing networks, record companies have become more aggressive in
finding technology to protect their property. Indeed, Sony BMG was
unapologetic in its mission to use anti-piracy technology.

"(It) is an important tool to protect our intellectual property rights
and those of our artists," the company said Friday.

In the case of the latest technology, however, the tool was misused.

"They aimed at the pirates, and in the process managed to shoot
themselves in the foot," Cluley said.

F-Secure Corp. spoke with Sony in October to try to dissuade the company
from using the rootkit, Travis Witteveen, vice president of the security
vendor's North American operations, said. The result was a patch Sony
BMG recently offered to remove the technology's cloaking ability.

"We worked together with Sony to have them change their methodology,"
Witteveen said.

Unlike Apple Computer Inc., which protects music downloads by only
allowing them to be played in its own iTunes software, Sony is dealing
with protecting music played on devices that are out of its control. 


"They were trying a different way to solve the same problem
(copy-protection)," Witteveen said. "But (the methodology) was not being
relayed to the security industry, and they didn't understand the
consequences of their action." 


The anger toward Sony was probably the result of people being taken off
guard by a security threat coming from a record company, a security
expert said. 


"People didn't really expect a large, legitimate -- not questionable --
company like Sony to use something that hid itself from the computer
user," Jon Orbeton, senior security analyst for Zone Labs LLC, said.
"Given the press, (record) companies will take a good look at Sony.
They'll learn from this incident that if you're going to install
copy-protection, than you need to do it in a way that's upfront."



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