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Copy protection, also known as copy prevention or copy restriction, is a kind of hardware or storage media oriented method for technologically preventing unauthorized reproduction of copyrighted software, movies, music, and other media1. For other uses, see Hardware (disambiguation). ...
The terms storage (U.K.) or memory (U.S.) refer to the parts of a digital computer that retain physical state (data) for some interval of time, possibly even after electrical power to the computer is turned off. ...
Not to be confused with copywriting. ...
Note on terminology
Media corporations have always used the term copy protection, but critics like Richard Stallman argue that the term tends to bias the public into identifying with the publishers that favor restriction technologies, rather than with the users. [1] Copy prevention and Copy control are purported to be more neutral terms. "Copy protection" is a misnomer for some systems, because any number of copies can be made from an original and all of these copies will work, but only in one computer, or only with one dongle, or only with another device that cannot be easily copied. Richard Matthew Stallman (born March 16, 1953), often abbreviated rms,[1] is an American software freedom activist, hacker,[2] and software developer. ...
Chained parallel port copy prevention dongles. ...
The term is also often related to and/or confused with the concept of digital rights management. Digital rights management is a more general term because it includes all sorts of management of works, including copy restrictions. Copy protection may include measures that are not digital. A more likely description to this is "technical protection measures" (TPM), which is often defined as the use of technological tools in order to restrict the use and/or access to a work. Digital rights management (DRM) is an umbrella term that refers to access control technologies used by publishers and copyright holders to limit usage of digital media or devices. ...
Business rationale In the absence of copy protection, media are easy to copy in their entirety using a machine (as opposed to photocopying each page of a book). This results in a situation where consumers can easily make copies of the items to give to their friends, a practice known as "casual copying". This practice reduces the number of people in the market who lack the product. Copy protection is most commonly found on videotapes, DVDs, computer software discs, video game discs and cartridges, and more recently, some audio CDs. A small, much-used Xerox copier in a high school library. ...
Bottom view of VHS videotape cassette with magnetic tape exposed Videotape is a means of recording images and sound onto magnetic tape as opposed to movie film. ...
DVD (also known as Digital Versatile Disc or Digital Video Disc) is a popular optical disc storage media format. ...
Software redirects here. ...
Namcos Pac-Man is one of the most popular video games ever made. ...
CD redirects here. ...
Companies that choose to publish works under copy protection do so because they believe that the added expense of implementing the copy protection will be offset by even greater increases in revenue by creating a greater scarcity of casually copied media. Opponents of copy protection argue that people who obtain free copies only use what they can get for free, and would not purchase their own copy if they were unable to obtain a free copy. Some even argue that it increases profit; people who receive a free copy of a music CD may then go and buy more of that band's music, which they would not have done otherwise. Some publishers have avoided copy-protecting their products, on the theory that the resulting inconvenience to their users outweighs any benefit of frustrating "casual copying". No formal studies have been conducted which demonstrate the truth or falsehood of this belief. The term copy protection refers to the technology used to attempt to frustrate copying, and not to the legal remedies available to publishers or authors whose copyrights are violated. Software usage models evolve beyond node locking to floating licenses (where up to N licenses can be concurrently used across an enterprise), grid computing (where multiple computers function as one unit and so use a common license) and electronic licensing (where features can be purchased and activated online. The term license management refers to broad platforms which enable the specification, enforcement and tracking of software licenses. To safeguard copy protection and license management technologies themselves against tampering and hacking, software anti-tamper methods are used. A software license is a legal agreement which may take the form of a proprietary or gratuitous license as well as a memorandum of contract between a producer and a user of computer software. ...
Technical challenges From a technical standpoint, it would seem theoretically impossible to completely prevent users from making copies of the media they purchase, as long as a "writer" is available that can write to blank media. The basic technical fact is that all types of media require a "player"—a CD player, DVD player, videotape player, computer, or video game console. The player has to be able to read the media in order to display it to a human. In turn, then, logically, a player could be built that first reads the media, and then writes out an exact copy of what was read, to the same type of media, or perhaps to some other format, such as a file on a hard disk. Game console redirects here. ...
Typical hard drives of the mid-1990s. ...
At a minimum, digital copy protection of non-interactive works is subject to the analog hole: regardless of any digital restrictions, if music can be heard by the human ear, it can also be recorded (at the very least, with a microphone and tape recorder); if a movie can be viewed by the human eye, it can also be recorded (at the very least, with a video camera and recorder). In practice, almost-perfect copies can typically be made by tapping into the analog output of a player (e.g. the speaker output or headphone jacks) and, once redigitized into an unprotected form, duplicated indefinitely. Copying text-based content in this way is more tedious, but the same principle applies: if it can be printed or displayed, it can also be scanned and OCRed. With basic software and some patience, these techniques can be applied by a typical computer-literate user. The analog hole is a fundamental, and inevitable vulnerability in copy prevention schemes for noninteractive digital content which is intended to be played back using analog means. ...
For other uses, see Music (disambiguation). ...
This article is about motion pictures. ...
For the Marty Friedman album, see Loudspeaker (album) An inexpensive low fidelity 3. ...
In-ear headphones Headphones (also known as earphones, stereophones, headsets, or the slang term cans) is a transducer that receives an electrical signal from a media player or receiver and uses speakers placed in close proximity to the ears (hence the name earphone) to convert the signal into audible sound...
