Sony Spyware

blastarr

Power Member
It get's worse, way worse:
http://news.com.com/Bots+for+Sony+CD+software+spotted+online/2100-1029_3-5944643.html?tag=nefd.lede

Pequena passagem do artigo completo, que recomendo:

Sony's software, installed when playing one of the record label's recent copy-protected CDs in a computer, hides itself on hard drives using a powerful programming tool called a "rootkit." But the tool leaves the door open behind it, allowing other software--including viruses--to be deeply hidden behind the rootkit cloak.

The first version of a Trojan horse spotted early Thursday, which aims to give an attacker complete remote control over an infected computer, didn't work well. But over the course of the day, several others emerged that apparently fixed early flaws.
This is no longer a theoretical vulnerability; it is a real vulnerability," said Sam Curry, vice president of Computer Associates' eTrust Security Management division. "This is no longer about digital rights management or content protection, this is about people having their PCs taken over."
 
Já tinha lido isto no OSNews. Pelo que parece, além do habitual Windows, o OS X também está na lista!
Aparentemente, apenas se safa o linux, como já é costume.

Espero que os advogados continuem com o processo e que causem milhares de dolares em prejuíso à Sony! É para que todas as empresas discográficas aprendam a não mexer no que não é deles!
 
Assim só nos obrigam a fazer downloads ilegais :P mas realmente e uma falha das grandes... já agora uma pequena lista de alguns dos cd´s com este problemamas duvido que sejam todos:


- Trey Anastasio - Shine a light on Sony's DRM process
- Celine Dion - On ne Change Pas ("One does not change"...Big media and it's desire to control your music)
- Neil Diamond - 12 Songs (and some DRM rootkitty goodness)
- Our Lady Peace - Healthy in Paranoid Times (paranoid because of Sony's DRM)
- Chris Botti - To Love the music Again
- Van Zant - Get Right with the Man (need I say more?)
- Switchfoot - Nothing is Sound (certainly not Sony's DRM policy)
- The Coral - The Invisible Invasion of rootkits
- Acceptance - Phantoms (aka "rootkits")
- Susie Suh - Susie Suh (Susie → Sue → your ca$h or 12-year-olds or grandmothers)
- Amerie - Touch (just a light "touch" of our rootkit on your machine)
- Life of Agony - Broken Valley (removing a rootkit? that's the "life of agony")
- The Bad Plus - Suspicious Activity ("the bad plus" is a rootkit...which is certainly "suspicious activity" by Sony on your machine)
- The Dead 60s - The Dead 60s (60s → freedom → now dead)
- Dion - The Essential Dion ("essential" to get our rootkit on your machine")
- Natasha Bedingfield - Unwritten ("unwritten" at least by Sony...they had someone else write their rootkit for them)
- Ricky Martin - Life (what Sony needs to get; and what you give up in the process of accepting their EULA or trying to remove a rootkit)
- Horace Silver Quintet - Silver's Blue
- Gerry Mulligan - Jeru
- Dexter Gordon - Manhatta Symphonie
 
E o melhor de tudo é que so afecta mesmo o Windows! Quem tem Linux ou Mac OS X safa-se, e pode fazer as suas cópias de segurança à vontade.

Ou seja, além da Sony de ter gasto fortunas a mandar fazer esta protecção, ela não impossiblita a cópia legal ou ilegal dos CD's.
Este pessoal das editoras de música são mesmo tansos! Quando é que vão aprender que não há forma de impedir as cópias?
 
Não afecta só o windows, tb afecta Mac's !

Um artigo de follow-up:

Sony BMG affects Macs too

There's a difference at Mac


By INQUIRER staff: sexta-feira 11 novembro 2005, 11:56

MACINTOUCH claimed that Macintosh users also face installing rootkits when they're playing certain Sony CDs. But there's a difference.
That difference is further taken up the Heise news site, here. (German language site). µ

Se é grave ou não, não sei (há alguém que perceba alemão por aí ?), mas a verdade é que nenhum OS parece estar imune, os rootkits são coisas bem mais perigosas do que simples vírus, trojan's e malware/spyware em geral.

edit
Versão traduzida no babelfish, do artigo alemão:
Collateral damage: Sony BMGs copy protection f?Mac computer
Sony BMG incited the Windows universe with the XCP copy protection of roofridge 4 InterNet against itself. Now also a copy protection procedure emerges, which is to erf?en in the Mac cosmos?liche tasks like the XCP software. F?Mac systems were so far as well as no Trojaner and root kits well-known.

