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Sony's Copy-Protected CD's Cracked
Posted by on May 20, 2002 at 6:33 PM   (printer friendly)

Rather than write an entire article I'm just gonna copy and paste.

Credit goes to CNet News.

Technology buffs have cracked music publishing giant Sony Music's elaborate disc copy-protection technology with a decidedly low-tech method: scribbling around the rim of a disk with a felt-tip marker.
Internet newsgroups have been circulating news of the discovery for the past week, and in typical newsgroup style, users have pilloried Sony for using "high-tech" copy protection that can be defeated by paying a visit to a stationery store.

"I wonder what type of copy protection will come next?" one posting on alt.music.prince read. "Maybe they'll ban markers." Sony did not immediately return calls seeking comment.

Major music labels, including Sony and Universal Music, have begun selling the "copy-proof" discs as a means of tackling the rampant spread of music piracy, which they claim is eating into sales.

The new technology aims to prevent consumers from copying, or "burning," music onto recordable CDs or onto their computer hard drives, which can then be shared with other users over file-sharing Internet services such as Kazaa or Morpheus MusicCity.

Anti-piracy push
On Monday, Reuters obtained an ordinary copy of Celine Dion's newest release, "A New Day Has Come," which comes embedded with Sony's Key2Audio technology.

After an initial attempt to play the disc on a PC resulted in failure, the edge of the shiny side of the disc was blackened out with a felt-tip marker. The second attempt with the marked-up CD played and copied to the hard drive without a hitch.

Internet postings claim that tape or even a sticky note can also be used to cover the security track, typically located on the outer rim of the disc. And there are suggestions that copy-protection schemes used by other music labels can also be circumvented in a similar way.

Sony's proprietary technology, deployed on many recent releases, works by adding a track to the copy-protected disc that contains bogus data.

Because computer hard drives are programmed to read data files first, the computer will continuously try to play the bogus track first. It never gets to play the music tracks located elsewhere on the compact disc.

The effect is that the copy-protected disc will play on standard CD players but not on computer CD-ROM drives, some portable devices, and even some car stereo systems.

Some Apple Computer Macintosh users have reported that playing the disc in the computer's CD drive causes the computer to crash. The cover of the copy-protected discs contain a warning that the album will not play on Macintoshes or other personal computers.

Apple has since posted a warning on its Web site.

Sony Music Europe has taken the most aggressive anti-piracy stance in the business. Since last fall, the label has shipped more than 11 million copy-protected discs in Europe, with the largest proportion going to Germany, a market label executives claim is rife with illegal CD-burning.


Oh yeah!!! Told ya Sony we'll crack it somehow. And it looks like we cracked that sucker with a marker! Boo-Ya!!!

-A D-Musical Note. :)


User Comments (These do not necessarily reflect the beliefs of this site)

weaponzero  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 7:25 PM
damn, just about to submit news about this :/

thumbtack  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 8:15 PM
Works for More Fast and Furious as well, a Universial Disc....Gotta wonder how long before that Hilary woman, Mighty Mouth Valenti, and the their banker Fritz Hollings try to outlaw black markers..

smelv1n  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 9:01 PM
i think they're already debating the bill :P

spikester  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 9:10 PM
Damn this is good, ive seen it coming. Didnt they spend millions on this type of copy protection? What a complete waste. Way to go RIAA! What stupid move are you going to make next? Very funny this all is, as stupid as they are, they very well could be trying to develop a new scheme. They dont seem to ever give up. But seeing them continue to fail is enough enjoyment for me. ;-)

mtbatol  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 9:40 PM
They're gonna write that in as an extra rule of the CDPTA perhaps :'

mtbatol  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 9:40 PM
black perminate markers that is :/

Mediamaster  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 10:21 PM
Well that didn't take long. Wake up to reality Sony. No matter what protection you put on disc it can be broken by crackers. I have the same view on DVD protection. They believed their DVD's weren't crackable. It took not even half an hour to crack it. Now, because the way they set up the protection their is nothing they can do to stop DVD copying. Besides, who is Sony really hurting? People who want to copy the disc know how to now, but your ordinary Joe who buys CD's and dosen't rip can no longer listen to CD's on his computer. And the record companies say that piracy is to blame in the loss of CD sales. Way to go crackers, your the real fighters aginst the RIAA.

