Windows DRM cracked again

nathan

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Poor Microsoft. :(
From: Windows Media License Agreements [email removed]
Sent: Thursday, September 07, 2006
To: Windows Media License Agreements
Subject: Status - Windows Media DRM circumvention

MICROSOFT CONFIDENTIAL [This was highlighted in bold red letters, ha!]

Dear Windows Media DRM Licensee,

As you may know, on August 28 2006 Microsoft released an update of the individualized blackbox component (IBX) of Windows Media DRM to address a circumvention of the Windows Media DRM system. Unfortunately, a new version of the tool that circumvents Windows Media DRM technology on Windows PCs has surfaced, breaking the content protection that our content partners apply to their intellectual property such as music or video content.

As we did with the initial circumvention, Microsoft will use the built-in renewability features of Windows Media DRM to deploy an update to address this circumvention. We have teams working around the clock on this project, and this update will include incrementing the Security Version of the individualized blackbox component, which should ease deployment and make it easier to detect the update remotely. We will continue to work closely with you to inform you of our progress and help you update your systems as needed. As always, we appreciate your feedback and ongoing support.

If you have any questions, comments, or concerns regarding this circumvention or related updates, please contact [email removed].

Kind regards,

Windows Media Licensing Department
Microsoft Consumer Media Technology
 
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nathan

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Almost two weeks later and there is still no fix. I guess I'm the only one that thinks this is a huge story. What this means is that you can use one of those subscription services like Rhapsody or Napster and permanently remove the protection scheme. Maybe I should sign up for a trial subscription to one of them...:devil:

On a related note, Microsoft seems to be scrapping this scheme with their new zune player.
EFF on Zune: Risk of DRM/DMCA checkmate no longer a risk. It's reality Posted by David Berlind @ 6:58 am

Digg This!

By way of Cory Doctorow, comes a pointer to the Electronic Frontier Foundation's take on Microsoft's new Zune: a brand that has broken ranks with the Redmond-based company's previous digital rights management (DRM) strategy that attempted to establish an ecosystem of compatibility (under the name "PlaysForSure") between content merchants (ie: AOL, Yahoo, Amazon, etc.), the copy protection on the content they sold, and the software and devices that could play that content.

Critics of DRM (including me) have long warned of the risks of strategy, policy, and technology shifts amongst the various DRM stakeholders (technology companies, entertainment companies, copyright holders, etc.): namely that consumers could wake up one morning to learn that the rules regarding legal playback of their content investments (audio, video, images, etc.) may have changed to the point that they'll probably have to, at some point,M re-buy their favorite music and video all over again. In the US, the Digital Millenium Copyright Act (DMCA) has, with few exceptions (none of which apply here), outlawed circumvention of content copy protection. So, with Microsoft's Zune, now comes proof that these were not Chicken Little warnings. Wrote the EFF's Derek Slater:

Microsoft's Zune will not play protected Windows Media Audio and Video purchased or "rented" from Napster 2.0, Rhapsody, Yahoo! Unlimited, Movielink, Cinemanow, or any other online media service. That's right — the media that Microsoft promised would Play For Sure doesn't even play on Microsoft's own device. Buried in footnote 4 of its press release, Microsoft clearly states that "Zune software can import audio files in unprotected WMA, MP3, AAC; photos in JPEG; and videos in WMV, MPEG-4, H.264" — protected WMA and WMV (not to mention iTunes DRMed AAC) are conspicuously absent.……

…..This is a stark example of DRM under the DMCA giving customers a raw deal. Buying DRMed media means you're locked into the limited array of devices that vendors say you can use. You have to rebuy your preexisting DRMed media collection if you want to use it on the Zune. And you'll have to do that over and over again whenever a new, incompatible device with innovative features blows existing players out of the water….

….The real culprit here is the DMCA — but for that bad law, customers could legally convert DRMed files into whatever format they want, and tech creators would be free to reverse engineer the DRM to create compatible devices. Even though those acts have traditionally been and still are non-infringing, the DMCA makes them illegal and stifles fair use, innovation, and competition.

….May this be a lesson to those who mistakenly laud certain DRM as "open" and offering customers "freedom of choice" simply because it is more widely-licensed than other formats. With DRM under the DMCA, nothing truly plays for sure, regardless of whether you're purchasing from Apple, Microsoft, or anyone else….

Doctorow drove straight to the irony of the situation when he wrote "Microsoft's iPod-killing Zune player won't play music that's locked up with Microsoft's own anti-copying software."

Don't say you weren't warned.
 
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