Usually used in reference to a computer application, especially a computer game, a text-based application is one whose primary input and output are based on text rather than graphics. ...
Optical character recognition, usually abbreviated to OCR, is a type of computer software designed to translate images of handwritten or typewritten text (usually captured by a scanner) into machine-editable text, or to translate pictures of characters into a standard encoding scheme representing them (e. ...
Since these basic technical facts exist, it follows that a determined individual will definitely succeed in copying any media, given enough time and resources. Media publishers understand this; copy protection is not intended to stop professional operations involved in the unauthorized mass duplication of media, but rather to stop "casual copying". Copying of information goods which are downloaded (rather than being mass-duplicated as with physical media) can be inexpensively customized for each download, and thus restricted more effectively. They can be encrypted in a fashion which is unique for each user's computer, and the decryption system can be made tamper-resistant (see also traitor tracing). In the field of computer security, system hardware is said to be tamper-resistant if it is difficult to modify or subvert, even for an assailant who has physical access to the system. ...
Traitor tracing is a copy prevention strategy which has been around for years. ...
Copy protection for computer software Copy protection for early home computer software, especially for games, started a long cat-and-mouse struggle between publishers and crackers. These were (and are) programmers who as a hobby would defeat copy protection on software, add their alias to the title screen, and then distribute the cracked product to the network of warez BBSes or Internet sites that specialized in distributing unauthorized copies of software. Software cracking is the modification of software to remove protection methods: copy prevention, trial/demo version, serial number, hardware key, CD check or software annoyances like nag screens and adware. ...
For other uses, see Alias. ...
Warez refers primarily to copyrighted works traded in violation of copyright law. ...
BBS redirects here. ...
Software copy protection schemes for early computers such as the Apple II and Commodore 64 computers were extremely varied and creative because most of the floppy disk reading and writing was controlled by software, not by hardware. The first copy protection was for cassette tapes and consisted of a loader at the beginning of the tape, which read a specially formatted section which followed. The 1977 Apple II, complete with integrated keyboard, color graphics, sound, a plastic case and eight expansion slots. ...
C-64 redirects here. ...
The first protection of floppy disks consisted of changing the address marks, bit slip marks, data marks, or end of data marks for each sector. For example, Apple’s standard sector markings were: D5 AA 96 for the address mark. That was followed by track, sector, and checksum. DE AA EB concluded the address header with what are known as bit slip marks. D5 AA AD was used for the data mark and the end of data mark was another DE AA EB. Changing any of these marks required changing the software which read the floppy disk, but produced a disk that could not be copied. Some systems used complicated systems that changed the marks by track or even within a track. By 1980 the first nibble copier, Locksmith, was introduced. These copiers reproduced copy protected floppy disks an entire track at a time, ignoring how the sectors were marked. This was harder to do than it sounds, because Apple disks did not use the index hole to mark the start of a track. Tracks could start anywhere. Nevertheless, Locksmith copied Apple II disks by taking advantage of the sync fields between sectors, which consisted of a long string of FF (hex) bytes between each sector. It found the longest string of FFs, which occurred between the last and first sectors on each track, and began writing the track in the middle of that. For other uses, see Nibble (disambiguation). ...
Ironically, Locksmith would not copy itself. The first Locksmith measured the distance between sector 1 of each track. Copy protection engineers quickly figured out what Locksmith was doing and began to use the same technique to defeat it. Locksmith countered by introducing the ability to reproduce track alignment and prevented itself from being copied by embedding a special sequence of nibbles, that if found, would stop the copy process. A graduate student in computer science at the University of South Carolina reverse engineered Locksmith, found the sequence and distributed the information to some of the 7 or 8 people producing copy protection at the time. For some time, Locksmith continued to defeat virtually all of the copy protection systems in existence. The next advance came from the previously mentioned graduate student’s thesis on software copy protection, which devised a way of replacing Apple’s sync field of FFs, with random appearing patterns of bytes. Because the graduate student had frequent copy protection discussions with Apple’s copy protection engineer, Apple developed a copy protection system which made use of this technique. Of course a competitor of Locksmith, Back It UP, devised several methods for defeating that, and ultimately a method was devised for reading self sync fields directly, regardless of what nibbles they contained. The back and forth struggle between copy protection engineers and nibble copiers continued until the Apple II became obsolete and was replaced by the IBM PC and its clones. Floppy disks were replaced by CDs as the preferred method of distribution, and companies like Macrovision and Sony providing copy protection schemes that work by writing data to places on the CD-ROM where a CD-R drive cannot normally write. Such a scheme has been used for the Sony PlayStation and cannot be circumvented easily without the use of a modchip. Macrovision is a company that creates electronic copy prevention schemes, established in 1983. ...
Sony Corporation ) is a Japanese multinational corporation and one of the worlds largest media conglomerates with revenue of $66. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
The original PlayStation was produced in a light grey colour; the more recent PSOne redesign sports a smaller more rounded case. ...
Xenium Mod Chip attached to an Xbox. ...
