A hacker claims he or she has cracked the code and can remove the encryption on e-books in the RocketBook format
Published:
28 April 2001 y., Saturday
A hacker claims he or she has cracked the code and can remove the encryption on e-books in the RocketBook format, allowing the extraction of the content as plain text. At the end of March, the hacker started making this information available publicly, and posted one URL to Gemstar's forums and the code and instructions to other Web forums.
"My goal was, and continues to be, to point out the weaknesses of DRM (digital rights management) systems, in the hope that these systems will either grow so much to collapse under their own weight or be abandoned as futile," the poster said. Now the same information is being circulated in a letter that is making the rounds on the Internet. The original hacker said in e-mail that this new letter was written by someone else.
Gemstar has tried to address the problem. In order to download any e-books for the REB, consumers must download from Gemstar’s server. In the process, Gemstar upgrades the operating system of the REB device -- and in effect stops the ability to hack into the book.
But the e-mail circulating on the Net includes instructions for how the old operating system can be reinstalled into the reading devices and basically wipe out the fix. Experts who have studied the letter have confirmed that the instructions do appear to be legitimate and operable. Gemstar did not return phone calls requesting comment.
The e-mail also states that while the hacker was figuring this all out, he or she discovered three more potential holes in the encryption protection that can't be fixed with a simple firmware upgrade.
Šaltinis:
wired.com
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