High Definition TiVo Bash Software Hack Claimed 154
crazyray writes "Fresh on the heels of Sunday's Washington Post's article about TiVo and the broadcast flag, a group calling themselves the 'HD TeAm' is claiming to have discovered a software-only exploit to enable bash on the new $1000 High Definition DirecTiVo.
Prior to this announcement, it was thought that this was only possible by desoldering and reflashing the PROM.
Perhaps most interestingly, 'HD TeAm' is offering to release the code to the world if enough donations are given to the Electronic Frontier Foundation."
Smart plan (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Smart plan (Score:5, Insightful)
Now would we?
Re:Smart plan (Score:3, Insightful)
I hope they are smart enough to not leave any traces of their identity in it so they cant get harassed like the DECSS debacle.
I can hear it now... (Score:3, Interesting)
(Tell-Sell mode)
The latest TiVo hack... Soon coming to a Freenet [freenetproject.org] or MUTE [sourceforge.net] node near you... It's amazing!
(/Tell-Sell mode)
A little later, it'll be all over the general file-sharing networks, without ever having left a trace to its origin. At that stage, the cat is irrevocably out of the bag.
The point you raise is interesting: it doesn't matter that anonymous networks like Freenet or MUTE are not currently used by a lot of users; they _are_ used by ~1000-~10000 users. When more than a view of those sta
Re:Smart plan (Score:2)
You assume that there's "code".
Have you read anything at DealDatabase? The "developers" there are mostly people who hack together a collection of real work done by other people. I bet this hack is some one-liner exploit that gets just enough data past the Tivo boot-time checks to make one of the existing hacks feasible. Those existing hacks are mainly pasted together work from people you've all heard of like Andrew Tridgell and Donald Becker that was done and dumped after they had what they wanted, or
Re:Smart plan (Score:2)
I could care less about it in either way. I was just pointing out that it's unlikely that there's enough there to even be worried about a legal challenge. This type of stuff doesn't enable any copyright infringement. This just boots the box. All the recordings are still encrypted. If anybody needs to be worried it's the people who are developing the software to prevent that encryption and (illega
Re:Smart plan (Score:1)
Re:Smart plan (Score:2)
I will only release this is proper donations are met : I might even include the laser-rays too.
off like a dress... (Score:4, Funny)
and reflashing the PROM
well I have to say that brings back fond memories of prom night.
Re:off like a dress... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:off like a dress... (Score:2)
You went to the prom??? What are you doing reading Slashdot?
I'm pretty miffed, too, because I didn't get my robotic girlfriend built in time for prom night.
Bullshit. (Score:2)
Re:off like a dress... (Score:2)
But now, those same cheerleaders will come to us BEGGING for us to change their proms around so they work. Reality is really strange.
Away to Jail with Ye (Score:5, Funny)
Senator Orrin Hatch, chief sponsor of the bill, was quoted as saying "This issue is of extreme importance to the future of America. What kind of message would we be sending to our children if we allowed this kind of wanton hacking activity to go on unchecked? I ask all politicians who value protecting our intellectual property laws to join me in support of this legislation."
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:3, Funny)
Yes, this is the proper usage of Fascist. We are allowing our country to be opened to the control of the corporations.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2, Interesting)
Nope, it is not. Godwin's Law applies. Second time in one thread. Remember to logout, loser.
Until we (US) start claiming racial superiority and burning racially inferior peoples in furnaces, all the talk of our alleged "Fascism" is complete nonsense.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:4, Informative)
You know, I have mod points, and could just mod you down, but I thought I'd reply instead.
Godwin's Law isn't a rule about winning or losing arguments. It's a law of nature. It's like gravity. If a thread goes on for long enough, someone will mention Nazis or Hitler. But notice, I'm the first one in this thread to do so. Fascism is bigger than just Nazis. The Italian government under Mussolini was fascist as well.
Before you say that fascism requires burning racially inferior people in furnaces, you might want to at least read the definition [cambridge.org]:
Let's compare that to the current state of affairs in the US of A:
There's no question, we're a long way from Italy or Germany in the '30s. At the same time, there's a continuum between an open society and a fascist one. The US is much closer to the fascist side of that spectrum than any other western (or modern eastern) country. Sure, Cuba is worse, and so is North Korea, but when those are the only countries that are more fascist than you... it's a pretty bad sign.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
Awfully decent of you. If only you had the decency to not mention this fact...
Right here is the flaw in your and Garcia's arguments. As per your definitions and explanations, there is nothing automaticly "pretty bad" about Fascism -- not without burning the inferior races in furnaces.
Yours, Garcia's (although he may d
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
True enough, Fascism is not automatically bad. Just like National Socialism is not automatically bad. Even Anarchy is not automatically bad. But history has shown that whatever their abstract flaws or benefits, in practice, they seem to be bad both for their neighbors and for the citizens.