For software publishers, a less expensive method of copy protection is to write the software so that it requires some evidence from the user that they have actually purchased the software, usually by asking a question that only a user with a software manual could answer (for example, "What is the 4th word on the 6th line of page 37?"). This approach can be defeated by users who have the patience to copy the manual with a photocopier, and it also suffers from the fact that once crackers circumvent the copy protection on a piece of software, the resulting cracked product is more convenient than the original software, creating a disincentive to buying an original. As a result, user-interactive copy protection of this kind has mostly disappeared. A small, much-used Xerox copier in a high school library. ...
Other software copy protection techniques include: - A dongle, a piece of hardware containing an electronic serial number that must be plugged into the computer to run the software. This adds extra cost for the software publisher, so dongles are uncommon for games and are found mostly in expensive high-end software packages. iLok (Copy Protection), Synchrosoft and Matrix Software License Protection System are popular dongle protection schemes utilizing a USB "Smart Key". For even stricter anti-piracy requirement, dongle product that supports code porting mechanism is a good choice for software developers.
- Bus encryption and encrypted code for use in Secure cryptoprocessors. This prevents copying and tampering of programs used in high security environments such as ATMs. This hardware solution is based on the fact that unlike music, video, and text that must eventually be revealed to users to be heard, viewed, or read, program instructions are needed only by the cryptoprocessor that decrypts and executes them.
- A registration key, a series of letters and numbers that is asked for when running the program. Many computer games use registration keys. The software will refuse to run if the registration key is not typed in correctly, and multiplayer games will refuse to run if another user is online who has used the same registration key.
- Name & Serial, a name and serial number that is given to the user at the time the software is purchased, and is required to install it.
- Keyfile, which requires the user to have a keyfile in the same directory as the program is installed to run it.
- A phone activation code, which requires the user to call a number and register the product to receive a computer-specific serial number.
- Internet product activation, which requires the user to connect to the Internet and type in a serial number so the software can "call home" and notify the manufacturer who has installed the software and where, and prevent other users from installing the software if they attempt to use the same serial number. Microsoft's Windows Genuine Advantage system is a far-reaching example of this.
- Protection by code morphing or code obfuscation. The Code Morphing is multilevel technology containing hundreds of unique code transformation patterns. In addition this technology includes the special layer that transforms some commands into Virtual Machine commands (like P-Code). Code Obfuscation turns binary code into an undecipherable mess that is not similar to normal compiled code, and completely hides execution logic of the protected code.
Copy protection methods usually tie the installed software to a specific machine by involving some unique feature of the machine. Some machines have a serial number in ROM, while others do not, and so some other metric, such as the date and time (to the second) of initialisation of the hard disk can be used. On machines with Ethernet cards, the MAC address, which is unique and factory-assigned, is a popular surrogate for a machine serial number; however, this address is programmable on modern cards. Chained parallel port copy prevention dongles. ...
A serial number is a unique number that is one of a series assigned for identification which varies from its successor or predecessor by a fixed discrete integer value. ...
This section has been identified as trivia. ...
TDi GmbH is a company that provides solutions for software license protection and internet login with headquarters offices in Dortmund, Germany as well as in Zug, Switzerland. ...
Code porting means to port computer program written in one programming language to another language. ...
Bus encryption is the use of encrypted program instructions on a data bus in a computer that includes a secure cryptoprocessor for executing the encrypted instructions. ...
A secure cryptoprocessor is a dedicated computer for carrying out cryptographic operations, embedded in a packaging with multiple physical security measures, which give it a degree of tamper resistance. ...
Cash machine redirects here. ...
Online gaming redirects here. ...
Keyfile protection scheme An efficient way to protect software from copy protection is to put a keyfile on a computer, that will periodically establish connection with the protected application and testing it for validity. ...
Product activation is a license validation procedure required by some proprietary computer software programs. ...
Microsoft Corporation, (NASDAQ: MSFT, HKSE: 4338) is a multinational computer technology corporation with global annual revenue of US$44. ...
Windows Genuine Advantage Notification in Windows XP Windows Genuine Advantage Notification in Windows Vista Windows Genuine Advantage (WGA) is an anti-piracy system enacted by Microsoft that enforces Microsoft Windows online validation of the authenticity of several recent Microsoft operating systems when accessing several Microsoft Windows services, such as Windows...
Code morphing is a one of the approaches to protect software applications from reverse engineering, analysis, modifications, and cracking used in obfuscating software. ...
Obfuscated code is source code that is (perhaps intentionally) very hard to read and understand. ...
In computer science, a virtual machine is software that creates a virtualized environment between the computer platform and its operating system, so that the end user can operate software on an abstract machine. ...
In computer programming, a P-code machine or pseudo-code machine is a specification of a cpu whose instructions are expected to be executed in software rather than in hardware (ie, interpreted). ...
A serial number is a unique number that is one of a series assigned for identification which varies from its successor or predecessor by a fixed discrete integer value. ...
Read-only memory (usually known by its acronym, ROM) is a class of storage media used in computers and other electronic devices. ...
Typical hard drives of the mid-1990s. ...
In computer networking a Media Access Control address (MAC address) or Ethernet Hardware Address (EHA) or hardware address or adapter address is a quasi-unique identifier attached to most network adapters (NICs). ...
