Stories
Slash Boxes
Comments

News for nerds, stuff that matters

Bad Day To Be Sony

Posted by Zonk on Tue Nov 15, 2005 02:52 PM
from the who-needs-customer-loyalty dept.
Not only is Sony no longer selling the RootKit CDs, Arend writes "According to a USAToday article, Sony is to pull their controversial rootkit CDs from store shelves." A nice gesture, but a little late. bos writes "Sony's DRM rootkit has been found by Dan Kaminsky to have infected at least half a million networks, according to an article by Quinn Norton for Wired News. Dan has even put together some pretty pictures of the breadth of the infection." With so many people infected, it's unfortunate that wiredog writes "From The Washington Post comes the news that serious security flaws have been found in the software that Sony is distributing to users who want to remove the Sony rootkit. The article says: 'Because of the way the tool is configured ... it allows any Web page that the user subsequently visits to download, install and run any code that it likes.'" Oops. Even Microsoft is getting into the act. ares284 writes "Microsoft said it would remove controversial copy-protection software that CDs from music publisher Sony BMG install on personal computers, deeming it a security risk to PCs running on Windows."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.
Bad Day To Be Sony | Log In/Create an Account | Top | 812 comments (Spill at 50!) | Index Only | Search Discussion
Display Options Threshold:
The Fine Print: The following comments are owned by whoever posted them. We are not responsible for them in any way.
(1) | 2 | 3
  • How to boycott? (Score:5, Interesting)

    I'm not a "boycott!!!" kind of guy. When I was younger I used to be, but no one ever stuck to it. This "error in judgement" is definitely something that I am adding to my (really small) short list of company-groups I won't buy from. I already won't buy CDs without the "CD" logo. I won't buy Sony TVs or receivers for the last 4 years because of their terrible support policies. I won't buy anything from Menard's either. And now Sony music CDs are permanently out.

    How do those who are active boycotters stick to it? Do you actively pursue telling others, or is it just a "one person, one dollar, one vote" kind of life lead?

    I could care less if other people want to support Sony artists or Sony products. All mercantilistic (using government to acquire wealth) corporations are bad, but that doesn't mean that every business is bad. Sony has actually been one of the least mercantilistic corporation I've tracked over the years, but their releasing of items without proper quality control is what kills them time and again.

    And I believe that is the problem with this rootkit. Sony didn't test it properly. If they had tested it properly and kept it within its own little world on a customer's PC, I don't think the fallout would have been so excessive. They didn't test the product, they relied on the customers to do so. Luckily for Sony, the customers weren't happy and were vocal about it.

    That is the free market at work. People unhappy about a company or a product have much more of a voice with the web being so readily available. The more the Internet allows billions of citizens to align on different issues, the more we'll see that a free market "democracy" is better than a democracy built around the use of force.

    Vote with your dollars.
    • Re:How to boycott? by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Anonymous Coward (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Alcilbiades (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:58PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Rude Turnip (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM
      • [OT] Re:How to boycott? by dada21 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:02PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by SilverspurG (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:13PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by Fiver- (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:27PM
        • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Funny)

          by idontgno (624372) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:34PM (#14037722)
          (Last Journal: Wednesday February 07 2007, @10:52AM)
          He smiles with his mouth, but not his eyes.

          I've noticed this phenomenon too. Because there's no involvement with any facial muscle groups other than the lips, people have trouble interpreting the expression.

          In this case, I assume folks are using cultural expectations of the behaviors of spokespuppets in TV commercials to resolve the lack of direct evidence and essentially assuming the grey-haired chap in the Menards' commercials is smiling.

          But I've figured out the truth. It's not a smile, it's a predatory tooth-baring snarl.

          Which is why the Menards' guy scares the bejeebus out of me. That, and how he's always going on about my nards. You leave my nards out of it, dammit.

          [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by jedidiah (1196) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM (#14037347)
      (http://penguin.lvcm.com/)
      Nevermind boycotts. These sorts of shenanigans deserve nothing short of civil litigation and criminal prosecution. People should be showing up to the local DA's office with pitchforks in hand. Nevermind silly little boycotts.
      [ Parent ]
      • mod parent up by Mateo_LeFou (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:04PM
      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:16PM (#14037531)
        From TFA: "Microsoft said it would remove ... copy-protection software


        That's a clear DMCA violation.

        If DVD John gets in trouble for less, surely whomever at Microsoft decided to do this should suffer the same.

        [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Informative)

        by Dammital (220641) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:24PM (#14037614)
        Oh, I don't know... that smug feeling you get is worth something.

        Two years ago I stopped buying Belkin [theregister.co.uk] products after their routers started redirecting port 80 queries to their own adservers. Can't say that I miss 'em.

        [ Parent ]
      • Phone Sony about the problem (Score:5, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:39PM (#14037767)
        [...] with pitchforks in hand. Nevermind silly little boycotts.
        Although I can quite understand your feeling, I think it's always wrong to resort to violence, and in my mind even to boycotts, if you haven't at least tried to talk to the other party.

        According to the feedback page [sonymusic.net] for Sony USA, you should call their Quality Management Department at 800-255-7514 (609-722-8224 in New Jersey) "if you believe a Sony Music product has a manufacturing defect".

        I would seem reasonable to give them the courtesy of doing what they ask for, and phone them before doing anything else.

        [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? by apt142 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:10PM
      • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Informative)

        by MisterLawyer (770687) <michaellawyerNO@SPAMhotmail.com> on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:11PM (#14038076)
        This DRM trojan horse issue isn't the only reason to call up the militia! Sony has been sh*tting all over its customers for years. Take their EULA, for example:

        Sony's End User License Agreement requires the following things of all consumers who purchase this "content protected" music:

        1. If your house gets burgled, you have to delete all your music from your laptop when you get home. That's because the EULA says that your rights to any copies terminate as soon as you no longer possess the original CD.

        2. You can't keep your music on any computers at work. The EULA only gives you the right to put copies on a "personal home computer system owned by you."

        3. If you move out of the country, you have to delete all your music. The EULA specifically forbids "export" outside the country where you reside.

        4. You must install any and all updates, or else lose the music on your computer. The EULA immediately terminates if you fail to install any update. No more holding out on those hobble-ware downgrades masquerading as updates.

        5. Sony-BMG can install and use backdoors in the copy protection software or media player to "enforce their rights" against you, at any time, without notice. And Sony-BMG disclaims any liability if this "self help" crashes your computer, exposes you to security risks, or any other harm.

        6. The EULA says Sony-BMG will never be liable to you for more than $5.00. That's right, no matter what happens, you can't even get back what you paid for the CD.

        7. If you file for bankruptcy, you have to delete all the music on your computer. Seriously.

        8. You have no right to transfer the music on your computer, even along with the original CD.

        9. Forget about using the music as a soundtrack for your latest family photo slideshow, or mash-ups, or sampling. The EULA forbids changing, altering, or make derivative works from the music on your computer.

        Refer to the following for details:

        (From a Brendan Ribera, Amazon Post)
        [ Parent ]
      • Italian criminal probe requested (Score:5, Informative)

        by VENONA (902751) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:36PM (#14038328)
        It's widely published that legal actions have begun in California, New York, and Italy. The Italian situation is not just some class-action lawsuit. A complaint was filed with a criminal investigation unit last Friday.

        "The complaint alleges that XCP violates a number of Italy's computer security laws by causing damage to users' systems and by acting in the same way as malicious software, according to Andrea Monti, chairman of the ALCEI-EFI. "What Sony did qualifies as a criminal offense under Italian law," he said in an e-mail interview.

        Should police determine that a crime has been committed, prosecutors will be required to begin criminal proceedings against Sony, Monti said."

        Sony has declined to comment.

        From:
        http://www.computerworld.com/securitytopics/securi ty/story/0,10801,106064,00.html?source=NLT_PM&nid= 106064 [computerworld.com]

        [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Funny)

        "Vote with your dollars."

