Post-it Notes vs. Copy-Inhibited CDs 843
rjoseph writes "MacUser is running an article about how the new Celine Dion CD A New Day Has Come with copy protection mechanisms to prevent the CD from being played on a PC not only won't play on an iMac, but it will lock the CD tray (so it can't be removed) and fubar the firmware (so the machine can't be rebooted), effectivley killing the iMac. Ouch." We mentioned this interesting experiment in consumer relations last month as well, but now it's getting noticed a lot more. However, emkman writes: "What was first thought to be an April Fool's joke, now appears to be true. Some Audio CD protection schemes such as Cactus DATA Shield 100/200, KeyAudio, and perhaps others may be defeated by invalidating the outer ring of the CD with a black marker or post-it sticky note. www.chip.de has their report in German, here is a translation."
Oh for goodness sakes! (Score:0, Informative)
In other cases, perhaps you might need to get creative to get that CD out. Perhaps you need to pull the drive apart - who knows. The point is, the article made it clear that there is no permanent damage to the machine. Get the CD out, and everything goes back to normal.
Re:Oh for goodness sakes! (Score:5, Informative)
The new iMac doesn't have any manual way to do it.
Oh of course. All you have to do is dismantle the computer and void your warranty to get the CD out? Man, some people are just whiners!
mark
This explains how to get the drive to open... (Score:5, Informative)
For everyone saying "I don't like Celine Dion" (Score:5, Informative)
Not a big deal, folks... (Score:2, Informative)
Apple Responds w/ KBA (Score:5, Informative)
Apple has released KnowledgeBase Article #106882, Cannot Eject Copy Protected Audio Disc [apple.com], to adress the problem with the cd's getting locked into the drive.
"You may be unable to eject certain copy-protected audio discs, which resemble Compact Discs (CD) but technically are not. Some computers start up to a gray screen after a copy protected disc has been left in the computer."
Re:Apple Responds w/ KBA (Score:4, Informative)
CD audio discs that incorporate copyright protection technologies do not adhere to published Compact Disc standards. Apple designs its CD drives to support media that conforms to such standards. Apple computers are not designed to support copyright protected media that do not conform to such standards. Therefore, any attempt to use non standard discs with Apple CD drives will be considered a misapplication of the product. Under the terms of Apple's One-Year Limited Warranty, AppleCare Protection Plan, or other AppleCare agreement any misapplication of the product is excluded from Apple's repair coverage.
How do you like them apples?
Hold the mouse button down (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Episode 2 CD (Jango Fett cover+Bonus Track) (Score:2, Informative)
Only the UK version! (Score:4, Informative)
Way to eject CD on new iMac (Score:5, Informative)
PPA, the girl next door
Re:Oh for goodness sakes! (Score:5, Informative)
Apple knows [apple.com]. You have three non-pull-apart options.
Re:Class Action Lawsuit! (Sign-Up Here) (Score:5, Informative)
If you are a U.S. resident (you don't have to be a citizen) and want to be part of a class-action lawsuit, go here:
http://www.fatchucks.com/z3.cd.submit.html [fatchucks.com]
after you buy a known corrupt CD (one with a red star next to it):
http://www.fatchucks.com/z3.cd.html [fatchucks.com]
I will personally forward your info to the group of lawfirms who are already planning a class-action against the record industry. If you have any questions about this class-action or anything else, write me at chuck@fatchucks.com [mailto].
Peace.
Re:Episode 2 CD (Jango Fett cover+Bonus Track) (Score:2, Informative)
http://www.fatchucks.com/z3.cd.starwars.soundtrac
but there have been no reports out of the Ameircas. Of course, time will tell if this holds up.
Note the culprit, folks... (Score:3, Informative)
SONY.
Sony, Sony, Sony.
Now do you understand why I fsckn can't stand them????
If there is an Intellectual Property fracas, 9 out of 10 times Sony's right in the middle of it. Burn in Hell, Akio Morita!
Re:Oh for goodness sakes! (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Apple Responds w/ KBA (Score:3, Informative)
Daniel
Re:Apple Responds w/ KBA (Score:5, Informative)
You have got to be kidding me. Are you a troll, or what? That kind of wildly disproportionate comparison casts your whole post in an unflattering light.
