Topic: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken  (Read 3858 times)

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Offline Nemesis

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Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« on: February 14, 2007, 07:19:53 am »
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Arnezami, a hacker on the Doom9 forum, has published a crack for extracting the "processing key" from a high-def DVD player. This key can be used to gain access to every single Blu-Ray and HD-DVD disc.

Previously, another Doom9 user called Muslix64 had broken both Blu-Ray and HD-DVD by extracting the "volume keys" for each disc, a cumbersome process. This break builds on Muslix64's work but extends it -- now you can break all AACS-locked discs.

AACS took years to develop, and it has been broken in weeks. The developers spent billions, the hackers spent pennies.


DRM doesn't work for more than the short term.  When will the megacorps learn that?
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Offline GE-Raven

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #1 on: February 14, 2007, 08:00:41 am »


AACS took years to develop, and it has been broken in weeks. The developers spent billions, the hackers spent pennies.

DRM doesn't work for more than the short term.  When will the megacorps learn that?
Quote


Padlocks took years to develop and aren't very hard to go around either.  All security measures have a single purpose... to make "Someone else" an easier target for thieves.  To this end the only people who will really use these tools are the hackers, script kiddies, and other general dregs of the computing world that feel they "deserve" sh*t for free.  However they will now need to go find this tool and (insert process here) to steal from these particular disks.  If it wasn't there a good deal more people who are less than morally right would steal it because it was "easy".

No one ever thinks security is iron clad.  They just want to make it harder for the thieves.

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Offline The_Joker

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #2 on: February 14, 2007, 08:18:48 am »
Its the same as any other lock.  Its purpose is to keep honest people, honest.  A dishonest person will find a way around anything.
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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #3 on: February 14, 2007, 08:26:09 am »
The history of copy protection mechanisms is that they don't stop the pirates and honest users get the shaft. 

I've had several programs that due to the copy protection would not install.  Around here software can't be returned except if the media is defective and then only for a direct exchange.  That means the companies involved stole from me not the other way around. 

Then of course there are the defects in copy protection measures (such as the Sony rootkit fiasco) that expose your computer to attackers.

The big difference between DRM and padlocks is who applies the lock.  The padlock I use to protect my possessions.  DRM is used by the former owners to prevent me from using my possessions in legal ways. 
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Offline GE-Raven

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #4 on: February 14, 2007, 08:35:37 am »
The history of copy protection mechanisms is that they don't stop the pirates and honest users get the shaft. 
  Very similar to door locks (ever lock your keys in the car?), Car alarms, and Tax laws.... yet we still seem to "waste time" time on them anyway.

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I've had several programs that due to the copy protection would not install.  Around here software can't be returned except if the media is defective and then only for a direct exchange.  That means the companies involved stole from me not the other way around. 

Odd... as a network administrator I have installed literally Hundreds of different software packages, can't recall a single time when copy protection has halted me, at work or  at home.  Karma I guess...

Quote
Then of course there are the defects in copy protection measures (such as the Sony rootkit fiasco) that expose your computer to attackers.

The big difference between DRM and padlocks is who applies the lock.  The padlock I use to protect my possessions.  DRM is used by the former owners to prevent me from using my possessions in legal ways. 

Well since it is a padlock for intellectual and artistic property it would make sense that it protects the real owner and not the person who is just licensed to use it.  So I guess the better analogy would be the locking/tracking systems that are installed in leased vehicles.  From many companies you don't get a choice... it has lead to people who have gotten the car stolen getting the car back. 

DRM is not to stop theft... it is to make it more difficult for the average user that might be tempted by the ease of digital media.  I know I personally will never need a tool to rip away such DRM.  Not real certain why you would ever need it.  However I always here very detailed and drawn out explanations that are used by people to explain how they one time needed to copy a disc for a legal use and couldn't...  I am sure at least half of them aren't just a great story.

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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #5 on: February 14, 2007, 09:13:39 am »
Very similar to door locks (ever lock your keys in the car?), Car alarms,

My door, my lock, my choice to use it or not.