        I don't have enough of them to matter.
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:Shenanigans by Irish_Samurai (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:56PM
      • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:How to boycott? by Anonymous Coward (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by achacha (139424) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM (#14037354)
      (http://www.achacha.org/)
      Have to agree with you, I have added Sony to my very small list of companies not to buy things from. Yesterday I bought a camcorder from Canon even though both Canon and Sony were final runner ups, I put my 800$ on a Canon for one reason... Sony DRM is an insult to consumers and I am sure my miniscule decision will not matter but I feel good that I will not be giving money to a company that thinks it is ok to distribute a rootkit with their music CDs. And I actually checked the music CDs I was buying to make sure they were not from Sony. The only way we can have our voices heard is not by making noise but by not spending money ontheir products... when you affect their profits it hurts a lot more and while I am one person and my immediate actions will not even affect the company, I am hoping there are more people out there that believe in honest practices.
      [ Parent ]
    • buy second hand? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by speedfreak_5 (546044) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM (#14037364)
      (http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Friday April 05 2002, @07:47PM)
      I'm a music nut. I've tried the boycott thing with mixed results. But what has "worked" for me lately is buying CDs and vinyl second hand. Unfortunately, They may already have the money from the original purchase of the music, but if you buy second hand, someone gets money and you get a CD or record and the RIAA partners get nothing.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:buy second hand? by BushCheney08 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:42PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by forkazoo (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:43PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by Bohiti (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:51PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by ChaosDiscord (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:54PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by spagiola (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:13PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by mochan_s (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:03PM
      • Re:buy second hand? by Myopic (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @12:10AM
      • Re:buy second hand? (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:07PM (#14038041)

        Personally I buy as straight from the artist as I can.

        Buy your music from allofmp3.com, then send an envelope with three or four dollars in it to the band. Join the fan club or whatever. Can there be a better way? Look at all of the benefits:

        1. Price. The net price will be far below what you'd pay for the CD. And if you decide the music sucks, just delete it and don't bother paying the band. You're only out ~$2.
        2. Convenience. Buy music at 2 am in your underwear, listen to it in minutes.
        3. Flexibility. No DRM and the music is already encoded in your choice of format at your choice of bitrate (including FLAC lossless, if you want).
        4. Artists get paid. More than if you bought the CD, actually.
        5. Labels don't get paid. Well, they do, but not much. Almost nothing, actually, and I think what they do get is a flat license fee that is independent of how much stuff allofmp3.com sells.

        Really, the only downside is the possibility that you're supporting criminals in Russia. But the other alternatives are supporting criminals in LA, or not buying music at all. And the Russian criminals in question seem to be very fair businessmen. I was impressed to see that when they tell you you're paying two cents per MB, they in fact charge you exactly $.02 for every 1,048,576 (2^20) bytes, and they calculate it to the tenth of a penny and don't deduct it until you've successfully completed the download.

        [ Parent ]
      • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:How to boycott? Website (Score:5, Informative)

      by saskboy (600063) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:04PM (#14037404)
      (http://www.misscellania.com/ | Last Journal: Monday October 29, @11:47PM)
      I just found the website claiming to lead the charge http://www.boycottsony.us/ [boycottsony.us] in the boycott.

      I've been including information I think is important about the Sony case on my blog too since the story broke, but other sites have much more detail. I just try to break it down so the average joe knows what's going on if their brain turns off at acronyms like DRM.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? by RichMan (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:11PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by enraged78 (931288) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:12PM (#14037492)
      I myself have been boycotting CD's produced by the any label associated with the RIAA for the last three years. I have not purchased any CD's for myself, or as gifts for others. I do not plan to do so until three conditions are met. First, artists are properly compensated for their music. By properly compensated, I mean more than a nickel a disc, which works out to less than that due to 'questionable' accounting practices. Second, that that RIAA ceases all current lawsuits against users who "illegally" downloaded music, and returns all moneys garnered from users who "settled" with the racketeering, um, I mean consortium. Third, that the RIAA cease to destroy both public domain, and fair use policy. In order for the public to respect the RIAA's property, the RIAA needs to stop illegally extending copyright by purchasing politicians. Oddly enough, all this purchasing power seems to stem from the 12-18 year old market. That same market does not possess the ability to vote, and I find it rather strange that all their hard earned dollars are being redirected towards buying our public officials for the highest dollar. Sony products in general will no longer be purchased by me until these and many other wrongs are rectified. Their policies are criminal, their once good hardware products are now sub-par, and their greed is insurmountable. This is no longer a free market question. This is now a corporation buying legal power to function as a makeshift mob. I for one will not stand for it by purchasing thier products.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? by JWW (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:41PM
      • artists properly compensated? by blitz487 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:06PM
        • It's called a Cartel. Just like the diamond merchants do everything they can to restrict the injection of "other" diamonds into the marketplace, RIAA companies restrict the airplay and venues available to new artists. This means that in most cases, if you want to make a living off of your music, you have to sign with an RIAA member, in order to get the startup financing, airplay, and venues that are generally required to become popular. Most artists eventually give up and sign, even if they don't like the conditions of the contract.

          However, with the advent of internet-based human networking (IM, blogs, etc.), this is starting to change. You still can't get the old airplay and venues, but it is now affordable to distribute your music over the internet, using word of mouth to increase demand. Similarly, you might not be able to book the good venues, but with blogs etc., people can find the alternative venues that don't get ad-time in newspapers, on the radio, or on TV.

          So in summary, artists often are victims, but with the new technologies of the last 10 years, more and more artists are able to emancipate themselves and survive.

          [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? by Koiu Lpoi (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @08:18PM
    • How about Criminal Charges. (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:12PM (#14037496)
      If practically every kid who cracks into some network gets jail time; how about some criminal charges against whomever the idiot in Sony that approved this.


      Seriously - if some company hires a hitman to do illegal stuff they get in trouble. Why can Sony hack my network without any repercusions.

      [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? by DroopyStonx (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:16PM
      • So what's your point? by Eric Damron (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:40PM
      • Maybe You're Right by DannyO152 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:52PM
      • What will work (Score:5, Insightful)

        by SuperKendall (25149) * on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:05PM (#14038020)
        I also agree boycotts will not work. A major reason? Because there's no way Sony can measure what you are not buying. If you can get enough people not buying something it might work, but as the poster said that task is really impossible when it comes to Sony as a company.

        So what will work:

        Litigation. That's a great start because it costs them money they can count (legal fees) instead of four people not buying some Sony product. It looks like this might end up costing them big.

        Harrass customer service. It is not as effective but if a lot of people start consuming customer service with calls, again this costs them a measureable amount of money and also makes the VP in charge of customer service very angry. You want angry people at the same level in the company as the ones who are putting in things like the rootkit.

        The main goal in all this should be to try and make a public example of Sony so that other companies do not do the same thing, and Sony themselves will not want to try again for quite some time.
        [ Parent ]
        • Re:What will work by DanielJosphXhan (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:31PM
        • Re:What will work by born_to_live_forever (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:52PM
        • Re:What will work (Score:5, Informative)

          by SoCalChris (573049) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:10PM (#14038632)
          (http://www.lbcpc.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday November 12 2003, @05:30PM)
          Harrass customer service. It is not as effective but if a lot of people start consuming customer service with calls, again this costs them a measureable amount of money and also makes the VP in charge of customer service very angry. You want angry people at the same level in the company as the ones who are putting in things like the rootkit.

          I work for a company that writes software for call centers. Customer support calls cost an average of $3-$30 per call for a company. Lots of upset customers add up quickly.
          [ Parent ]
        • Re:What will work by ToasterofDOOM (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:30PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by God'sDuck (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:12PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by Yaa 101 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:35PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by divisionbyzero (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:42PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by johno.ie (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:46PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by springbox (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:03PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by DroopyStonx (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @02:20AM
      • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by SoCalChris (573049) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:17PM (#14037542)
      (http://www.lbcpc.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday November 12 2003, @05:30PM)
      I quit buying Sony crap over a decade ago. I used to buy their products more often than other brands, because they used to be higher quality. Then, I had a string of high end Sony items go bad (Usually within about a month of the warranty expiring).