On CDs of the Sony BMG daughter RCA Victor according to US media Sunncomms MediaMax copy protectionis used. Mediamax embodies itself like XCP deeply in the system. In addition the software of the CDs installs two Kernel extensions, as Darren Dittrich announces on MacInTouch: PhoenixNub1.kext as well as PhoenixNub12.kext. These extensions are – likewise as of the Windows copy protection admit – only a limited number of copies to permit and in addition the medium access control.

To the Verf?ng, according to product description comes along the software does not stand for the heise editorship CD concerned however also on the Mac as harmless CD Player. A starting function furnishes the Kernelerweiterungen according to Dittrich, to which input of username and password is necessary; however in the use contract (EULA) to the installation of software one refers.

F?die hiding place technology under Windows are according to the anti-virus manufacturers already three Trojaner on the way.

Aparentemente, nos Mac's, o software instala sorrateiramente duas extensões no kernel.
 
Última edição:
Microsoft reage (e não exclui a possibilidade de "marcar" este software da Sony, na versão seguinte do "Windows Malicious Software Removal" Tool, a.k.a. MS Spyware killer):

http://www.eweek.com/article2/0,1895,1884677,00.asp

Microsoft 'Concerned' by Sony DRM


Microsoft Corp. is concerned about rootkit features in CDs from Sony BMG artists and is evaluating the situation to see if any action needs to be taken, a spokesperson said.
The Redmond, Wash., software maker said that the security of its customers' information is a "top priority" and that the company is concerned by software like that deployed by Sony to block illegal CD copying.


However, unlike other security software vendors, Microsoft hasn't decided whether to take more aggressive action against the product, such as detecting and removing it from systems, the spokesperson said.

Sony's rights management technology, which it calls "sterile burning," shipped on CDs by around 20 Sony BMG artists and is installed along with a custom media player that must be used to play the songs on a Windows PC.
Using code written by Sony partner First 4 Internet Ltd. of the United Kingdom, the DRM technology manipulates the Windows core processing center, or "kernel," to make it almost totally undetectable on Windows systems and nearly impossible to remove without fouling Windows, much like malicious programs known as "rootkits."

Sony's efforts to hide the anti-piracy programs erupted into a controversy last week, after Windows analyst Mark Russinovich discovered the cloaked software on his own computer and published a detailed analysis of it on his blog at Sysinternals.com.


Russinovich claimed that Sony provided inadequate disclosure of the rootkit program in its end user license agreement and installed software that could destabilize Windows systems, and even be used by hackers to hide their own malicious programs.

Sony BMG acknowledged that the rootkit-style features are part of DRM technology that began shipping with CDs in 2005, and quickly released a software patch to disable it.
The company also posted instructions for obtaining a program that could remove the DRM technology altogether.

That hasn't stopped security companies, including Computer Associates International Inc. and Symantec Corp., from adding detection for the software to their security products.
Speaking with eWEEK Magazine this week, Sam Curry, Computer Associates' vice president eTrust Security Management, said his company's anti-spyware program, Pest Patrol, would identify the First 4 Internet technology used by Sony BMG and label it a "rootkit," a kind of malicious code.


Microsoft, which also ships an anti-spyware program, recently renamed "Windows Defender," hasn't yet decided whether it will also flag the Sony DRM software as malicious code, the spokesperson said.

"Microsoft's Windows Defender and the Malicious Software Removal Tool [MSRT] have established objective criteria to determine what code will be classified for removal. We are evaluating the current situation to determine if any action from Microsoft is necessary," the spokesperson wrote in an e-mail statement.

However, Sony's actions have caught the attention of staff in Redmond, she said.

"We have invested considerable resources in the security of our products and processes. As such, we are concerned about any malware, including root kits, which targets our customers and negatively impacts the security, reliability and performance of their systems," the spokesperson said.
 
