MSN as peer-to-peer piracy tool

Not that I was using it for that, but it’s really quick and easy file shar­ing — I hadn’t setup port for­ward­ing since we got our new router, so MSN was the way to go for lots of lit­tle things… and today I had to send 750MB of pho­tos to some­one and didn’t have a work­ing server here.

So, just for kicks, we tried via MSN. At this point it’s also worth remark­ing that ADSL2+ upload speeds kick butt — we were done in two hours fif­teen appar­ently (I went AFK but believe MSN’s logs). And the file even got there intact. I know.
Not as much band­width as the Odyssey (car I drive), but quite enough for when you’re feel­ing lazy/out of blank CDs. Dou­ble ewe oh oh tee.

# by Josh on January 20th, 2007 Tags: , ,
| No Comments »

Bejeweled

Bejeweled

Con­sider it under trial. I down­loaded it not-from-an-official source because I haven’t got a Win­dows machine hooked up to this thing and can’t install any­thing by ActiveSync, so I needed an unof­fi­cial pack­age (that, in this case, just hap­pened to be cracked because that file looked like the right approx size on var­i­ous peer-to-peer nets). If I’m not over it after 30 days I’ll fork out $15 or what­ever it is from AstraWare. Which I prob­a­bly won’t be (nor, I imag­ine, will var­i­ous other users of this thing allow me to!)

# by Josh on June 5th, 2006 Tags: ,
| 1 Comment »

Yellowcard: Silent Lights and Sounds

Yellowcard: Lights and Sounds CD cover

Stu­pid DRM. My com­puter, of course, gets around the copy pro­tec­tion on this CD instantly. My DVD player (which I use as a CD player: shut up Steve, CD play­ers don’t sound a-few-hundred-dollars bet­ter, so I don’t care! ;-) ), on the other hand, can’t play the damn thing. As of right now I’m rip­ping it to my com­puter (loss­lessly with FLAC) and will have a pres­tine, non-DRM copy on a burnt CD for my use in a mat­ter of minutes.

And if a friend ever asks if they can bor­row my Yel­low­card CD (bought on a whim know­ing only one of their songs, I’ll add), I’ll be sure to lend them the ver­sion that works bet­ter: The one I burnt myself, with­out your stupid-arse soft­ware all over it.

Oh, yeah, and I’ll hes­i­tate to pur­chase EMI CDs in the future. All other DRM-encumbered crap I’ve bought in the past has at least had the cour­tesy to work in my DVD player (this one made detec­tion take ages, then picked it up as a VCD with wierd timecoding) — this is the bar­rier at which point it becomes infi­nitely eas­ier to use Peer-to-Peer than buy things that look like they might be inter­est­ing in a CD store.

With phys­i­cal media, I can (read: should be able to) toss it in any­thing and expect it to work instantly (no rip­ping required, etc.).

And, you know, if I wind up using Peer-to-Peer for this kind of stuff, my loss­less (yeah, that’s CD qual­ity, not MP3 junk) audio col­lec­tion will be shared back with the rest of the world. Yes, even the CDs you make it harder for me to use legit­i­mately. I will fig­ure out a way to get them onto my com­puter (or some­one else will with another CD), and I will use shar­ing net­works if scum­bag con­tent providers pro­vide me with suf­fi­cient impe­tus to do that.

(Inci­den­tally, if any­one wants to bor­row a non-DRM-encumbered Yel­low­card CD…)

Windows XP upgrading…

Irony is, the thing that didn’t work was some­thing that’d been paid for. Again. That’s twice this has hap­pened now.

Pop the disc in, over a per­fectly legit­i­mate install of Win­dows, to wipe and upgrade (from within the installer, so it can detect Win­dows first). Nat­u­rally, it doesn’t work. So I pull out a legit­i­mate Win­dows disc to flash at it. Of course, it doesn’t work. On one of the installs, it wasn’t even an OEM mod­i­fied disc (I’ve got a Win­dows ME disc here from Gate­way which it also choked on, later) — but alas, it would not work.