Odd... as a network administrator I have installed literally Hundreds of different software packages, can't recall a single time when copy protection has halted me, at work or  at home.  Karma I guess...

If your implying that I missapropriate copywritten materials you are wrong.  My friends consider me to be rather a fanatic in my opposition to that. 

Some copy protection mechanism used to fail if you had too much free memory, which I learned years later.  Having more than 600k free of the lower 640k was the problem as some systems couldn't run in the bottom 64k.  Some now detect if you are using a CD/DVD emulator like Daemon tools and automatically fail even though I have the legal right to use such programs and they have no legal rights to stop me.

You may also recall hearing of the Lotus copyprotection which locked you out if you defragged your HD.  Lotus eventually dropped it as it cost more to create and support than the "piracy" did.

Well since it is a padlock for intellectual and artistic property it would make sense that it protects the real owner and not the person who is just licensed to use it.  So I guess the better analogy would be the locking/tracking systems that are installed in leased vehicles.  From many companies you don't get a choice... it has lead to people who have gotten the car stolen getting the car back. 

For that copy I am the real owner.  It is only the right to create and distribute copies that is owned by someone else.  That is what copyright means.

DRM is not to stop theft... it is to make it more difficult for the average user that might be tempted by the ease of digital media.  I know I personally will never need a tool to rip away such DRM.  Not real certain why you would ever need it.  However I always here very detailed and drawn out explanations that are used by people to explain how they one time needed to copy a disc for a legal use and couldn't...  I am sure at least half of them aren't just a great story.

GE-Raven

DRM is a control mechanism.  One that is designed as much as anything to make you buy more copies than you should need to.  It is used to deny you your rights under the law.  I have the legal right to make back up copies, to rip MP3s or cache my DVDs on a HD for playback (your local laws may vary) DRM tries to remove those rights and others. 

When the current DRM becomes obsolete and you can no longer get players for your current media then you must buy it again, that is the whole plan, force you to buy again what you already own.

Why would I want to remove copy protection?  To allow installation of a program that the DRM blocks - as allowed by law?  To remove bugs introduced purely by that "protection" - as allowed by law.  To play back media on devices the DRM blocks me from using - as allowed by law.  To make legal and legitimate backups - as the law allows.  To  make "fair use" of portions of the media - as allowed by law.  Notice all purely legal uses.
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Offline GE-Raven

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #6 on: February 14, 2007, 10:59:59 am »
Actually Copyright... is the rights OF the copy.  In other words you don't "own" the original, you own a copy of the intellectual property.  By law a book, CD, Performance, etc. are considered a copy of the original intellectual property of the owner/creator of that work.  That owner is allowed certain protections for their property.  The owner of the copy is allowed certain rights under the interpretation of "fair and acceptable use" of the copy.  However time and again the courts have always erred on the side of caution with regards to protecting the original property at the expense of the owner of the copy.  Perhaps you know of some better way to do this... I am sure all parties involved would love to know what it is.  However the lack of copy protection doesn't seem to be a viable option as CD to MP3 ripping of the napster age showed.  I am not assuming you are doing anything illegal or immoral, I am just saying that I personally have never once had a problem related to copy protection.  That being said, I know that I probably am much more of an "average" user as I use almost all commercially marketed software.  In other words I am probably the user type the stuff is designed for, as I have heard endless tales about copy protection troubles with Virtual Daemon tools.  Probably because the primary use of Virtual Daemon tools (given its popularity on cracking sites) is for circumventing game copyright protection.

GE-Raven


Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #7 on: February 14, 2007, 11:45:45 am »
Ever look up the sales in the music industry?  They peaked with Napster.  When Napster was forced out the RIAA members lowered their investments and their sales declined.  Of course if you look only at what the RIAA says things are different.  Check the facts not the rhetoric. 

I particularly liked it when the RIAA was claiming a massive drop in sales.  The % they quoted applied to cassette singles - CD album and single sales were booming but the RIAA ignored those numbers.  Should they have been surprised that the older format that was being phased out was selling less and the new formats were selling more?  I think not. 

