Newfangled DVD Copy Protection Apparently Cracked; Now The Real Fun Starts

from the pointless dept

Next-gen DVD players are already something of a joke. Despite their ability to play HD content, industry infighting over two competing standards has stymied their introduction, and their high prices don't help, either. But HD isn't the only new feature these players enable -- they've got a fantastic new DRM scheme, called AACS, too. But, just like pretty much every other DRM scheme out there, rumors say it's already been cracked. It's inevitable, really, and illustrates just what an exercise in futility implementing DRM is: it certainly doesn't stop piracy, as the content available on file-sharing networks indicates, and it simply raises costs and prevents honest consumers from using content they've legitimately purchased in the ways which they'd like. In any case, if AACS really has been cracked, it will be interesting to see the industry response. AACS is supposed to be able to adapt and be changed as time goes on. For instance, keys on playback devices can apparently be revoked and updated in order to allow the DRM to be updated and keep pace with cracks and hacks. However, simply not updating a player may not shield a user from updated DRM, since the copy-protection on discs will change, too -- and if a player hasn't been updated, it won't play the new media. Surely the movie industry feels great about this, and thinks it's really got one over on crackers and pirates. Here's the thing, though: whatever changes they make, the DRM will just get cracked again. And changing around the DRM and requiring updates and breaking functionality isn't going to hurt those people -- it's just going to frustrate honest consumers who won't understand why their expensive DVD player won't play movies any more.
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  • icon
    Vincent Clement (profile), 29 Dec 2006 @ 8:56am

    Paying Customers are Criminals

    it's just going to frustrate honest consumers who won't understand why their expensive DVD player won't play movies any more.

    How about frustrating honest consumers who do not understand why their cheap DVD player will not play movies any more? My youngest kid received Little Mermaid for Christmas. My wife and I wondered why he would leave the room part way through the movie. Well, at the half way point, the DVD would pause and eventually stop. This happened in two of my DVD players. My PS2 reported a read error. Apparently, the newer Disney DVDs use a new copy protection that fills the DVD with errors.

    Fortunately, I was able to find a few programs on the internet that would decode and rip the CD, strip the copy protection and re-author just the movie (no previews, no FBI warnings and no menus). The newly burned copy worked like a charm - no compression required to fit on a regular DVD.

    Screw the MPAA and other media trade organizations. Copy protection reduces the value of your product. I was still able to make copy of your 'protected' DVD without the previews and copyright warnings. I'll be making a movie-only copy of every kids DVD I have. Stop treating paying customers as criminals.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      ehrichweiss, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:36am

      Re: Paying Customers are Criminals

      Paying customers ARE criminals. We should put them in an economic prison...oh wait.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Livas Video/Photography, 31 Dec 2009 @ 5:40am

      Re: Paying Customers are Criminals

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Komataguri, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:42am

    I wonder..

    I wonder how long it is going to take the industry to realize, that the more they lock down products with pointless DRM, the more they are going to drive once loyal customers to piracy.


    Specially with the new HD era, Where you can't play Blu-Ray or HD-DVD movies in your PC unless you have a HDCP compliant video card, a certified monitor, a pint of chicken blood, and three pagen priests.


    The more they make their products inusable for the legitamate user, the more they are driving people to piracy.


    I've had to resort to downloading things I legally own, Just to be able to use the damnable things, and its ridiculous.



    This piracy fire continues to grow, and its only because the MPAA, RIAA, etc are fighting the fires with gasoline.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      dataGuy, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:02am

      Re: I wonder..

      "The more they make their products inusable for the legitamate user, the more they are driving people to piracy."

      That may be true for some. It's not true for me and I doubt that it's true for the majority of people.

      What DRM does do is encourage me to look for non-DRMed products and to tell everyone I know about the down side of companies that use DRM. For example I know my input has cost Sony some sales.

      If it ever gets to the point that I can't easily find non-DRMed products, then I'll do without. These companies are banking on the fact that most people are lazy and stupid. I believe they are wrong on that point. They will be able to burn plenty of customers in the short term (many less than in the old days thanks to the internet) but in the long term they will lose multiple customers for everyone that gets ripped off by DRM.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:44am

    ... I hate these organizations...

    nuff said.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Joe Smith, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:48am

    too complicated

    Consumer electronics are too comlicated as it is.

    I am not buying hardware that is going to need to be updated and I am not going to buy hardware with an expiry feature.

    The recording and movie industries can go f**k themselves.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:51am

      Re: too complicated

      I am not buying hardware that is going to need to be updated and I am not going to buy hardware with an expiry feature.
      You don't think they're gong to tell people that on the box, do you?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        Livas Video/Photography, 5 Dec 2009 @ 8:55am

        Buy

        where to buy a device to stop people from making copy from my DVD?

        link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    anonymous coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:49am

    i wonder if the MPAA is going to reimburse the retailers for the cost of the DVD returns from customers that can't play the movie and have no idea why?

