October 23rd, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
Hackers, like life, will find a way. Sony knows that all too well thanks to the PSP, but so far the PlayStation 3 has stood strong in the face of legions of nerds trying to find a way to exploit it. A potentially major breakthrough may have been made, though, as well-known PS3 hacker StreetskaterFU (we’ve no idea what he’s going for with that name — really) has managed to decrypt the beta client for Sony’s PlayStation Home service. Curious devs can now poke around in the files looking for a way to exploit the newish in-game XMB functionality, potentially allowing homebrew apps and game backups without hard drive swapping. There’s no guarantee it will lead anywhere in the end, but you don’t care either way, right? Our upstanding readership would never participate in such heinously illegal activities.
[Thanks, James]
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Posted in playstation 3, ps3, sony, hack, piracy, hacks, homebrew, xmb, home, decryption, backups, playstation home, in-game-xmb, decrypted, reverse engineer, reverse engineering, streetskaterfu | No Comments »
July 31st, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Audio
If you woke up this morning worried about what Yahoo! is planning to do for its Music Store customers who are about to be left in the lurch with its DRM server shut-down, have no fear. Yahoo! has announced that it will offer customers coupons or refunds for those songs you bought. Basically, you’ll get a coupon that you can use at RealNetworks Inc.’s Rhapsody download service. Their songs, of course, are DRM-free. For those of you who have “serious problems with this arrangement” (their words, not ours), refunds will be available. The servers go down on September 30, so start combing your collections, kids.
[Thanks, JC]
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Posted in drm, piracy, riaa, customer service, CustomerService, yahoo, yahoo music, YahooMusic, compensate | No Comments »
July 28th, 2008 by
Filed under: Cellphones
digg_url = ‘http://digg.com/apple/iPhone_apps_pirated_shared_but_not_GPL_d’; Seeing as Apple’s FairPlay DRM has already been cracked for music and movies, it’s not at all surprising that people are starting to poke holes in the FairPlay-based iPhone App Store. The first loophole is pretty simple, since it doesn’t appear that FairPlay links the iPhone hardware to specific Apple IDs: just log into iTunes from any of the machines authorized to use your account, and every app you’ve purchased will be available for free re-downloading to any attached phone. Since music and movies wrapped in FairPlay can be transferred to unlimited iPods and iPhones, we’re guessing this little trick will work indefinitely, but we wouldn’t depend on it.
Continue reading iPhone apps pirated, shared — but not GPL’d
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Posted in iPhone, Apple, drm, jailbreak, piracy, 3g iphone, 3gIphone, iphone 2.0, Iphone2.0, iphone 3g, Iphone3g, FairPlay, fairplay drm, FairplayDrm | No Comments »
July 26th, 2008 by
Filed under: Portable Audio
Hey, both of you Yahoo! Music Store customers, listen up. Just hours after Yahoo! affirmed that it would be powering down its DRM servers, along comes a spokesperson to alleviate any worries that you two will get screwed in all of this. According to Carrie Davis, customers “will be compensated for whatever they paid for the music,” and she continued on to state that Yahoo “had not yet decided what exactly it would do, but it would take care of its customers.” Some of the possible options include getting cash back for the money spent on tracks or receiving MP3 versions of the jams sans DRM (we’d take the former, thanks). Depressingly, there doesn’t seem to be a definitive time table laid out just yet for the restitution process.
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Posted in drm, piracy, riaa, customer service, CustomerService, yahoo, yahoo music, YahooMusic, compensate | No Comments »
May 25th, 2008 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
So news is making its way around the internets that at the Wedbush Morgan Securities Management Access Conference, Atari founder Nolan Bushnell proclaimed the end of PC gaming piracy as we know it, thanks to a “stealth encryption chip.” The magic chip he’s referring to that “will, in fact, absolutely stop piracy of gameplay”? The TPM chip — what’s been on motherboards for years, that apparently Bushnell just found out about. While the tinfoil hats in the house will likely attribute TPM (Trusted Platform Module) and other onboard crypto-chips to the eventual downfall of privacy and personal computing, to date we’ve yet to see piracy stunted or civil liberties breached because of the little bugger. FUD you later, Nolan.
