Posts Tagged ‘DRM’

Sony Rootkit mk2

Wednesday, August 29th, 2007

Sony lost a lot of credibility when its music CDs were found to contain a rootkit virus. Those who purchased Sony’s products legally would have their computers infected, whereas those who downloaded them for free would (as with all DRM) get a better deal than those who paid.

Apparently not content with destroying customers’ computers with music CDs and fire, Sony has managed to arse-up yet another segment of its once-revered product lineup. The MicroVault USB sticks - which justify costing many times more than competitor products with their ‘fingerprint reader’ security - use an incompetent rootkit as part of their security suite. Like XCP, the Micro Vault rootkit could allow malicious hackers easier access to an infected PC. As with the XCP fiasco Sony did not reply to the security researchers who initially informed them privately - as is the ‘done thing’ in these sorts of situations.

Just in case people thought that it might be safe to buy Sony products again - here’s the evidence you were probably hoping didn’t exist.

BBC ‘to face EU action’

Tuesday, June 26th, 2007

The BBC’s decision to offer its ‘iPlayer’ download service only to customers of Microsoft is facing referral to the EU’s competition authorities. For those of you outside the UK, I’ll give a bit of background:

The BBC is funded by the public through a tax known as the ‘TV licence’. Anyone who owns a TV is obliged to be a paying customer of the BBC, even if they have no interest in is content. Failure to pay results in criminal sanctions. As well as having to provide the service which members of the public have paid for (some under protest), the BBC is required by its charter to be impartial.

The company intends to use Microsoft DRM with its ‘iPlayer’ service, which results in the exclusion of all BBC customers who are not also customers of Microsoft (as the latter has not provided DRM players for other operating systems). This is despite the existing use of RealMedia for all of the BBC’s streaming video services - a DRM system which is available on most computer operating systems. This shows that there is no need to endorse one operating system vendor in order to ‘protect’ content.

EU law prohibits companies from concluding market-restricting agreements which harm competition or consumers. The Open Source Consortium (who I’ve never heard of, despite using a lot of OSS) plans to make a complaint to the EU authorities on this basis. Although I’m actually a Windows user myself, I think it is unacceptable for a publicly-funded broadcaster such as the BBC to refuse to provide its services to customers of companies other than Microsoft. What is worse is that the government has allowed this to go as far as the EU - this proposal should have been stomped on at the UK level.