These schemes have all been criticized for causing problems for validly licensed users who upgrade to a new machine, or have to reinstall the software after reinitialising their hard disk. Some Internet product activation products can allow replacement copies to be issued to registered users or multiple copies to the same licensee. Like all software, copy-protection software sometimes contains bugs, whose effect may be to deny access to validly licensed users. Most copy protection schemes are easy to crack, and the resulting cracked software is then more valuable than the uncracked version, because users can make additional copies. In his 1976 Open Letter to Hobbyists, Bill Gates complained that "most of you steal your software." However, Gates initially rejected copy protection and said "It just gets in the way." The Open Letter to Hobbyists was an open letter written on February 3, 1976 by Bill Gates, the founder of Microsoft. ...
There is also the tool of software blacklisting that is used to enhance certain copy protection schemes. Software blacklisting is a tool used by manufacturers of software and music on CD and DVD. Essentially the software on the disc will audit the users computer for certain types of virtual CD and CD authoring software, or for debugging software used by warez groups to create patches (known...
Case study: Steam The best known form of Internet activation is Valve's Steam system. Using Steam, players can either download games directly from Valve or register store bought copies; in either case that copy of the purchased game is inextricably linked to the player's account on Steam and cannot be transferred without either passing on Steam account details or, in the case of store bought games, getting a new CD key. Steam is a digital distribution, digital rights management, multiplayer and communications platform developed by Valve Corporation. ...
While the system has its advantages and has been extremely successful in reducing illegal copying of Valve's games, it is not without criticisms. When Valve's flagship game Half-Life 2 was released, millions of players attempted to register their copies of the game simultaneously. This led to an overload of Valve's servers and temporarily denied genuine customers access to their purchased game. It also becomes costly to resell a game since there is a transfer fee involved. Half-Life 2 (commonly abbreviated to HL2) is a science fiction first-person shooter computer game that is the sequel to Half-Life. ...
Copy protection specific to old games During the 1980s and 1990s, computer games sold on audio cassette and floppy disks were usually protected with a user-interactive method that demanded the user to have the original package or a part of it, usually the manual. Copy protection was activated not at installation but every time the game was executed. The 1980s refers to the years from 1980 to 1989. ...
For the band, see 1990s (band). ...
For the meaning of cassette in genetics, see cassette (genetics). ...
A floppy disk is a data storage device that is composed of a disk of thin, flexible (floppy) magnetic storage medium encased in a square or rectangular plastic shell. ...
Sometimes the copy protection code was needed not at launch, but at a later point in the game. This helped the gamer to experience the game (e.g. as a demonstration) and perhaps could convince him to buy it by the time the copy protection point was reached. Several imaginative and creative methods have been employed, in order to be both fun and hard to copy. These include: - The most common method ("What is the 13th word on the 7th line of page 22?") was often used at the beginning of each game session, but as it proved to be troublesome and tiring for the players, it declined in popularity.
- Manuals containing information and hints vital to the completion of the game, like answers to riddles (Conquests of Camelot, King's Quest 6), recipes of spells (King's Quest 3), keys to deciphering non-Latin writing systems (Ultima series, see also Ultima writing systems), maze guides (Manhunter), dialogue spoken by other characters in the game (Wasteland, Dragon Wars), excerpts of the storyline (most Advanced Dungeons and Dragons games), or a radio frequency to use to communicate with a character to further a game (Metal Gear Solid).
- Some sort of code with symbols, not existing on the keyboard or the ASCII code. This code was arranged in a grid, and had to be entered via a virtual keyboard at the request "What is the code at line 3 row 2?". These tables were printed on dark paper (Maniac Mansion), or were visible only through a red transparent layer (Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade), making the paper very difficult to photocopy. Another variant of this method - most famously used on the ZX Spectrum version of Jet Set Willy - was a card with color sequences at each grid reference that had to be entered before starting the game. This also prevented photocopying.
- The Secret of Monkey Island offered one of the most imaginative protection keys: a rotating wheel with halves of pirate's faces. The game showed a face composed of two different parts and asked when this pirate was hanged on a certain island. The player then had to match the faces on the wheel, and enter the year number that appeared on the island-respective hole. Its sequel had the same concept, but with magic potion ingredients. Other games that employed the "code wheel" system include games from Accolade like Star Control.
- Superior Soccer had no outward signs of copy protection, but if it decided it was illegally copied, it would make the soccer ball in the game invisible, thus making it impossible to play the game.
- Zork games such as Beyond Zork and Zork Zero came with "feelies" which contained information vital to the completion of the game. For example, the parchment found from Zork Zero contained clues vital to solving the final puzzle. However, whenever the player attempts to read the parchment, they are referred to the game package. The in-game help function alluded to this form of control with the response "good luck, blackbeard" to queries that were unsolvable without the original game materials.
- Some game companies offered "value-added" goodies with the package, like funny manuals, posters, comics, storybooks or fictional documentation concerning the game (e.g. the Grail Diary for Indiana Jones or a police cadet notebook with Police Quest or the Hero's manual of Quest for Glory or a copy of the National Inquisitor newspaper in Zak McKracken) in order to entice gamers to buy the package.
- The lenslok system used a plastic prismatic device, shipped with the game, which was used to descramble a code displayed on screen.
Conquests of Camelot (full official title: Conquests of Camelot I: King Arthur, Quest for the Grail) is a graphic adventure game released in 1989 by Sierra. ...
