« Happy Bluetoothing with the Sony Ericsson T610 | Main | Pew Study: Consumption of Information Goods and Services in the United States »

November 26, 2003

iTunes Hacked

itunes.jpg

Apple's digital rights management (DRM) system on the iTunes Music Store has been challenged by Jon Johansen, well-known as the author of the DeCSS program for bypassing DVD copy protection.

The new program, QTFairUse, does not actually crack the DRM. Instead, it intercepts the music file while it is in the process of being streamed and before the DRM is applied.

While this implies that - similar to DeCSS - the program works only on content legitimately purchased from iTunes, a number of observers suggest that the program can be mis-used because it allows users to compile their own database of unprotected - and potentially distributable - content.

In its current release, QTFairUse does require some programming knowledge to implement, but more user-friendly versions are likely to appear in time. The current version is available only for Windows-based PCs.

Posted by Sam in Computing and Internet and Music & Audio and Popular Media

Comments

Post a comment



(required; will not be shown publicly)


(optional; will be shown publicly)
Remember Me?

(you may use HTML tags for style)