Ahar­rrr! Thar be pirates lurkin’!

Eye candy. Image of pirate ship with Windows logo.

A quick sail over to them thar dan­ger­ous peer-to-peer waters quickly patched up the prob­lem, espe­cially when I can down­load an OEM disc image (~400MB) faster than Win­dows XP actu­ally installs. Not that any­one ever would, of course. Yarrrrrr!

It’s now installing rather hap­pily, just for the record. And there are sep­a­rate licenses for each of the com­put­ers Win­dows XP is being installed on (or has been installed on), and the pirated copy of Win­dows 98 isn’t in use… but it sure sim­pli­fied the instal­la­tion process! Thank you, Gnutella!

# by Josh on March 26th, 2005 Tags: , , , ,
| No Comments »

UK, Australia top TV piracy list

In this arti­cle in the Aus­tralian five days ago, Aus­tralia and the UK are iden­ti­fied as being the two largest pirates of TV con­tent, espe­cially mate­r­ial from the US. I found this arti­cle immensely amus­ing, espe­cially the fol­low­ing excerpt:

“Unless you’re a pretty big cybergeek, peo­ple are gen­er­ally happy to watch it on TV,” said an exec­u­tive at one UK broad­caster who asked to remain anonymous.

Nev­er­the­less, Hol­ly­wood is not stand­ing by idly. Fear­ful of a repeat of the ram­pant down­load­ing that crip­pled the music indus­try, the Motion Pic­ture Asso­ci­a­tion of Amer­ica (MPAA) has forced the clo­sure of sev­eral sites that pro­vide the links needed to down­load movies and tele­vi­sion shows.

In my pre­vi­ous post on piracy-related issues, I talked about the inad­e­quacy of stag­gered global release poli­cies in an envi­ron­ment in which con­sumer sov­er­eignty exists to the point where this stag­gered release sys­tem is com­pletely irrel­e­vant, and serves only to pro­mote and give addi­tional cause for piracy. We’re see­ing exactly the same issue with stag­gered tele­vi­sion episode release, too.

Suc­cinct ver­sion: The UK broad­caster exec­u­tive labelling the issue as being niche and only for “pretty big cybergeek[s]” is hor­ri­bly, hor­ri­bly naïve and gen­er­ally mis­guided, mak­ing him/her more than a lit­tle bit the fool.

Not-so-succinct ver­sion: They’re hor­ri­bly wrong, and I’ve got anec­do­tal and other evi­dence to con­clu­sively prove him so. Really. Admit­tedly, anec­do­tal evi­dence which is drawn from a smaller spec­trum of soci­ety, but it’s indica­tive of a greater prob­lem to come (teenage cul­ture rep­re­sent­ing an “early adopter” mar­ket within the field of con­sumer elec­tron­ics and tech­nol­ogy), which can­not be sim­ply ignored in the way that it appears broad­cast­ers have ignored this.

Today a group of peo­ple at school were talk­ing about the TV show “Des­per­ate House­wives”, and some­one said words to the effect of “I wish I knew what hap­pened next week, this is addic­tive TV!” (appar­ently most of Aus­tralia would agree with them, as evi­dent from the sta­tis­tics posted on Steve’s weblog). That’s far less inter­est­ing in and of itself than what came next – a com­ment along the lines of “Oh, in the US they’re up to [some other sea­son or some­thing], I’ve already seen them”, cou­pled with an offer to plot-spoil for other watch­ers of the series. Which isn’t exactly some­thing the net­works need to worry about – plot spoil­ers rarely would actu­ally deter some­one from spend­ing an hour (or 47 min­utes, given the 13 minute adver­tis­ing restric­tion in that times­lot in Aus­tralia, if I recall cor­rectly – some­one might care to clar­ify as a mat­ter of trivia?) watch­ing a pro­gramme they enjoy, even if it makes lit­tle to no dif­fer­ence to them in terms of plot revelation.

