Hackers urge boycott of record industry bounty

Published: 25 September 2000 y., Monday
Angered by the music industry's bid to close down Napster and MP3.com, a group of computer hackers are organizing a boycott of a competition to win $10,000 hacking new copyright-protection software being developed by major record labels. "I won't do your dirty work for you," Don Marti, technology editor for Linux Journal, wrote in an open letter posted on the magazine (www.linuxjournal.com) for programmers of the shared-code software called Linux. Marti's comments echo the sentiments of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, an online civil liberties group, and other so-called open-source software advocates, who have called for a boycott of the industry's hacking contest offer, posted last week by the Secure Digital Music Initiative. The "big five" major record labels are all founding members of SDMI. The record labels seek to woo hackers to help them in building a program to defend copyrights against other hackers. The labels, in court against music-sharing Web-sites such as Napster Inc. and MP3.com Inc., are hoping to build a program which will defeat the song-swappers for good. In the contest, which runs through Oct. 7, SDMI has placed six sample files on its site available for downloading and hacking. The files are programs which SDMI hopes will screen for pirated copies of music. But Linux Journal's Marti said that many expert hackers, including hacking superstars who cracked the encryption codes on DVDs, had agreed not to participate in SDMI's challenge. The boycott's backers object to the SDMI effort, saying it limits consumers' "fair use" rights to the music they buy, such as making personal copies to use in a car stereo or lap-top computer, or making copies for education and criticism. But programmers say SDMI's Digital Music Access Technology, or DMAT, code will not be broken in the three weeks allotted. Marti said the DMAT code provided on a Web site is not enough information for a successful crack - programmers also need to examine the SDMI compatible hardware, such as CD players, which are not yet on the market. He also said he thinks expert hackers with the ability to crack the code will stay away from the contest.
Šaltinis: news.excite.com
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

Innovative Range of Mobile Services

NOKIA: TheFeature.com launches new, innovative mobile information services at CeBIT 2003 more »

The darkest side of ID theft

When impostors are arrested, victims get criminal records more »

search.lt news

search.lt presents newest links more »

FIX uptake is good news for Swift

Interbank payments network Swift is likely to be the primary beneficiary of FIX uptake by European securities firms, according to a survey conducted by London consultancy City IQ. more »

Visa to hide card numbers in bid to cut identity theft

Visa is to require merchants to display only the last four digits of a credit card number on receipts in a bid to combat a rising tide of financial identity crime more »

Norwegian Court Approves DVD Hack Retrial

A Norwegian court has approved prosecutors' appeal of a teenager's acquittal on charges that he created and circulated online a program that cracks the security codes on DVDs more »

Recruitment website's ID theft warning

Fraudsters pose as employers to steal job-seekers' personal details more »

How Web Services Will Change E-Business

IDC has estimated that just 5 percent of U.S. businesses in 2002 had completed a Web services project. But by 2008, the research firm said, 80 percent of firms will have such a project under way. more »

Credit Card Cos. Watch Own Backs

The credit card industry focuses too much on reducing its own fraud costs and not enough on protecting consumers more »

Chipmakers dip processor prices

PC chipmakers Intel and Advanced Micro Devices this week enacted their first sweeping desktop processor price cuts of the year more »