Sony DRM – worse than we thought

This entry has been edited for accuracy. The old version equated the current Sony DRM with the old Sony DRM rootkits, but they are two separate pieces of malware. This paragraph has been changed to correct this error. See the apposite comments for more information. It now appears that the CDs with Sony’s DRM technology on them (the CDs with rootkits have been recalled, so you luckily can’t get them any more, but other DRM’ed Sony CDs are still out on the market) will install their software even if you do not accept the EULA. Woah. This has definitely crossed some new sort of line that it hadn’t crossed before (and the old DRM rootkits had crossed several lines already). I hope Sony gets what’s coming to them…

On the terrorist front, the Bush administration appears to be afraid to defend its enemy combatant policy in front of the Supreme Court. One of these cases, in which a US citizen has been held without charges for 3 years on suspicion of planning to detonate a dirty bomb (he was recently charged, though these charges made no mention of such a bomb), has finally been appealed to the Supreme Court. In response, the Bush administration has attempted to move him to a civilian jail, rather than the military prison he is currently being held in (this would nullify any ruling that would otherwise be appealed to the Supreme Court). The Bush administration also tried to overturn a ruling which stated that the government could hold such people indefinitely (although this seems counterproductive at first, such an overturn would also keep this from going to the Supreme Court). The Bush administration’s actions on this case give the impression that they are afraid that the Supreme Court will rule against them in favor of basic civil liberties, and the administration appears to be trying their best to weasel out of this and continue holding citizens indefinitely. I really hope this hits the Supreme Court soon.

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3 Comments

  1. krustad says:

    It’s not the rootkit that automatically installs–it’s a different DRM program that Sony uses, MediaMax. While it isn’t a rootkit, it still has some nasty issues–crashing your computer, spying on you, etc. Besides, of course, installing on your computer without your consent. These guys did an analysis of it.

    The article’s kind of vague about the distinction. Especially the part about the recall–while the 52 rootkit-infected CDs were recalled, as far as I know CDs that had only MediaMax on them were not.

  2. fireshadowed says:

    BoingBoing has a timeline of all the Sony stuff up on their website. It starts here: http://www.boingboing.net/2005/11/14/sony_anticustomer_te.html

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