      I had a Sony cell phone (This was when cell phones were first starting to come out, and were about the size of a brick). It was several hundred dollars. I went through 7 of them before the warranty expired, and I finally replaced it with another brand. I had a laser disc player whose drive motor kept dying. I had a boom box whose tape drive never worked right, even after sending it in for work several times. Then I had a Sony AV receiver, that one day decided not to turn on, unless you picked it up a few inches and dropped it. After that string of bad products, that Sony wouldn't stand behind, it was easy for me to stop buying their crap.

      I don't actively try to dissuade people from buying Sony stuff, but if asked my opinion, I will gladly tell people about my experience with them.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? by ballpoint (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:20PM
    • Just MHO by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:28PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Zathrus (232140) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:31PM (#14037686)
      (http://slashdot.org/)
      How do those who are active boycotters stick to it? Do you actively pursue telling others, or is it just a "one person, one dollar, one vote" kind of life lead?

      If you actively pursue telling others you'll just annoy them and get labeled as a wacko. So it's pretty much up to you and your money. If the opportunity presents itself to discuss the topic without having to stretch for relevance (e.g. -- a friend/colleage/random stranger complains about a CD not working on their computer or something), then go for it. Otherwise keep to yourself. The only real exception here is demonstrations -- if you can get a reasonable number of people together then you don't look like quite such a loon; instead you look like a group of loons. But at least then you're in a flock.

      As for boycotting Sony specifically -- first, write them a note telling them why you're boycotting and what they need to do to end your boycott. The second part is extremely important -- if you don't give them a method to regain your money, then why should they even bother? And in that vein, it has to be reasonable. I don't expect Sony to never issue non-CDs with DRM. I do expect them to never use this piece of crap again and to fire/relieve from their existing duties any managers that were involved in the approval of XCD.

      Second, try to make sure you don't give them any money. If you want to be strict about it, then only punish Sony-BMG Music. That means no buying CDs from them. If you want to be more liberal then don't buy anything from any Sony division -- no CDs, no DVDs, no movies, no electronics (including PS2 and so forth), nothing whatsoever directly associated with the company. If you want to be even more liberal then don't buy anything that will funnel money to the company -- all PS2 games are licensed, so none of them. Similarly, many movies may use music that's owned by Sony, so start checking those music credits first! And if you want to be a complete whacko then avoid any thing that funnels money to them through cross-licensing, partnerships, and so forth. Given how big Sony is, if you take this route then I suggest you sit quietly in an open field and hope they break before you die of dehydration or starvation (pray for rain and small, harmless furry animals to wander nearby).

      At least send the letter and try to stick to your boycott, at whatever level you choose. They've already done a lot more than I expected by recalling the defective CDs. Now they need to post a public apology (from a Japanese company that's a big deal), post a non-ActiveX method on their website to completely and utterly remove the DRM (and the decloaking junk), and appropriately punish the management involved in this cock-up. That would make me happy at least.
      [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? by thegnu (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:07PM
      • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Funny)

        by R3d M3rcury (871886) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @09:34PM (#14040553)
        (Last Journal: Friday May 04 2007, @08:30PM)
        "As for boycotting Sony specifically -- first, write them a note telling them why you're boycotting and what they need to do to end your boycott."

        Dear Sony,

        I am boycotting all Sony products until the following demands have been met.

        1. Give me a tool to remove the spyware from my system.
        2. Remove all infected CDs from stores.
        3. Replace all infected CDs that have been purchased with uninfected CDs free of charge.
        4. A public apology and a promise to never use DRM on CDs again.
        5. Susie Suh [susiesuh.com]. In a string bikini. At my place. Tonight.
        6. I'm having a little get-together this weekend and it would be great if Santana [santana.com] could be there and play a few songs.
        7. Three words: Dump Michael Bolton. [michaelbolton.com]
        8. One...million...dollars.

        Thank you for your time.
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:How to boycott? by AgentPhunk (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @10:24PM
      • Re:How to boycott? by Ernesto5 (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @01:01AM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:How to boycott? by CrystalFalcon (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @01:29AM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Milican (58140) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM (#14037713)
      (Last Journal: Tuesday June 07 2005, @09:18AM)
      Well, I just bought a 32" TV 2.5-hours ago [circuitcity.com] at Circuit City. It was between the Sony and the JVC. Both looked good and were at similar price points. Guess which one I bought? Thats right, I bought the JVC. Thats $500 less for Sony. All because of this XCP fiasco. They better wise up and remember that they are in the business of selling music and electronics. Not treating their computers like thieves and fscking up their computers.

      JOhn
      [ Parent ]
    • "CD" logo? by jasongetsdown (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM
      • Re:"CD" logo? by kosmicki (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:09PM
      • Re:"CD" logo? by The boojum (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:14PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Boycott? Why not picket? by dbc (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:37PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Esion Modnar (632431) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:43PM (#14037816)
      People unhappy about a company or a product have much more of a voice

      I recall that a certain popular tax preparation software (TurboTax, that's it!) got into hot water when, in the effort to curb piracy, they started mucking with the customer's boot sector, or some such. (Couple years back.) They ended up retracting their software naughtiness, and doing a profound mea culpa.

      Anyhow, will these companies ever learn that the bad press from borking their customers' computers, will cost them much more than piracy ever will? Sure, they see piracy as a problem to be met with DRM, but they're losing all perspective. Their DRM hammer is leaving holes in the wall.

      Good will is a commodity which is built up slowly over many years, and can be lost overnight.

      [ Parent ]
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:How to boycott? by mencik (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:52PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by TheUnknownCoder (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:53PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Total_Wimp (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:53PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Mind Booster Noori (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:57PM
    • Sony and RIAA will blame P2Pers not boycott by bgalbrecht (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:00PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Saphati (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:01PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Aumaden (598628) <Devon.C.Miller@noSPaM.gmail.com> on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:02PM (#14037980)
      (Last Journal: Wednesday March 15 2006, @04:00PM)
      Boycotting Sony BMG will have the same effect as boycotting RIAA.
      "Wah! Our profits aren't humungous!
      Boycott?
      No, there's no boycott, its them pirates!
      Arr!"
      Find an artist you like who is on one of Sony's labels (there are over 20 labels held by Sony BMG, so you should be able to find something). Take a few minutes to track down contact information for the artist. Now, write them and their agent a nice letter explaining how you really like their music, but are not buying their album because you don't want to risk being infected by Sony's defective copy protection. Let them yell at Sony.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? by briggsb (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:06PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by poot_rootbeer (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:12PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by fade-in (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:17PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by utlemming (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:37PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Seanasy (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:11PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Sgt Pinback (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:19PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by 16K Ram Pack (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:27PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by JahToasted (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:30PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Trogre (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:54PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by awol (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @08:15PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Kris_J (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @09:50PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by blacksilver (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:00PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Travoltus (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:46PM
    • Re:Not a big deal by symbolic (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @12:51AM
    • Re:How to boycott? by das3cr (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @08:29AM
    • Re:How to boycott? by quarkscat (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @08:52AM
    • [OT] Re:How to boycott? mercantilism by dada21 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:08PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by linguae (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:17PM
    • Re:How to boycott? by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:32PM
    • Re:How to boycott? (Score:5, Funny)

      by PunkFloyd (817784) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM (#14037711)
      Here's to correcting the worlds grammar one person at a time.

