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Piracy Microsoft The Almighty Buck

Microsoft Envisions a Blockchain-Based Bounty System to Catch Pirates (torrentfreak.com) 59

A new paper (PDF) published by Microsoft's research department proposes to tackle piracy with a blockchain-based bounty system titled "Argus." The system allows volunteers to report piracy in exchange for a reward. It uses the Ethereum blockchain and is transparent, practical, and secure, while limiting abusive reports and errors. TorrentFreak reports: Argus is a transparent system built on the Ethereum blockchain that allows people to anonymously report piracy in exchange for a bounty. Pirated content is traced back to the source through a unique watermark that corresponds with a secret code. When a pirated copy is reported, the status of the source (licensee) is changed to "accused." The system provides an appeal option, but if that fails, the accused status changes to "guilty." Argus is an open system but there are various safeguards to prevent abuse. Reporting the same pirated work multiple times under different aliases is useless, for example, as that will only reduce the reward.

The system relies on several checks to ensure that the system is open, while avoiding false accusations at the same time. And according to the researchers, the costs of utilizing the blockchain are relatively low. "We effectively optimize several cryptographic operations so that the cost for a piracy reporting is reduced to an equivalent cost of sending about 14 ETH-transfer transactions to run on the public Ethereum network, which would otherwise correspond to thousands of transactions. "With the security and practicality of Argus, we hope real-world anti-piracy campaigns will be truly effective by shifting to a fully transparent incentive mechanism," the researchers add.

Whether Microsoft has any plans to test the system in the wild is unknown. It theoretically works with various media types including images, audio and software. That said, it's unclear how effective it will be. The researchers "assume" that the watermarking technology deployed is tamper-free, which isn't always the case today. The paper and the Argus system will be presented at the upcoming 40th International Symposium on Reliable Distributed Systems, which will be held virtually at the end of September.

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Microsoft Envisions a Blockchain-Based Bounty System to Catch Pirates

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  • by AuMatar ( 183847 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @09:06PM (#61703347)

    How is a blockchain of value here? What does it give that just reporting to a central authority (or the company itself) won't provide? Nothing? Yeah, I thought so.

    • The added value is the buzzword: MS is the first company to have a BLOCKCHAIN anti-piracy feature; Woah!

    • by ShanghaiBill ( 739463 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @09:59PM (#61703467)

      The blockchain provides a permanent sequenced public record of the infringement report.

      There is no dispute about who made the report or who made it first.

      That makes it harder for a company to deny a reward to the snitch.

      • by TechyImmigrant ( 175943 ) on Wednesday August 18, 2021 @12:06AM (#61703633) Homepage Journal

        The blockchain provides a permanent sequenced public record of the infringement report.

        There is no dispute about who made the report or who made it first.

        That makes it harder for a company to deny a reward to the snitch.

        It will also identtify the snitch, so the pirates can find them and make them walk the plank.

      • by Misagon ( 1135 )

        A blockchains contains a record but they don't have any inherent concurrency control as to who put it there first.
        The purpose behind why cryptocurrencies are mined is (supposed to be) for a consistency protocol: first to mine wins. Some few cryptocurrencies are centrally controlled, where a central authority decides.
        What is the consistency mechanism here?

    • by dohzer ( 867770 )

      Because then Microsoft can create their own cryptocurrency for them to pay with, which means it doesn't cost them anything.

    • > How is a blockchain of value here?

      Blockchains make everything better!

    • Yes, also the best way to deal with pirates is just end copyright entirely.

    • I don't know their motivation, but mine is that I can call it the Blockwart [wikipedia.org]. Its job is pretty much that.

  • Snitches Get Stitches with an public record of the pay outs

    • Indeed. The entire concept relies on people telling on other people. It does smack of Gestapo or Stasi information gathering - which is probably why MS insists on the reports being anonymous. It is quite disgusting at core I have to say.

      • I think that Microsoft will see adoption of this technology worldwide. The fundamental premise of rewards for anonymous reporting of anti-social behavior is of obvious value to a well run government.

        Likely Microsoft clients:

        Afghanistan under the Taliban, Algeria, Angola, Azerbaijan, Bahrain, Belarus, Brunei, Burundi, Cambodia, Cameroon, Central African Republic, Chad, China, Democratic Republic of Congo, Republic of Congo, Cuba, Djibouti, Egypt, Equatorial Guinea, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gabon, Iran, Iraq, Kaz

  • I envision Blake Lively in a maid outfit picking up small things from the floors of various rooms in my house.

    Shit in one hand, fart in the other... how does that go again?

  • by NoMoreDupes ( 8410441 ) on Tuesday August 17, 2021 @09:17PM (#61703373)
    Like this one? [slashdot.org]
  • applied to solve exactly zero technological problem. It's sad.

  • Seems like a solution looking for a problem to solve.

    If you can strip silverlight/GDP/whatever you should be able to get rid of other digital watermarks pretty easily.

  • How is this different from a disgruntled employee calling the BSA other than 'blockchain'?

  • I assume they won't use it to catch GPL violators

  • again? wow they are really pushing the blockchain for piracy idea hard with two of these in a matter of days. If the one from monday failed so fast you would think they would wait more than 2 days before trying again /s
  • with its ability to detect piracy (i.e. copying) perhaps /. can use it to detect dupes?
    • with its ability to detect piracy (i.e. copying) perhaps /. can use it to detect dupes?

      Everybody knows that Slashdot can't steal from itself. (Unless it has Multiple Personality Disorder - then the authorities might take an interest). Come to think of it, it might be time to call the Feds...

  • ... source (licensee) is changed to "accused".

    It's still the US-ian model of 'prove your innocence', with money-grabbing corporations deciding what rights the accused has (that is, none).

