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Encryption Security Media Music Your Rights Online

DVD-Audio's CPPM Circumvented 415

Bodysurf writes "After DVD-Video's CSS encryption was broken in 1999, the music industry chose a much more secure copy-protection method for DVD-Audio called Copy Protection for PreRecorded Media (CPPM). This protection scheme has remained publicly uncracked, but it was circumvented recently, providing the ability to save the unencrypted digital audio data. CDFreaks has the details."
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DVD-Audio's CPPM Circumvented

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  • by Approaching.sanity ( 889047 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:20PM (#12996109) Homepage
    We deserve our free use.

    And we will take it by any and all means.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:23PM (#12996147)
      That is right! Even if it means we have to kill every single one of you mother....

      Oh, wait, all we did was hack their encryption. Nevermind....
    • by garcia ( 6573 ) * on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:26PM (#12996183)
      We deserve our free use. And we will take it by any and all means.

      That should read: We deserve our fair use and we will take it back by any and all means.
      • Good point. Thank-you.

        Since this is being tried in both the courts of law and of public opinion it is important to keep the argument sane, salient and factual. We are only wanting to keep that to which we are already entitled by law.

        Those who fight against fair use are behaving unethically.

    • by jdray ( 645332 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:27PM (#12996190) Homepage Journal
      I'm starting to wonder why anyone even bothers anymore. I'm not sure I agree that "we" (the world?) deserves free use of media content, but I think fair use would be ... fair.
      • Fair use would be fair, yes, but free use is free. Which would you rather be paying for?
        Or do you hate our freedoms?
        • Or do you hate our freedoms?

          As the old saw goes, your freedom ends the second your fist touches my nose. Fair use is one thing, stealing from the people who create and make the things you would enjoy is something else entirely...

          • by Alioth ( 221270 ) <no@spam> on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @05:17PM (#12998386) Journal
            The thing is...these copy protection schemes frustrate fair use badly, but don't really affect piracy. Consider this: most people pirating music online are quite happy with 128kbit MP3 files. They will also likely be happy with an analogue recording from the line-out of a DVD-A encoded at 128kbit/s. People who want to pirate music will go to the effort of re-recording the music.

            However, someone who just wants to have the convenience of hearing their music regardless of what computer they are using, or perhaps be able to listen to it on the hi-fi upstairs, and when they are working, in the computer room upstairs without having to fish out the disc are frustrated. They aren't stealing, they aren't doing anything morally wrong. The pirates will still pirate regardless of what measures are put in place, but people just wanting to hear their music anywhere will just find it annoying (and probably won't buy DVD-A discs, I certainly won't be buying any).

            The day all music is DRMed such that it can't be trivially cracked is the day I stop buying music. I'm not interested in pirating it, after all I've bought three albums of Magnatune this week and it's trivial to listen to the entire albums for free at Magnatune if you are a cheapskate. Part of the reason I'm willing to buy from them is that they do NOT drm the music, so I can put it on my PowerBook, or put it on my Linux workstation, or on my NFS server and just pick it up from anywhere in the house. Part of the reason I'm willing to buy music from iTunes is that JHymn exists and it's trivial to strip off the DRM so I can put the music on my server and listen to it anywhere.
      • I have a couple of Audio DVDs. When I play them, they only play through my SoundBlaster Audigy 2. I have a professional card that has far superior DACs and opamps, and thus far superior sound, but it won't play through it. Why? Well the pro card plays by my rules, it will route any input to any output, allow logging to disk, allow full resolution digital output, etc. Thus, the driver isn't certified. The Audigy 2 will accept encrypted input from the program, shut off digital outs, deny recording capability,
    • by redheaded_stepchild ( 629363 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:34PM (#12996259)
      I think I'd rather wait for them to figure it out. It's not like I can't find plenty of other *gasp* decent artists to listen to without RIAA's hands in it.

      I know it gets thrown around in here a lot, but if you really wanted to piss them off and make them think about what they are doing, STOP BUYING THEIR CRAP. But more than that, don't download it either. Embargo them on all fronts. Watch them adapt or die. Too bad I'll never see this happen, what with the majority of my country (and apparently the world) being led around by the short and danglies by the RIAA. Like bands don't exist unless they have massive media hype, a video on MTV, and a shamelessly promoted 'world tour'.

      Makes me want to start my own music distribution just to show it can be done without the RIAA.
      • Like bands don't exist unless they have massive media hype, a video on MTV, and a shamelessly promoted 'world tour'.

        Most bands don't exist w/o that -- at least they don't in the eyes of most people. Most people sit at home glued to their major media shows, force fed conglomorate TV, and listening to their conglomorate owned/sponsored radio.

