Monthly Archive for November, 2005

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Sony in the virus manufacturing business

The first trojan to exploit Sony’s wonderful DRM scheme has been spotted in the wild. Some enterprising virus writer sent spam overnight with a modified trojan that takes advantage of Sony’s DRM security holes.

Apparently the trojan was coded in too much of a hurry because it’s not working as intended. Nothing’s preventing someone from doing a better job at it though.

More information about the trojan by Sophos

-TPP

We are not in Kansas anymore

The Kansas Board of Education approved new public-school science standards Tuesday that cast doubt on the theory of evolution.

And Kansas just moved 2000 years back to neverneverland.

-TPP

Rootkits are a-ok by Sony

NPR recently interviewed Thomas Hesse, president of Sony BMG’s Global Digital Business division, regarding the DRM scheme Sony BMG is using on some of their music CDs.

Mr. Hesse had this to say about their rootkits:

“Most people I think don’t even know what a root kit is so why should they care about it”

That comment shows a complete lack of understanding regarding computer security issues. It’s not “most people” you have to worry about, it’s the bad actors, who are the ones who WOULD know about exploiting the security hole created by Sony. “Most people”, precisely because they don’t know what a rootkit is, would never know how to protect themselves against exploits helped by Sony’s cluelessness.

Here’s further evidence of Sony’s cluelessness. Mark Curtis’ daughter bought a Sony BMG music cd from Walmart. The CD does not play on any music player, including stereo equipment, the family owns. The DRM software is causing the family computer to BSOD immediately after bootup. Walmart is refusing a refund. Sony is saying to install a patch to get rid of the DRM program. How would one do that, if the computer doesn’t boot up any more?

-TPP

MPAA stormtroopers invade movie theaters, in Canada

Movie reviewers watching a prescreening of Derailed in Toronto are subjected to detention center type of security procedures before entering the movie theatre. Security guards also record the audience for duration of the screening. Can’t wait to go see movies! Maybe they’ll give me a strip search next time.

-TPP

My new patent

My next patent is to patent a plotline where an outraged private individual goes postal on the USPTO, blows up the main office, stages a mass protest in front of the ruins and then gets killed in an epic shootout with the FBI.

I’m just afraid it’s going to fail the non-obviousness test.

-TPP

Introducing SuprGlu

Check out the rather excellent new service put out by Iridesco, Inc.

In their own words:

SuprGlu is about bringing the pieces of your web content together into one central place for you, your friends, and maybe even your friends to-be.

This is a great idea and I’m glad one of my friends was bright enough to think of it and make it happen. Way to go Danny!

-TPP – I’m at tpp.suprglu.com

The CIA is using old Soviet prison camps to detain terrorist suspects

In Soviet USA terrorists are kept in secret prisons outside of US borders to mitigate legal liability.

Washington Post reports that the CIA has set up a covert prison network in 8 foreign countries, including several Eastern European countries, to house top Al Qaeda leaders captured around the world.

It is illegal to do this within the US, which is why the prisons are run abroad. Some of the prisoners have been illegally captured on foreign soil, then transferred into these secret prisons.

Sounds exactly like what communist regimes did back in the day.

-TPP