Still More on News Corp. Hacking Charges 78
Spike and others wrote in about this ongoing saga: subsidiary of Vivendi claims that a subsidiary of News Corporation cracked their satellite TV smart cards and posted for public download. (See our previous stories.) Two new stories from the Associated Press and Yahoo note that although the two companies are apparently dropping the original lawsuit (since News Corp. is making a large investment in Vivendi), Echostar is now claiming they were hacked too and the U.S. Justice Department is investigating possible criminal charges.
Me too! (Score:1, Interesting)
Love! (Score:1, Insightful)
I got hacked too, honest (Score:3, Funny)
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:1, Funny)
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:2)
As to your second paragraph, it seems you don't know the right as well as you think. It's chockablock with promiscuous women who use their sex as a weapon because of their inherent inferiority complexes. Yes, my friend, the sex life on the right is a complicated, dangerous game.
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:2)
As to your question, I doubt that Mr. Coulter is the promiscuous type. She is a conservative and therefore she is Right. She would never gave premarital sex, unlike most leftists who can't recognize morals even if it smacked them upside the head.
She/He is a LANKY SKANKY NUTTY SLUTTY IGNORANT WHORE with one wasted existence to pass himself/herself off as a woman. She/He reminds me of those reptile people on the TV series "V". Cold-blooded and always spitting venom.
Nice Adam's Apple for a "woman"? [wittenberg.edu]
What about this one? Nice "Crazy Eyes" there Mr./Mrs. LANKY SKANKY. [mediatransparency.org]
Ann "LANKY SKANKY" Coulter is a perfect example of the "Seduction of the Ignorant" crowd that fuels the rancid Criminal Republican Criminal Party Criminals and their twisted anti-American spew which regularly is vomited up on one of their many televised "happy to be retarded" love-fests. I see every Ann "LANKY SKANKY" Coulter appearance as yet another parade of a gaunt shemale which titillates the Rancid Criminal Republican Party while ENRON, WORLDCOM, & CHOICEPOINT robs those empty-dittoheads and their suffering children (suffering the torment of ignorant worthless parents who cheer Criminal Traitor Fraud President George Worthless Bush on while he robs them blind. These perverse demented Criminal Republican Criminals ought to be charged with child abuse for forcing these unfortunate children born to mentally defective washouts while they masturbate frantically to images of a shemale viper.
She/He says the National Review only paid him/her $5 a month for her column. The National Review was ripped off by the spindly stupid slut for his/her constant bimbo-burps she claims to fame.
Frankly I consider the LANKY SKANKY random word vomiter as most likely too scary for even Charles Manson (though those "Crazy Eyes" show even Squeaky Frome is a tame nutball compared to LANKY SKANKY).
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:3, Insightful)
> It's people like you who are destroying this
> country. You people feel entitled to everything
> that you can never achieve with your godforsaken
> attitudes. There were places in the world where
> people like you poisoned with your way of
> thinking. Your post isn't even funny. Joking about
> the confescation of property is an assult on the
> principles of this nation.
Oh, for crying out loud, it was a joke! iainl was parodying what they thought Echostar was doing. iainl has a perfect right to do so, under the United States' First Amendment to the Constitution.
> Major corporations made this country Great.
> Civilians should not have the same rights as
> corporations because they do not contribute as
> much to our nation.
So sorry, but we are a nation "of the people, by the people, for the people" according to Abraham Lincoln. The Declaration of Independence states that it is men that are created equal and given rights that can not be taken away, and lists among those "life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness." No mention of nations for the corporation, or any rights given to the corporations (a very recent concept).
> The only ones who should be allowed to sue (and
> reap irreperible damage to a corporation) are
> corporations who have as much at stake.
Thankfully, that isn't the case. Sometimes lawsuits are the only way to reign in greedy sharks that are negligent enough to make defective products that kill people. Of course, if corporations were always responsible and fair, there would be no reason to sue them.
> Our Nation is founded upon the concept of a
> Constitutional Republic(tm).
Didn't know that was a trademark of some corporation.
A constitutional republic simply means that the citizens elect representatives to represent them in Congress. The representatives make the laws (following, in theory, the wishes of those who elected them and not the corporations that bribe them), and the whole process is governed by the Constitution.
