World of Warcraft hackers using Sony BMG rootkit
Robert Lemos 2005-11-03
http://www.securityfocus.com/brief/34

Want to cheat in your online game and not get caught? Just buy a Sony BMG
copy protected CD.

World of Warcraft hackers have confirmed that the hiding capabilities of
Sony BMG's content protection software can make tools made for cheating in
the online world impossible to detect. The software--deemed a "rootkit" by
many security experts--is shipped with tens of thousands of the record
company's music titles.

Blizzard Entertainment, the maker of World of Warcraft, has created a
controversial program that detects cheaters by scanning the processes that
are running at the time the game is played. Called the Warden, the
anti-cheating program cannot detect any files that are hidden with Sony
BMG's content protection, which only requires that the hacker add the prefix
"$sys$" to file names.

Despite making a patch available on Wednesday to consumers to amend its copy
protection software's behavior, Sony BMG and First 4 Internet, the maker of
the content protection technology, have both disputed claims that their
system could harm the security of a Windows system. Yet, other software
makers that rely on the integrity of the operating system are finding that
hidden code makes security impossible



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