You might also look up the information on audits of RIAA members.  Last time I saw those numbers over 99.9% of artists were underpaid by RIAA members.  That to me makes the RIAA members the biggest violators of copyright.

Have you followed the lawsuits where people have actually fought the RIAA accusations?  They seem to be winning (against the RIAA) pretty consistantly.  RIAA legal theories keep being rejected.  The RIAA has now been forced to pay legal fees for one found innocent.

Link

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To reproduce the work in copies or phonorecords;

To prepare derivative works based upon the work;

To distribute copies or phonorecords of the work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;

To perform the work publicly, in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works;

To display the work publicly, in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works, including the individual images of a motion picture or other audiovisual work; and

In the case of sound recordings*, to perform the work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission.


Transfer of ownership of the copy, just as I said.  My copy is MY property not the copyright holders.  My copy to do with as I like so long as I don't make and distribute new copies and don't "publicly display" it.  In other words so long as I do nothing that interferes with the copyright holders right to sell more I am pretty much free to do as I wish.

You might like to read this analysis of a recent claim of movie piracy in Canada.  Interesting reading as the author checks the claims versus publicly available information and finds the claims without merit.
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Offline Dash Jones

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #8 on: February 16, 2007, 11:21:16 am »
Just as a Note, I agree wholeheartedly that copy protection ONLY hurts the legit users, pirates have never been stopped by it.  In fact, one of the bigger ones was XP (and now Vista) which has been broken and hacked in a matter of hours of it's release.  Wow, yeah, that really stopped them pirates good, for a whole less then 24 hours.

I love games which don't require you to have the CD in or do a CD check, such as UT 2004, which interestingly enough...STILL MADE MONEY...

Hmm, yet a game that is outstanding as well, called Darkstar One gets a bad rep because of why??? The copy protection makes it hard to run on people's computers...so a DIRECT thing between bad sales...and copy protection...

Yet idiots STILL use copy protection...thinking it will help sell more games...idiots.

Same goes for movies.
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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #9 on: February 16, 2007, 01:07:41 pm »
 
"Rebroadcasting, or any other pictures, descriptions or accounts of the game, without the NFL's express written consent, is strictly prohibited..."

Hmmm...  Copyright law says I can't hang around the water cooler at work and discuss what happened in the SuperBowl (tm) with my co-workers.

 :-\

We've reached the point of absurdity with 'intellectual property'.  Is it any wonder so few people take it seriously anymore?


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Offline GE-Raven

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #10 on: February 16, 2007, 02:00:41 pm »
Just as a Note, I agree wholeheartedly that copy protection ONLY hurts the legit users, pirates have never been stopped by it.  In fact, one of the bigger ones was XP (and now Vista) which has been broken and hacked in a matter of hours of it's release.  Wow, yeah, that really stopped them pirates good, for a whole less then 24 hours.

I love games which don't require you to have the CD in or do a CD check, such as UT 2004, which interestingly enough...STILL MADE MONEY...

Hmm, yet a game that is outstanding as well, called Darkstar One gets a bad rep because of why??? The copy protection makes it hard to run on people's computers...so a DIRECT thing between bad sales...and copy protection...

Yet idiots STILL use copy protection...thinking it will help sell more games...idiots.

Same goes for movies.

This is the attitude I love!  Because it was broken by someone and they made that information available it is pointless...  Well hell... no reason to use passwords on machines anymore.  Obviously they can be broken so why use them???  Oh wait... you mean that 98% of the populous has no clue how to "Crack" the DRM by themselves and at 90% or more will never bother to go find a tool to do it?

Do you REALLY think companies would continue copy protection if it really only cost them money?  Do you honestly believe corporations are that stupid?  Really?  Especially ones that are often run by the guys that have literally grown up in an age where copy protection was always circumvented?  Huh... I wonder if maybe, just maybe, somewhere someone actually ran the numbers and found a correlation between piracy and ease of copyright infringement. 