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:18am

      Re:

      i wonder if the MPAA is going to reimburse the retailers for the cost of the DVD returns from customers that can't play the movie and have no idea why?
      No problem for the retailers: They will just refuse such returns and the consumers will get fleeced as intended.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Wizard Prang, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:10am

      DVD returns?

      Hah! That's a laugh.

      Once you've opened it, most stores won't give you your money back for any reason. Why? Cos we're all thieves... it says here.

      These folks are Ferengi in disguise. Rule of Acquisition !3: Once you have their money, never give it back.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:54am

    DRM is a bad use of encryption

    The problem with DRM is pretty simple. The reason you encrypt something is because you want to prevent people from being able to access the data unless they are authorized to do so. But to encrypt something to prevent someone from accessing the data and then handing them the key to decrypt it makes no sense. Even if you pull all sorts of tricks to try and prevent the person from using the key in ways you don't want them to use it, you still have to give it to them.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    LooseLips, 29 Dec 2006 @ 9:59am

    ... sink ships!

    Well, this is what happens when you try to "prevent" the "unpreventable". I mean when these studios get the hint and start offer a better means to transcode, re-encode, divx dump DVD's then they will always have a small elite group of extremly driven indivuduals that will push as hard as possible to break the system. Lets face it folks, the data (no mattter how encrypted it is), will always be decypted else how the heck would we be able to listen [watch] or hear the media. Its time for these HUGE media compaines to understand that the consumers are not trying to steal but rather want many options for our purchase. Seriously, if I bought gasoline I would expect to use it anywhere in anything that accepts that medium. Well if we applied the DRM to gasoline then when I purchased it then I would only be able to use it for the medium I choose at the time of bidding. Ridculous...! I will offer up my entire fleet of computer's horsepower to break that DRM crap. (I'm talking distrubuted computing, super-computing power here)... they cannot stop the mad cow they built.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    -, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:14am

    Remember: Can't returned opened media

    Remember sheeple:

    you opened the DVD?

    You.can't.return.it!

    You'll just be able to get the same DVD.

    This happened to my kid sister 2 days ago w/ a Disney DVD.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:27am

      Re: Remember: Can't returned opened media

      she probably did not get pissy enough at the returns desk

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:27am

      Re: Remember: Can't returned opened media

      Just return and say you disagree with the licensing terms. If the store still will not take it back them get in writing. End result: you disagree with eh licensing terms and the store refuses to refund you the money then you can do as you please with the media.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Well,, 29 Dec 2006 @ 2:59pm

      Re: Remember: Can't returned opened media

      You generally CAN exchange it for the same movie, Once you've done that about 10 or 12 times per Person, per Movie, I think that the retailers will begin to become annoyed with the studios for all of the defective product.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    xtraSico, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:22am

    Oh...

    I have an old and cheap dvd player, $28 about 2-3 years ago. Now I understand why there are some movies I can't play in it. With some movies it doesn't even play. It just shows "LOADING DVD-VIDEO" and then stops. Uhmmm. It was frustrating. I took the disk to the rental store and ask for the same title because I thought it was a damaged disk, only to get the same result. The owner never believed me that I couldn't see that darn movie.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    smellygirl, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:36am

    stop the comparisons to physical goods

    everyone on both sides needs to stop making comparisons between physical goods and information.

    obviously the difference is that digital information can be identically duplicated at effectively no cost, and physical goods cannot.

    so none of those arguments are worthwhile.

    we are in the mess we are because the old media keep trying to make them seem the same, and so far the laws support them in it.

    we know that stealing a physical CD or DVD is not REALLY the same as downloading music or movies.

    but DRM on a movie is not the same as your hypothetical DRM on gasoline, either.

    and 1000s of people downloading movies and songs is not the same as making a mix tape for a friend.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:02am

      Re: stop the comparisons to physical goods

      but DRM on a movie is not the same as your hypothetical DRM on gasoline
      No, not the same, just the same principle. Remember, movie DRM doesn't keep one from copying the movie, it just intends to keep one from using it in an "unauthorized" player.

      and 1000s of people downloading movies and songs is not the same as making a mix tape for a friend.
      Seems to me to be the same as 1000's of people making mix tapes for their friends. In principle that is.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Roy, 10 Jan 2007 @ 7:43am

      Re: stop the comparisons to physical goods

      Yes, the thread wouldn't be complete without the "it's not theft because it's not physical" crap argument.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 10:46am

    Well, this is what happens when you try to "prevent" the "unpreventable".
    Kind of like the "war on drugs". It may not be winnable, but like with other wars there sure is a lot of money to be made in fighting it anyway. In fact there is more money to be made and power to be gained in not winning a never ending war of this sort than by actually winning. More prison construction, more guards, more lawyers, more judges, more cops, more surveillance, more control and so on. All of which benefits the enforcement system.