      Wouldn't that be the world's grammar? :)

      -pf
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:How to boycott? by JFitzsimmons (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:39PM
    • 6 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Ouch (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM (#14037268)
    To have Microsoft call you on your bad business practices...
    • Re:Ouch by blincoln (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:03PM
      • Re:Ouch by emjoi_gently (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:38PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • And their mp3 player sucks too! by ReeferCpe (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM
  • Wow this will be quite expensive! by Lucia_Inverse (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM
  • Not to worry by Anonymous Coward (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM
  • LGPL and/or GPL? by edubarr (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:55PM
  • Coral Cache by whysanity (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:56PM
  • I'd like to thank the fine folks at Sony for helping me decide which next-generation gaming console to buy (hint: It doesn't begin with the letter "P" or end in a "3"). It's a sad state of affairs when Microsoft has to come to the rescue and un-fsck your security blunders.
  • Thank god for Sony (Score:5, Insightful)

    by sedyn (880034) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:56PM (#14037291)
    I'm all in favour of letting the average person know the truth behind what content distributors are willing to do to protect "their" property.

    Let us hope that people find out about DRMs before they saturate the market any further.
  • Wow... by Premo_Maggot (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:56PM
  • by LithiumX (717017) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:56PM (#14037296)
    The DRM WANTS to be free!
    • TOO LATE!!! by alizard (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:23PM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • by apflwr (930636) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM (#14037303)
    In the end it probably would have been cheaper and much less hassle to just let us download the damn mp3s.
  • Good PR for Microsoft by Dark Paladin (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM
  • The natives are restless.. (Score:5, Informative)

    by grub (11606) <slashdot@grub.net> on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM (#14037305)
    (http://www.grub.net/blog/index.html | Last Journal: Wednesday June 27, @08:48AM)

    Read the comments for this protected disc by Van Zant on the Sony label [amazon.com].
    ,br>OUCH.
  • You wouldn't know from their stock price (eom) by Mateo_LeFou (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM
  • Hey Dan by ryanr (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM
    • Re:Hey Dan by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
      • Re:Hey Dan by ryanr (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:17PM
  • I'm really torn by $RANDOMLUSER (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM
    • Re:I'm really torn by Ironsides (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM
    • Indeed by samjam (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:04PM
      • Re:Indeed by Ithika (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:18PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by jenkin sear (28765) * on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM (#14037321)
    (http://www.wdogsystems.com/ | Last Journal: Thursday October 06 2005, @10:10AM)
    Looks like Sony crossed the threshold from nuisance to crime. While DOJ is almost certainly going to soft-pedal this, a savvy attorney general with political ambitions from a state unencumbered by Hollywood and the RIAA could probably ride this case into the governor's office....

    "Paging Eliot Spitzer [wikipedia.org], Paging Eliot Spitzer, Mr. Spitzer white courtesy phone..."

  • Nooooo! (Score:4, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM (#14037325)
    The Brotherhood of NOD has taken over 75% of the United States!
    • too bad... by tomcres (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:23PM
  • Bad Day for Sony? by HotNeedleOfInquiry (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM
  • Vulnerability (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM (#14037328)
    So we have a vulnerability on machines that was pushed out intentionally by somebody. We know who that somebody is.

    The question is, will they get punished for this by the authorities? The FBI and police seem to be happy to jail writers of virii or worms or those who spread vulnerabilities to unsuspecting systems. Why shouldn't the product manager responsible for this pay for his crime of making the nations computers even more insecure?

    Considering the rootkit is installed without owners realistically being aware, doesn't that make it equivalent to a form of worm, virus, or other type of nasty?

    I seriously believe that someone should be doing jail time for this. Such a punishment would make any other malfeasants think twice before thinking that they don't have to obey the law.
  • Get 'em good (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM (#14037335)
    Go to http://cp.sonybmg.com/xcp/ [sonybmg.com] or http://cp.sonybmg.com/xcp/english/form14.html [sonybmg.com]

    Where it asks for the Artists name type in some diatribe

    Where it asks for the Album Title, type in more diatribe

    Where it asks for Store Name, type in yet even more diatribe

    Where it asks for email address try something that will cause them trouble such as uce@ftc.gov or some chronic antispammer advocate.

    This will hopefully force Sony to make the "patch directly downloadable." ...since Sony says over 2 million disks containing the rootkit have been sold, that puts them under the gun for roughly U.S. $150 billion in damages :)

    Perhaps the copyright owners could offer to settle: have Sony repay all of the people who have been extorted for money because of filesharing (double for damages), and promise to stop all such activities in the future. That would only run them about $100 million, so it would be quite a deal.
  • Boycott Big Music (Score:5, Insightful)

    by drdanny_orig (585847) * on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:59PM (#14037337)
    I suggest people consider boycotting _all_ RIAA member labels, not just Sony. They just happened to be the fools who fell for this particular version. It's not hte implementation that's anathema, it's the concept of DRM. When in doubt, consult RIAA Radar [magnetbox.com]. Don't buy discs produced by RIAA members, it't that simple.
  • Who was held accountable? by Murphy's Paradox (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM
  • Another Sony story in the news by matt me (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM
  • Today's article of LWN.net about Sony (Score:3, Informative)

    by njchick (611256) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:00PM (#14037346)
    (Last Journal: Tuesday September 25, @06:21PM)
  • Maybe the time's arrived... by gik (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM
  • FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by The Rizz (1319) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM (#14037363)
    Why hasn't Sony been raided by the Feds, yet?

    If this had been an individual, or small business, you know they would already be behind bars awaiting trial for violating some law or another... possibly even being brought up on some sort of national security-related charges.
    ( Someone in a secure/top secret/classified government network has probably stuck one of these CDs into their machine at some point.)

    I want to know why the Feds aren't treating Sony like they would anyone else ... break into their offices, confiscate every single piece of electronics and CD in the place, and never give them back, ever (or at least, not until years after you've replaced everything).
    • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? (Score:5, Insightful)

      Because we live in a democratically elected plutocracy.

      By associating it with democracy, though, that makes it all better. We're all supposed to be happy that corporate profits supersede individual rights and property.
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by Guppy06 (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:18PM
    • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by OneFix at Work (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:18PM
      • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by CoderBob (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:27PM
      • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by SilverspurG (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM
      • by coinreturn (617535) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:42PM (#14037808)
        The kinds of machines that are in these secure environments are locked down big time...most don't even have a CD-ROM attached to the machine. The networks are closed (no direct internet access) and the machines with CD-ROMs/RWs have their lasers aligned differently so as to not be able to be read on a standard drive...one of the benifits of purposefuly misaligning the laser that writes the disks to be read in these machines is that you can't just insert a standard CD... Yes, contrary to what the media would have you belive, the folks in secure/top-secret/classified government positions are not stupid...

        All I can say is I am in the know with regard to such matters and you are so amazingly wrong it is unbelieveable. There may be EXTREMELY isolated cases of such Machiavellian security measures, but it has been my experience that music CDs are always making it into secured areas and being played on secure machines.
        [ Parent ]
      • Re:CD's on top secret machines by Maxo-Texas (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:53PM
        • Re:CD's on top secret machines by jonnythan (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:59PM
        • by AKAJack (31058) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:18PM (#14038138)
          or blah, blah, blah.

          It's been over ten years since i've been in that business, but i'd be seriously surprised if there were locally mountable devices, or even ports (USB, etc) on TS machines. We had no floppy drives and removable hard drives in our Secret machines, plus they were all tempest hardened, plus in lockable cabinets (those who know, know what i mean). We only had a few areas where we could even work on TS docs, much less create them from scratch. Having a CD drive (even read only) seems like something a security officer would have jumped on as a "duh" very early on in any project. If you needed a CD it would be mounted as a share to a server in the "vault" and you would be granted access to it for the time you needed it. No personal electrical devices were allowed in any way, shape, or form so no radios, CD players, etc.

          I suppose if a contractor was lax this could all take place, someone could use the document blender to make margaritas, but in my experience there was no way to just pop in some disk or attach a device. I mean we didn't even have printers! They were locked up in the vault also and you had to sign for the number of pages you printed! This was just a SECRET rated facility (o.k., Secret with SAR, I'll give you that much). So be realistic. I could take CDs in all day long but they were only good as drink coasters.
          [ Parent ]
          • Re:Confidential, Secret, Top Secret, SAR, Intel, e by Maxo-Texas (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:08PM
            • by Sycraft-fu (314770) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:11PM (#14039251)
              I'm sure there are people who post on Slashdot who really have worked in facilities doing classified work. Hell the guy who sits across from me at work was cleard TS/SCI when he was in teh Ariforce years ago, and one of our student employees actually has active secret clearence for his internship.