For instance what is the easiest copyright material to steal in the digital age?  Yup you guessed it... CD music.  Now here is a fun test for you all... Please go find me the Mp3 of The Chicago Symphony Orchestra's 1971 recording of Symphony Fantastique by Hector Berlioz.  Now if you want the 1973 it will take about 15 seconds.  Why?  It is on CD.  Any idiot can rip MP3 from a CD.  However the '71 is by far superior... and more over it is only available on Vinyl!  Yup you need a record player to hear it.  So it has no better copy protection than the '73 recording, however it is a hell of a lot more work to make an MP3 from a record than it is from a cd.  End result... path of least resistance wins!

I am willing to bet dollars to donuts that software companies (as well as media types) "ran the math" and found that some form of copy protection (Despite the fact it is already broken by some) does indeed lead to less piracy by "the masses".  Make something easy to steal and you make more thieves!  Napster was proof... any idiot was able to make their CD collection available online to others, and any idiot did!  It was easy... there were no "real" victims, and people's morals went out the window.  Now it is almost considered a birth right to get other peoples ripped music for free.

So while they may have stopped the "hardcore" pirates for a few hours they stop a whole lot of "casual" pirates forever.  Because many of them will just pay the cash if they think it is worth it.  More over many of the hardcore pirates spent more time (at a measly $10 an hour) than if they just forked over the money (and at least 1 of them had to fork over the money as well as someone had to have the media in the first place) for the game.

This is why I think the MMO revolution is so profitable... Piracy is not really a problem for blizzard in World of Warcraft...  that is the bonus of hosting servers.  It makes verification of product very easy.  You mention UT2004... It so happens our CGIM department uses that game to teach a level design class.  It also happens that the MAJOR draw of the game is multiplayer online that requires an individualized Key... They don't care if you copy the game to 100 machines in order to play your buddy on the internet you needed a Key and so did he.  They still got their money.  So I think we will see more and more movement to online games that require online authorization.  Why?  Piracy makes it more desirable for the software development companies.  That in the end is the ultimate irony of media and software theft.  In the end the only people that it screws are the customers... not because of "bulky" Copy protection, but because every stolen game makes it less likely for people to write more of them.  Very few people write games for free... the more money made by game companies... the more good games you will get.  Pretty simple really.

So you bring up ONE title that suffered from bad Copy protection.  For it I can list hundreds that benefited from good copy protection.  So those "idiots" are probably not in the business because they are idiots... I am sure when you own and run your own game company you can tell me how wrong I am... however, I suspect if that were your lot in life you would be listening to the "idiots" that were telling you how to protect your investment... the same way they are.

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Offline GE-Raven

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #11 on: February 16, 2007, 02:01:55 pm »

"Rebroadcasting, or any other pictures, descriptions or WRITTEN accounts of the game, without the NFL's express written consent, is strictly prohibited..."

Hmmm...  Copyright law says I can't hang around the water cooler at work and discuss what happened in the SuperBowl (tm) with my co-workers.

 :-\

We've reached the point of absurdity with 'intellectual property'.  Is it any wonder so few people take it seriously anymore?


There fixed that for you... so it seems sports writers still need permission, but you and your buddies don't.  Unless you try to make money of your discussions.

GE-Raven

Offline The Bar-Abbas Anomaly

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #12 on: February 16, 2007, 02:21:39 pm »

"Rebroadcasting, or any other pictures, DESCRIPTIONS or written accounts of the game, without the NFL's express written consent, is strictly prohibited..."

Hmmm...  Copyright law says I can't hang around the water cooler at work and discuss what happened in the SuperBowl (tm) with my co-workers.

 :-\

We've reached the point of absurdity with 'intellectual property'.  Is it any wonder so few people take it seriously anymore?


You seem to have overlooked one...   ;)

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Offline Dash Jones

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #13 on: February 16, 2007, 02:44:00 pm »
Just as a Note, I agree wholeheartedly that copy protection ONLY hurts the legit users, pirates have never been stopped by it.  In fact, one of the bigger ones was XP (and now Vista) which has been broken and hacked in a matter of hours of it's release.  Wow, yeah, that really stopped them pirates good, for a whole less then 24 hours.