The more sig­nif­i­cant part of this com­ment is of course that this per­son had actu­ally seen these episodes, and con­text which direct quo­ta­tion can’t con­vey – this per­son is a TV addict, but they’re hardly a “geek extra­or­di­naire”, which is impor­tant in crit­i­cis­ing this executive’s state­ments. The per­son who’d seen the episode was hardly the only one, either, although the only instance that imme­di­ately springs to mind as being noteworthy.

A slightly more removed exam­ple from this is from a few months back, relat­ing to those piratical-problem-children, uni­ver­sity stu­dents from an insti­tu­tion that shall remain unnamed. Episodes from the entire first sea­son of The OC, long before we were too far into it here in Aus­tralia. On a lap­top, down­loaded from Peer-to-Peer, by an arts stu­dent with a mod­er­ate (and I mean very mod­er­ate!) IT bent… nobody ever try and say that using peer-to-peer is beyond the scope of any aver­age teenager or uni­ver­sity student!

Which is, of course, exactly what this exec­u­tive was sug­gest­ing – that down­load­ing con­tent that isn’t avail­able by other means is some­thing solely restricted to geeky peo­ple. It’s not. And until this fact is recog­nised by net­works, they can enjoy watch­ing their adver­tis­ing rev­enue fall as view­ers enjoy ad-free down­loaded cap­tures of pro­grammes not yet even released in this coun­try – all of which could be cir­cum­vented through stu­dios per­mit­ting and sup­port­ing simul­ta­ne­ous Inter­na­tional con­tent release, because real­is­ti­cally “global pre­miere rights” don’t offer any­thing aside from mar­ket­ing appeal, as the audi­ence can’t just hop con­ti­nents in order to view it on a com­pet­ing net­work (that’s an issue for another decade, when real-time video stream­ing becomes as pro­lific as audio streams are today… although com­pe­ti­tion with tra­di­tional radio net­works is only just begin­ning to become appar­ent in the US, with the advent of ded­i­cated wire­less stream­ing ser­vices), but they CAN wait 24 hours to view an ad-free cap­ture of the same pro­gramme via the Inter­net if they’re patient, or if the pro­gramme isn’t avail­able in their locale.

The exec­u­tive wasn’t com­pletely wrong. Peo­ple are happy to watch things on TV. The only issue with that is that TV must be show­ing the con­tent that peo­ple want to watch – that’s long been a recog­nised fact, but per­haps not so much in the tim­ing of this con­tent deliv­ery… now, it has to be on a sched­ule which leaves the audi­ence no alter­na­tive which is desir­able (because TV itself is eas­ier to use than peer-to-peer downloading).

Consumer sovereignty equals piracy

In an eco­nomic sys­tem where con­sumer sov­er­eignty is famed to exist, such that there is suf­fi­cient choice across most mar­kets to per­mit a degree of choice by the buyer, for which mar­keters com­pete, the major stu­dios (this dis­course is lim­ited to movie pro­duc­tion, for rea­sons which shall be dis­closed) are doing some­thing hor­ri­bly wrong. Many would argue that the state of the movie indus­try at present does not hon­our the notion of con­sumer sov­er­eignty by virtue of the range/variety or qual­ity of con­tent avail­able — but I refute this; not only because it is untrue (the con­sumer is sov­er­eign, even if only pre­sented with fewer options), but also because there are far more sub­stan­tial mis­takes being made with regard to this, such that any offence in the afore­men­tioned man­ner becomes some­what irrel­e­vant. Read the rest of this entry »

Make love, not spam, finis.

Per­haps one of the most con­tro­ver­sial corporate-sponsored acts of poplar elec­tronic activism in the his­tory of the Inter­net (and cer­tainly this year), AAP pub­lished an arti­cle which was picked up by the Syd­ney Morn­ing Her­ald at 10:44 this morn­ing (GMT +11, Syd­ney time) in which Lycos is cited as ter­mi­nat­ing the cam­paign, in face of crit­i­cism from (unspec­i­fied) “secu­rity experts”. The orig­i­nal arti­cle may be found on the Syd­ney Morn­ing Her­ald web­site (reg. required).