              However, for every person on here who legitmately knwos what they are talking about, you have someone who's just making shit up. They want to appear "in the know" and believe they really know how it is, because they heard a story somewhere or something like that. However in the retelling, they pretend like it was them, because of course it makes them seem to be more knowledgable on the topic.

              I've had lots of people tell me how things work in regards to secret data, however most of the people doing the telling, I know for a fact have never worked in such a facility. So what they are saying may be based entirely on fiction.

              As always, take what you hear on Slashdot with a grain of salt.
              [ Parent ]
              • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by MoogMan (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:13PM
      • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by OneFix at Work (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:43PM
        • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:FBI? NSA? Homeland Security? by bill_kress (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:06PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • by Dante333 (25148) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:01PM (#14037365)
    Now that I have already got GTA: Liberty City Stories for my PSP.
  • The "Infection" Picture by parasonic (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:02PM
  • MS is marking it as spyware... by orion41us (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:02PM
  • Sony messup is public now. No longer only on /. by alphax45 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:02PM
  • They are still being weasels... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by Zocalo (252965) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:03PM (#14037378)
    (http://www.zocalo.uk.com/)
    When the say "remove the rootkit CDs from the shelves" they mean just that; "rootkit CDs" specifically meaning those with "XCP-Aurora" installed and not with any other kind of DRM they are currently shipping. I wouldn't be at all surprised if they are even going to extend that to the specific version of "XCP-Aurora" people are complaining about on those CDs already known to contain it.

    What a shame that Scott Adams' "Weasel Awards" [dilbert.com] for 2005 have already been awarded. There's always 2006 I suppose, but this will probably have been long since done and dusted by then... unless it's still churning though legal systems in the US and elsewhere of course.

  • No Refund (Score:5, Informative)

    by rozthepimp (638319) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:03PM (#14037379)
    From Sony regarding the XCP CD received today in an email: Sony has already addressed the issue of the security concerns via the Service Pack 2 update on our website. According to the terms of the EULA that you agreed to when first installing our software, you agreed to obtain and install any recommended updates. All major security vendors have and Microsoft have announced that the installation of the SP2 update removes their concerns over the original technology used on our CDs. Sony BMG does not offer a refund/return program for this product.
    • Re:No Refund (Score:4, Informative)

      by Intron (870560) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:52PM (#14037888)
      All well and good? I downloaded Service Pack 2 and looked at it:

      strings -n 5 Update071105.exe |more

      1.2.1
        deflate 1.2.1 Copyright 1995-2003 Jean-loup Gailly

      Then I went and took a look at the zlib site http://www.zlib.net/ [zlib.net]

      "zlib 1.2.3

      July 18, 2005

      Version 1.2.3 eliminates potential security vulnerabilities in zlib 1.2.1 and 1.2.2, so all users of those versions should upgrade immediately."

      Sounds like Sony needs to trot back and have a whole nother look at those "security concerns"
      [ Parent ]
    • Re:No Refund by merchant_x (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:53PM
      • Re:No Refund by Tsiangkun (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:15PM
    • Re:No Refund by ThePhin (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:19PM
    • Re:No Refund by Barrellina (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @08:14PM
    • From the EULA by rozthepimp (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:47PM
    • 2 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • Silver Lining (Score:3, Interesting)

    by happymedium (861907) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:04PM (#14037393)
    DRM is poised to intrude on our lives even more in the form of the HD-DVD/Blu-ray copy protection, Windows Vista, and the digital TV broadcast flag... isn't it about time Slashdot's least favorite acronym (besides SCO perhaps) got some bad mainstream press?

    This Sony incident could help convince consumers and businesses alike that intrusive DRM is a bad idea.
  • You know when... by Ted_Bell111 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:04PM
  • Isn't there a word ... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Daniel Dvorkin (106857) * on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:05PM (#14037406)
    (http://www.sff.net/people/Daniel.Dvorkin | Last Journal: Friday October 12, @01:42PM)
    ... for a political maneuver where you first propose something so outrageous that it's sure to get shot down, and then withdraw the proposal and advance something only slightly less outrageous? Like, let's say Senator Boughtandpaidfor introduces a bill requiring the death penalty for anyone who cracks a copy-protected CD, and when that gets the desired uproar, he says, "Oh, okay, let's compromise and make it fifty years in prison instead" -- and that bill passes because it's more "reasonable."

    Which makes me wonder what Sony's got coming next.
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by sconeu (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:21PM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by Starker_Kull (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:40PM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Fnkmaster (89084) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:42PM (#14037800)
      It seems related to a behavioral finance effect calling anchoring, which I believe was part of Kahneman and Tversky's Nobel-winning work. From Wikipedia:

      As a second example, according to Daniel Kahneman if an audience is asked firstly to memorise the last 4 digits of their social security number and then to estimate the number of physicians in New York the correlation between the two numbers is around 0.4--far beyond what would be expected by chance. The simple act of thinking of the first number strongly influences the second, even though there is no logical connection between them.

      Basically, people often don't have any absolute framework for judging what is reasonable in a particular situation, so their mind subconsciously focuses or anchors on the first number they see, even if there is no rational basis or relationship between the number presented and the judgment call being asked for.
      [ Parent ]
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by hackstraw (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:06PM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by smellsofbikes (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:14PM
    • Door in the Face by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:04PM
      • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by suwain_2 (Score:3) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:24PM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by Myopic (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @12:29AM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by Daniel Dvorkin (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:09PM
    • Re:Isn't there a word ... by swillden (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:50PM
    • 3 replies beneath your current threshold.
  • The real story... by Schart (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:05PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Oops. (Score:3, Funny)

    by AWhiteFlame (928642) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM (#14037415)
    (http://www.awhiteflame.net/)
    You know you screwed something up when Microsoft comes in and calls it a threat to the security of windows.
  • Let's kill them with the cure... by WalterODimm (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
  • Several outcomes... by KD5YPT (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
  • The pendulum swings by eieken (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
  • Boil a frog? by WankersRevenge (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
  • PS3 by Deanasc (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:06PM
  • Blu-Ray vs HD-DVD = Sony vs Microsoft. by bubulubugoth (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:07PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Can't... type... reply... too... much... by The I Shing (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:08PM
  • Another Reasons by Scurra UK (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:09PM
  • I vote we do (Score:5, Funny)

    by guardiangod (880192) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:09PM (#14037452)
    this.... [bash.org]

    Disclaimer: In case those lawyers from Sony is not being work to death right now from all those demage lawsuit- I am joking.
  • What's going to happen... by mulicheng (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:09PM
  • In related (Wired) news... by Spy der Mann (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:09PM
  • This is Good News... by craznar (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:10PM
  • LOL by olddotter (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:10PM
  • For the love of $$$ by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:10PM
  • Only one thing could make this worse by erroneus (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:11PM
  • All well and good but... by NVP_Radical_Dreamer (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:12PM
  • The ethical fix... by wherrera (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:12PM
  • In other news... by Jesselnz (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:13PM
  • Wow (Score:5, Insightful)

    by realmolo (574068) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:13PM (#14037505)
    Sony really screwed the pooch on this one.