Kings Quest VI is universally known as the high point of the series for its in-depth plot, its landmark 3D graphic introduction movie, and its great voice acting, with actor Robby Benson providing the voice for Alexander, the games protagonist. ...
Story In Kings Quest III, the game has moved away from Daventry and King Graham to the land of Llewdor, where a boy named Gwydion is being kept by the wicked magician Manannan. ...
It has been suggested that Mongbat (Ultima) be merged into this article or section. ...
The Ultima series of computer games employed several different artificial scripts. ...
Manhunter (game) - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia /**/ @import /skins-1. ...
Wasteland can refer to: Look up wasteland in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. ...
Dragon Wars was a computer fantasy role-playing game designed by Interplay Productions and distributed by Activision. ...
For other uses, see Dungeons & Dragons (disambiguation). ...
This article is about the original Metal Gear Solid released for the PlayStation. ...
Image:ASCII fullsvg There are 95 printable ASCII characters, numbered 32 to 126. ...
Maniac Mansion is a graphical adventure game originally released in 1987 by Lucasfilm Games (now known as LucasArts). ...
Indiana Jones and the Last Crusade is a 1989 adventure film directed by Steven Spielberg and starring Harrison Ford, Sean Connery, Denholm Elliott, Julian Glover, Alison Doody, River Phoenix, and John Rhys-Davies. ...
The ZX Spectrum is an 8-bit personal home computer released in the United Kingdom in 1982 by Sinclair Research Ltd. ...
Jet Set Willy is a computer game for the ZX Spectrum home computer. ...
The Secret of Monkey Island (SMI) is a well known adventure game that spawned a series of famous and classic comedy adventure games, known as the Monkey Island series as well as making a name for LucasArts (then Lucasfilm Games) as a producer of adventure games, thus the largest competitor...
Monkey Island 2: LeChucks Revenge (MI2), was the second game of the Monkey Island series and the sixth by LucasArts to use the SCUMM engine. ...
The Star Control series is a trilogy of computer games with a cult following. ...
A football, when used in the singular, is a ball used to play one of the sports known as football. ...
Zork universe Zork games Zork Anthology Zork trilogy Zork I ⢠Zork II ⢠Zork III Beyond Zork ⢠Zork Zero Enchanter trilogy Enchanter ⢠Sorcerer ⢠Spellbreaker Other games Wishbringer ⢠Return to Zork Zork: Nemesis ⢠Zork Grand Inquisitor Zork: The Undiscovered Underground Topics in Zork Encyclopedia Frobozzica Characters ⢠Kings ⢠Creatures Timeline ⢠Magic ⢠Calendar Zorkmid...
Zork universe Zork games Zork Anthology Zork trilogy Zork I Zork II Zork III Beyond Zork Zork Zero Planetfall Enchanter trilogy Enchanter Sorcerer Spellbreaker Other games Wishbringer Return to Zork Zork: Nemesis Zork Grand Inquisitor Zork: The Undiscovered Underground Topics in Zork Encyclopedia Frobozzica Characters Kings Creatures Timeline Magic Calendar...
Zork universe Zork games Zork Anthology Zork trilogy Zork I Zork II Zork III Beyond Zork Zork Zero Planetfall Enchanter trilogy Enchanter Sorcerer Spellbreaker Other games Wishbringer Return to Zork Zork: Nemesis Zork Grand Inquisitor Zork: The Undiscovered Underground Topics in Zork Encyclopedia Frobozzica Characters Kings Creatures Timeline Magic Calendar...
Infocom used the term feelies to refer to the extra content included with the boxed versions of their interactive fiction computer games. ...
Police Quest is a series of computer games produced and published by Sierra On-Line between 1987 and 1993. ...
Quest for Glory is a series of hybrid role-playing/adventure computer games designed by Corey and Lori Ann Cole. ...
Zak McKracken and the Alien Mindbenders is a graphical adventure game, originally released in 1988, published by LucasArts (known at the time as Lucasfilm Games). ...
Lenslok was a copy prevention mechanism found in some computer games on Commodore 64 and Sinclair ZX Spectrum. ...
Copy protection methods of recent video game console systems When Sega's Dreamcast was released 9 September 1999, it came with a newer disc format, called the GD-ROM. Using a modified CD player, one could access the game functionality. Using a special swap method could allow reading a GD-ROM game through a CD-ROM just using common MIL-CD (standard CD Boot loading, commonly found on Windows Installation Discs, Linux LiveCDs, and others). Sega DreamCasts sold after October 2000 contain a newer firmware update, not allowing MIL-CD boot. The Dreamcast , code-named White Belt, Black Belt, Dural, Dricas, Vortex, Katana, Shark and Guppy during development) is Segas last video game console and the successor to the Sega Saturn. ...
is the 252nd day of the year (253rd in leap years) in the Gregorian calendar. ...
GD-ROM is the proprietary optical disc format used by the Sega Dreamcast. ...
The Microsoft Xbox, has a specific function: Non-booting or non-reading from CDs and DVD-Rs as a method of game copy protection. Also, the Xbox is said to use a different DVD file system (instead of UDF). Xbox and a Controller S The Xbox is Microsofts game console, released on November 15, 2001. ...