> We have class separations that must be enforced.
Only if you are a snooty patuty rich person.
> An average Joe Sixpack, or a mass of them,
> should never wield the kind of power deprive
> companies of millions.
Yeah, well, a mass of corporations (and their greedy CEOs) should never wield the kind of power to deprive Joe Sixpacks of 7 trillion dollars of retirement money. But they did.
> On the other hand, News Corp. has every Right to
> hack their competition because they dominate the
> market. People recieve more rights as they
> ascend the ladder, and it should be that way or
> otherwise we would have a ruling mob.
Please quote the section of the Constitution that says this.
> Those of you who believe in a parity between
> Corporate rights and civilian rights are
> socialists.
There is no parity. Corporations still do not have all the rights of a citizen, and they never should. I am a citizen of the United States of America. News Corp. is not.
> The fact of the matter is that America is an
> aristocracy and that is what makes this nation
> Great.
No, what makes this nation great, despite all its warts and mistakes, is the great ideals on which it was founded, and the courage and compassion of its people. Justice makes us great. Liberty makes us great. Life and Happiness make us great.
Greedy sharks, their willful actions and their bribes, are the problem, not the solution.
"The path of peace is yours to discover for eternity."
Japanese version of "Mothra" (1961)
It's a troll (Score:2)
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:1)
> People like you who badmouth private enterprise
> can me sued or convicted (hopefully both) under
> certain statutes.
Wow, really? Just like all my favorite 60's Mothra heroes! Those nasty greedy sharks were always threatening to sue or report them for "interfering with private enterprise". Of course, the good reporters were just objecting to the sharks using people as slaves (the truth).
> The Declarations of Lincoln and Jefferson are
> just that, declarations of their opinions.
Nope. The Gettysburg Address was a president, in an official capacity, praising the deeds of soldiers who had died "that the government of the people, by the people, and for the people shall not perish from the earth." The Declaration of Independence was the first document that stated what the American Revolution was all about, and was signed by representatives of each colony which would later become one of the original states.
> Ideas that don't work are dismissed and their
> sympathisers can be called before a
> congressional hearing and charged with being
> unAmerican.
Well then, arrest me for being unAmerican. I believe in those bad old unworking ideals in the Declaration of Independence and the Bill of Rights! I also have enough sense to bring my flag in out of the rain. Heck, I even know all four verses of the National Anthem.
> The reversal of the tradition of requiring both
> parties to have comparable risk has led to many
> frivilous lawsuits.
Which any judge with half a brain throws out.
> Every foreign country are laughing at us
A constitutional representative form of government means we care about the constitution and the people, not who laughs at us.
> Classes are supposed to let people know what
> their place in society is. The reason why we
> have so a lazy, incompetant, workforce is
> because they do not know their place. If they
> know that they can not hope to achieve any more
> than what they have then maybe they won't be so
> cocky and dismiss their jobs as being menial.
If it were not for the "cockiness" of certain individuals, a number of large corporations (such as Apple) would not exist today. That is something called the "American dream".
On the otherhand, all jobs are important, even that of a laborer. After all, without dock workers, a good chunk of the economy comes to a screaching halt.
> The reason why we don't have world class (pun
> intended) academic achievement is because
> everyone is at garenteed food and shelter.
I'm sure the jobless, the homeless, and the hungry will be most happy to hear that. Not everyone who wants to work can get a job. Those laid off due to no fault of their own can still loose their homes and have no money to feed their families.
> And whose fault is it to put so much money into
> risky ventures. People should accept loss and
> not cry to the government for reparations. Only
> a fool would put their life's savings in one
> kind of investment.
Newsflash: Most retirement programs are invested in money market funds that are invested in the stock market. Joe doesn't choose exactly where the money goes. Most of these 'ventures' are huge established corporations that have failed due to the criminal actions of the people running them.
> Just because something is not in the constition
> doesn't mean that it has no basis.
Well, when you are talking about a "right" to do something that is against the law (such as hacking), you better have some reference in the Constitution that contradicts the law.
> It's funny how leftists like you would refer to
> the Constitution only when it suits you.