    They actually got the Department of Homeland Security to denounce them. I knew it had to be good for something ;)

    The great thing about all of this is that now that the Feds are aware of this evil DRM bullshit, they will start regulating it a little better. As it stands now, the DMCA basically give all the media companies "carte blanche" with regards to copy-protection schemes.
  • Joe Random, hacker .. (Score:3, Funny)

    by RedLaggedTeut (216304) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:14PM (#14037512)
    (http://wurzel.fortunecity.de/ | Last Journal: Friday January 27 2006, @04:14PM)
    Joe Random, hacker, reading slashdot:

    rootkit.. bad
    microsoft.. good
    hacker.. head explodes
  • How long has XCP been around? by SysKoll (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:14PM
  • Buying CDs is unsafe... (Score:5, Funny)

    by ncoder (517020) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:18PM (#14037547)
    Download them from the net. It's much safer. ;)
  • Holy shnikies! by nxaccount (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:18PM
  • Sony - Accused of Price Fixing by Ahnteis (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:21PM
  • Sony infection map excludes most of Mexico by digitaldc (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:21PM
  • Darn by Billly Gates (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:21PM
    • Re:Darn by Billly Gates (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:13PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • How bad is it? by jav1231 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:21PM
  • Analogy -- Why Neo will always be faster... by 3seas (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:22PM
  • by Starker_Kull (896770) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:22PM (#14037596)
    About the only way DRM will be tamed (I think, in the long run, it will be eliminated completely, but that will take people completely rethinking intellectual "property" as a lega concept) is if it intereferes or damages an average person's system. That is perhaps the biggest "problem" with DRM - its many failure modes usually screw you out of your content - or in this case, screw up your system. And it's a great, wonderful problem, because all we need are a few more screw-ups like this, and average people will start to associate "DRM" with "Sucks/Breaks" and avoid it like the plauge.

    Go Sony! Do it again!
  • Rootkit detection by Anthony (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:24PM
  • Re: Bad Day To Be Sony by Trailer Trash (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:25PM
  • What next? by dtfinch (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:26PM
    • Re:What next? by planetoid (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:31PM
  • Rootkit? by Lurk3r (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:27PM
    • Re:Rootkit? by KD5YPT (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:24PM
      • Re:Rootkit? by Lurk3r (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:56PM
    • Re:Rootkit? by daremonai (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:26PM
  • by threaded (89367) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:30PM (#14037682)
    (http://www.threaded.com/index.html)
    Was not the software used by Sony written by a UK limited company? Is not the commissioning and construction of such software illegal under UK law? (Computer Misuse Act 1990)
  • by Daedala (819156) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:31PM (#14037695)
    These CDs have been out since mid-2004, according to Sony. Why hasn't this been noticed? Were they all bought off?

    This is what really disturbs me. Not "What was Sony thinking?" -- businesses can be really stupid. Not "How could they do this?" -- businesses can be really evil. Shit happens. Get over it. Bad security happens, whatever.

    However, I did have some trust (not much, but some) for the anti-malware establishment. I'm in infosec; I believe that even in the biggest and stupidest infosec company, there will be people with the hackerish instincts (i.e. lower-than-average sense of self-preservation) to blow the whistle. However, the failure of all the big anti-whatever companies to notice and/or do anything about this, with full year of lead time, demonstrates that they are incompetent at best, unethical at worst.

    I don't care, personally; I use a Mac. It's not a security panacea but it's a pretty darn good line of defense. Professionally, however, I feel downright ill.

    Kudos to F-Secure and Sysinternals. Where the hell were the rest of them?
     
  • What does "Pull it from the Shelf" mean exactly? by Mateo_LeFou (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:32PM
  • Are you ALLOWED to remove it? by calvinsdad (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:32PM
  • For the people by the people by PacketScan (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM
  • It's MY computer... and I have rules also by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:33PM
  • Half a million networks? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by NIK282000 (737852) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:35PM (#14037728)
    (http://4hv.org/ | Last Journal: Sunday June 06 2004, @09:26PM)
    But the RIAA told me that because of file sharing no one bought new CDs any more. Im confused! ;)
  • Bad Day To Be Sony? by thomasa (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:35PM
  • Multi-Billion Dollar Lawsuit anyone!? by GecKo213 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:38PM
  • I want crying directors! by network23 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:40PM
  • by atomic_toaster (840941) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:40PM (#14037781)
    Okay, I've fallen for your lines about downloading and not paying for mp3's "taking money away from artists", that downloading is illegal and immoral and God knows what else. Or maybe I've just gotten tired of trying to find a good copy of a song online. Or I might simply prefer to have a high-quality copy of my favorite album(s) so that, if for some reason my computer should crash, I can convert a new copy to MP3 and lose nothing but a little time.

    For whatever reason, I buy one of your CD's, pay the $18 CAD or thereabouts for a new release. But this is the computer age, I don't even own a stereo, so I want to play the CD on my computer.

    The first thing I notice is that the CD is DRM-ed to death so it's a pain in the ass to convert the songs to MP3 format; so much for listening to the music that I've bought on my iPod. (If I live in Canada, I may have also paid for this music twice, once through the purchase of the CD, and a second time through the levy on my iPod as "blank media".) Oh yeah, and for some reason, neither iTunes nor Winamp will play the CD.

    The second thing I notice (because who really reads the EULA?) while researching how to crack the DRM, is that, among other things, if my house is burgled I will have to delete all the mp3's from this disc. (Because, you know, a burglar would spend all that time copying the MP3's from my hard drive instead of stealing the whole damn computer. And man, if I own a laptop, they're just going to leave it on the desk and take my crappy TV instead...) Also, if I don't update the software whenever it prompts me to, I will lose all access to the music that I have purchased. And I can't listen to the music on a work computer, nor can I re-sell the CD that I have just purchased. WTF?

    But then my system crashes, and some virus I can't get rid of keeps me from accessing all the data on my hard drives that I haven't backed up in ages (of course). And how did this virus get on my system? Through a root kit that the Sony CD installed without even telling me it was doing so, thank you very much. ...

    Alright, Sony, now you've shot yourself in the foot. You've basically persuaded millions of CD buyers out there (you know, the people who were actually paying for your product?) that it's easier, safer, and plain old less annoying to yoink MP3's from thier favorite website or file-sharing program.

    Way to go.

    (Idiots.)
  • Why does Microsoft look so good here? by spankaroo (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:42PM
  • by anandamide (86527) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:43PM (#14037811)
    Did anyone look at some of the titles they chose to infect with this thing?

    Bob Brookmeyer - Bob Brookmeyer & Friends
    Horace Silver - Silver?s Blue
    Dexter Gordon - Manhattan Symphonie
    Ahmed Jamal - The Legendary Okeh and Epic Recordings

    Bob Brookmeyer???? Was Sony afraid of the cadre of L33t h4xx0r d00dz pirating their catalog of elderly jazz trombonists?
  • DNS Query by QuantumRiff (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:44PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Hello Class Action Lawsuit by rootology (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:45PM
  • by Animats (122034) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:46PM (#14037830)
    (http://www.animats.com)
    If you're a sysadmin cleaning this crap out of a big collection of computers, you're in a good position to file a criminal complaint with the Department of Justice. And you should. A crime has been committed.

    Jennifer Granick, executive director of Stanford University's Center for Internet and Society, sees this as a question of how well written their EULA is, a topic of much conversation in the media lately.

    But either way, she noted over IM, "if the EULA did not advise the user that s/he was installing software on the machine that would collect information and/or open the machine to vulnerabilities, then the software arguably violates 18 usc 1030(a)(5)(A)." That's a criminal charge. But Granick doesn't see criminal prosecution of Sony anytime soon.

    "The (Department of Justice) is not going to charge Sony.... They have never charged a big corporation with a computer crime."

    In order to invoke 18 USC 1030, you have to show $5,000 in damages or damage to a computer system used by or for a government entity in furtherance of the administration of justice, national defense or national security. That's another interesting point of Kaminsky's work, because it shows networks that are part of national security and civil infrastructure faithfully reporting their existance back to Sony, along with as yet unknown information about the compromised computers.

  • About that uninstaller (Score:5, Informative)

    by kawika (87069) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:50PM (#14037865)
    The Sony/XCP uninstall process requires you to fill out a web form that uses an ActiveX control. That control has several serious security issues including the ability to run arbitrary code and even a handy built-in reboot function. The ActiveX control gropes around your system and encrypts some information that is submitted in a hidden form field. Their privacy policy does not mention this.