I love games which don't require you to have the CD in or do a CD check, such as UT 2004, which interestingly enough...STILL MADE MONEY...

Hmm, yet a game that is outstanding as well, called Darkstar One gets a bad rep because of why??? The copy protection makes it hard to run on people's computers...so a DIRECT thing between bad sales...and copy protection...

Yet idiots STILL use copy protection...thinking it will help sell more games...idiots.

Same goes for movies.

This is the attitude I love!  Because it was broken by someone and they made that information available it is pointless...  Well hell... no reason to use passwords on machines anymore.  Obviously they can be broken so why use them???  Oh wait... you mean that 98% of the populous has no clue how to "Crack" the DRM by themselves and at 90% or more will never bother to go find a tool to do it?

Do you REALLY think companies would continue copy protection if it really only cost them money?  Do you honestly believe corporations are that stupid?  Really?  Especially ones that are often run by the guys that have literally grown up in an age where copy protection was always circumvented?  Huh... I wonder if maybe, just maybe, somewhere someone actually ran the numbers and found a correlation between piracy and ease of copyright infringement. 

For instance what is the easiest copyright material to steal in the digital age?  Yup you guessed it... CD music.  Now here is a fun test for you all... Please go find me the Mp3 of The Chicago Symphony Orchestra's 1971 recording of Symphony Fantastique by Hector Berlioz.  Now if you want the 1973 it will take about 15 seconds.  Why?  It is on CD.  Any idiot can rip MP3 from a CD.  However the '71 is by far superior... and more over it is only available on Vinyl!  Yup you need a record player to hear it.  So it has no better copy protection than the '73 recording, however it is a hell of a lot more work to make an MP3 from a record than it is from a cd.  End result... path of least resistance wins!

I am willing to bet dollars to donuts that software companies (as well as media types) "ran the math" and found that some form of copy protection (Despite the fact it is already broken by some) does indeed lead to less piracy by "the masses".  Make something easy to steal and you make more thieves!  Napster was proof... any idiot was able to make their CD collection available online to others, and any idiot did!  It was easy... there were no "real" victims, and people's morals went out the window.  Now it is almost considered a birth right to get other peoples ripped music for free.

So while they may have stopped the "hardcore" pirates for a few hours they stop a whole lot of "casual" pirates forever.  Because many of them will just pay the cash if they think it is worth it.  More over many of the hardcore pirates spent more time (at a measly $10 an hour) than if they just forked over the money (and at least 1 of them had to fork over the money as well as someone had to have the media in the first place) for the game.

This is why I think the MMO revolution is so profitable... Piracy is not really a problem for blizzard in World of Warcraft...  that is the bonus of hosting servers.  It makes verification of product very easy.  You mention UT2004... It so happens our CGIM department uses that game to teach a level design class.  It also happens that the MAJOR draw of the game is multiplayer online that requires an individualized Key... They don't care if you copy the game to 100 machines in order to play your buddy on the internet you needed a Key and so did he.  They still got their money.  So I think we will see more and more movement to online games that require online authorization.  Why?  Piracy makes it more desirable for the software development companies.  That in the end is the ultimate irony of media and software theft.  In the end the only people that it screws are the customers... not because of "bulky" Copy protection, but because every stolen game makes it less likely for people to write more of them.  Very few people write games for free... the more money made by game companies... the more good games you will get.  Pretty simple really.

So you bring up ONE title that suffered from bad Copy protection.  For it I can list hundreds that benefited from good copy protection.  So those "idiots" are probably not in the business because they are idiots... I am sure when you own and run your own game company you can tell me how wrong I am... however, I suspect if that were your lot in life you would be listening to the "idiots" that were telling you how to protect your investment... the same way they are.

GE-Raven
- Idiot.