CD may stand for: Compact Disc Canadian Forces Decoration Cash Dispenser (at least used in Japan) CD LPMud Driver Centrum-Demokraterne (Centre Democrats of Denmark) Certificate of Deposit Äeské Dráhy (Czech Railways) Chad (NATO country code) Chalmers Datorförening (computer club of the Chalmers University of Technology) a 1960s...
A DVD+R disc The title given to this article is incorrect due to technical limitations. ...
The Playstation 2 has a map file that contains all of the exact positions and file size info of the CD in it. It is stored at a position that beyond the file limit. The game directly calls the position at where the map file is supposed to be. This means that if the file is moved inside the limit, it's useless since the game is looking outside the limit for it. And it will not work outside of the limit, thus making any copied disc unusable without a mod chip. PS2 redirects here. ...
The Nintendo's Wii and Gamecube have their own specialty format for copy protection. It is based on DVD/miniDVD (Game Cube) technology; there is a barcode on the edge of the disc. It is not readable on standard DVD-ROM Drives, although some have been able to accomplish this using a certain specific DVD-ROM drive's "debug mode." The Wii (pronounced as the pronoun we, IPA: ) is the fifth home video game console released by Nintendo. ...
The Nintendo GameCube (Japanese: ゲームキューブ; originally code-named Dolphin during development; abbreviated as GCN) is Nintendos fourth home video game console, belonging to the 128-bit era; the same generation as Segas Dreamcast, Sonys PlayStation 2, and Microsofts Xbox. ...
DVD (also known as Digital Versatile Disc or Digital Video Disc) is a popular optical disc storage media format. ...
The PSP uses the Universal Media Disc, a media format similar to a MiniDisc. It holds about 1.2 GB. Although it cannot be copied, one can make an ISO image and play it on custom firmware using a third-party utility. PSP most often refers to: PlayStation Portable, a handheld game console produced by Sony Computer Entertainment PlayStation Portable Slim & Lite, a new model of the original PlayStation Portable console Corel Paint Shop Pro, a graphics editor distributed by Corel Corporation, formerly a product of Jasc Software PSP may also refer...
A UMD The Universal Media Disc (UMD) is an optical disc medium developed by Sony for use on the PlayStation Portable. ...
See also IBMs VM operating system family, where minidisk refers to a logical unit of storage. ...
This article does not cite any references or sources. ...
PlayStation Portable homebrew refers to the process of executing unsigned code on the PlayStation Portable. ...
Copy protection for videotape Companies like Macrovision provide schemes to videotape publishers making copies unusable if they were created with a normal VCR. All major videotape duplicators license Macrovision or similar technologies to copy protect video cassettes for their clients or themselves. Macrovision is a company that creates electronic copy prevention schemes, established in 1983. ...
Bottom view of VHS videotape cassette with magnetic tape exposed Videotape is a means of recording images and sound onto magnetic tape as opposed to movie film. ...
The video cassette recorder (or VCR, less popularly video tape recorder) is a type of video tape recorder that uses removable cassettes containing magnetic tape to record audio and video from a television broadcast so it can be played back later. ...
Starting in 1985 with the video release of "The Cotton Club", Macrovision has licensed to publishers a technology that exploits the automatic gain control feature of VCRs by adding pulses to the vertical blanking sync signal. These pulses do not affect the image a consumer sees on his TV, but do confuse the recording-level circuitry of consumer VCRs. This technology, which is aided by U.S. legislation mandating the presence of automatic gain-control circuitry in VCRs, is said to "plug the analog hole" and make VCR-to-VCR copies impossible, although an inexpensive circuit is widely available that will defeat the protection by removing the pulses. Macrovision uses a legal strategy of patenting its video AGC system, giving it a more straightforward basis to shut down manufacture of any device that descrambles it than often exists in the DRM world. This article is about the year. ...
The Cotton Club is a movie, released in 1984, centered around a popular real-life Harlem jazz club in the 1930s, the Cotton Club. ...
Automatic gain control (AGC) is an electronic system found in many types of devices. ...
Copy protection for audio CDs By 2000, Napster had become a popular mainstream hobby, and several music publishers responded by starting to sell some CDs with various copy protection schemes. Most of these are playback restrictions that aim to make the CD unusable in computers with CD-ROM drives, leaving only dedicated audio CD players for playback. This does not, however, prevent such a CD from being copied via analogue connections or by ripping the CD under operating systems such as Linux (which is effective since copy-protection software is generally written for Microsoft Windows), which has led critics to question the usefulness of such schemes. Year 2000 (MM) was a leap year starting on Saturday (link will display full 2000 Gregorian calendar). ...
Napster was a file sharing service that paved the way for decentralized P2P file-sharing programs such as Kazaa, Limewire, iMesh, Morpheus, and BearShare, which are now used for many of the same reasons and can download music, pictures, and other files. ...
This article is about operating systems that use the Linux kernel. ...
Windows redirects here. ...
CD copy protection is achieved by assuming certain feature levels in the drives: The CD Digital Audio is the oldest CD standard and forms the basic feature set beyond which dedicated audio players need no knowledge. CD-ROM drives additionally need to support mixed mode CDs (combined audio and data tracks) and multi-session CDs (multiple data recordings each superseding and incorporating data of the previous session). Rainbow Books: Red Book (CD Digital Audio), Yellow Book (CD-ROM and CD-ROM XA), Orange Book (CD_R and CD-RW), White Book (Video CD), Blue Book (Enhanced Music CD, CD+G and CD-Plus), Beige Book (Photo CD), Green Book (CD-i). ...