  • I'm not sure I fully get this, to quote:

    We effectively optimize several cryptographic operations so that the cost for a piracy reporting is reduced to an equivalent cost of sending about 14 ETH-transfer transactions

    So, I'm guessing that's a cost for *Microsoft*, not the end user?
    Right now, 14 ETH transactions, will cost about $56 - at the moment I type this.
    In a few minutes, it could be $100.

    That's just insanity.
    So, ANY report, regardless of whether it is bogus or not, is going to cost 14 ETH transactions?
    T

  • by kmoser ( 1469707 ) on Wednesday August 18, 2021 @12:32AM (#61703659)
    Not naming names, but I know a particular Redmond-based company that has engaged in monopolistic behavior and unfair business practices.
  • by thogard ( 43403 ) on Wednesday August 18, 2021 @12:34AM (#61703665) Homepage

    Defamation, libel and slander laws differ in most countries and the truth isn't a defense in many of them. Getting falsely accused of piracy using this system could resulting an a nice annual payout until the block chain is gone.

  • I believe Piracy should be stopped but to encourage people to buy genuine licensing should be cheap and affordable.
  • My old employer's network admin used to sell Office keys for $15 a pop. No longer a member so they are safe from being reported. It's smart though because being a member of "government" allows you to claim something like, "it isn't piracy, it is for educational purposes." Works for me. I had a bunch of new games for "educational purposes" on my employer's shield. It wasn't until I challenged them to honor a DMCA takedown notice for a video they "used for educational purposes." That I learned the governm
  • Because who even uses windoze anymore?
    It's improvements are to be ignored as they add nothing useful for the average person.
    UI is a mess of various versions of design.
    Controlpanel/system: where is my stuff?
    Why can't it even indicate exactly which part failed? (PCI path, etc)(in clear lettering)(when the mic of your HP laptop dies)
    It's expensive for what one gets.
    • by ebyrob ( 165903 )

      > Because who even uses windoze anymore?

      I dunno, I tried to use a couple chrome books and the keyboards kept breaking after a week or so. Seems a software problem since it happens to various hardware models. Hitting the 'e' key and seeing "quazimodo" get typed on screen is pretty depressing when you're just trying to enter your password to log in.

      OSX was just too expensive and restrictive so I didn't try that option...

      For those who need a "real keyboard" what other commercial option is there? (ok, Lin

  • Imagine if every story was assigned a special cryptographically secure Slashtoken. These tokens would track all stories in a blockchain for all to see. Editors can then look through this blockchain and NOT POST DUPES.

  • all the parts in place, well done comrad
  • From Wikipedia:
    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    "The term cobra effect was coined by economist Horst Siebert based on an anecdote of an occurrence in India during British rule.[2][3][4] The British government, concerned about the number of venomous cobras in Delhi, offered a bounty for every dead cobra. Initially, this was a successful strategy; large numbers of snakes were killed for the reward. Eventually, however, enterprising people began to breed cobras for the income. When the government became a
  • Fails everywhere (Score:4, Interesting)

    by sjames ( 1099 ) on Wednesday August 18, 2021 @04:49AM (#61704001) Homepage Journal

    The system is packed with fail. So many that I will only hit the hilights here.

    First, "leaking" a licensed work is not a crime. That is, you have done nothing wrong if someone steals your phone from your desk and torrents all your media files. Yet in this system, if someone gets a copy from the torrent (pirates the content) and reports it, YOU get marked as accused and the system has no idea who stole your phone.

    Next up, the system is set up as guilty until proven innocent. You get accused of "leaking" (notacrime). You get to appeal the accusation. If you fail you get tagged as guilty. In a sane system, the accuser must prove your guilt or you are presumed innocent. Further, it offers no clue what happens if you decide to ignore the kangaroo court and neither appeal nor admit guilt. Does MS expect to be backed as a law enforcement agency or a court?

    I don't actually care if the watermark can be broken. I hope it can be so this system fails at it's goal of setting neighbor against neighbor like the STASI. It would, however, be a problem if the watermark can be read and applied to another copy.

    By rewarding turning in copies of licensed works, the system actually ENCOURAGES criminal activity. Imagine if you can get a cash reward for successfully copying media from someone's phone without their knowledge. So now, even if you hate the song in question, you still want a copy so you can turn it in for cash. In other words, the system should be outlawed for the same reason that fencing stolen goods is a crime.

  • I have read about in along time. Still wish we had a micropayment system and better identity services online. If the trolls had to spend crypto cause they were downvoted so be it.
  • not sure why outing a pirate would stop that. besides whatchu gone do after identifying them? hang them in yardarms and let their corpses rot as a warning for others?
  • In Europe, there are strong basic laws that the accuser must be examined. No hearsay. If money has changed hands, labor contracts, secrecy agreements and labor hire firms. In addition to not reporting the matter first, internally. Microsoft has paid admin snitches in the past, and some send out pretend auditors to steal registries, and use these to sandbag more money out of the client. Fortunately, these amateur auditors believed the specially poisoned registry to solely conclude a license discrepancy, dema
  • I killed that Sansha's Butcher, so where's my 13,000 ISK?

  • I've always had an instinct tell me that eventually older computers would likely be considered contraband. However, I had a hard time justifying this thought because I didn't see exactly what would degrade the modern PC into a less desirable proposition. Now, it's becoming clear, the newer PCs will come full of snitch-ready features that will benefit the corporate feudalists and finger the little guy. Political types sure love a good snitch program. Just ask the East Germans about the Stasi. Can you imagine

"The whole problem with the world is that fools and fanatics are always so certain of themselves, but wiser people so full of doubts." -- Bertrand Russell

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