No, what is funny is that you think believing in "Truth, Justice, and the American Way" is leftist.
> The established norm is that corporations are
> more deserving of favoritism because they fund
> and sustain the nation, period. Civilians don't
> have the power and therefore should deserve less
> attention.
Favoritism, power, and attention: are you sure the corporations aren't just jealous because citizens are teacher's pet?
BTW, it is "citizen", not "civilian". Unless American corporations all joined the army and I wasn't informed?
"Ridiculous, you have no claim. I'll sue you for interfering with private enterprise."
Kumoyama, Happy Enterprises, "Mothra vs. Godzilla", 1964
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:1)
I'm not going to argue about whether or not I'm "Unamerican" right now, but there is one tiny factor thats probably worth mentioning about now. I'm Un-American in the 'not an American citizen' sense, at least. Lovely country, lovely people, but I live elsewhere in the world.
Will someone mod this up as funny? (Score:1)
The first ten million years were the hardest...
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:3, Funny)
Your name isn's Goerge W. by any change ?
Re:I got hacked too, honest (Score:2, Funny)
Nope. Given that wonderful new word you've invented, I don't suppose you are, are you?
So they claim... (Score:4, Insightful)
So why did I read them?
-S
Re:So they claim... (Score:3, Insightful)
Something about the concept of middle-aged, corporate type businessmen hacking each other what makes it a compelling story.
Re:So they claim... (Score:5, Interesting)
Although this is pure speculation, having your technology leaked to the hackers, forcing an industry-wide upgrade to new technology which is leaked to the hackers, forcing... makes an interesting business model.
Isn't this breaking the DMCA? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Isn't this breaking the DMCA? (Score:2)
Re:Isn't this breaking the DMCA? (Score:1)
http://www.eff.org/IP/DMCA/US_v_Elcomsoft/us_v_
"Security" (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:"Security" (Score:5, Interesting)
This is exactly what is going to happen to DirectTV, but they only have to send out new cards, not entire receivers. When piracy gets too high, they ship another card. It's much easier to ship a card, to have the user install it, and coordinate the effort. But once the piracy becomes rampant, then the legitimate subscribers will have lost their initial hardware investment.
Re:"Security" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:"Security" (Score:2)
Some people might not understand that what they are paying for, people are getting for free. Some people might just turn around and start pirating it, if everyone else is.
People are strange, and will do strange things. I've worked for millionaires who pirate software, who pirate satellite, hell, even try to cheat me out of money. And it's not being frugal or hard-working that got them their millions, and their actions are definitely not keeping them millionaires.
Re:"Security" (Score:2, Interesting)
The card upgrade is for the security of DirecTV's revenue stream. Everything else is secondary.
Since they are not replacing the receivers, that means the cards will be as hackable as before. Somebody will get a legit card, pop it in a debugger and watch the communications between the card and the receiver, then get to work on reverse-engineering the card. It will take a while, but the new cards will ultimately be hacked too.
Re:"Security" (Score:3)
I guess that I'm just honest about my dishonesty.
Re:"Security" (Score:2)
Legal = Not stealing.
But thanks for tossing some sympathy towards Dave, he needs it after all. I'm sure he's grateful to sniveling little asswads like yourself.
BTW, for those that don't know. Canadians can't by law subscribe to directv, and a court ruling declared their signals to be public domain, across the border. He could have been a billionaire, and he still couldn't have subscribed to them, without immigrating to the US. So, he's not honest at all, and he's not even lying for his own benefit... rather, for the benefit of a big, fat, filthy corporation! Way to go, AWG.
Re:"Security" (Score:1)
So before you go lipping off, get your facts straight.
Re:"Security" (Score:1)
CARD SWAP = FALSE! (Score:2, Informative)
Dave's H cards were completely exploited by hackers (aka "testers") and were completely protected from any electronic countermeasures [pirateden.com] (aka "ECM") by a method of testing called emulation. Dave had no choice but to instigate a card swap.
The problem now is that Dave's HU cards are almost completely exploited also. About the only thing most testers can't do with Dave's HU cards is truly emulate. There is a form of pseudo-emulation out called C-Master and Kryptonite, but those don't truly protect the card from a ASIC-killing ECM.