        God forbid you have to search around for some different stuff to listen to! God forbid they might have to leave their comfort of their own homes to see a show and su
      • My question is, who really needs DVD-A and SACD in the first place? Only a super ear can hear the difference, and surround sound is pretty useless for basic music. It's far more useful for movies, concerts, and theatrical productions.
      • by TechnoGrl ( 322690 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @02:21PM (#12996706)
        >Makes me want to start my own music
        >distribution just to show it can be done
        >without the RIAA.

        It's called http://cdbaby.com/ [cdbaby.com]

        Enjoy !

      • by Rick.C ( 626083 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @02:51PM (#12996993)
        Makes me want to start my own music distribution just to show it can be done without the RIAA.

        The RIAA would be at your door within hours:

        "Say, dat's a nice group you got dere. It'd be a shame if somethin' happened to it...

        "We got dis RIAA contract we'd like you to sign... umm, sign right here. Yeah, it's a real luxury havin' a drummer with two good arms, you know... real luxury..."

      • by Armchair Dissident ( 557503 ) * on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @02:53PM (#12997005)
        Like bands don't exist unless they have massive media hype, a video on MTV, and a shamelessly promoted 'world tour'.

        'The Buggles' said it best:

        "Video killed the radio star."

        It's hard to find good music these days by listening to the radio, because they're just playing the tracks that look good on television. Flashy women or six-packed men appeal to the audience that the MTV or HMV bosses can make money from; but they can't play well, and they can't sing well. Hell, even Robbie Williams is a second rate singer, both as part of "Take That" and as a solo singer.

        "You can't see tits on the radio", but that won't stop people buying Kylie Minogue, or whoever is the latest fashion in pop, because that's what it is: Music is fashion. Gucci, Niki, et al make a fortune selling tat, but they make money because they're "fashionable".

        French Connection get away with selling - in the UK - t-shirts saying "FCUK - you" to 10 year old kids, because it's fashionable.

        No one cares about music, no one even cares what ten year old kids have plastered to their chests, so long as it's fashionable.

        How do you stop it being fashionable? That is the question. A few thousand people not buying the 'Crazy Frog' single won't make one iota of difference so long as it remains fashionable. Stop the RIAA, and the BPA's records, and their stars being fashionable, and perhaps you have a chance.

        But how do you do that?
      • The problem with that is that any such action would be 'imagineered' by the RIAA as "proof" that filesharing is destroying their business, and their tools in congress would have that much more ammunition to pass ridiculous legislation.

        Let's be honest: most of the stuff on MTV is crap, no? So is most of the indie stuff that's NOT pimped by the RIAA. So I listen to the radio, and when I hear something I like, I tape it (legally accepted fair use). Then I turn THAT tape into an mp3. I can go in with an ed
  • by sstamps ( 39313 )
    Sadly, they will never learn.
  • by Xunker ( 6905 ) * on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:23PM (#12996136) Homepage Journal
    What was that saying?

    "To view it, we have to decrypt them. If we can decrypt them, we can rip them."

    The only "secure" media format is a CD laminated between two plates of steel.
  • by KennyP ( 724304 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:23PM (#12996145)
    "For every lock there is a key"

    Gotta love fair use!

    Visualize Whirled P.'s
  • by Sierpinski ( 266120 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:24PM (#12996149)
    I bet in another 5 years, they'll come out with some ultra-new technology that is REALLY crackproof.

    Its like Tide... its new and improved? You mean there are people STILL working on Tide? (Yeah I know, Seinfeld!)
    • It's pretty much impossible. If one application or device can decode encrypted data into video/audio, then so can any other application or device. It's merely a matter of reverse-enginnering the encryption. Even if that fails, there's always streaming the audio/video straight to another computer. It only needs to happen once, and it's on P2P.

      The only way to stop it is by very seriously limiting what computers can do. Even then, there's nothing stopping you plugging the output from the sound card into anoth
  • Learn a lesson? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by balster neb ( 645686 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:24PM (#12996162)
    Region coding on DVDs has caused enough headaches for people. The idea of having DVD audio disks that don't allow ripping to your computer is idiotic.

    CSS for DVDs didn't stop ripped DVD movies being downloaded by millions. Why does the recording industry think that some new encryption scheme will stop music pirates? All such encryption does is make the lives of legitimate users hard.
    • How does this harm regular consumers? Are we talking that price on players will go up? Or price on media?

      Or is this new scheme something that requires a whole new player to understand it?

      The CDFreaks link is down and I couldn't find anything on a quick google other than the specs. And I don't want to read a spec sheet!
  • by Chas ( 5144 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:25PM (#12996178) Homepage Journal
    Anyhoo, this is good news.

