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French Hadopi “3 Strikes” Anti-Piracy Company Hacked Posted: 14 May 2011 09:16 AM PDT Under France’s so-called Hadopi law, alleged copyright infringers will be reported to a judge once they have received three official warnings for illicit file-sharing. Those judges are empowered to hand down any one of a range of penalties, from fines through to disconnecting the infringer from the Internet. However, to get caught sharing copyright material, Internet users have to be monitored on file-sharing networks by the rights holders. The entertainment companies entrusted that spying job to Trident Media Guard (TMG) but during the last few hours, much to the amusement of opponents of France’s approach to enforcement, TMG has been hacked. Actually, hacked is probably too strong a word, since it appears TMG left the front door open. “A virtual machine leaked a lot of information like scripts, p2p clients to generate fake peers, local physical addresses in the datacenter and even a password that could lead to a major global TMG security breach,” French security researcher Olivier Laurelli, aka Bluetouff, just informed TorrentFreak. TorrentFreak obtained copies of the files leaked from the TMG server (image above, cropped) and we’re in the process of trying work out exactly what they do which may take some time. One of the files is an executable called ‘server_interface’ while there are also batch files which appear to start two file-sharing clients, eMule and Shareaza. These are likely to be special versions, probably modified for conducting both monitoring and spoofing on eD2K and BitTorrent networks respectively. The screenshot below (of code labelled ‘Poster’ in action) also appears to be connected to the publishing of fakes on file-sharing networks. Another file – cmd_auto_update_cmd_file.txt – is the one carrying the worrying password referred to by Bluetouff earlier. TMG’s security appears to be so low that Bluetouff suggests that either Christmas has come early for people wanting a poke around around an anti-piracy system or it’s some kind of weird honeypot. TorrentFreak was also supplied with a list of IP addresses which pulled up some interesting web interfaces but we won’t publish those nor the leaked files for now. “It’s a huge fail that could impact the graduated response (repression), during the next days,” Bluetouff concludes. Source: French Hadopi “3 Strikes” Anti-Piracy Company Hacked |
Ex-SAS Soldier Avoids Conflict in Book Piracy Battle Posted: 14 May 2011 06:36 AM PDT 'Andy McNab' is the pseudonym used by a former SAS soldier and now novelist, best known for his 1993 book Bravo Two Zero. McNab has been decorated for his work in the military, receiving the Distinguished Conduct Medal in 1991. But now, in addition to his writing projects he also runs MobCast, a platform designed to get digital content (including eBooks) onto mobile phones and devices. Considering the reputation of the SAS for using force and the years of training they undergo to make that response come naturally, it was refreshing this morning to hear McNab suggesting a rather different approach to problem solving, specifically the issue of piracy. In an open letter, McNab details how piracy often stems from copies of books sent out to reviewers which are scanned and subsequently posted on file-sharing sites. He also notes, however, that these copies are often of poor quality and in the inconvenient PDF format, something which diminishes reader experience and enjoyment. Despite these shortcomings, book publishers still spend a lot of effort trying to get these books taken down with DMCA notices and the like, but McNab says he prefers a different approach. “Taking down illegal books from file sharing sites is only a short term fix and both a time-consuming and expensive business as we have already seen from the music industry. Maybe it is better for us to invest these resources in other ways, to stop consumers from migrating to pirate sites that are always going to exist anyway,” he writes. Some book publishers feel that by not providing a digital version of their products, somehow they’re going to stop online piracy. McNab notes, correctly, that’s not the case and that publishers have the opportunity to do what pirates do, but better. “Holding back on releasing a digital version of a book won’t stop it from being pirated. With so many of the illegal copies out there originating from printed proof copies that are then put up on sites, if consumers are going to read a digital copy, it’s better that they purchase them legitimately,” he notes. But its not just the product itself, but the discovering and accessibility experience that McNab feels can be a leverage point for legitimate outlets to persuade, not force, would-be pirates into obtaining the real deal. Restrictive DRM and security, he suggests, are counter-productive. “If you surround a digital book with too many security obstacles which makes it difficult to find, purchase and read, it will only force consumers to look elsewhere to get their book,” says McNab. “It is also important to realise that digital books have a quality of content that can not be pirated. These include: immediacy, personalisation, accessibility, discoverability and authenticity. As an industry, we need to understand and use these distinct properties in the fight against piracy,” he says. “In order to be successful, legal ebooks need to bring more value to the consumer than pirated ones and we can already see great progress in making this happen.” All this from McNab without a single mention of a lawsuit, getting the law changed, arresting site owners, hijacking domains, disconnecting file-sharers and other similar negative-energy approaches to dealing with this complex issue. In his previous role McNab was undoubtedly well-versed in sabotage techniques and asymmetric warfare scenarios. His training has served him well. Source: Ex-SAS Soldier Avoids Conflict in Book Piracy Battle |
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