Microsoft confirma.
Vai marcar o software da Sony para remoção pelo MS Anti-Spyware Tool:


November 12, 2005 @ 8:57PM - posted by Steve Dispensa

Microsoft to remove Sony's DRM rootkit

Jason Grime from Microsoft's Anti-Malware Technology Team announced today that the company's Windows AntiSpyware product, currently in beta testing, will be enhanced to detect and remove Sony's rootkit-style Digital Rights Management software, known as XCP, that is installed with certain protected Sony audio CDs.


"We use a set of objective criteria for both Windows Defender and the Malicious Software Removal Tool to determine what software will be classified for detection and removal by our anti-malware technology. We have analyzed this software, and have determined that in order to help protect our customers we will add a detection and removal signature for the rootkit component of the XCP software to the Windows AntiSpyware beta, which is currently used by millions of users."


The new detection code will be released shortly, and will be automatically distributed to Windows AntiSpyware users as a part of regular reference file updates. In addition, Grime says Microsoft will add detection of XCP to the Windows Malicious Software Removal Tool in its December monthly update. This tool is delivered to customers via the company's Windows Update and Microsoft Update websites.

The rootkit was originally discovered by Mark Russinovich of Sysinternals last week. The discovery has led to widespread complaints from the user community and a number of lawsuits in the United States and internationally. Sony has since agreed to discontinue use of the rootkit and has begun cooperating with antivirus vendors for its removal from infected computers, but today's announcement mentions no collaboration between Sony and Microsoft for removal of the code.

in Ars
 
Última edição:
BBC disse:
Sony stops making anti-piracy CDs

_41007650_beddingfield.jpg
Sony has said it will suspend the production of music CDs with anti-piracy technology which can leave computers vulnerable to viruses.
The move came after security firms said hackers were exploiting the software to hide their creations.
The software has been used by viruses to evade detection by anti-virus programs and infect computers.
Sony said it had a right to stop people illegally copying music, but added that the halt was precautionary.
"We also intend to re-examine all aspects of our content protection initiative to be sure that it continues to meet our goals of security and ease of consumer use," the company said in a statement.
Viral trio
In late October Sony BMG was found to be using stealth techniques to hide software that stopped some of its CDs being illegally copied.
Windows programming expert Mark Russinovich discovered that the Sony XCP copy protection system was a so-called "root-kit" that hid itself deep inside the Windows operating system.
XCP uses these techniques to install a proprietary media player that allows PC users to play music on the 20 CDs Sony BMG is protecting with this system. The CDs affected are only being sold in the US.
Soon after Mr Russinovich exposed how XCP worked security experts speculated that it would be easy to hijack the anti-piracy system to hide viruses.
Now anti-virus companies have discovered three malicious programs that use XCP's stealthy capabilities if they find it installed on a compromised PC.
Backdoor virus
Security firm Sophos said it had found a virus attached to a spam message posing as an e-mail from a British business magazine. The subject line of the message is: "Photo Approval Deadline".
Those opening and running the program attached to the mail will have their computer infected with the Stinx-E trojan. The virus is also known as Breplibot and Ryknos.
_41007434_sonyviru-bbc203.jpg
This virus opens a backdoor into infected machines and tries to download more malicious code from the net to further compromise an infected machine.
A bug in the code of the first variant of this virus prevented it working properly but now other versions of the malicious program are appearing that fix this problem.
So far the numbers of people caught out by the virus is thought to be very low.
Graham Cluley from Sophos said he expected other virus writers to start exploiting the Sony XCP code.
Sony apologised, saying it was working with computer security firms to address the problems.
The news came as more legal challenges to Sony's use of the anti-piracy program were being launched.
At last count six class-action lawsuits have been started against the company. As the Boycott Sony blog pointed out, the appearance of these viruses could make it much easier for lawyers to argue that the XCP software can cause real harm to a user's computer.
Um bom começo...
O passo seguinte será o mais importante
 
Isto já começa a ser caricato.
Agora foi a EFF (Electronic Frontier Foundation) que expôs o EULA (End User License Agreement - aquela coisa que nunca ninguém lê ao instalar software-) do Sony "XCP" rootkit.