    Now I can rip this stuff off to 64K MP3, then convert it over to Real, and finally through to it's final form as a DRM'ed WMA. ;)
    • by Sycraft-fu ( 314770 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:56PM (#12996456)
      That's what always cracked me up about the RIAA's parinoia over DVD-A. They burdened it with protections, set it so you can't get the full signal over a digital connection, etc. Why? Internet copying. Of course it seems the majority of Internet copying is 128k or less MP3s, often reencoded form another compressed format and/or recorded from an analogue line in.

      The people who trade that kind of stuff are not going to bother sending DVD Audio around. I mean it is on the order of 50MB per MINUTE compressed.

      The kind of people who have the money for a system that you can appreciate the extra detail on aren't going to squabble much about buying the discs.
    • Call me a philistine but that would be fine for me. The sound coming out of your speakers is only there to remind you, the real tune is inside your head, and it always sounds fine.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:26PM (#12996185)
    CDfreaks has nothing to do with this release. The guys from RareWares are the ones taking risks to bring these tools to the community.

    http://www.rarewares.org/ [rarewares.org]
  • Geez, couldn't you at least wait until some good stuff was released on the format before cracking it?

    Now the copyright cartel will probably just kill the format, and try again with stronger encryption.

    This, of course, is not meant by me to imply that any form of mass-consumer DRM is at all uncrackable. They're all doomed in my view.

    So I guess it is more fun this way. Crack it early, and hope they come up with something more interesting. More challenging.

    • by mpe ( 36238 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:47PM (#12996382)
      Now the copyright cartel will probably just kill the format, and try again with stronger encryption.

      The problem isn't so much the strength of the encryption. It's more that they are trying to use encryption to do something encryption isn't very good at doing.

      This, of course, is not meant by me to imply that any form of mass-consumer DRM is at all uncrackable. They're all doomed in my view.

      Hence they are often combined with legislation to attempt to outlaw cryptoanalysis.
    • I doubt it will be perceptible, but I think this will have if anything a positive effect on the market. Who buys DVD-Audio? My guess is mostly audiophiles, and mostly people with tons of their own CDs ripped to their PC. Once you rip stuff to your PC, you will realize how much a format that doesn't let you do that sucks. So to a large portion of the market, DVD-Audio discs just got a bunch more useful.

      I'm not saying the effect will be huge, or even noticeable. For one, as mentioned, the industry can r

  • Great (Score:2, Funny)

    by iamjoltman ( 883526 )
    That's great, now if only someone could figure out how to circumvent getting Slashdotted.
  • MIRROR / CACHE (Score:4, Informative)

    by AyeRoxor! ( 471669 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:31PM (#12996226) Journal
    Good old coral cache [nyud.net]
  • Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:31PM (#12996232)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
  • Software page (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:34PM (#12996265)
    Link to software [rarewares.org]

    "DVD Audio Tools", second from bottom.
  • It's a start... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by MynockGuano ( 164259 ) <hyperactiveChipm ... S.com minus city> on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:35PM (#12996269)
    So, rather than try to compromise the DVD-Audio's encryption itself, someone has succeeded in making a patch that uses WinDVD to perform the decryption and playback, but instead pipes the decrypted audio output to the hard drive instead of the sound card.

    While certainly useful for WinDVD users who aren't able to do this natively (guessing that Windows can't do this redirection natively, hence the news story), this is really "circumvention" at its most basic level. Well, almost...one step up from sticking a tape recorder next to your speakers. Not quite the "fair use" that will "break open" the DVD-Audio market that many posters will no doubt clamor over, and nowhere near a true solution to the problem.

    And to those familiar with this patch: Is the output even in a standard format capable of more than two channels?
    • Is it that, or is it intercepting the decrypted stream before it's decoded? Like using mplayer -streamdump to rip files from web streaming video servers. If so, it is a big thing. Seems possible, and makes me wonder if someone could disassemble windvd and take the decryption code out.
  • by angle_slam ( 623817 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:39PM (#12996313)
    I was always under the impression that the reason DVD-Audio was developed was *NOT* to repalce CD, but to create a higher quality version marketed towards audiophiles and HT enthusiasts with 5.1.

    But the reputation of the format here on /. is that it was created because they (the RIAA) wanted to prevent ripping. So which is it?

    The problem with the "prevent ripping" choice is that, AFAIK, there are no releases on DVD-A that isn't also available on CD.

    • So which is it?

      Both. It just depends on who you are.

      The CD format is hopelessly unprotected, but it's also got a huge installed base. If you want people to change you're going to have to convince them that it's an upgrade: higher bit rate, better sepration, liner notes and titles. Then they can slip in what they really want: copy protection. That's the primary goal; the other features are the spoonful of sugar to make the bitter pill go down.

