Updated: 24.11.2002; 11:47:55 Uhr.
disLEXia
lies, laws, legal research, crime and the internet
        

Thursday, December 21, 2000

Hackers hack science exam

Two 8th-grade honor students in Tampa, Hillsborough County, Florida, hacked into the school computer and copied the final exam for one of their courses. They have been suspended. [PGN-ed]

We've wired up the country's schools, put the kids on the Internet, and only a small handful of teachers have any clue as to what goes on behind the mouse button. The teachers are not technically trained, they are underpaid and underappreciated. Is it any wonder? And I doubt the kids have been taught the first thing about CyberEthics by their schools or their parents.

Winn Schwartau [Winn Schwartau via risks-digest Volume 21, Issue 18]
0:00 # G!

IBM and Intel push copy protection into ordinary disk drives

[From cryptography@c2.net; Source: Stealth plan puts copy protection into every hard drive http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/2/15620.html]

*The Register* has broken a story of the latest tragedy of copyright mania in the computer industry. Intel and IBM have invented and are pushing a change to the standard spec for PC hard drives that would make each one enforce "copy protection" on the data stored on the hard drive. You wouldn't be able to copy data from your own hard drive to another drive, or back it up, without permission from some third party. Every drive would have a unique ID and unique keys, and would encrypt the data it stores -- not to protect YOU, the drive's owner, but to protect unnamed third parties AGAINST you.

The same guy who leads the DVD Copy Control Association is heading the organization that licenses this new technology -- John Hoy. He's a front-man for the movie and record companies, and a leading figure in the California DVD lawsuit. These people are lunatics, who would destroy the future of free expression and technological development, so they could sit in easy chairs at the top of the smoking ruins and light their cigars off 'em.

The folks at Intel and IBM who are letting themselves be led by the nose are even crazier. They've piled fortunes on fortunes by building machines that are better and better at copying and communicating WHATEVER collections of raw bits their customers desire to copy. Now for some completely unfathomable reason, they're actively destroying that working business model. Instead they're building in circuitry that gives third parties enforceable veto power over which bits their customers can send where. (This disk drive stuff is just the tip of the iceberg; they're doing the same thing with LCD monitors, flash memory, digital cable interfaces, BIOSes, and the OS. Next week we'll probably hear of some new industry-wide copy protection spec, perhaps for network interface cards or DRAMs.) I don't know whether the movie moguls are holding compromising photos of Intel and IBM executives over their heads, or whether they have simply lost their minds. The only way they can succeed in imposing this on the buyers in the computer market is if those buyers have no honest vendors to turn to. Or if those buyers honestly don't know what they are being sold.

So spread the word. No copy protection should exist ANYWHERE in generic computer hardware! It's up to the BUYER to determine what to use their product for. It's not up to the vendors of generic hardware, and certainly not up to a record company that's shadily influencing those vendors in back-room meetings. Demand a policy declaration from your vendor that they will build only open hardware, not covertly controlled hardware. Use your purchasing dollars to enforce that policy.

Our business should go to the honest vendors, who'll sell you a drive and an OS and a motherboard and a CPU and a monitor that YOU, the buyer, can determine what is a valid use of. Don't send your money to Intel or IBM or Sony. Give your money to the vendors who'll sell you a product that YOU control.

John [John Gilmore via risks-digest Volume 21, Issue 17]
0:00 # G!


Maximillian Dornseif, 2002.
 
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