Hackulous, the picaresque pirates best known for plundering Apple's DRM and capturing unprotected software for iPhone, iPod and iPad, yesterday unleashed an onslaught of updates, including cracking software for the much-anticipated Mac App Store and a "reverse BitTorrent" for jailbroken devices that aims to increase availability of cracked apps across the Web.. According to TorrentFreak, a community of hackers striving to circumnavigate DRM on Apple mobile devices, Hackulous is most notorious for two products: "Apptrakr," a Web-based index of cracked apps that boasts some 10 million unique users monthly; and "Installous," software that enables installation of software found via Apptrakr, which runs on about 9 million jailbroken Apple devices. Here's what's new on the high seas. Hackulous admin Dissident announced dueling upgrades to "Clutch," which allows cracking of iOS, and its GUI, "Crackulous." There's also a piece of code called "Overdrive" that grogs up apps to keep them from becoming self-aware. The biggest news, however, is the new "Installous 4" package bundled in flagship Apptrakr. The link for this article located at PC Magazine is no longer available. . According to TorrentFreak, a community of hackers striving to circumnavigate DRM on Apple mobile dev. hackulous, picaresque, pirates, known, plundering, apple's, capturing, unprotected. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
The FBI took a Russian encryption expert into custody Monday at his hotel in Las Vegas for publishing software that cracks a variety of methods used to secure e-books and thus, according to the bureau, violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. . . . . The FBI took a Russian encryption expert into custody Monday at his hotel in Las Vegas for publishing software that cracks a variety of methods used to secure e-books and thus, according to the bureau, violates the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. The FBI acknowledged the arrest Tuesday. The arrest came a day after the security researcher, Dmitry Sklyarov, outlined the problems plaguing e-book formats and Adobe's PDF format at the Def Con hacking conference. According to the FBI, the warrant for Sklyarov's arrest was issued in the Northern District of California. "He is being held pending extradition back to San Francisco," said Daron W. Borst, a spokesman for the FBI's Las Vegas office. If convicted, Sklyarov would face a maximum penalty of a $500,000 fine and 5 years in prison. The link for this article located at ZDNet is no longer available. . The FBI took a Russian encryption expert into custody Monday at his hotel in Las Vegas for publishin. russian, encryption, expert, custody, monday, hotel, vegas, publishin. . LinuxSecurity.com Team
Music bootleggers and software crackers tired of wading through the entire United States Code to see if they're about to break the law, or incur daunting criminal liabilities in excess of the potential value of their planned activities, may now consult . . . . Music bootleggers and software crackers tired of wading through the entire United States Code to see if they're about to break the law, or incur daunting criminal liabilities in excess of the potential value of their planned activities, may now consult a handy reference guide on line. The US Department of Justice (DoJ) has published a manual for prosecuting intellectual property violation and copyright infringement, including the maximum penalties for each sort of infraction and related sentencing guidelines. The link for this article located at TheRegister is no longer available. . Pirate content creators and app hacktivists are hoping for guidance regarding intellectual property regulations and associated risks amid the DOJ's recent policy changes.. Copyright Infringement, Legal Guidelines, Intellectual Property, Software Licensing. . Anthony Pell
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