[Infowarrior] - OpEd: Sony's mind trick

Richard Forno rforno at infowarrior.org
Thu Feb 1 09:14:38 EST 2007


Sony's mind trick
http://www.globalpov.com/archives/2007/02/post_41.html

Sony reached an agreement with the FTC over their infamous "rootkit"
incident last year. Sony had installed a intrusive (and badly written)
rootkit on some of their audio CDs, in such a way that when the consumer had
bought the music and played it on their PC, the rootkit was surreptitiously
installed on their hard drive. Once there, it would do things like stop the
music from being copied onto MP3 players, monitor how the tunes were used
and occasionally phone home to Sony and tell them what else the poor sap had
on their computer. (A rootkit is a program that installs itself on your
computer and then twiddles the operating system to hide it's presence--sort
of like Obi Wan Kenobi using the Jedi mind trick on Imperial Stormtroopers
"These aren't the droids you're looking for.")

The settlement worked out to $150 per user to repair damage to their
computer. I haven't seen the details yet, but I imagine that the submitting
user will have to show that there was in fact, repairable damage to their
machine plus proof of purchase of the CD. In other words, although there
were millions of CDs sold with the damaging software installed, it's
unlikely that Sony will pay off on many of them. In fact, as per usual with
this kind of settlement, the biggest beneficiaries will undoubtedly be the
lawyers on both sides who probably high-fived each other in the hallways,
congratulating each other on collecting another round of high-priced fees.

So, and this is a serious question--why isn't what Sony did an act of
terrorism? Wilful attacks on private property, spying on American citizens
and potential disruption of computer networks sound like something that the
Taliban might have tried.

Why aren't Sony executives being brought up on criminal charges? The
recording motion picture industries have been getting away with a lot in
this country in the last few decades. This is one of the most outrageous
acts, but it's not an isolated incident. If Congress would get the
entertainment industries tongues and wallets out of their pants, perhaps
they would protect us from these predatory actions on the part of companies
like Sony.

I believe that there are worse things going on out there in cyberspace
created and released by the Mad Doctors of Hollywood. Viruses and spambots,
zombie nets and trojan horse files floating around the Internet plaguing our
personal computers may in some part, someday, be traced back to these clowns
at companies like Sony.




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