    I expect to see a "war on piracy", as it will probably be called, at the federal level. Federal law enforcement agencies are already pushing hard to get their involvement and subsequent funding increased in this area increased.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:55am

      Re:

      "In fact there is more money to be made and power to be gained in not winning a never ending war of this sort than by actually winning."

      Isn't that the exact principle used by the inner party to permanently dumb down and hence subjugate the entire world population in 1984?

      Scary thought eh?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    safusa, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:04am

    Returned DVD

    Yes you get exactly the same title, but you don't open it. You then return the unopened on to the store saying it was a duplicate present, or that you already had it. They will issue a store credit and put it back on the shelf for someone else to buy. I have done it with a computer game that wouldn't play in my system.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Wizard Prang, 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:13am

      Only a matter of time...

      ...before they get wise to this, if they haven't done so already.

      They'll probably start opening the replacement items as a matter of policy. Or something like that.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • icon
        Peet McKimmie (profile), 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:54am

        Re: Only a matter of time...

        I bought a VHS tape in Woolworths of Aberdeen a few years back. The woman took the tape out of my hand, took my credit card, rang the sale through, then ripped the cellophane off the tape, opened the box and put a "Woolworths" rubber-stamp on the tape label over the printed info. I complained and asked for an "undamaged" copy - she refused and told me it was the shop's policy to stamp everything they sell because they had a run of people returning goods that they hadn't originally bought there. Yeah, right.

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          Erv Server, 29 Dec 2006 @ 12:11pm

          It has been cracked

          just do a GOOGLE, it's been easily cracked

          link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          ME, 29 Dec 2006 @ 12:15pm

          Re: Re: Only a matter of time...

          so you simply stop sale and contest it with your credit comapny. fsck em outa their maney and keep your tape. that and if the stupid woman did that AFTER the credit transaction went through you could also press charges for vandelism...

          link to this | view in chronology ]

          • identicon
            Sanguine Dream, 29 Dec 2006 @ 2:06pm

            Re: Re: Re: Only a matter of time...

            If you try to bring vandelism charges based on the fact that you didin't know that opening and stamping the item was policy (cuz if you knew then you wouldn't have bought it right?) then the store would just mention the all too common clause of, "we reserve the right to change our policy without notice."

            This is a prime example of why lots of EULAs, store policies, and damn near every service contract (like phone, cable, and internet) has that clause thsese days. That line is just a blanket right to change the rules as they please. Don't be surprised if the **AAs start putting this in the copyright warnings of their content and then try to have it interpreted as the right to go on a fishing expedition into someone's media collection.

            link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    ConceptJunkie (profile), 29 Dec 2006 @ 11:05am

    The end of useful computers...

    You know, we've spent 60 years trying to make software more and more power and useful, and it seems these days, the primary emphasis in software and hardware development is to literally make products that DON'T work.

    Let's face it, the software and hardware industry has a hard enough time making things that just work, adding in this additional layer of complexity is ruining the usability of consumer electronics.

    I wonder how many companies will be ruined and how back the economy will be affected before they finally figure out that deliberately breaking their products isn't good business.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Alex Hagen, 29 Dec 2006 @ 12:03pm

    Not so fast.

    This is interesting, but I think this is not quite as big a deal as it sounds at first glance. It appears that a particular player key has been cracked, just like happened with CSS. What will happen now is that that player key will be revoked, and new titles coming out will not play on it. But there are a LOT of player keys this time around, and the only players being affected will be the same one that got cracked, i.e. the manufacturer that screwed up and left their key vulnerable will be the one that gets screwed in return and will have their products stop working and their customers mad at them, and presumably have to pay to replace all their players. In other words the system is working exactly as they planned it to.

    The belief that all DRM is ultimately unworkable which many in the tech world seem to have, including most people here, is an interesting one. It may indeed be true, but I think it is way too early to believe this with as much certainty as people seem to do.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:06pm

      Re: Not so fast.

      "The belief that all DRM is ultimately unworkable which many in the tech world seem to have, including most people here, is an interesting one. It may indeed be true, but I think it is way too early to believe this with as much certainty as people seem to do."

      I think the reason for that is because to date there isn't a single DRM or copy protection that has even remotely worked. So as many others have said if it can be watch or heard it can be copied period!

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Anonymous Coward, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:18pm

      Re: Not so fast.