    Feel free to go over there and try it yourself. If you install the ActiveX you can remove it in Tools, Internet Options, Settings, View Objects, "CodeSupport Control". Here's what they send you:

    From: contentprotectionhelp
    Sent: Monday, November 14, 2005 04:22 AM
    To: sony-bmg-sucks@invalid.com
    Subject: Re: ContentProtectionHelp Email Form

    Thank you for contacting Sony BMG Online.

    Sony BMG and First 4 Internet have released a Service Pack 2a update that addresses recent concerns surrounding the cloaking technology component on SONY BMG content protected CDs which use XCP technology. These components are not malicious nor spyware however to alleviate any concerns that users may have about the program posing potential security vulnerabilities the update removes the cloaking component from their computers. Please visit the link below to install the SP2a update.

          http://updates.xcp-aurora.com/ [xcp-aurora.com]

    If you do not want to install the SP2a update and only wish to uninstall the DRM software, visit the form below using IE 5.0 (or higher) from the computer where the software is installed. After submission, you will be emailed a customized uninstall link within 1 business day (M-F).

          http://cp.sonybmg.com/xcp/english/form9.html [sonybmg.com]
          Your "Case ID" is: 9999999.

    TIP: The uninstall request form will require an ActiveX plug-in.
                    Also you may need to temporarily turn off any pop-up blocker
                    software on the PC.

    Thank you for the opportunity to be of assistance.

    The Sony BMG Online Support Team
    FKSZ

    This message and any attachments are solely for the use of intended recipients. They may contain privileged and/or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you received this email in error, and that any review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this email and any attachment is strictly prohibited. If you receive this email in error please contact the sender and delete the message and any attachments associated therewith from your computer. Your cooperation in this matter is appreciated.

    - - - - -
  • On behalf of every malware writer out there... by suitepotato (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:50PM
  • Obnoxious EULA by apetala2 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:51PM
  • Curiouser and curiouser... by Thad Boyd (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:51PM
  • A little harsh by alanbs (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:55PM
    • Re:A little harsh by KD5YPT (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:16PM
    • Re:A little harsh (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Todd Knarr (15451) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:31PM (#14038280)
      (http://www.silverglass.org/)

      Robert Morris didn't intend his little worm program to spread as widely as it did, but none of the companies and universities whose networks were shut down by the Morris Worm in 1988 cared about intentions. They only cared about the fact that the worm killed their networks. When Sony's software starts playing games with my system I don't care what their intentions were, only what the results are.

      [ Parent ]
  • Searching Sony by Bloggins (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:56PM
  • Jail Time by jlavarj (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:57PM
  • Where were Symantec, Microsoft, and McAfee ?? by softcoder (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:59PM
  • As the news spread, check here often by Puhase (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:59PM
  • Record Yet? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Nom du Keyboard (633989) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:03PM (#14037990)
    Are we at the record yet for most stories on consecutive days trashing the same company for the same beyond stupid bonehead move?

    Or are we simply waiting for their current management to fall on their sword when the post bad-will boycott sales figures arrive?

    My hope is that this will force companies to actually tell you what they've been able to hide behind the scenes and lawyers up to now.

  • Sony's day just got worse.. by tomcres (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:05PM
  • Big Market Share...= Really Big Problems by BoRegardless (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:10PM
  • Microsoft's removal by porkface (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:10PM
  • Blame it on MSFT by n6kuy (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:12PM
  • For me, it's a trust issue... by DigitalJeremy (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:17PM
  • Needed: Automatic "EULA-reject" mode by Animats (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:19PM
  • warp records are doing it the right way by Anonymous Coward (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:19PM
  • by paj1234 (234750) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:19PM (#14038150)
    It's an even worse day to be Sony, in the UK. Today's newspapers have headlines like "Sony accused of Internet rip-off" and "End to online bargains as Sony forces prices higher".

    According to The Times, "the practice of charging different prices to Internet retailers and high street stockists -- known as dual pricing -- was started by Sony and has been followed by other manufacturers." Here's the article:

    http://www.timesonline.co.uk/article/0,,2-1872549, 00.html [timesonline.co.uk]
  • I love it.. by bmantz65 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:21PM
  • *plink* *plink* my $0.02 (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Tsiangkun (746511) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:23PM (#14038189)
    (http://www.soundclick.com/tsiangkun)
    People infected with a rootkit should be re-imbursed from Sony Music for the cost of the removal service, provided by whom ever the person chooses to use to remove the kit.

      Rootkits are designed to avoid detection, and only an idiot would trust a company destributing rootkits to provide them with software to remove the rootkit. For all I know, they just changed the cloaking mechanism, and left the machine vulnerable to attacks, still running the rootkit.

      Shouldn't Sony pay the cost of having machines backed up, wiping and formating of the drives, re-install of the OS, re-install of the software, re-configure the software, and reimbursement for the time and productivity lost in the process.

      Right now the whole thing is being treated like a childish goof up and a big oops. Sony has installed rootkits, on personal machines and corporate equipment, and they should be paying for the equipment to be restored as deemed necessary by the owner. Simply giving a link to a download that claims to remove the rootkit is entirely insufficient.
  • Stock market still relatively unfazed by Sony flap by greyfeld (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:24PM
  • Greenland by moosesocks (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:25PM
  • Word of mouth ain't trivial (Score:3, Interesting)

    by loose_cannon_gamer (857933) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:30PM (#14038263)
    Just had to jump on here for a minute... Many of the posts today are what we, the 'enraged geeks of society' should do about Sony's practices. Might I suggest one -- post on slashdot.

    You laugh, but I call a recent article on Tom's Hardware into witness. The reason that the graphics card companies (nVidia, ATI) go so intensely after that performance crown is that the people who care deeply about it tend to be influencers -- I think the article claimed something like those graphics card companies can be assured of 20 mainstream target purchases due to the influence of one high-end customer.

    Point being, people here care, and deeply, about the stuff Sony has been up to, and in many of these markets, *we* are the influencers.

    If your company gets bad press on Slashdot, and you do technology, that's not just bad, that's very very bad, because for every post and every reader, there may well be 20 or more people who are going to stop doing business with you. And if you get repeated bad articles, over and over again, well, golly. This is only worse when there is a choice in the market, and for almost everything Sony makes, somebody else makes something like it.

  • Mass Returns to Wal-Mart by bigbigbison (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:31PM
  • by RichMan (8097) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:31PM (#14038283)
    If the CD is a valid music CD and will play in a standard player,

    Why is the operating system trying to run a program from the CD?

    You should be able to set the OS to treat music CD's as music CD's and ignore any other content.

    This is all due to MS advanced features messing the user over. Pressure should also be placed on Microsoft to treat music CDs as music CDs.

    Perhaps a configuration to easily switch between
    1. Play Music
    2. Access any Autorun features
    3. Offer option of 1 or 2
  • where's the cyber police? by wardk (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:32PM
  • Sony auto-installing malware from SunnComm... by hkmwbz (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:35PM
  • Could this help Sony? by tahooie2 (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:37PM
  • "Bad Guy" paradigm shift? (Score:3, Insightful)

    by merc (115854) <slashdot@upt.org> on Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:40PM (#14038359)
    (http://upt.org/lane)
    I have noticed one aspect from all of this Sony/BMG rootkit fallout that seems to have gone unnoticed; but which I believe is a positive thing:

    Up until now the RIAA trade group has been the front-man for all of the label cartels' untenable activities -- it's never been BMG, Geffen, Warner Brothers, Universal, EMI, et al, suing 12 year old girls and old ladies--noo, it's the RIAA.

    Up until now whenever the consuming masses are outraged, all they have to derive their seering hatred towards is a large anonymous trade association which exists purely to absorb all of that yucky malevolent P.R.