I didn't claim that the USA is "Fascist", but I said it was farther along the continuum between Fascism and an open, free society than most other countries in the world. While it is true that the Supreme Court has
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
No, what I'm saying is that there nothing wrong with being made of steel, even if that makes a metal shovel "closer" to a people-killing gun, than a plastic or a (dure-)aluminum shovel is.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
Although I realize, I made the mistake of thinking this was the same person, that used the term "corperate Gestapo" in another posting [slashdot.org] on the same thread, I'm quite certain of Garcia [slashdot.org]'s point.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
I meant Fascism in a general sense. My comment was not directly related to Italy or Germany. Perhaps for the general population this is something that is a bit difficult to fathom but I have faith that most people here knew better when it came to what I said (and based on your moderation and those under you I believe they did).
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
Most certainly, however, Mr. (?) Garcia used the term Fascism as a "dirty word".
You know it, I know it, he knows it. Put away the dictionary...
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:1)
Yes, this is the proper usage of Fascist. We are allowing our country to be opened to the control of the corporations.
Corporate control is a bad thing, but you should look up *fascism*. I believe that what you are referring to is more of a plutocracy since it's really control by corporate top management.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2, Insightful)
wanton - Audio pronunciation of "wanton" ( P ) Pronunciation Key (wntn) adj.
1. Gratuitously cruel; merciless.
2. Marked by unprovoked, gratuitous
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:2)
Well, if it's Senator Hatch trying to sell it to a clueless public and his even more clueless coleages, it's the perfect work. Oh, and I'm pretty sure he never actually said that. Calm down, it was satire.
Re:Away to Jail with Ye (Score:3, Funny)
Blackmail? (Score:2, Insightful)
Uh, why? Just release the code.
Re:Blackmail? (Score:4, Informative)
"HD TeAm has a solution prepared and authorizes it's distribution via ddb once $1,000 has been collected. We request that all proceeds be donated to the EFF so that research of this nature remains legal in the future."
"It is our position that if the community, particularly the minority with the disposable income for hd-units, is unwilling to come together & donate this token sum to a worthy organization the hack is probably better kept private"
Re:Blackmail? (Score:5, Insightful)
Why? This should be obvious.
The music, movie, and TV industries in the U.S. still haven't opened up to the idea of sharing things. It was one thing back when TV was analog, and music was on tapes (yeah, they complained back then, but it *was* less of a problem), but now they're scared shitless because they're broadcasting a digital stream, and, although it is compressed, any duplication, recording, or sharing of it would be at exactly the same quality.
So, they try to manipulate laws (DMCA, Broadcast Flag, etc...) their way so that nobody can copy their stuff illegally or legally. The end result is that we need organizations like the Electronic Frontier Foundation to stand up to them and preserve our rights to use media legally.
A lot of these laws fall into a category which I particularly find disturbing: laws that cure the symptom instead of the disease. Instead of just cracking down on true copyright violation (large groups of people selling pirated movies and such, not some guy who copies a few movies for a friend), they crack down on ways to violate copyrights, or they crack down on ways to create ways to violate copyrights, or they crack down on uses of copyrighted material more broad than what is truly illegal, or they crack down on anything that could eventually lead to copyright infringement.
Now, for some analogies. (I warned you, so don't complain they suck!) People are allowed to have knives, for normal uses such as chopping vegetables. Knives, however, can also be used for violence. If knives were regulated the same way copyright law is looking, we wouldn't be able to have knives because they *could* be used to hurt people. Furthermore, most recipies involving chopping would be illegal, due to the fact that they could induce someone to create a knife for that purpose.
But look at it another way: guns--something whose purpose is solely violence--are regulated. Think about DeCSS--it is used only to decode DVD data to view it; pirates don't even need to decode DVD data to make pirated discs. If the movie industry wanted to crack down on something, it should have been DVD burners (yeah, I know, they shouldn't be regulated either... maybe they should have required a special code on consumer discs, so players won't play DeCSS-encrypted discs [presumably a copyrighted movie] when they are on a consumer disc [presumably because it is a pirated copy]), not DeCSS. That's like cracking down on knives, because they can be used to hurt people, even though they have plenty of harmless uses, while leaving guns unregulated.
Okay, shred apart my analogies. Have fun. But that is the reason we need the EFF--to protect us from corporations that would otherwise crack down on lawful acts.
So why not just release it? As the thread says, the people who have enough money to buy an HD TiVo certainly have enough money to contribute to the EFF, and their very use of the TiVo is an act protected by the EFF. Asking for donations to a good group in exchange for a donation is perfectly valid. If you don't like it, don't give money... someone else will... or maybe not, and we'll never see the code...
Re:Blackmail? (Score:2)
But look at it another way: guns--something whose purpose is solely violence--are regulated.
It's probably not a good idea to use a more contentious issue as your metaphor. You tend to lose people who are otherwise sympathetic to your argument. Care to explain it to me in abortion terms?
Larger point taken, however.
Re:Blackmail? (Score:2)
Re:Blackmail? (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Blackmail? (Score:1)
Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:3, Insightful)
I have to say that I'm against anything that might harm Tivo as a company; I'm a rabid fan who sees signs on the wall that Tivo may be in trouble within the next few years as the cable companies produce low-grade DVRs that do not give the database-powered juicy goodness that Tivo provides.