The CD-ROM (an abbreviation for Compact Disc Read-Only Memory (ROM)) is a non-volatile optical data storage medium using the same physical format as audio compact discs, readable by a computer with a CD-ROM drive. ...
Enhanced CD is a certification mark of the Recording Industry Association of America for various technologies that combine audio and computer data for use in both compact disc and CD-ROM players. ...
The play preventions in use intentionally deviate from the standards and intentionally include malformed multisession data or similar with the purpose of confusing the CD-ROM drives to prevent correct function. Simple dedicated audio CD players would not be affected by the malformed data since these are for features they do not support — for example, an audio player will not even look for a second session containing the copy protection data. In practice, results vary wildly. CD-ROM drives may be able to correct the malformed data and still play them to an extent that depends on the make and version of the drive. On the other hand, some audio players may be built around drives with more than the basic intelligence required for audio playback. Some car radios with CD playback, portable CD players, CD players with additional support for data CDs containing MP3 files, and DVD players have had problems with these CDs. For other uses, see MP3 (disambiguation). ...
The deviation from the Red Book standard that defines audio CDs required the publishers of these copy-protected CDs to refrain from using the official CDDA logo on the discs or the cases. The logo is a trademark owned by Philips and Sony and licensed to identify compliant audio discs only. To prevent dissatisfied customers from returning CDs which were misrepresented as compliant audio CDs, such CDs also started to carry prominent notices on their covers. Red Book is the standard for audio CDs (Compact Disc Digital Audio system, or CDDA). ...
â(TM)â redirects here. ...
Philips HQ in Amsterdam Koninklijke Philips Electronics N.V. (Royal Philips Electronics N.V.), usually known as Philips, (Euronext: PHIA, NYSE: PHG) is one of the largest electronics companies in the world, founded and headquartered in the Netherlands. ...
Sony Corporation ) is a Japanese multinational corporation and one of the worlds largest media conglomerates with revenue of $66. ...
In general the audio can always be extracted by applying the principle of the analog hole. Additionally, such programs as ISOBuster may be capable of producing hidden audio files. The analog hole is a fundamental, and inevitable vulnerability in copy prevention schemes for noninteractive digital content which is intended to be played back using analog means. ...
Examples of CD copy protection schemes are Cactus Data Shield and Copy Control. Cactus Data Shield is a form of CD/DVD copy protection for audio compact discs developed by Midbar Tech now owned by Macrovision. ...
Copy control logo Copy Control is the generic name of a copy protection system, used from 2001 until 2006 on several digital audio disc releases by EMI and Sony BMG Music Entertainment in several regions (Europe, Canada, the United States, Australia). ...
Copy protection in recent digital media
The MPAA's "Copy Protection Awareness Icon" for DVDs. More recently, publishers of music and movies in digital form have turned to encryption to make copying more difficult. CSS, which is used on DVDs, is a famous example of this. It is a form of copy protection that uses 40-bit encryption. Copies will not be playable since they will be missing the key, which is not writable on DVD-R or DVD-RW discs. With this technique, the work is encrypted using a key only included in the firmware of "authorized" players, which allow only "legitimate" uses of the work (usually restricted forms of playback, but no conversion or modification). The controversial Digital Millennium Copyright Act provides a legal protection for this in the US, that would make it illegal to distribute "unauthorized" players—which was supposed to eliminate the possibility of building a DVD copier. However, encryption schemes designed for mass-market standardized media such as DVD suffer from the fundamental weakness that once implemented, they can never be changed without breaking the standard. Since consumers are highly unlikely to buy new hardware for the sole purpose of preserving copy protection, manufacturers have been prevented from enhancing their DRM technology until recently, with the release of next-generation media such as HD DVD and Blu-Ray Disc. This period represents more than enough time for the encryption scheme to be defeated by determined attackers. For example, the CSS encryption system used on DVD Video was broken within three years of its market release in November 1996 (see DeCSS), but has not been changed since, because doing so would immediately render all DVD players sold prior to the change incapable of reading new DVDs - this would not only provoke a furious backlash amongst consumers, but massively restrict the market that the new DVDs could be sold to. More recent DVDs have attempted to augment CSS with additional protection schemes. Most modern schemes like ARccOS Protection use tricks of the DVD format in an attempt to trip up pirating programs, though it is noted that any scheme must stay within the bounds of the DVD Video format, limiting the possible avenues of protection—and making it easier for hackers to learn the innards of the scheme and find ways around it. Image File history File links CopyProtectionAwareness. ...
Image File history File links CopyProtectionAwareness. ...
MPAA redirects here. ...
DVD (also known as Digital Versatile Disc or Digital Video Disc) is a popular optical disc storage media format. ...
Encrypt redirects here. ...
Content Scramble System (CSS) is an encryption system used on some DVDs. ...
40-bit encryption is a key size for symmetric encryption representing a low-level of security where the key is forty bits in length (five bytes). ...
A microcontroller, like this PIC18F8720 is controlled by firmware stored inside on FLASH memory In computing, firmware is a computer program that is embedded in a hardware device, for example a microcontroller. ...
The Digital Millennium Copyright Act (DMCA) is a United States copyright law which implements two 1996 WIPO treaties. ...
