Nerdy Photo in Vista DVDs Thwarts Disk Pirates 265
maximus1 writes "Microsoft says that the tiny photo on the Windows Vista Business Edition installation disks is an anti-piracy feature. The tiny photo of three grinning men — less that 1 mm in size — is one of several images incorporated into the hologram's design intended to make it harder to replicate a Vista DVD, according to Nick White on Microsoft's Vista team blog. 'The real story is interesting, but conspiracy theorists will be disappointed to learn that it is not the result of a deliberate attempt to deceive,' White wrote."
If it were porn... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:If it were porn... (Score:5, Funny)
How is someone supposed to know (Score:5, Insightful)
And it only assumes the buyer cares.
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Fifth picture discovered (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Fifth picture discovered (Score:4, Funny)
Re:How is someone supposed to know (Score:5, Informative)
Watermarks such as this are designed to prevent counterfeits, not piracy. There are large scale counterfeit operations designed to pass themselves off as legitimate software resellers. Considering the type of disc presses these organizations have access to these days, they can stamp some very authentic looking discs.
The BSA and other such agents look out for these tiny missing features, so they know when and where to release the hounds.
A mom and pop shop with a few extra installs than licenses is small potatoes. They group stamping 100s of thousands of discs in China and selling them as genuine in Europe are the big daddy potatoes.
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Re:How is someone supposed to know (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:How is someone supposed to know (Score:5, Informative)
This isn't about stopping you or me from installing a pirated copy of Vista (knowingly or unknowingly), this is about making it that bit easier to find and shut down the big counterfeiting operations.
Yes, it's easy to duplicate holograms. (Score:3, Informative)
It also assumes that the factory did not print 16 million extra copies and that the "pirates" won't be able to duplicate the image. The widespread counterfieting of currency is evidence to the contrary.
And from a story the next day, a report of just that [sfgate.com]:
Fascinating (Score:2, Insightful)
It's all about the photo (Score:3, Insightful)
All pirates care about is 1) Does it install? 2) Can I "activate" it?
Cheers.
Re:It's all about the photo (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:It's all about the photo (Score:5, Funny)
REAL pirates primarily care about: Can I SAIL it and get away?
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Cheers.
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fail (Score:2, Redundant)
Re:fail (Score:5, Informative)
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Re:fail (Score:5, Interesting)
Plain pirates who do nothing to disguise what they are selling as legit may do some damage but buisness customers are easilly scared away from them by the threat of audits, counterfieers OTOH can sell at a much higher price to buisness customers taking sales directly from MS.
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Oooh look, a statistic pulled out of thin air! It's magic!
The one reporter I've seen who experienced WGA first hand actually found out that the shrinkwrapped copy he had purchased was counterfeit.
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Sports Merchandise (Score:2)
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If it is a mark of authenticity that is difficult to duplicate, it's easier for discriminating customers to skip. It's the same concept the gubment uses to make money difficult to counterfit.
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One point of reference would be to check the number of seeders/peers on any given torrent site for a particular OEM version of Vista Ultimate, pre-activated.
Last time I checked there were a couple hundred seeders and about a thousand plus peers, keeping in mind of course that once you download a new OS, chances are you're gonna get straight to burning and installing it, which reduces the seeder lev
exactly (Score:5, Interesting)
1. Plastic sleeve
2. No box
3. Burned CD with "Vista 32 Eng" written in Sharpie on the front.
And it works great. Even came with the guys phone number in case I had problems applying the validation hacks.
If youre going to buy a pirate version what do you care? I have seen the nicer versions (with fake box et. al.) but trust me, no one is fooling themselves into thinking that they are getting a $400 program for ten bucks.
But my even more ghetto pirate version only cost $5 and it came with Office 2007 as well (which employed the same counter measures)
Re:exactly (Score:4, Insightful)
That's for the $10 copies. There are, however, the $400 copies, in which case people are fooled into thinking that the $400 they're paying for this program is going to Microsoft instead of some thief's pocket.