Lycos spokesper­son, Kay Ober­beck, is quoted as say­ing that “the [Make Love not Spam] cam­paign was only meant to be tem­po­rary”, it’s pri­mary goals being to spark dis­cus­sion and raise aware­ness — some­thing which it has unques­tion­ably achieved, per­haps in a realm far greater than that of just unso­licited spam mar­ket­ing (I refuse to use euphemisms here — spam is unso­licited, intru­sive, tres­pass­ing, unre­quested and unde­sire­able — not “direct mar­ket­ing”). The cam­paign has raised ques­tions regard­ing the state of reg­u­la­tion of the Inter­net, both in terms of anti-spam leg­is­la­tion, and the legal­ity of “elec­tronic sit-in” tac­tics, up to and includ­ing the use of dis­trib­uted (col­lab­o­ra­tive) attacks on a cen­tralised point.

Argu­ments over the seman­tics of what exactly con­sti­tutes a DDoS attack have also arisen as a result of this cam­paign: Whilst it’s gen­er­ally accepted that this is indeed a dis­trib­uted attack, the curi­ous nature of the appli­ca­tion, in that it attempts to raise the costs of spam­ming but not alto­gether “deny ser­vice”, cou­pled with the fact that par­tic­i­pa­tion in this cam­paign is user-driven (by way of active par­tic­i­pa­tory choice), mean that this can­not be likened to virus-driven DDoS attacks seen in recent times, such as those upon The SCO Group’s website.

Not only is the basic ques­tion of what con­sti­tutes a (D)DoS attack raised, but also the ques­tion of what, exactly, is required for this attack to be con­sid­ered “dis­trib­uted”. Legally speak­ing, the attack has not been launched from any one co-ordinating point. The soft­ware dis­tri­b­u­tion point and direc­tory list­ing points were cen­tralised, how­ever these were not respon­si­ble for the inde­pen­dent actions of over 100,000 users[1], who down­loaded the soft­ware, and ran it.

Col­lab­o­ra­tive attacks such as this make lit­i­ga­tion remark­ably dif­fi­cult, con­sid­er­ing the very dis­trib­uted par­tic­i­pa­tion — how can Lycos be sued for some­thing they didn’t do? And, even if they could be sued for “some­thing” they didn’t do, is it even legit­i­mate to pros­e­cute over a “denial of ser­vice” attack such as this? Some have com­mented that by con­nect­ing a com­puter to the Inter­net, you accept the pos­si­bil­ity of such attacks implic­itly — admit­tedly, this was posted on Slash­dot, a (slightly more Left) IT news source, but the point bears consideration.

Was the cam­paign a “good” thing? In accor­dance with the stated goals pre­sented to the world in hind­sight, yes. Hav­ing said that, how­ever, Lycos appear to have been stand­ing on defen­sive foot­ing for much of this cam­paign, deny­ing events which the rest of the world seem to have wit­nessed, beyond most rea­son­able doubt (speak­ing specif­i­cally of the denial of the com­pro­mise of their web­site, either by a direct hack­ing, or DNS poi­son­ing). Star­ring, the agency respon­si­ble for devel­op­ing the Spray web­site (an arm of Lycos) and the Make LOVE not SPAM cam­paign, main­tains the inten­tion of the cam­paign is to increase the costs involved with SPAM adver­tis­ing (as well as aware­ness rais­ing and a pro­mo­tional util­ity for Spray mail), some­thing which every­one took as implicit, but (so far as I’ve seen) Lycos hasn’t explic­itly stated[2].