Hail Mp3!!!

TheWitchingHour  
Date: May 20, 2002 @ 11:38 PM
Oh wow I get black markers for free at work lol...

Your-Mom  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 7:33 AM
already posted a thread about this.

creativetim  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 8:10 AM
This is hilarious!

We win again! :D

pan0k  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 8:12 AM
For a good laungh, go and read this article about "RIAA Wants Background Checks on CD-RW Buyers" at
http://www.boycott-riaa.com/article/4810

Now substitute the word "CD-RW" and "CD-RW drive" with marker pen.

j11070  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 11:39 AM
BAAAAAAAAA HA HA HA HA.
Eat this, Hilary.

DiscoProJoe  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 4:53 PM
Damn, I just couldn't stop laughing as I read that! Looks like I won't have to manually record through my sound card after all!

oldschoolfunk  
Date: May 21, 2002 @ 6:58 PM
And guess what else too? If you don't want the black mark on the CD after you rip or copy it, just take some rubbing alcohol and cotton(or just even an alcohol prep), and you can wipe it all off.

Hilary Rosen......BE DAMNED!!!!

erichdusk  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 2:34 AM
And not once did the encryption programmers ever stop to think, "what if someone covers the data track?". Wow. That's actually so stupid, it's impressive.

Xyrus2000  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 10:39 AM
Heh, you don't even need a black marker. It's pretty easy to write a program that just skips the first section and play the PCM data from there :). I expect winamp and others will most likeley incorporate this fix into the next release of their programs.

princess-angry  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 5:22 PM
mediamaster is right... mp3 will live on... mp3 is cool.... I gotta mp3 dvd player....

princess-angry  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 5:23 PM
I don't really wanna try the marker thing yet...

princess-angry  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 5:23 PM
:)

cype  
Date: May 22, 2002 @ 7:12 PM
sony ain't so smart, eh.

GarrettEvans  
Date: May 23, 2002 @ 1:29 PM
So how far in do you paint? Can anyone explain in detail where to put the pen tip?

kvasi  
Date: May 24, 2002 @ 7:45 AM
http://www.chip.de/praxis_wissen/praxis_wissen_8725919.html

The site is german. But the pictures tell you all You need.

The numbered liks by the picture, are links to closeups of the "crack".

kvasi  
Date: May 24, 2002 @ 7:47 AM
Hmm, try that links one more time..

howto crack

kvasi  
Date: May 24, 2002 @ 7:49 AM
Again. Its a bug in the postscript.

the filename of the URI is:
praxis_wissen_8725919.html

kobejitsu  
Date: May 28, 2002 @ 11:56 AM
Here is the link in English

http://216.239.35.120/translate_c?hl=en&ie=UTF8&oe=UTF8&langpair=de%7Cen&u=http://www.chip.de/praxis_wissen/unterseite_praxis_wissen_8725967.html&prev=/language_tools

WhoDatSooMe  
Date: May 28, 2002 @ 1:51 PM
I can see it now. Sharpee stocks go through the roof. I'm investing as soon as I send this post.

kobejitsu  
Date: May 28, 2002 @ 9:01 PM
I couldn't get it to work with my "Fast and the Furious" CD. Am I doing something wrong? I made the line, thus hiding track 15 (data). I am using an HP 9300 CD Writer to rip it with CDDA Extractor. Is my writer too old, is there a better program to use?

alwayssingin...  
Date: June 3, 2002 @ 8:20 AM
lol That's about as useless as punching out the little squares on the cassette tapes and video tapes so you can't record over them. All you do is put a piece of tape over the hole, an voila, you can cover up the crap that was on it! hehehehe

Dastrix  
Date: June 5, 2002 @ 8:19 AM
Omigod! I have a desk full of black markers! I'm a criminal, I have the tools to deliberatly circumvent copy protection!!!!!!!!!!! Nooo! Black unmarked helicopters are circling my office now... they're coming to take me away.....
....
...bwahahahahahahah!

hotdogskier  
Date: June 12, 2002 @ 12:30 AM
why did they just scribble on celine dion's new album? they should've burned it with a lighter. no sound from her is good sound.