HD-DVD disc HD DVD (for High Density Digital Versatile Disc) is a digital optical media format which is being developed as one standard for high-definition DVD. HD DVD is similar to the competing Blu-ray Disc, which also uses the same CD sized (120 mm diameter) optical data...
A Blu-ray Disc (also called BDray) is a high-density optical disc format for the storage of digital information, including high-definition video. ...
DeCSS is a computer program capable of decrypting content on a DVD video disc encrypted using the Content-Scrambling System (CSS). ...
ARccOS is a copy-protection system developed by Sony used on some DVDs. ...
The newest generations of optical disc media, HD DVD and Blu-ray Disc, attempt to address this issue. Both formats employ the Advanced Access Content System, which provides for several hundred different decryption keys (for the varying models of players to hit the market), each of which can be invalidated ("revoked") should one of the keys be compromised. Revoked keys simply will not appear on future discs, rendering the compromised players useless for future titles unless they are updated to fix the issue. For this reason, all HD-DVD and Blu-ray Disc players include an ethernet port, to give them the ability to download DRM updates. Blu-ray Disc goes one step further with a separate technique called BD+, a virtual machine that can execute code included on discs to verify, authorize, revoke, and update players as the need arises. Since the protection program is on the disc rather than the player, this allows for updating protection programs within BD's working life by simply having newer programs included on newer discs. HD-DVD disc HD DVD (for High Density Digital Versatile Disc) is a digital optical media format which is being developed as one standard for high-definition DVD. HD DVD is similar to the competing Blu-ray Disc, which also uses the same CD sized (120 mm diameter) optical data...
A Blu-ray Disc (also called BDray) is a high-density optical disc format for the storage of digital information, including high-definition video. ...
The Advanced Access Content System (AACS) is a standard for content distribution and digital rights management, intended to restrict access to and copying of the next generation of optical discs and DVDs. ...
IEEE photograph of a diagram with the original terms for describing Ethernet drawn by Robert M. Metcalfe around 1976. ...
BD+ is a component of the Blu-ray Disc Digital Rights Management system. ...
See also CD Freaks. ...
SafeDisc is a CD/DVD copy protection program for Windows applications and games, developed by Macrovision Corporation, aiming to prevent software piracy, as well as resisting home media duplication devices, professional duplicators, and reverse engineering attempts. ...
For the video game, see Star Force. ...
SecuROM is a CD/DVD copy protection product, most often used for computer games, developed by Sony DADC. SecuROM aims to resist home media duplication devices, professional duplicators, and reverse engineering attempts. ...
TAGES (Tagès) is a software Copy Protection brand, jointly developed, at first, by MPO and the Thales Group (formerly known as Thomson-CSF). ...
Alcohol 120% is an optical disc authoring program and disk image emulator created by Alcohol Soft. ...
This section has been identified as trivia. ...
Tiny USB dongle designed by Senselock Senselock is a company that provides solutions for software protection and Internet security since 1995 with headquarters office in Beijing, China. ...
TDi GmbH is a company that provides solutions for software license protection and internet login with headquarters offices in Dortmund, Germany as well as in Zug, Switzerland. ...
This article is about the disk image emulator. ...
Game Jackal is a PC application developed by Caribbean based company SlySoft that allows users to play PC game titles without the need for the games media to be in the CD-ROM or DVD-ROM drive. ...
Code morphing is a one of the approaches to protect software applications from reverse engineering, analysis, modifications, and cracking used in obfuscating software. ...
Obfuscated code is source code that is (perhaps intentionally) very hard to read and understand. ...
Bus encryption is the use of encrypted program instructions on a data bus in a computer that includes a secure cryptoprocessor for executing the encrypted instructions. ...
A broadcast flag is a set of status bits (or flags) sent in the data stream of a digital television program that indicates whether or not it can be recorded, or if there are any restrictions on recorded content. ...
Digital rights management (DRM) is an umbrella term that refers to access control technologies used by publishers and copyright holders to limit usage of digital media or devices. ...
XCP-Aurora Extended Copy Protection (XCP) is a software package developed by the British company First 4 Internet, (which on 20 November 2006, changed its name to Fortium Technologies Ltd - see links below), and sold as a copy protection or digital rights management (DRM) scheme for compact discs. ...
Rob Northen Copylock is a copy-protection system to prevent disk duplication with standard floppy disk drives on the Amiga platform. ...
Logo of Trusted Computing Group, an initiative to implement Trusted Computing Trusted Computing (commonly abbreviated TC) is a technology developed and promoted by the Trusted Computing Group (TCG). ...
In economics, vendor lock-in, also known as proprietary lock-in, customer lock-in, lock-in is where a customer is dependent on a vendor for products and services and cannot move to another vendor without substantial switching costs, real and/or perceived. ...
Anti-tamper (AT) is defined as the systems engineering activities intended to prevent or delay exploitation of essential or critical technologies in U.S. weapon systems or the private sector. ...
In the field of computer security, system hardware is said to be tamper-resistant if it is difficult to modify or subvert, even for an assailant who has physical access to the system. ...
External links 1): Thomas Obnigene, DVD Glossary, 2007. Retrieved July, 19 2007 from http://www.filmfodder.com/movies/dvd/glossary/glossary.htm. |