      Alex Hagen wrote:
      the manufacturer that screwed up and left their key vulnerable
      How do you know that, Alex? The article doesn't state that. Which manufacturer was it?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • icon
      chris (profile), 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:20pm

      Re: Not so fast.

      yeah, by ignoring the fact that *every* digital content protection scheme has failed in the past i am ver hopeful that *this time* it's going to work.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      ScytheNoire, 29 Dec 2006 @ 2:31pm

      Re: Not so fast.

      Even better. This means that they can keep cracking devices, ruining product keys one by one, until the manufacturers get tired of their products being blacklisted and simply release players that ignore the DRM and will play anything.

      DRM is such a huge waste of money, and it stops me from buying legit products. i still buy DVD's, because it's DRM is a joke, but i don't buy CD's, ever since the Sony rootkit hacking attack. but then again, i never put a DVD in my computer, and i want my music on my computer and would never put a purchased disc in my computer.

      link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Mad Bastard, 29 Dec 2006 @ 12:08pm

    Shrink.wrap.the.dvd.again.then.they.can't.say.SHIT!!

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    William, 29 Dec 2006 @ 12:56pm

    DVD Genuine Advantage

    Your HD-DVD player calls the home office and checks to see if you are playing a licensed copy of Spiderman for a DB of "good licenses". If not the entire HD-DVD player is bricked. That is just how they roll.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Not William, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:30pm

      Re: DVD Genuine Advantage

      Your HD-DVD player calls the home office and checks to see if you are playing a licensed copy of Spiderman for a DB of "good licenses".
      Does this also mean that they can keep a record of what movies I watch?

      link to this | view in chronology ]

      • identicon
        VintageCoronado, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:38pm

        Re: Re: DVD Genuine Advantage

        somone is watching hungarian kiddie porn!!!!!

        link to this | view in chronology ]

        • identicon
          fjsadkdsiljsdfjkl, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:49pm

          Re: Re: Re: DVD Genuine Advantage

          somone is watching hungarian kiddie porn!!!!!
          Or something worse, like Michael Moore movies.

          link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    VintageCoronado, 29 Dec 2006 @ 1:21pm

    a message Tom Cruise and Cameron Diaz

    Hi,

    This is Tom Cruise I make 20 million a film. Hi, this Cameron Diaz and I make 15 million a film. We want to express that piracy is illegal and can land you in jail. When you pirate movies the industry is forced to hike up movie ticket prices and while we're still making 15-20 mil, the industry is also forced to layoff the workers behind the camera who happen to be the backbone of the industry.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    Alex Elsayed, 29 Dec 2006 @ 7:16pm

    Misconception

    As a matter of fact, it was NOT the player key that was cracked. See, AACS works like this: The player key decrypts the title key, and the title key decrypts the content. The way it was crackes was that the software player cached the TITLE key in memory in the DECRYPTED form. This guy used a memory editor (like TSearch or ARTMoney) to find the title key, and then wrote a program to decrypt a movie, given that movie's title key. Thus, they can't revoke anything - That title key was never seen as a vulnerable point, so it doesn't have a revocation mechanism. And so, as long as a software player that caches the key insecurely exists, we don't crack AACS - We crack _each_movie_ on a case-by-case basis.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    misanthropic humanist, 31 Dec 2006 @ 3:53am

    easy, just don't buy it

    The answer to this one is simple. Don't buy this crap any more.

    If you can't survive without buying CD's and DVD's then you're no better than a drug addict really are you?

    I bought ZERO digital media this year for Christmas , despite some pressure from kids and naive family members.

    I took it as a chance to educate them a little further - explaining how DVDs and CDs now contain "hacker code" designed to break your computer and media players.

    I think my presents, like a juicer, clothes, and books were extremely well received this year, a nice refreshing surprise instead of the usual crappy silver discs that everyone knows cost 0.02c to manufacture and will be broken by February.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • icon
    Derek Kerton (profile), 2 Jan 2007 @ 12:27am

    Twist

    A funny twist on all of this is if some very effective, very easy to use hack comes out for only one of either Blu-Ray or HD-DVD. If that happened, the media industry would throw another tantrum as expected, but I bet a weird outcome would surprise them:

    If one of the two competing standards were fully DRM-hacked, it would suddenly increase in value to the users, and (like VHS to Beta) grow quickly in popularity. A good hack could decide the format war. Customers would feel comfortable buying HD disks and players, and despite themselves the media companies would make money selling us the same content again.

    It wouldn't be the first time "the people" had to fight the media companies to help them make money.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    fred, 29 Jul 2008 @ 6:09am

    Megaupload downloading

    All new music mp3 and clips are available for downloading at http://megaupload.name/

    link to this | view in chronology ]

  • identicon
    anon, 3 Oct 2010 @ 11:17am

    this works

    anydvd and dvd shrink

    I know this is a old thread but still useful

    anydvd has a free 21 day trial and dvd shrink is a free program

    link to this | view in chronology ]


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