      So both properties (features and copy protection) are the "
      • On the other hand, the last few times the industry tried this (DAT, 8-Tracks, SVHS...) have not been that well recieved. The industry would have to cut the prices on the DVD-Audio discs below that of CDs to get people to swich, and there is no way those greedy bastards are going to do that.
  • DVD-What? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by dema ( 103780 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:40PM (#12996328) Homepage
    I imagine the only reason it took so long is because no one gives a damn about DVD-Audio (: The last DVD-Audio disc I actually saw was the test one that came with my previous DVD player.
  • As long as they provide people with a way to hear the music, there will be a way to store the stream. Not to mention that any possible encryption is hax0red within 12 minutes of it's release.

    Instead of companies giving up on protection, I would love to see them give a nod to the hackers by making it something really simple like a key of "12345". How much does your job suck when you design this encryption? You know that the work you did for the last 10 years will last about 2 days.
    • I would love to see them give a nod to the hackers by making it something really simple like a key of "12345".
      That's amazing! I've got the same combination on my luggage!
  • by WindBourne ( 631190 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:47PM (#12996377) Journal
    Plain and simple, the format allows the companies to disable your machine. Not only are they trying to control the music that you buy, but now they are wanting to control your machine.

    Funny thing is, that kids today can control the industry as they are the main buyers of the music.
  • FINALLY! (Score:5, Funny)

    by halo1982 ( 679554 ) * on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:47PM (#12996379) Homepage Journal
    As one of the 3 people in the world who actually own DVD-Audio discs I am very excited about this. Thankfully I was able to get the story and programs before the server went up in flames. I'm alredy ripping my Nine Inch Nails With Teeth DualDisc and it seems to be working quite well. I also had to rip the VIDEO_TS folder after using DVDADecrypter to get WinDVD to read the files when I loaded PPCMRipper. Now it's decoding, and I can't seem to get it to get the multichannel audio. Also, its cutting off the first few seconds of the first track on the disc, but if you hit the back button it starts reencoding the first track. Maybe I could just use a normal dvd audio ripper for this part...
  • by WoodstockJeff ( 568111 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:50PM (#12996405) Homepage
    A search of Amazon shows only 36 hits for "dvd-audio" in the music section, and several of those are actually SACD, not DVD-Audio. Wow. Think of the losses! It could run in the tens of thousands of Yen!
  • by RancidMilk ( 872628 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @01:55PM (#12996446)
    " scheme has remain publicly uncracked,"
    "Me fail English? Thats unpossible" --Ralph Wiggums
  • Windows Media (Score:2, Insightful)

    by drstock ( 621360 )
    Now if they could crack a format that is actually used, like DRM:ed WMV/WMA.

    (Yeah, I know Freeme cracks the old version)
  • by PipianJ ( 574459 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @02:08PM (#12996579)
    Here's why:

    As cited in the article, this only compromised WinDVD. CPPM, like CSS, has player keys that are specific to the player hardware/software being used. This did not actually reclaim the player key from WinDVD, and even if it did, the player key can be deactivated in future releases, so that future DVD-Audio DVDs can still play. Hence, for true cracking, all of the player keys need to be discovered.

    Furthermore, if only WinDVD is compromised, it will send a signal to content companies to support such formats as SACD, as the format's design naturally prevents playback (and hence any sort of ripping) on computers entirely (as the technology has not been licensed).
  • by Sloppy ( 14984 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @02:40PM (#12996883) Homepage Journal
    The idea of buying DVDs was a pretty stupid investment .. until it was cracked. Then, once we had a way to play them, the idea was finally on the table.

    This is just the same thing. Right now, DVD audio is an obscure thing that few people have heard of or seen around, and even if you know it exists, you gotta be crazy to buy one. Now it should become less crazy, and publishers will start to have a reason to use the format.

    You just can't seriously be in the market until your format is usable. It's just common sense.

  • Not been cracked (Score:3, Informative)

    by Reality Master 101 ( 179095 ) <.moc.liamg. .ta. .101retsaMytilaeR.> on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @03:01PM (#12997092) Homepage Journal
    Neither CSS nor DVD Audio has been CRACKED, meaning the audio is decoded. CSS was decoded because some idiot DVD player manufacturer let out an unencrypted key. This is being done by re-encoding an output stream. You could do the same thing by sticking a microphone next to your speakers.

    As usual, too many people lose sight of the goal of encryption. It's not to be "foolproof" where no one can make copies, it's to make it hard enough that the casual music fan decides it's easier just to buy the music than go through the hassle of installing software.

  • by Nom du Keyboard ( 633989 ) on Wednesday July 06, 2005 @03:47PM (#12997591)
    If this format allows revocation of keys for compromised hardware the next time you play an updated disc after your player, than mischief can certain abound.

    1: Company A cracks Company B's more successful player and distributes said crack over Usenet.
    2: Company B's keys are revoked, rendering their players useless.
    3: PROFIT!

    A 3-steps to Profit is a short pipeline indeed.

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