http://news.com.com/Sony+CD+protection+sparks+security+concerns/2100-7355_3-5926657.html

Sony CD protection sparks security concerns
By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com

Published: November 1, 2005, 2:15 PM PST
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Mark Russinovich was doing a routine test this week of computer
security software he'd co-written, when he made a surprising
discovery: Something new was hiding itself deep inside his PC's guts.

It took some time for Russinovich, an experienced programmer who has
written a book on the Windows operating system for Microsoft, to track
down exactly what was happening, but he ultimately traced it to code
left behind by a recent CD he'd bought and played on his computer.

The SonyBMG-produced Van Zant album had been advertised as
copy-protected when he'd bought it on Amazon.com, and he'd clicked
through an installation agreement when he put the disc in his
computer. What he later found is that the software had used a
sophisticated cloaking technique that involves a "rootkit"--something
not dangerous in itself, but a tool often used by virus writers to
hide all traces of their work on a computer.

News.context

What's new:
Copy-protection software on CDs produced by SonyBMG is cloaked by a
technique that involves a "rootkit," which is designed to hide and
protect the software on the user's computer.
Bottom line:
Rootkit tools often are used by virus writers to hide malicious
software, and security experts say rootkit mechanisms used by
recording companies could be misused by others. That threat is only
theoretical so far, but the debate continues between consumers and
record companies about what copy-protection technologies are necessary
and appropriate.

More stories on this topic
"We're still trying to find a line between fair use and digital rights
management, and it is going to take issues like this, with discussions
between lawmakers and industry, to come up with what's fair and
honest," Russinovich said. "But I think this has gone too far."

Russinovich posted a detailed step-by-step account of his findings on
his blog, drawing immediate criticism of SonyBMG's technology from
some inside the security software community. The passionate response
underlines the power copy protection retains to inflame emotions and
spark bitter debate, despite the growing string of chart-topping
albums that have been released over the past year with the protections
included.

A handful of security companies weighed in on the issue, saying the
rootkit could present a possible--if still theoretical--risk to
computers.

The creator of the copy-protection software, a British company called
First 4 Internet, said the cloaking mechanism was not a risk, and that
its team worked closely with big antivirus companies such as Symantec
to ensure that was the case. The cloaking function was aimed at making
it difficult, though not impossible, to hack the content protection in
ways that have been simple in similar products, the company said.

In any case, First 4 has moved away from the techniques used on the
Van Zant album to new ways of cloaking files on a hard drive, said
Mathew Gilliat-Smith, the company's CEO.

"I think this is slightly old news," Gilliat-Smith said. "For the
eight months that these CDs have been out, we haven't had any comments
about malware (malicious software) at all."

A SonyBMG representative said the software could be easily
uninstalled, by contacting the company's customer support service for
instructions. Those instructions are not specifically available on the
Web site that answers questions about the company's copy protection
tools.

Rootkit realities
Rootkit software has been around for over a decade but has recently
come to increased prominence as more writers of viruses and the like
adopt it for their purposes. Essentially, rootkits are tools for
digging deep into a computer's operating system to hide the fact that
certain software files exist or that the computer is performing
certain functions.

Unlike other, less-powerful means of hiding files on a hard drive,
rootkits are created to be extraordinarily difficult to uninstall
without specific instructions, rooting themselves in an operating
systems' deepest recesses in order to prevent their deletion.

In the case of the SonyBMG software, trying to remove it manually
could shut off access to the computer's CD player, researchers said.

Security researchers note that simply hiding something doesn't make it
a threat, and the SonyBMG software is designed to hide the digital
rights management tools that prevent unauthorized copies of the CD
from being made.

However, it does remain active in the background of a computer, taking
up a small amount of memory, even when the CD is not being played.
Thus the rootkit software does have the potential to be misused by
others, according to some researchers. The First 4 Internet software's
technique for hiding files is broad enough that it could be adopted by
virus writers, allowing them to hide their own tools on computers that
have run the software from the CD, say some security experts.

That's an "academic" concern, but a real one, said F-Secure Chief
Research Officer Mikko Hypponen, who wrote a warning on the issue
Tuesday.

"Obviously there are a lot of people who don't like the technology,
and we will take note if we need to."
--Mathew Giliat-Smith, CEO, First 4 Internet"Right now if you have
this on your system, there is no real-world risk just because of
this," Hypponen said. "But it would not be too far-fetched that some
virus writer would try to take advantage of this."

Giliat-Smith said his company is working with major antivirus software
companies to help their software recognize the copy-protection tools
and help guard against misuse.

A balancing act
The criticism over the protection technology highlights the careful
balance record labels are trying to strike as they seek ways to guard
their discs against copying.

Label executives have increasingly shifted their public piracy
concerns from Internet file-swapping to the effect of widespread CD
burning. The Recording Industry Association of America cites recent
research from marketing specialist NPD Group showing that 29 percent
of consumers' new music is acquired through ripping or burning a copy
of a CD.

The CD copy protection tools now on the market do let consumers make
copies of the music, both in the form of digital files on their
computer and a limited number of backup CDs. Labels say they support
both these activities, as long as they're for personal use.

The files that can be ripped to computers from these discs cannot be
played on iPod MP3 players, however. The labels say they have not yet
been able to persuade Apple Computer to include this capability.

Several earlier versions of copy protection were widely mocked online
for being trivially easy to circumvent, by using techniques that
included holding the computer's "shift" key down while starting, and
coloring the rim of a CD with a magic marker.

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