(And yes, this is in fact theft. The data might not be "stolen", but the $400 definitely was stolen.)
Re:exactly (Score:4, Insightful)
No, it isn't. Selling an item with the pretense that it's a different item is called "fraud".
Re:exactly (Score:4, Informative)
Re:exactly (Score:4, Funny)
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You might not be hurting Bill Gates with your pirating, but you are most definitely hurting people.
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geeks tand to get things fixed or returned, while non-geeks are more likely to live with the problems and bitch a lot.
Re:fail (Score:5, Funny)
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Re:fail (Score:5, Interesting)
Dell had to revert back to selling XP due to customer demand. Many poles, published on many sites, indicate that the business world is nonplussed with Vista and many have no plans to migrate over. This includes our shop that runs all XP on the desktop and Linux on the servers only.
Many, many people are not interested in Vista, particularly since it won't run a lot of popular software. By the time you can't get support for XP, we will have already migrated to either OS/X or Linux. There IS a lot of negative reaction to Vista. The average gamer or grandma may not care because it is their only choice, but many of us will stick with XP until a better choice comes along. I run IT and I haven't bothered installing it, although I can for free. Won't run all my hardware and software, is buggy as hell, so why would I?
What really matters: More people are trying to pirate XP than Vista. When people won't even STEAL a product, I would consider that a negative reaction to it.
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Many Poles? I certainly hadn't heard much about Polish bloggers before. I wonder why they're speaking out about Vista? :-)
My experience with Vista has been limited. It came on a friend's new (Dell) laptop. There weren't any particular problems with it, but the software I installed was Firefox, Thunderbird and a slew of Adobe apps (Photoshop, Illustrator, et al, from Creat
You've never heard of PolishLinux.org? (Score:2)
http://polishlinux.org/ [polishlinux.org]
It's one of the major linux distro review sites, they linked to from distrowatch.org all the time.
Many Poles (Score:2)
Thats because all the poles are on the left hand side of the plane.
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My experience within a company says that Vista is bad. Just put the Aero stylexp mod on and go for it.
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I'm not surprised that Vista isn't popular in Poland.
And if you are going to refer to Polish people as Poles, please capitalise it.
Thanks.
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Yeah, I know rebelling by pasting the 09 F9 key everywhere is trendy, but I'm wondering how many people have noticed the new one....
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Did they copy Tiger or something?
Link To Pictures (Score:5, Informative)
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The three guys trap your soul ... (Score:5, Funny)
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All I know is ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All I know is ... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All I know is ... (Score:5, Funny)
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I Feel Ripped Off (Score:5, Funny)
Let's see what's wrong... (Score:5, Interesting)
They dont really want to stop piracy (Score:3, Interesting)
"I buried Paul" (Score:5, Funny)
The devil says, "join the botnet" (Score:2, Insightful)
you have to play them forward to hear the devil talking.
And you have to let it onto your computer for it to do any real harm.
Avoid CLick through (Score:5, Informative)
no ads.
This isn't an anti-piracy measure, Microsoft is actually pretty upset about it. They don't like easter eggs because it makes them look unprofessional. If they find the guys that did this, they will probably be fired.
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Tiny Penis on a DVD? Wha??? (Score:2)
I'm hoping that by saying "could have stuck in a penis" they meant to say "could have included AN IMAGE of a penis on the DVD." I mean, the internet's a pretty strange place but somebody farking a DVD is just plain freaky.
However, this is far too serious an issue to take any chances and MSFT is far too serious a company not to respond appropr
Re:Avoid CLick through (Score:4, Informative)
Leading up the release of Windows 2000, Microsoft starting getting a lot more serious about selling servers into the government and large enterprise markets. These guys saw NT 4 as the first really credible enterprise-class product from MS, and were evaluating Win2k to see how things were progressing.
The story, as I recall it, is that one of these customers had some strong words for our easter eggs, suggesting that any company that could let such things frivolous things into their products wasn't doing a very good software engineering job, and thus couldn't be trusted to run an enterprise-scale business.
