YKhan said:
X-bit labs - Hardware news - Copyright Protection Technology on Blu-Ray
and HD DVD Reportedly Cracked.
http://www.xbitlabs.com/news/multimedia/display/20061228225123.html
I have been following the blogs, and some forums, such as avsforum, and
Ars this seems to be what people expected. I would agree that crack is
kind of the wrong word, a better word would be exposed. I also think
it's interesting that most people kind of ho hum at oh a patch is in
the works. Well OK, but what about the method, it almost seems that
they need to use a better method then storing keys in memory during
playback. I also think that if they patch or revoke the keys, and don't
change the method of using those keys then this could be an on going
problem.
I also agree that this is at most first step, you get rid of the disk,
but you still need the keys for playback. I do think this is a win for
fair use, I bet a lot of people will pay attention to this method, but
I would not want to be in Cyberlink shoes, as I bet a firestorm is
about to be unleashed. I can almost feel the weight of MS, and the MPAA
on them. I also bet that once the keys are analyised someone will
develop a keygen and your off to the bank. Yes I know the keys are
encrypted but I am sure some smart computer science guy will recognize
some pattern and suggest a compatible algorithm. Heck whats to stop
someone from plugging the new keys into the program to sniff the new
keys. Every time the keys are updated just sniff the new keys and
repeat, you might not even need the keygen.
Rthoreau