Dave's latest card out is called a P4 [hucards.com]. This card is immune to all forms of public testing at this point. There is currently a small group of elite testers who are attempting to perfect a method of bypassing the P4's security measures via a method called "glitching". It involves varying the voltage supplied to the card in a certain way in order to gain entry. Read/write entry via glitching the P4 has be perfected at this point. Bypassing the P4's security measures and reading/writing to the card can be done at will now. The last thing left to do is to finish up something called "unlooping" [dssmili.com]. A smartcard can get looped if the voltages during glitching aren't applied correctly. Basically, the card gets stuck in an endless loop. Unlooping a P4 card is still difficult and can take 15-30 minutes currently. The testers are hoping to speed the time up it takes to do this.
At some point, Dave may perform a HU to P4 swap. For the testers sake, let's hope that P4 unlooping gets perfected before that point.
Hope that clears things up a bit.
Re:Calling all proofreaders (Score:2)
Re:Calling all proofreaders (Score:2)
Happy?
People who illegally recieve SatTV are not Pirates (Score:3, Funny)
Arrr, me Hearty, your a scurvy dog sea lawyer (Score:1)
NOUN:
1 a. One who robs at sea or plunders the land from the sea without commission from a sovereign nation. b. A ship used for this purpose. 2. One who preys on others; a plunderer. 3. One who makes use of or reproduces the work of another without authorization. 4. One that operates an unlicensed, illegal television or radio station.
VERB:
Inflected forms: pirated , pirating , pirates
TRANSITIVE VERB:
1. To attack and rob (a ship at sea). 2. To take (something) by piracy. 3. To make use of or reproduce (another's work) without authorization.
INTRANSITIVE VERB:
To act as a pirate; practice piracy.
Re:Arrr, me Hearty, your a scurvy dog sea lawyer (Score:2)
1. People who say it's right to call copyright infringers "pirates" are correct
2. People who say it's wrong to call copyright infringers "pirates" are also correct - as long as they're arguing that it's morally, not definitively wrong; if they persuade enough people to adopt their viewpoint they'll eventually be definitively right too!
Re:Arrr, me Hearty, your a scurvy dog sea lawyer (Score:2)
So, Congress is full of pirates. Arrr, avast, ye mateys!
Corporate hacking (Score:5, Funny)
Interesting timing . (Score:4, Insightful)
It was only yesterday (*not kidding*) that one of the bigger Vivendi owned satellite TV (Canalsat) upgraded it's encryption system to "Seca2".
But I'm afraid the Seca2 system is DOA as it has already been cracked by Italian Crackers [virgilio.it].
Re:Interesting timing . (Score:1)
Where does it say (yes this is an automated Italian->English translation) that Seca2 is hacked?
Re:Interesting timing . (Score:2)
Scroll down a bit and you find links to download the smartcard programs.
Also, have a look at This page [securitynewsportal.com] (search for "seca")
Continuous update (Score:5, Interesting)
Ultimately no security scheme based on commodity hardware is secure against a determined attack. Even the clipper chip was broken. If the adversary has a scanning electron microscope available they are going to be able to reverse engineer the chip. Ross Andersson [cam.ac.uk] did a paper [cam.ac.uk] on this a while back.
The strategy the satellite companies use today is economic rather than purely technical. What they do is to design smart cards which are subject to progressive security flaws. They then send out different variations on the smart card to different customers.
The trick is that the pirate does not know which of the flaws matter and which do not. So if the pirate clones a particular card perfectly the satellite company can respond cheaply and effectively by just replacing the small number of cards that have been compromised.
If the pirate makes a more general attack the satelite co looks for any small difference between the cloned card and the genuine cards and programs a deactivation code to take advantage.
Most cloned cards are not perfect since the pirates are in competition with each other. It is better to get a cloned card out in 3 weeks than to wait a n extra couple of months and allow a competitor to steal the market.
The satelite cos generally wait until the pirates have sold a significant number of cards before sending out the deactivation codes. This discredits the pirates with more customers. If the customers learn that using a pirate card ends up costing them more than being honest in addition to being inconvenient they are more likely to turn honest. Another trick is to disable the cards right before big events.