Spyware com EULA, that's a first... :-D

Now the Legalese Rootkit: Sony-BMG's EULA
November 09, 2005

If you thought XCP "rootkit" copy-protection on Sony-BMG CDs was bad, perhaps you'd better read the 3,000 word (!) end-user license agreement (aka "EULA") that comes with all these CDs.



First, a baseline. When you buy a regular CD, you own it. You do not "license" it. You own it outright. You're allowed to do anything with it you like, so long as you don't violate one of the exclusive rights reserved to the copyright owner. So you can play the CD at your next dinner party (copyright owners get no rights over private performances), you can loan it to a friend (thanks to the "first sale" doctrine), or make a copy for use on your iPod (thanks to "fair use"). Every use that falls outside the limited exclusive rights of the copyright owner belongs to you, the owner of the CD.

Now compare that baseline with the world according to the Sony-BMG EULA, which applies to any digital copies you make of the music on the CD:



1 - If your house gets burgled, you have to delete all your music from your laptop when you get home. That's because the EULA says that your rights to any copies terminate as soon as you no longer possess the original CD.

2 - You can't keep your music on any computers at work. The EULA only gives you the right to put copies on a "personal home computer system owned by you."


3 - If you move out of the country, you have to delete all your music. The EULA specifically forbids "export" outside the country where you reside.


4 - You must install any and all updates, or else lose the music on your computer. The EULA immediately terminates if you fail to install any update. No more holding out on those hobble-ware downgrades masquerading as updates.


5 - Sony-BMG can install and use backdoors in the copy protection software or media player to "enforce their rights" against you, at any time, without notice. And Sony-BMG disclaims any liability if this "self help" crashes your computer, exposes you to security risks, or any other harm.


6 - The EULA says Sony-BMG will never be liable to you for more than $5.00. That's right, no matter what happens, you can't even get back what you paid for the CD.


7 - If you file for bankruptcy, you have to delete all the music on your computer. Seriously.


8 - You have no right to transfer the music on your computer, even along with the original CD.


9 - Forget about using the music as a soundtrack for your latest family photo slideshow, or mash-ups, or sampling. The EULA forbids changing, altering, or make derivative works from the music on your computer.




So this is what Sony-BMG thinks we should be allowed to do with the music on the CDs that we purchase from them? No word yet about whether Sony-BMG will be offering a "patch" for this legalese rootkit. I'm not holding my breath.

in www.eff.org

Digam lá se isto não é acto de uma empresa desesperada ?
 
Última edição:
Há pontos que sao de rir e chorar por mais...

Se me gamarem os CDs de musica, gamam também o computador... onde está o computador para eu apagar as musicas?
 
E se pensavam que isto ficava por aqui...

EA DRM blocks games based on emulator software

EAgames logoAnd you thought Sony was the only company with invasive DRM. It turns out that Electronic Arts includes DRM on some of its game CDs that makes the games unplayable if you’re running CD emulation software, such as Fantom CD Emulator or Alcohol 120%. In order to run the games, you need to quit the offending software. EA’s actions seem designed to make it harder for users to copy the company’s games, but there are plenty of legitimate uses for emulation software, such as allowing a game or other product to run more quickly in an emulated CD drive than it might in your hardware drive, or simply to reduce wear-and-tear on the CD drive. It seems that EA, like Sony, has decided to assume its customers are pirates, and has provided an inept and troublesome way to express that assumption.

Link: http://www.ehomeupgrade.com/entry/1648/electronic_arts_drm
 
mas estes gajos andam a fumar umas coisas mta manhosas ó quê?

Sinceramente, isto já anda a atingir contornos paranoicos! Duvido que exista algum país que faça cumprir á risca qq tipo de clausas do EULA...

A sony anda desesperada ...tem medidas descabidas e totalmente desajustadas da realidade e eu é que sou o anti-sony boy!
 
Eu já não compro muitos CD's e DVD's, agora ainda menos -> há pois se todos pensarem assim eles logo percebem :P

Antes de comprar qualquer cena original e ver na caixa ou NET se não esconde alguma "arma" :mad:
 
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