The argument never made much sense to me. Easter eggs, at least on teams I worked on, were never anywhere near critical-path code. And they often seem to have been pretty well tested by every member of the product team who wanted to verify their name showed up. Maybe there's some story I don't know about how an Easter egg caused a perf hit, or crash or something (I bet if such a story existed, Raymond would know it.). In any event, it seemed like we one day got this email that said "no more Easter eggs ever again", and that was pretty much the end of it.
Honestly I don't blame them... (Score:2)
I don't actually hope these guys get into trouble, but I think any of us should understand why they would. I'm sure there are business cultures where this
Re:Avoid CLick through (Score:5, Funny)
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The Dark Ages called. They want their crass ignorance back.
At least... (Score:5, Funny)
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Who is looking for these images? (Score:2)
So why bother with them then? Seriously, let's say that I wanted to know if someone was selling me a counterfeit vista disc. I look on the back and there's nothing there, how do I know whether or not the watermark is there?
Completely fucking worthless.
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Not in court. There it's called "evidence".
So this is why Vista is so expensive (Score:3, Funny)
Sweet!
Worried about being authentic (Score:5, Funny)
If you intentionally buy "pirated" software (Score:2)
Sort of like counterfeit bills, if it passes at the local burger joint, its good enough. Who cares if the feds catch it at the federal bank and take it out of circulation? You got your use out of it.
Nerdy Photo? (Score:5, Funny)
If there were really serious, THIS [informacyde.com] should have been the embedded image.
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Sensible Idea (Score:2)
It's a secret BECAUSE... (Score:4, Funny)
Image Here... (Score:2)
Kneel before ZOD (Score:4, Funny)
Does no one get it? (Score:4, Insightful)
You go to your local mom and pop PC shop. You buy a PC for $1000 including Vista. They give you a disk that has a nice color silkscreened vista logo. 9 months later, the activation hack they applied and didn't tell you was applied is fixed via update, and you call MS to deal with validation. They ask you about your disk, which has no holograms. They tell you you've been "had," so you go back to the mom and pop shop and require a real copy, this time knowing what to look for and demand.
The same story could be told about small businesses who are not large enough to use corporate version with their own keyserver, and thus buy bulk professional licenses and have the CDs as proof of license.
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Microsoft (or more likely the BSA) goes to places suspected of counterfeiting. They go to an assortment of vendors and buy Vista. Then they discover which vendor is selling thousands of copies of counterfeit Vista and call the police.
Customers don't enter into it.
I don't buy it... (Score:2, Insightful)
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I can see the fnerds! (Score:2)
The real secret. (Score:2)
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Cracked? (Score:5, Funny)
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Cracked versions will feature the gaping crack of none other than... Drum Roll...
The Goatse Guy.
Tada!
Jobs????? (Score:2)
Isn't the one the right Steve Jobs???
Vista by itself is enough to thwart piracy (Score:5, Funny)
Not worth it (Score:3, Informative)
Other companies do. And I bet a fair number operate in China. So guess who can make 1mm holograms?
Most pirates won't bother because their target markets don't care. But how hard is it for a factory to have "production overruns" or "test runs"?
In fact, I've seen a 100% original MS CD that was a _low_quality_ stamp (and was not easily readable by some drives) - you could see the "shiny side" was "disfigured" - I've seen low quality pirate CDs that looked like that, but wasn't expecting MS to use the same el-cheapo manufacturers.
I bet if MS sues one of those Chinese factory after a few too many "overruns", it'll just close down, and reopen under a new name and "new management", and start making the same stuff.
"DRM" tag...? (Score:3, Informative)
Come on, people; if you dilute a phrase enough it is liable to lose its meaning; calling all anti-theft measures from holograms on discs to security guards at the entrance of a shop "DRM" will just detract from legitimate efforts opposing the use of actual DRM to prevent fair use, etc.
Re:LESS THAT 1 MM IN SIZE (Score:4, Funny)
If you must comment on your penis size, Please use your journal.