So what’d they do wrong, from a con­struc­tive per­spec­tive? Well, it was of a closed nature, for one. Lycos copped a sur­pris­ing amount of crit­i­cism for this one from the main­stream media, specif­i­cally as “inde­pen­dent ver­i­fi­ca­tion” of the nature of sources was unable to be per­formed — fears that the lists of offend­ers were cor­rupted remained unre­solved, as pub­lic access to this infor­ma­tion was not read­ily avail­able [3]. If Lycos’s present stance on the project is legit­i­mate, then the project rather delib­er­ately remained closed in nature — if it were open, they would have an AOL-style Gnutella on their hands (admit­tedly, the sit­u­a­tion of recall is remark­ably sim­i­lar, but the project hasn’t been able to get out of con­trol due to a lack of pub­li­cally avail­able source code), arguably a worse cor­po­rate night­mare than the legal mess in which Lycos may find them­selves entangled.

An open project would have allowed the project a greater chance of suc­cess, in that crit­i­cism per­tain­ing to the valid­ity of tar­gets would be quelled, and even an offi­cial end to the project would likely per­mit a host of child-projects, all with the same goals in mind. The dis­ad­van­tage to this, of course, is that community-powered vig­i­lan­tism is far more sus­cep­ti­ble to dubi­ous attacks on inno­cent web­sites, due to it’s (com­par­a­tively) unreg­u­lated nature (if Lycos’s claims regard­ing the check­ing process are to be believed).

Will this spurn a host of sim­i­lar projects? Prob­a­bly. Such projects already exist, on a smaller scope — one project tar­get­ting Niger­ian scam­mers is already in place — how­ever none of them have enjoyed such wide­spread media atten­tion as MLNS has from con­ven­tional press. Lycos’s posi­tion as a dom­i­nant Euro­pean (and, to a lesser extent, Amer­i­can) por­tal has meant that their actions are far more closely scru­ti­nised than those of small com­mu­nity bod­ies. Hav­ing said that, the pop­u­lar­ity of peer-to-peer file-sharing appli­ca­tions didn’t come about as a result of mass media prop­a­ga­tion, but rather through grass­roots com­mu­ni­ca­tion between peers, rec­om­mend­ing the soft­ware to others.

Infor­ma­tion Tech­nol­ogy pub­li­ca­tions (both phys­i­cal and elec­tronic) played a part in mak­ing early adopters aware of these tech­nolo­gies, how­ever the bulk of the work may be attrib­uted to com­mu­ni­ties online who spread aware­ness of this soft­ware on a peer-based level. This tech­nol­ogy has sim­i­lar poten­tial, on a far greater scale — it’s media expo­sure at launch was mas­sive, and whilst it was rapidly removed (or cen­sored), the amount of inter­est it gen­er­ated offers projects which adopt a sim­i­lar vein in the future a greater chance of success.

From a media per­spec­tive, future projects such as this will attract a men­tion, if only because of their sim­i­lar­ity to this high-profile one. The ram­i­fi­ca­tions of MLNS are great in scope; arguably, greater than Lycos have fore­seen in the launch of this. Ulti­mately, this project demon­strates the power of the Inter­net as a tool for activism and col­lab­o­ra­tive empow­er­ment — the true impact of these is some­thing for which the world must wait and watch.

Notes

  1. Actual down­loads may far exceed this fig­ure, given the rapid prop­a­ga­tion of mir­rors of this soft­ware, and the (highly ques­tion­able) actions of some back­bone providers in block­ing the offi­cial web­site, MakeLoveNotSpam.com — which raises a whole new set of ques­tions per­tain­ing to dig­i­tal activism, if the providers to this form of self-enforcing elec­tronic democ­racy are actively deny­ing access to “ques­tion­able” facilities!
  2. I’m quite open to being proved wrong on this point: so far as I can see, they haven’t stated that — I’ve been sift­ing through a decent amount of news mate­r­ial on the sub­ject, but it’s more than pos­si­ble that I sim­ply missed it. If you feel oth­er­wise, feel free to leave a comment/send me an email.
  3. Admit­tedly, it was pos­si­ble to access http://backend.makelovenotspam.com/xml/ for the data, but this wasn’t a highly pub­li­cised fact, and the meth­ods by which this data was attained and ver­i­fied remain shrouded in doubt.