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October 23, 2001 12:00 AM

Hacker Breaks DRM, Microsoft Looks Into Legal Action

Windows IT Pro
InstantDoc ID #23000
Rating: (4)

Microsoft might seek legal action against a hacker who at least partially compromised the company's Digital Rights Management (DRM) software, which is designed to prevent consumers from pirating music. In a self-described "act of civil disobedience," an anonymous hacker published the hack, dubbed FreeMe, on the Internet this week. Breaking DRM software is illegal under the Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA), a statute implemented in 1998. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (EFF), however, is challenging DMCA's legality in a New York court.

"We're investigating our legal options," said Jonathan Usher, group manager for Microsoft's Windows Digital Media division. "Our real focus right now is working with our content providers." More than 270 companies, including music-subscription services such as Pressplay, use Microsoft's DRM technology to protect the songs they sell online.

The FreeMe code strips Microsoft's copy protection away from the music customers purchase online. Currently, DRM prevents customers who purchase such protected music from copying it to other devices, such as other PCs and portable MP3 players. Microsoft says that it will soon apply a patch to fix the problem.

"We learned about the hack on Friday and were on the phone with our content partners right away," Usher says, noting that Microsoft was prepared for a hack such as this. "We have built in a means to update the protections for cases such as this, and we're still implementing that renewability. We realized well before we launched it that technologies such as this are not unbreachable."

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Comments
  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jun 23, 2005

    Microsoft continues to lock down while Linux continues to remain open. Microsoft DRM is a small example of how they will topple themselves.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jun 23, 2005

    Everyone should just create your own group of people who share mp3's to each other. Mp3's ripped without liscensing attached. Create virtual mp3 brothels amongst youselves and share to each other, not the morons who actually put accurate information into Kazaa or Bearshare. Weak.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Jun 02, 2005

    I also downloaded a few songs from the internet legally from musicmatch only to find that i couldn't take them home and play them on my computer w/o internet. very frustrating. i don't believe that hacking everything is the right way to go but for DRM, more power to anyone and everyone that cracks it. and when you do spread it around. i would do it illegally just because of what microsoft tried to do. just because they don't want it . evil i know but you know what i've payed for many a crappy cd in my day and i feel completely justified in getting some good free content. maybe the record industry should put a little more pressure on their artists to put out all good content not just a few hit singles. it's really annoying to go buy a cd and the only good songs are the ones they play on the radio 15 times a day and you don't want to hear anymore, but anyway... just my opinion.

  • Anonymous User
    7 years ago
    Mar 28, 2005

    hey im a comptuer guy but just started with this drm crap, and i mean pure bull! DRM files r just a waste of time if MS could just stop do whatever they do, it would make the world a safer place! if MS wasnt such tight wads alot of people convicted pirateors would be innocent

  • AbsolutZer00
    8 years ago
    Jun 01, 2004

    Muahahaha. The only bad thing about FreeMe is it's inability to code strip DRM1 encrypted files. Copyrighting "Ones" and "Zeros" how stupid. Death to profit! That's the problem with this world. Everything is done for profit. Data belongs to the realm of the hackers and when you try to put a price on it, we will just change the price tag back to "free".

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