[Thanks, Carl]
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Posted in software, security, piracy, atari, encryption, fud, nolan bushnell, NolanBushnell, tpm | No Comments »
April 1st, 2008 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
Ouch, that payback, it can be a bitch — Sony BMG, distributors of rootkit-installing CDs and litigious foe of P2P users worldwide, has just been busted in France for using pirated software on its servers. And it gets even worse: Windows admin tool developer PointDev says a Sony BMG was caught when an IT staffer actually called up for support and gave a pirated license number to the phone tech. That’s some pretty shady behavior for a company that’s rammed anti-piracy measures down its own customers’ throats — too bad it’s probably not going to feel the hit of the €300,000 ($475,000) lawsuit nearly as hard as the college students it routinely sues for $5,000.
[Via ZeroPaid, thanks to everyone who sent this in]
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Posted in lawsuit, legal, piracy, sony bmg, SonyBmg | No Comments »
March 27th, 2008 by
Filed under: Networking
Although Comcast has been beating around the proverbial bush about its data-meddling ways, it seems the pressure from the recent FCC investigation efforts have forced it to play nice. Reportedly, the firm is getting set to (begrudgingly, we presume) announce that it will “stop targeting BitTorrent on the internet.” More specifically, the cable company will purportedly “boost broadband capacity” in order to make things speedier all around, but details on this tidbit were unsurprisingly absent. Nevertheless, BitTorrent has also agreed to make its software “more efficient,” but those hoping that Comcast would leave well enough alone are in for even more disappointment. The outfit still plans on managing traffic on the ‘net (standard practice, we know), but Tony Werner, executive VP and CTO, noted that it was “working hard on a different approach that is protocol-agnostic during peak periods.”
[Thanks, Mike and Kenneth]
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Posted in fcc, internet, piracy, p2p, BitTorrent, comcast, blocking, data discrimination, DataDiscrimination, net neutrality, NetNeutrality, EFF, Electronic Frontier Foundation, ElectronicFrontierFoundation, packet forgery | No Comments »
February 14th, 2008 by
Filed under: Gaming
We’re always a little skeptical of piracy impact numbers, especially when companies try to factor in things like “lost sales,” which can’t be adequately measured, but it’s still interesting to hear how large the hit is estimated to be — like Nintendo’s recent filing with the US Trade Representative that piracy cost it and its partners some $975m worldwide in 2007. Saying that the popularity of the Wii and DS makes Nintendo an “attractive target” for counterfeiters, the big N broke the problem down by region, highlighting its efforts to stem the tide and proposed solutions and regulations. We’d say that with profits soaring and plenty of people clamoring for hard-to-find systems, Nintendo could probably get back a little of that cash by finally getting some boxes on shelves instead of pushing for new laws, but hey — even Mario’s lawyers probably get sick of being paid in mushrooms.
[Image courtesy of Nick Cueva]
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Posted in Nintendo, Wii, piracy, ds | No Comments »
December 17th, 2007 by
Filed under: Misc. Gadgets
In an unusual situation for a company so vocal about protecting intellectual property rights, Microsoft is being sued for allegedly distributing material copyrighted by a Philippine college — despite the fact that the material in question seems to have only been given to fellow educational professionals. Southeastern College in Pasay City is suing Microsoft and Microsoft Philippines for 100 million Filipino pesos ($2.4 million) for handing out at least 700 CDs in 2005 and 2006 containing the 379-page “SEC Microsoft Office XP Manual,” which had been copyrighted by SEC director Conrad Mañalac in 2005 (although work on it reportedly began in 1999). Apparently 10,000 copies of this same manual had previously been licensed from the school by the company in 2004, and retitled for use in a program to train high school teachers. For its part, Microsoft Philippines denies having “improperly distributed additional copies of the curriculum,” although it’s a little unclear what the company’s actual position is, with the following statement — emailed to the Inquirer.net — seeming to indicate that the primary concern right now is protecting the mothership: “They brought this matter to our attention a year ago and we worked hard to resolve it, but without success. For all intents and purposes, this is a purely local matter which does not involve Microsoft Corporation.” Um, okay, whatever you say. We’ll be interested to see if / how Redmond responds to this one…
[Thanks, Mark]
Read - Microsoft sued
Read - Microsoft issues response
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in Microsoft, legal, copyright, piracy, copyright infringement, CopyrightInfringement, lawsuits, microsoft philippines, MicrosoftPhilippines, southeastern college, SoutheasternCollege | No Comments »
December 4th, 2007 by
Filed under: Desktops, Laptops
While it admits it’s not possible to pin down an exact number, Microsoft has let out word today that it estimates the counterfeit rate of Vista to be about half that of XP, a figure that it seems to be more than pleased with. Of course, one could interpret those numbers in slightly less positive ways, but Microsoft claims the sharp dip in piracy is due to Vista’s amped up authentication system, which it says is a “proven and effective way to combat piracy.” To come up with the numbers, Microsoft apparently relied statistics based on Windows Genuine Advantage validation failures, as well as other unspecified internal data. As TG Daily notes, all this follows Microsoft’s announcement of revised anti-piracy measures in Vista SP1 and, specifically, some big changes to the aforementioned WGA feature.
