Sony,Neil Diamond, Celine Dion and Ricky Martin and boycotts (CUNTS)

hobbit.

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Sony's Fix for CDs Has Security Problems of Its Own

By Brian Krebs
Special to The Washington Post
Thursday, November 17, 2005; Page D01

Consumers who used computers to listen to Sony BMG music CDs containing flawed software were still exposed to potentially crippling security breaches yesterday, experts said, as the company continued to try to fix the problem.

Sony BMG Music Entertainment released a software patch earlier in the week, but experts warned that the fix created as many security problems as the original program, and as of yesterday the company had not come up with a new approach.

Sony BMG has recalled nearly 5 million CDs equipped with the flawed anti-piracy software shipped to retailers over the past eight months -- including titles by singers Neil Diamond, Celine Dion and Ricky Martin. Roughly two weeks ago, security experts showed that the software automatically installed a program that hid all of its files from users and damaged or crashed computers of customers who tried to remove it.

When played on a home computer running Microsoft Windows, the CDs require users to install a special media player and click "agree" on 3,000-word license agreement. But the agreement makes scant mention of what the software, which is designed to prevent people from making unauthorized copies of the music, will do once installed.

For example, experts showed that the anti-piracy software "phones home" to Sony BMG and to the company that created the software, First 4 Internet Ltd., with details of user's music-listening habits. It also interferes with more than 250 programs that could allow copying of the CD contents to a portable media player or backup disc.

Detailed examination of the license agreement reveals no mention of such activity.

Further testing proved that hackers could use the program's file-hiding capabilities to silently embed computer viruses on PCs, prompting Sony BMG to issue a software update that removes that feature. Days later, unknown attackers sent millions of junk e-mails containing a virus crafted to exploit the flaws and seize control of vulnerable computers

After the virus outbreaks, Sony BMG -- a joint venture of Sony Corp. and Bertelsmann AG -- said it would suspend production of new CDs featuring the copy-protection technology. But after nearly two weeks of relentless consumer backlash, Sony BMG said Tuesday that it would recall all CDs equipped with the anti-piracy software and that roughly 2 million customers who have already bought the discs would be able to exchange them.

Sony BMG spokesman John McKay declined to comment beyond the company's written statement, which apologized to customers for any inconvenience caused by the software and promised additional details about the CD exchange program in coming days

Hours after Sony BMG announced its buyback, researchers at Princeton University found that even the patch the company released to remove the anti-piracy software contains security problems. The patch leaves behind coding that allows any Web page the user visits to download, install and run programs on the computer. Other research, released Tuesday by Atlanta-based Internet Security Systems, showed that the underlying program itself contained security holes that hackers could use to attack Windows computers running the software.

Sony BMG's latest moves have not erased its legal and public relations troubles. Last week, an attorney in California filed a lawsuit seeking damages for residents who bought the defective CDs, and on Monday, a lawyer in New York filed a nationwide class-action case against the company.
Mark Russinovich, chief software architect at Sysinternals, the security expert whose initial research into the anti-piracy program sparked the controversy, welcomed the class-action suits, saying withdrawal of the software wasn't enough.
"What I'm most concerned about is: If nothing serious happens to Sony that's visible to other companies, then we run the risk of this kind of thing becoming standard corporate behavior," Russinovich said.

The incident raises new questions about how far the music industry can go to defend its works from piracy. The industry loses roughly $4.2 billion worldwide to piracy each year, according to the Recording Industry Association of America. The software was the latest effort by entertainment companies to rely on controversial "digital rights management" (DRM) technologies to reverse a steady drop in sales that the industry attributes in large part to piracy facilitated by online music and movie file-sh
aring networks such as Kazaa and LimeWire.

Microsoft Corp. also waded into the fracas last week when it labeled Sony BMG's software a threat, saying it would let users remove the program through its anti-spyware program. Starting in December, Microsoft said, it will automate the removal of the software through its "malicious software removal tool," a program designed to help users clean up their computers after virus infections.


TIME TO BOYCOTT SONY?
 
bill-pix-trade said:
I think I will file suit against Sony in small claims court. I could use a new computer, and Massachusetts is very consumer friendly.

Das BeeGees did a song about that place...... however.


from http://www.stuff.co.nz/stuff/0,2106,3482215a1860,00.html
Sony BMG NZ says its CDs and DVDs safe
17 November 2005​
Sony BMG Entertainment (NZ) Ltd is assuring customers all its CDs and DVDs manufactured in New Zealand and Australia do not contain copy-protection technology which has shown to leave computers vulnerable to hackers.

The company said the easiest way to work out if a CD or DVD is manufactured in Australia or New Zealand for local release, and therefore completely safe, was to look at its back cover.

Discs manufactured in Australia for local release will state "Distributed in Australia by Sony BMG Music Entertainment (Australia) Pty Limited", and "Manufactured and Distributed in New Zealand by Sony BMG Music Entertainment (New Zealand) Ltd".

These products manufactured in Australia and New Zealand will also not have a "Copy Control Technology" logo on them, which is on products that contain any kind of copy protection technology.

In Amsterdam last week, a computer security firm said it had discovered hackers had been using the Sony BMG copy-protection software to hide a virus on computers that wreaks havoc.

Under a subject line containing the words "Photo approval," a hacker has mass-mailed the so-called Stinx-E trojan virus to British e-mail addresses, said British anti-virus firm Sophos.

When recipients click on an attachment, they install malware, which may tear down a computer's firewall and give hackers access to a PC. The malware hides by using Sony BMG software that is also hidden - the software would have been installed on a computer when consumers played Sony's copy-protected music CDs.


does the above also make Sony racist and infer that they are siding with the axis of evil, aka New Zealand?
 
never again can anyone here complain about hackers etc.
 
Mistress Lady X said:
Robbie is cool, I accept. :)
the take that reunion docu was vey funny last night. a good bit would have been jason orange shaging gary barlow over the sofa in the posh hotel, but it didnt get shown :cool:
 
hobbit. said:
the take that reunion docu was vey funny last night. a good bit would have been jason orange shaging gary barlow over the sofa in the posh hotel, but it didnt get shown :cool:

You do know if Bill rejoins this this thread he will be totally lost?

Bill: Take That were, allegedly, the best boyband ever. Were very popular everywhere except the USofA. Robbie Williams was a member of this band. He has gone on to have an exceedingly successful solo career.
 
Mistress Lady X said:
You do know if Bill rejoins this this thread he will be totally lost?

bill is sulking because mark owen got outed.
 
Pedal-Johnny said:
I didn't know people still actually paid for music.

Ya learn something new every day.

good point. but having paid for a 'puter it shouldnt be up to sony to wreck it for ya. bunch of cunts. one response could be, to be safe dont buy any cds (if ya buy music) on sony cds or labels owned by sony .
 
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