    Finally the pressure is being put on a specific corporate entity who happens to also be an RIAA member, and they will feel the wrath directly. It couldn't happen to a better company (well... okay, perhaps EMI; Bronfman is a real chode smacker).
  • Comic Tragedy by sgt scrub (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:40PM
  • How do we feel about Sony now? (BMG vs. PSP) by Theovon (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:43PM
  • Information on Sonymusic.com unreachable: by drijen (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @04:58PM
  • Sony should pay tens of billions in damages by Retired Replicant (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:02PM
  • End of DRM? by robbo (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:08PM
  • Something special for all you Execs at Sony by andrelix (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:09PM
  • Was this Sony crap malware on Everquest 2 media? by Retired Replicant (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:15PM
  • I'm off the Sony sauce by CharimanMeow (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:19PM
  • Doesn't this violate DMCA? by Dcnjoe60 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:19PM
  • by C0D3X (300627) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:24PM (#14038768)
    So isn't Microsoft violating the law by removing the Sony copy protection software, even though it's buggy and poses a security threat? Even though their intentions are good?

    Should it be a violation of law to circumvent such copy protection schemes, even though they are harmful to the user?
    It's still copy protection software, and they're still removing it.

    Of course I don't think Sony would take Microsoft to court over this since they put themselves in such a bad position -- it would make them look twice as bad.

    I think we finally found the missing link:

    1. Sell a CD with copy protection / spyware or virus in one program
    2. Antivirus will remove the program, circumventing the copyright measure and therefore breaking the law
    3. Sue the antivirus maker for the huge loss of billions of dollars (per second) and the awful personal damages from such a terrible disaster.
    4. PROFIT!!!
  • Howard Stringer by gamer4Life (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:25PM
  • We Need to Start a Programmers Guild by slarrg (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:27PM
  • Catch 22 ? by Roskolnikov (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:42PM
    • Re:Catch 22 ? by LocalH (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @01:40PM
    • Re:Catch 22 ? by Roskolnikov (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @04:49PM
  • Nice? (Score:3, Funny)

    by Snaller (147050) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:44PM (#14038968)
    (Last Journal: Tuesday June 26, @08:41AM)
    So if I first hit you with a hammer - and then *stop*, I'm nice?
  • Boycott? Yeah right... by Kuukai (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:45PM
  • Statement From an Artist by lo0ol (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:50PM
  • REPORT THE CRIME (Score:3, Informative)

    by spoonist (32012) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:52PM (#14039063)
    (http://www.scosucks.com/ | Last Journal: Wednesday April 16 2003, @06:44PM)

    I know I'm jumping in WAY late in this conversation, but if just a few people see this and respond, it'll do some good.

    Go to the following sites and complain:

    Department of Homeland Security [dhs.gov] - Select "Security Threats"

    US Secret Service [secretservice.gov] - They do computer fraud cases.

    FBI [fbi.gov]

  • Can't help myself. by Nazo-San (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @05:59PM
  • Microsoft vs. Sony? That's Odd... by DorkusMasterus (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:11PM
  • Ouch. by Niet3sche (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:13PM
  • The Bard's Tale by geminidomino (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:15PM
  • by seabreezemm (577723) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:28PM (#14039411)
    This type of tactic that was used with this virus ware is nothing new for Sony. It wasn't a simple mistake or an accident or simple bad judgment. Sony has a long history of this type of strong arm tactics in almost every branch of the company. Another example in particular is the SOE entertainment branch that runs Everquest and Everquest 2. Throughout the game of Everquest Sony placed spyware on machines in a form that captured user specifics about their computers, connections, and names, credit card information and other personal data. When confronted about this collection of information on the Everquest players they quickly turned tail and ran into the legal jungle of vague response and said it was needed to properly manage the game environment and accounts. This of course was complete garbage. It was a campaign to collect, sell and profit from this data. To this day that data collection continues according to the very EULA they force you to agree too in order to play any of the games they now operate. Not only did Sony collect data and lie about its purpose but they also actively engaged tactics to force players into huge fees to simply be able to allow the players to be able to sell the very software they had already purchased. This is just one of more then 20 easy to find examples of Sony's business model that exploits abuses and damages the public's security, welfare and privacy.
  • Guaranteed way to find files on any CD? by Hosiah (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:29PM
  • by Seraphnote (655201) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:35PM (#14039466)
    Have they publicly acknowledged they did wrong?
    Have they fired the executive who approved this idiocy?

    Sony will need to do this if they ever want my business, my family's business, or my employer's business again. And this includes EVERYTHING SONY.

    Why should a corporation who does this to their customers, have customers?

  • Serious vul in the tool to remove the rootkit by poppycock (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:38PM
  • The more important question (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Nkwe (604125) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:39PM (#14039510)
    While everyone is whining (rightly so) about what Sony has done, why is there not obvious and loud whining about what Microsoft has done? How come by simply inserting a disk into a CDROM drive, Windows will read the disk and automatically execute code as a privileged user? The Sony DRM stuff is evil and hooks into and hides at the kernel level. It is more evil that kernel level drivers are automatically installed by Windows by the mere insertion of media with no user interaction or confirmation. There is no excuse for this.
  • DMCA anyone? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by cryogenix (811497) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:01PM (#14039691)
    I'm all for MS removing the rootkit, but doesn't Sony now have grounds to go after anyone that makes a tool to remove this under the DMCA? I suppose they could waive rights to it or such... I'm kind of hoping they do so that DMCA proponents can watch in horror as the worst of all possibilities come to fruition. Perhaps we can then look at getting rid of that legislative piece of trash.
  • Dear Sony by Honkytonkwomen (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @07:10PM
  • This is Typical Sony by SuperFuse2 (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @08:18PM
  • Site with more than 20 infected titles by MiliusXP (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @08:51PM
  • apply black hat laws to sony? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by romerom (151264) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @09:10PM (#14040442)
    (http://www.anotherdimensionmusic.com/)
    Why shoudln't the same rules applied to black hat hackers who compromise and exploit the security of systems be applied towards sony executives? They should really make an example out of these guys so that other corporations and even spyware makers won't attempt anything like this EVER AGAIN.
  • iTunes by Tim12s (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:47PM
    • 1 reply beneath your current threshold.
  • Damages for Copyright Infringement... by cfulmer (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @11:50PM
  • Terrorist Photos by ONOIML8 (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @12:12AM
  • F**k customer loyalty by classical piano (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @12:50AM
  • Naughty Sony! by davro (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @09:30AM
  • Corporate Lawsuits - Legal Feeding Frenzy by zentinal (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @11:36AM
  • Mirror of the "pretty pictures"??? by c64cryptoboy (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @01:31PM
  • interesting site by NPerez (Score:1) Wednesday November 16 2005, @02:07PM
  • SonySuit.com Tracks The Class Actions by marklyon (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @10:37PM
  • New exciting business opportunities by Dove_from_above (Score:1) Thursday November 17 2005, @04:34AM
  • Re:fp i hate sony (Score:5, Funny)

    by rovingeyes (575063) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @02:57PM (#14037301)
    you should have tried $sys$fp. Then see if the moderators would have caught you. Oh well...
    [ Parent ]
  • Re:Hey... by Irish_Samurai (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:46PM
  • Re:This is not a rootkit. by icydog (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:51PM
  • That is what a rootkit does (Score:3, Informative)

    by bluGill (862) on Tuesday November 15 2005, @03:57PM (#14037934)

    A rootkit is any set (which could be one) of software that an attacker uses to attack your (or other) computer and cover his tracks so you don't notice and cannot uninstall.

    This meets both definitions. It covers it tracks, and it allows Sony to prevent you from ripping the disk.

    A rootkit might include software to attack other computers, but the rootkit itself is whatever is used on YOUR computer AFTER it is cracked.

    [ Parent ]
  • Re:This is not a rootkit. by VENONA (Score:2) Tuesday November 15 2005, @06:33PM
  • Re:Pretty $sys$ pictures lol by straight_up (Score:1) Tuesday November 15 2005, @09:01PM
  • Re:I already hated MS, now I also hate sony... Gam by Vo0k (Score:2) Wednesday November 16 2005, @04:47AM
  • 30 replies beneath your current threshold.
(1) | 2 | 3