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in Microsoft, vista, piracy, windows xp, xp, windows vista, WindowsVista, vista piracy, VistaPiracy | No Comments »
December 1st, 2007 by
Filed under: Networking
According to a report released by the Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), Comcast has yet to relinquish its data discriminating habits, and users attempting to share content via P2P could still face slowdowns and unexpected delays. Of course, Comcast’s Charlie Douglas proclaimed that the firm “does not, has not, and will not block any web site or online application, including peer-to-peer services,” but followed up by stating that it did engage in “reasonable network management to serve all of its customers with a good internet experience.” The EFF, however, saw things differently. During its own tests, it was reportedly able to confirm conclusions drawn earlier this year by the AP, and it also exclaimed that Comcast was “essentially deploying against its own customers techniques more typically used by malicious hackers.” Pretty strong words, to say the least, but we’re curious to know if the continued Comcast bashing is indeed legitimate. So, dear readers / Comcast users, are you still (or have you ever, for that matter) experiencing sketchy P2P performance, or is this all just one overblown mess?
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in internet, piracy, p2p, BitTorrent, comcast, blocking, data discrimination, DataDiscrimination, net neutrality, NetNeutrality, EFF, Electronic Frontier Foundation, ElectronicFrontierFoundation, packet forgery, PacketForgery | No Comments »
October 23rd, 2007 by
Filed under: Networking
Following AP reports published last week that painted Comcast in a less-than-positive light for apparently stifling BitTorrent uploads, the company has come clean (somewhat, that is). Reportedly, the firm did admit to “delaying” some subscriber internet traffic, but stated that any hiccups were “temporary and intended to improve surfing for other users.” More specifically, Mitch Bowling, senior vice president of Comcast Online Services, was quoted as saying that Comcast utilized “several network management technologies that, when necessary, enabled it to delay — not block — some peer-to-peer traffic,” but that doesn’t exactly jive with the AP’s findings. Nevertheless, Mr. Bowling also stated that the problem was “unintentional and due to a software bug [saywha?] that had been fixed.” So with that being said, are any of the afflicted users out there still seeing issues, or has all this negative attention really resulted in a change of heart?
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in internet, piracy, p2p, BitTorrent, comcast, blocking, data discrimination, DataDiscrimination, net neutrality, NetNeutrality, torrent | No Comments »
September 28th, 2007 by
Filed under: Home Entertainment, Storage
Just a week after the DVD CCA approved an unexciting (and incredibly restrictive) download-to-burn scheme, DataPlay has unveiled what it calls the “world’s first CSS-managed recording DVD burner.” Of course, this isn’t the first time we’ve heard about this type of setup, and as it turns out, DataPlay is actually “participating in the Qflix technology and IP licensing program.” The aptly-named MovieWriter is an external USB 2.0 device that is “capable of writing CSS encrypted content for playback on standard DVD players,” but alas, you’ll be forced to pick up the presumably expensive CSS-MR pre-keyed recordable discs through Verbatim or Taiyo Yuden before any burning can take place. Currently, no pricetag is being listed, but we are told that the outfit is already planning an internal version for OEMs to integrate into pre-fabricated machines. [Warning: PDF read link]
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Office Depot Featured Gadget: Xbox 360 Platinum System Packs the power to bring games to life!

Posted in drm, DVD, css, css-mr, dataplay, dvd burner, DvdBurner, film, movies, moviewriter, mpaa, piracy, Qflix | No Comments »