Re:Continuous update (Score:1)
> Another trick is to disable the cards right before big events.
that is where this pirating can be a advantage to the "injured" company. I never had cable, or satalite, until I was convinced of the great value in getting something for free. I now have the directv equipment, and so go ahead and subscribe. If it weren't for knowing of the pirated versions of the Directv, I would have either gone with the cheaper Dish Sat service, or none at all.
(I am not complaining, I am happy with their service.)
Re:Continuous update (Score:2)
Rule #1: Security in an insecure environment is unobtainable.
Be it commodity hardware or not, there is no such thing as 'tamper-proof' hardware and given enough resources, the best tamper-resistant hardware can be reverse engineered.
The goal of a security system is to make the cost of breaking into it more expensive than what the system is securing.
I think DirecTV has done a pretty good job at raising the cost (time more than money) of breaking the system above what your average individual considers excessive.
Re:Continuous update (Score:2)
I was also hacked !!! (Score:1, Funny)
dismay, delight, dismay (Score:5, Insightful)
delight: The text of the article gets the term right, saying that their smart cards were "cracked".
dismay: The text then misuses the term again, saying Echostar was hacked.
Come on folks, if a site that supposedly is "news for nerds" can't get the term right, how is anyone else expected to?
(and don't give me the BS that hacking and cracking are the same thing)
Re:dismay, delight, dismay (Score:1)
Read up on posts by people like p52, AOL9645 and RAM9999 on the den [pirateden.com]. They are explorers.
Re:dismay, delight, dismay (Score:4, Insightful)
I think of it this way - solving a crossword puzzle is like hacking. Copying someone else's solution to a crossword puzzle is like cracking.
Re:dismay, delight, dismay (Score:1)
hacker
n. Informal
1. One who is proficient at using or programming a computer; a computer buff.
2. One who uses programming skills to gain illegal access to a computer network or file.
3. One who enthusiastically pursues a game or sport: a weekend tennis hacker
The English language is defined in terms of usage.
Re:dismay, delight, dismay (Score:2)
Webster's dictionary defines...
Honestly, no offense to you personally, but quoting a dictionary is one of the most ignorant forms of educated argument you can make. Dictionaries are collections of what the dictionary writers think they know. Just because the American public misuses a term doesn't mean it is correct. Would you say that the words "your" and "you're" are interchangeable, since most people use them interchangeably? Dictionaries are to information what encyclopedias are to research books, or cliff's notes to literature. It is meant to be a starting point. Just because it is in a dictionary doesn't make it so.
ahh simpsons (Score:5, Funny)
Lisa: Dad that's fox!
Homer: Sell! Sell!
what do vivendi actually do? (Score:2, Informative)
And the dodgy business that news corp has done.
These corporations are both pretty evil.
However, Noone is really paying much notice to what vivendi has been doing is the last decade.
You go to the vivendi site and they own everything. Here in australia they own monopolies on bus routes own a majority of the films that we watch and own almost all of the water sources that are here.
I recently was on a train in sydney next to a farmer. It turned out he was heading to the city to consult with his solicitor. We're in the middle of the worst drought that has been here for a long while, And he was telling me that he had just recently been approached by legal representatives of vivendi water who were claiming that he has no rights to dams on his own land and that he had to pay them money for his own water. He was in sydney seeking legal advice on this matter.
Whoever controls the water of the world controls the world and can basically hold the world for ransom and charge whatever prices they want.
Vivendi seems to solely be a corporation bent on world domination.
Re:what do vivendi actually do? (Score:2)
People must have short memories, as the rural sector always has its hands out. Telephone services aren't as good? You're living in the middle of the fucking desert! It's getting to the point where you can get better and cheaper high-bandwidth net access in some rural areas than you can in the city, and guess how much that's costing the taxpayers. Agrarian bloody socialism, that's what it is.
Actually they are transmitting into my home.. (Score:1)
Last Post! (Score:1)
Supervisee: Ah! Well, what do we mean by "to understand" in the context of
Quantum Mechanics?
Supervisor: You mean "No", don't you?
Supervisee: Yes.
-- Overheard at a supervision.
- this post brought to you by the Automated Last Post Generator...