I don't know a SINGLE title that has profited from Copy Protection, but I can name some big ones that lost money.  For example, NWN was a big seller, but it didn't sell as many as it could.  The copy protection did terrible things for it's worth, and though Bioware finally convinced Atari of the stupidity of it all, they didn't manage to get it removed until patch 1.23 and by then much damage had been done.  Or then there's the Pool of Radiance fiasco, in which the installation and uninstallation program hadn't been checked for bugginess because the Copy Protection was slapped on after the final product was sent, and if you know anything about POR and what happened afterwards, you know that had a most definate hit on sales.  They finally got the patch out for it...but...

There's a difference between Copy Protection, and account creation, which is what you seem to be confused about.  Account Protection is what creates an account on line to play, which is what you do need in most instances for an MMO, however Blizzard's just about done away with ANY CD/Game CD protections for the actual game, to the point of offering it for free.  An MMO or MMORPG is now shown to actually prosper a great deal more WITHOUT those to deal with, it's not the game that they are worried about, it's the accounts, because in an MMORPG it's the acounts that make money, not the actual game.  Someone could have a game and never play, but even if they never play as long as they have 20 accounts, they make money, so that entire BS about MMO's using CD protections is not actually entirely accurate.  The more successful ones learned early on that a free game that drew people in to make accounts made a whole lot more money than a game with copy protection.  IN fact, the more that copied, the better, and hell, they beat them to the punch.  Everquest learned that hell, you don't even need to have people download the game, most who do would only try it out for a week or so, if even that to see if they liked it or not.  Why not offer it for free, for a 14 day to month long FREE trial...beating out anything the pirates might do with that.  Then it was the account that mattered, and if they could keep that person's account going, and charge them...THAT was where the money came from.  The ones that came after, who are successful have learned the same lessons...if you note, WoW is offered for free, and has free trials with it.  If you don't mind playing in chunks and have ways to verify the creation of different accounts, you could play literally almost forever on free WoW games, but you still have to be able to make an account, as the account is what matters.

The difference between and account and copy protection, copy protection prevents one from copying the game so others can get free copies.  Your attempt at an example for MMOs is so far off the mark as to be not funny, as MMO's typically explicitly cater to those who want to get free copies now days.  In many ways MMOs are the exact opposite of what copy protection is.  The accounts on the other hand, since that is real money for them, and is tied most times to your real money...aka a credit card...is more protected just like your bank account numbers and credit card numbers would be.  Not only does it make them money, but they could be sued badly if they released information like that to the public or made it easy access.

Musicwise, I found it interesting concerning Metallica's change of heart.  At first they were blazing the way in the fight against music, and then...their sales fell somewhat.  People claimed, or some Metallica publicists claimed it was due to Metallica making different and new types of Music.  What I find interesting is that their latest album after all this suddenly had free links to music, and other items...and NO protections whatsoever...though the album WASN't all that great anyways I must admit.

You think Sony hasn't suffered...and then you have Celine Dion.  Fabulous singer.  Used to have number one hits in the US all the time...hey...not just the US...but the world.  Her last albums...well...I Know I DIDN'T buy it (and yes, I had bought albums before), in fact someone tried giving me a copy and I refused because I didn't know which albums had copy protection on them anymore...and CD copy protections from her company had been known to cause problems.  Hell, I'll even d/l the songs maybe off youtube (interesting some of what's on there by the way), but no way I'm buying her CD...and I think others have done the same.

60% of my friends however DO burn their CDs to their ipods.  I don't know a single one that's been stopped by CD  protection if they really want to burn it.  It takes all of about 10 minutes to go search something up on the internet that a pirate's already created to make it possible to get past just about any CD protection out there.  So contrary to your idea of it taking hours...it takes SOME hours, the rest simply take minutes to use thier work.

The ONLY industry I know of where CD protection/DVD protections have actually done what needed to be done was Microsoft, and part of that was due to their online authorization...aka...creating an account to go along with the CD protection.  IN fact the account creation was MUCH more successful at preventing replication than the actual CD/DVD protections.  I actually disagree with how they do it, but for the US, it has been more preventative of the usual form of piracy which currently pervades the music world.

