Entertainment Industry Copyright Notice Acknowledgement Forms Easily Hacked
from the nice-work,-baytsp dept
One of the companies that the entertainment industry hires to send out nastygrams to people it believes are file sharing illegally is BayTSP. The company tries to hunt down IP addresses and then try to notify the user. Apparently, a part of this process is also to include a link to a web form where the user can respond to the notice and tell BayTSP if you will comply with their infringement notice and remove the offending files from your computer. Except, some are noticing, that BayTSP's method of doing this isn't even remotely secure, so the response forms are available for anyone to see -- and to respond to. You can find your own with a little help from Google.Even worse, you could send your own notices, pretending to be BayTSP, and get people to fill out the forms instead. And, on top of that, some have discovered that BayTSP's site has some scripting vulnerabilities such that you could create a fake complaint and get people to, say, download malware or enter credit card data. Once again demonstrating the high level of technical incompetence from the folks the RIAA and MPAA hire to piss off fans worldwide.
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Filed Under: copyright notices, security
Companies: baytsp
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Nefarious Thoughts Abound
Here's the question, is the MPAA aware that BayTSP's process is unsecure? If not, then they're just idiots. If so, hasn't some government official grandstanded about this insecurity and put it into a law. What about the children? These insecurities could hurt the children.
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Time to head over congress.gov
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I can't even imagine what it's like for RIAA hiring managers
Forget a person's personal feelings about piracy in general, these groups are technological shake down organizations.
One of two scenarios played out:
1) They couldn't find a decent developer to build the site (or were tired of interviews where the candidate laughed at them on their way out of the room), so they handed it to "some guy's son" who works in the organization and "knows HTML"
2) The guy who built it made it intentionally insecure, and then tipped off the general tech press for street cred shortly after walking into a telephone booth, changing clothes and flying away never to be seen again.
Perhaps that's wishful thinking, but a guy can dream.
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Your missing the point.
The more incompetence the more their point to congress.
The goal should be to highlight what works against their errors.
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Re:
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RICO the RIAA
BUY indie. RICO the RIAA
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Failure is the goal.
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http://webreply.baytsp.com/webreply/webreply.jsp?customerid=131&commhash=af36fb1762bc84fd3c9 8ef8121147003
BayTSP is asking for a movie title to be removed from BitTorrent. Not a .torrent file from a server, not an .avi from a torrent user's computer, but the removal of a torrent from an ISP.
"[X] Yes, Additional info: The infringement in question has long left our network on its own due to the very nature of network traffic".
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