The recording industry is experimenting with new technology it hopes can smother online song swapping by targeting music traders' computers directly. The record, movie and software industries have long pursued a controversial campaign that identifies people trading large numbers of songs . . . . The recording industry is experimenting with new technology it hopes can smother online song swapping by targeting music traders' computers directly. The record, movie and software industries have long pursued a controversial campaign that identifies people trading large numbers of songs though services such as MusicCity, OpenNap or Gnutella. Once the people are identified, the groups attempt to persuade Internet service providers (ISPs) to shut down those individuals' Internet connections. But copyright holders, including record labels, are now experimenting with new ways to cut down on copyright infringement. As described by sources at the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA), one method uses software to masquerade as a file-swapper online. Once the software has found a computer offering a certain song, it attempts to block other potential traders from downloading the song. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The recording industry seeks innovative tech solutions to combat online song swapping and copyright infringement.. music trading technology,copyright infringement,file-swapper,online copyright enforcement. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
A team of academics asked a federal court Wednesday for permission to publicly reveal how they cracked an anti-piracy technology backed by the music industry. Princeton University researchers headed by professor Edward Felten filed the challenge in order to present their . . . . A team of academics asked a federal court Wednesday for permission to publicly reveal how they cracked an anti-piracy technology backed by the music industry. Princeton University researchers headed by professor Edward Felten filed the challenge in order to present their findings at a computer security conference in August. Felten had originally planned to present a paper disclosing how his team defeated a digital-music antipiracy measure at another conference in April, but bowed out after the recording industry threatened a lawsuit. The link for this article located at Reuters is no longer available. . Legal proceedings uncover efforts by researchers to share results regarding breakthroughs in bypassing digital rights management in music.. Anti-Piracy Technology, Digital Security, Academic Research, Legal Challenges. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Country music record company Fahrenheit Entertainment said it will begin selling copy-protected CDs by early next year using encryption technology from SunnComm, a little-known company based in Phoenix. If successfully employed, SunnComm's technology could become the first to hamper the copying . . . . Country music record company Fahrenheit Entertainment said it will begin selling copy-protected CDs by early next year using encryption technology from SunnComm, a little-known company based in Phoenix. If successfully employed, SunnComm's technology could become the first to hamper the copying of CDs onto the Internet--a practice described as one of the music industry's greatest obstacles in its war against piracy. Nearly all of the music shared on the Internet through programs such as Napster comes from CDs, which can easily be copied, or "ripped," as MP3 files. SunnComm said that the technology will also prevent people from copying, or "burning," albums onto other CDs but would not block them from recording songs onto cassette tapes. The link for this article located at News.com is no longer available. . Fahrenheit Entertainment is preparing to debut encrypted CDs utilizing SunnComm's technology, aiming to combat the issue of music piracy.. Copy Protection, Encryption Technology, Music Piracy Prevention. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This is a good discussion of the issues surrounding the different perspectives of SDMI. "Music-sharing Net-freaks and digital rights management mongers have begun an epic battle to choose the replacement for the much-maligned 20th century record company system. Both sides offer . . . . This is a good discussion of the issues surrounding the different perspectives of SDMI. "Music-sharing Net-freaks and digital rights management mongers have begun an epic battle to choose the replacement for the much-maligned 20th century record company system. Both sides offer musicians a direct, two-way conversation with fans. Both sides claim they can give more musicians a decent living, and make a wider variety of music available, than the current music industry does. Both sides are probably right. So, it's up to the independent musicians now. They can choose to work with the Secure Digital Music Initiative (SDMI), which purports to restrict copying music to guarantee payment from listeners, or they can choose to release SDMI-free music -- and trust the fans to be good and support them somehow. " The link for this article located at LinuxJournal is no longer available. . This is a good discussion of the issues surrounding the different perspectives of SDMI. 'Music-shari. discussion, surrounding, different, perspectives, 'music-shari. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
This is no idle threat being launched by the Secure Digital Music Initiative, the industry consortium set up 18 months ago to figure out what the heck to do about the digital music mania, then just brewing online. (Napster hadn't even . . . . This is no idle threat being launched by the Secure Digital Music Initiative, the industry consortium set up 18 months ago to figure out what the heck to do about the digital music mania, then just brewing online. (Napster hadn't even crossed founder Shawn Fanning's mind at that point, much less become the powerhouse it now is.) Starting Friday, the consortium wants you to visit HackSDMI.org to see if you can hack SDMI. The challenge is open until Oct. 7. "By successfully breaking the SDMI protected content, you will play a role in determining what technology SDMI will adopt," says the release trumpeting the contest. The link for this article located at MSNBC is no longer available. . Explore the Secure Digital Music Initiative's call for hackers to infiltrate SDMI and influence technological decisions in the music sector.. Digital Rights Management, SDMI Challenge, Music Industry Security. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Get the latest Linux and open source security news straight to your inbox.