Now don't get me wrong, I am strongly against piracy overall...but I'm even more strongly against CD protections for one reason...I as a legit user have ONLY been hurt by them...and it pisses me off.  Enough so that I understand why a LOT of my friends have gone to getting the pirated goods, not because it's cheap (though it is, but there is always the risk of bugs and trojans), but because it's a hell of alot easier to run a game on the computer without the CD protections than it is with.  If copy protection is bad enough on a game that it reaches the news, and reaches me before I get the game, that is in and of itself reason not to get a game.  And I'm not the only one who thinks that way...however I am one of the few that won't actually get the game if that happens (others will simply go looking on the internet for a cracked version).

I DO however, crack the exe's, which the industry calls piracy, to run my games without CDs.  I'm not against that, though they call that piracy too.  However, I'm the one that the industry loves (my type of consumer, for if I like a game, I'll buy several copies to play MP, and yes, I'll crack them all, but I have them all as well...and they love people who buy multiple copies)...so if they want to stop my sells because they want to stop ALL of what they consider piracy, well their's a point where trying to label something as piracy when it isn't, is absurd.

PS:  Sorry for the long post.
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Now where in the Bible does it say if someone does something stupid you should shoot them in the face?"

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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #14 on: February 16, 2007, 07:07:40 pm »
PS:  Sorry for the long post.

Sometimes only a long post will get the point across.
Do unto others as Frey has done unto you.
Seti Team    Free Software
I believe truth and principle do matter. If you have to sacrifice them to get the results you want, then the results aren't worth it.
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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #15 on: February 16, 2007, 07:15:02 pm »
Do you REALLY think companies would continue copy protection if it really only cost them money?  Do you honestly believe corporations are that stupid?  Really?  Especially ones that are often run by the guys that have literally grown up in an age where copy protection was always circumvented?  Huh... I wonder if maybe, just maybe, somewhere someone actually ran the numbers and found a correlation between piracy and ease of copyright infringement. 

Two points:

1/ They do the math but if they use wrong assumptions the math is meaningless.  (Lotus spent more developing and maintaining their copy protection than on their software - remember what happened to them?)

2/ Some people would rather have all of a small pie than part of a larger pie even if that part were far larger than the entire small pie.   Such people will forgo some sales just to prevent anyone from using the product without paying for it.
Do unto others as Frey has done unto you.
Seti Team    Free Software
I believe truth and principle do matter. If you have to sacrifice them to get the results you want, then the results aren't worth it.
 FoaS_XC : "Take great pains to distinguish a criticism vs. an attack. A person reading a post should never be able to confuse the two."

Offline Sirgod

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #16 on: February 19, 2007, 12:54:55 pm »
Just as a footnote, and because I found it funny...

Well it seems our good old MPAA breaks law and license rights just like the normal person do.. When it comes to trying out software.
Kinda funny if you ask me.. This means I can download a movie just to see if I want to buy it later? Just like they state in thier reply.

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    Should we have decided to make the move to production, then we would have paid the 25 Pounds that would have authorized us to run a version of the blog without the logos and links.




If you don't know the story. Here is a short recap.
MPAA used a blog on thier site. License for that blog states that the blog MOST contain a link to the developer. A so called "linkware" license.
Or if you deside to remove the link you have to pay a small fee.
MPAA did neither of it.

http://torrentfreak.com/mpaa-steals-code-violates-linkware-license/
http://www.patrickrobin.co.uk/default.asp?Display=5

Stephen
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Offline Nemesis

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Re: Blu-Ray AND HD-DVD DRM broken
« Reply #17 on: February 19, 2007, 09:30:49 pm »
That is chapter 2 for the MPAA.  In chapter 1 they admitted duplicating (without permission) and distributing within the MPAA a movie they had no rights to reproduce after promising not to reproduce it.  That is exactly what they complain of others doing but they do it themselves which of  course means that they should be suing themselves which would possibly be a unique court case. 
Do unto others as Frey has done unto you.
Seti Team    Free Software
I believe truth and principle do matter. If you have to sacrifice them to get the results you want, then the results aren't worth it.
 FoaS_XC : "Take great pains to distinguish a criticism vs. an attack. A person reading a post should never be able to confuse the two."