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Watch out, Sony’s CDs spy on you


Mobile Phones Forum / General Chat Forums / The Boulevard

 

 


teleguy
Enthusiast

Nov 12, 2005, 8:01 PM

Post #1 of 3 (689 views)
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(OK-- This has nothing to do with phones, but I thought many of you would be interested. What is your reaction?)

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Sony is spying on thousands of listeners who buy and play its music CDs on their computers, a leading computer security firm said recently.

Computer Associates International Inc. said that new anti-copying software Sony is using to discourage pirating of its music also secretly collects information from any computer that plays the discs.

One of the world’s largest software and information technology companies, Computer Associates is the latest to wade into the growing controversy over Sony’s efforts to curb theft and illegal pirating of its music.
The software works only on computers running Microsoft Corp.’s Windows operating system. It limits listeners’ ability to copy the music onto their computers, and locks copied files so they cannot be freely distributed over the internet.
But Computer Associates said the anti-pirating software also secretly communicates with Sony over the Internet when listeners play the discs on computers that have an Internet connection. The software uses this connection to transmit the name of the CD being played to an office of Sony’s music division in Cary, NC. The software also transmits the IP address of the listener’s computer, Computer Associates said, but not the name of the listener. But Sony can still use the data to create a profile of a listener’s music collection, according to Computer Associates.
‘‘This is in effect ‘phone home’ technology, whether its intent is to capture such data or not,’’ said Sam Curry, vice president of Computer Associates’ eTrust Security Management unit.
‘‘If you choose to let people know what you’re listening to, that’s your business. If they do it without your permission, it’s an invasion of privacy.’’
Sony and the British firm that wrote the anti-pirating code for the music company flatly denied the software snoops on listeners.
‘‘We don’t receive any spyware information, any consumer information,’’ said Mathew Gilliat-Smith, chief executive of First 4 Internet Ltd., which makes the software for Sony BMG Music Entertainment.
So far, Sony BMG has installed the software on about 20 titles in its music catalog, including works by jazzman Dexter Gordon, singer Vivian Green, and the new issue by country rockers Van Zant, ‘‘Get Right with the Man’’.
It was the Van Zant disc that led to the controversy over Sony’s new software. In late October, a well-known Windows computer engineer, Mark Russinovich, stumbled across the Sony software on one of his personal computers while running a security scan. Russinovich had used the computer to play the Van Zant CD, not realising that it had installed the anti-copying program.
When he tried to remove it, Russinovich found that the program lacked the ‘‘uninstall’’ feature found in most Windows software. Indeed, key components of the software hid themselves deep in his computer by applying the same techniques used by data thieves to conceal their activities. Even a skilled user who identifies the correct files can’t safely remove them, said Russinovich.
‘‘Most users that stumble across the cloaked files ... will cripple their computer if they attempt the obvious step of deleting the cloaked files,’’he wrote on his technology website, SysInternals.
Computer Associates Monday concurred with Russinovich’s assessment. Curry said Sony has made it so difficult for listeners to uninstall its software that some could lose all their data in the process.
‘‘It can damage the operating system and the operating system’s integrity, ’’ Curry said. ‘‘As an expert in security, I can say this is bad behavior.’’ Indeed, Computer Associates has added the software to its list of spyware programs that collect personal information from users without permission.
Hiawatha Bray / NY TIMES


pain
New User

Jun 16, 2006, 7:16 AM

Post #2 of 3 (287 views)
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Bastards !


pain
New User

Jun 16, 2006, 7:17 AM

Post #3 of 3 (286 views)
Can't Post

bastards, thanks for the info

 
 
 



 
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