Pioneer - for engineering a drive where it is possible with the wrong combination of bits or read errors to completely lock the drive and ruin the firmware.
First and most important: the idea that these CDs are ruining firmware seems to have come from the mind of one sloppy reporter at MacUser UK. I quote from the (f'ing dreadful) article:
"As we reported last month, Celine's latest offering - A New Day Has Come - features copy-protection to prevent it being played and duplicated in a PC, and that same copy-protection was believed to be capable of damaging the PC's firmware. It seems that this is definitely the case, as once the CD is inserted into a new iMac it cannot be removed and the machine cannot be restarted."
(Emphasis mine, obviously.)
The actual fact is that the CD, once inserted, cannot be read by the Mac. If you try to reboot the Mac, something-- the OF boot loader, or something-- gets wedged trying to read the CD. Hell, maybe the drive is wedging the bus or something. Point is, if you can get the CD out, your Mac is just fine.
To remove the CD from the Mac, reboot, and hold down the mouse button during the boot chime. The Mac (actually Open Firmware) then spits out the CDROM and boots normally. This has been true since long, long ago. I think I remember getting a bad floppy disk out of a Mac 512K or SE that way.
If, for an unknown reason, holding down the mouse button doesn't work, then yeah, the drive has to be removed and the CD manually extracted. A person has to twist the eject cog with a tweaker or whatever. That's what the (f'ing dreadful) article was referring to when it said that the computer may have to be sent in for repair. Just for the record, I haven't heard of any instances firsthand where holding down the mouse button during power up failed to eject the CD.
So in summary, the idea that these CDs are ruining firmware is complete, total, utter bullshit. So let's just drop that one right now.
Apple - for engineering a machine with a soft eject and no aesthetically-challenging hard backup. Mr. Jobs, would a pinhole really have offended your out-of-wack perfectionism that much?
I'll say it again: it's a fucking Pioneer drive. Apple didn't design it. They didn't build it. And they didn't decide whether to put an "eject" button on it.
So then why not a hotkey during boot to eject the media or similar?
Apple has published [apple.com] not one but three non-mechanical options for getting the CD out, including the hold-down-the-button trick. The hold-down-the-button trick is very well known among Mac users, and all three of them are documented thoroughly. The fact that you are unaware of them is not evidence of negligence on Apple's part.
God, I can't believe you got so up in arms with so little information. At least get a little information before flying off the handle next time.
Re:Didn't the original post say you CAN'T reboot? (Score:3, Informative)
The MacUser UK article that inspired this thread is simply terrible. And yeah, it said that the CDs in question would leave the Mac unable to boot. But what was meant was that the Mac would be unable to boot all the way up to multiuser mode successfully.
In order to force-eject the CD-- using two out of the three methods, that is-- you only have to get the Mac up to Open Firmware. That's all in hardware, so the presence of a bad disc won't affect it.
Seems like most people don't even know that they've got a really sophisticated boot PROM underneath their Macs. Hold down cmd-opt-O-F (that's "oh" and "eff") right after powering on some time to see how it all works.
The drive isn't failing (was Re:Apple Responds w/ (Score:5, Informative)
The drive isn't failing. It's doing what it's suposed to do. It's reading the equivalent of the boot sector of the CD, and attempting to boot the software on the CD. The software on the CD is then doing deliberately malicious things to the computer. Any computer that's capable of booting or automatically running software from any media is vulnerable to attack from what is in effect a boot sector virus.
It does seem to me that Sony are sailing very close to some legal winds here. It would not seem to me to be so much a problem if the automatic-load-and-go program opened a window on the Mac screen saying 'this disc cannot be played on Macintosh computers', but this deliberate malicious damage seems to me quite serious.
Mind you, it's arguable that anyone who buys a Celine Dion record deserves all they get...
Re:Class Action Lawsuit! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Class Action Lawsuit! (Score:3, Informative)
They may have an eject hole, but it isn't accesible. There are however other ways [apple.com] of removing the disk.