Just my two cents.
Re:Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:5, Informative)
Later that hack was modified by other people to run *any* unsigned executable on the XBox. It was this very possibility that the original hacker wanted MS to avoid by allowing a signed Linux loader.
Re:Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:2)
too late. WE've had them here in comcast that also record HD for over a year now. an additional $5.00 a month and you get a HD PVR that can never break because you dont own it, something that Tivo cant offer..
Re:Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:1)
Re:Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:1)
I looked for a way to contact you, but not too much luck.
Re:Is this the opposite of digital terrorism?? (Score:1)
I just can't justify the cost of a Tivo (especially HD) when the cable company offers it so cheap (~$9/mo vs ~$6/mo for a digital box)
Software-only hacks rule! (Score:5, Insightful)
How about a hack for the Series 2? (Score:2)
Re:How about a hack for the Series 2? (Score:2)
Re:How about a hack for the Series 2? (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.dealdatabase.com/forum/showthread.php?
OK, dumb question (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:OK, dumb question (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OK, dumb question (Score:3, Funny)
Re:OK, dumb question (Score:1)
Re:OK, dumb question (Score:2)
Re:OK, dumb question (Score:1)
http://chriscarey.us/software/tivo/ [chriscarey.us]
Re:Still #2 And A Very Cool System (Score:3, Informative)
Disk space can be added to TiVos without shell access. Many people have already upgraded their HD TiVos' hard drives, while only a handfull have shell access to them.
Re:Still #2 And A Very Cool System (Score:2)
Re:Still #2 And A Very Cool System (Score:2, Informative)
Wrong. Those commands cause it to add a blessed drive to MFS, not to bless a blank drive. You still need to set up the basic partition table in a PC.
Re:Still #2 And A Very Cool System (Score:2)
Opening Narration (Score:5, Funny)
click click click click...
Re:Opening Narration (Score:5, Funny)
*snickers* Great reference!
Re:Opening Narration (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Opening Narration (Score:1)
Seriously, great reference!
Re:Opening Narration (Score:2)
I just laughed 'em off ;)
I have a question....... (Score:1)
Why are they waiting for the EFF to get more donations in order to show the code to the world? Please go easy on me.
Re:I have a question....... (Score:3, Interesting)
You'd be just as wise to put your money down on a "pre-release" copy of Duke Nuke'em Forever without doing more homework.
Re:I have a question....... (Score:1)
Seriously, they're not the ones getting the moolah, the EFF is. Therefore they obviously want the EFF to do well.
Move to your theory
Unless this were perpetrated by people who -want- to hurt the EFF or the TiVo community, there is just no reason for them to b
Re:I have a question....... (Score:3, Informative)
There is a group now that claims to have a working solution to the challenge, but they are saying they will not release it until the collected bounty is at least $1000 and with a promise that the contest organizers will not send it to the winners, but to the EFF instead.
Reading between the lines... (Score:5, Funny)
In other words, "We'd like our defense fund paid in advance before we release That-Which-Will-Get-Us-Sued-Out-Of-Our-Lives.
Oh, just freaking great (Score:1, Interesting)
The hack I'd like to see (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:1, Funny)
Skipping commercials is nice, but I'd like a hack to allow a TiVo to record and show good programs. "I wish my television had a control to adjust the intelligence level. I tried the control marked 'brightness', but it didn't help at all."
I can't help much with the good program side, but there is a simple hack to keep it from recording bad programs. Just unplug it.
We'll let you know when Ken is back on Jeopardy so you can plug it back in for 30 minutes a day.
Problem solved.
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:1)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:2)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:1)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:1, Interesting)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:3, Informative)
Re:The hack I'd like to see (Score:2, Informative)
Did you... (Score:2)
Of course, I only want intellectual shows
Kjella
Only $1,000? - so cheap! (Score:1, Redundant)
"HD TeAm has a solution prepared and authorizes it's distribution via ddb once $1,000 has been collected. We request that all proceeds be donated to the EFF so that research of this nature remains legal in the future."
"It is our position that if the community, particularly the minority with the disposable income for hd-units, is unwilling to come together & donate this token sum to a worthy organization the hack is probably better kept private"
What's bash? (Score:1, Funny)
This is not a good thing (Score:2, Insightful)
I wish they wouldn't do this.
Re:This is not blackmail (Score:1)
Re:This is not a good thing (Score:3, Informative)
It would be blackmail IF the team publicly said "we'll release this code UNLESS Tivo(/the broadcast industry/MPAA/whoever) pays the EFF $X"... this is more of a "we want an acknowledgement that this is useful, and people are interested in it, but legally we obviously can't get paid ourselves for it"
Re:you had a contract (Score:1)
There, wasn't that easy? All you have to do is look at the actual situation and then just think for a second.
ITS NOT BLACKMAIL (Score:4, Informative)
How is offering to release something that you created in exchange for donations, blackmail?
If it is, then I guess every business that sells goods or services is guilty of blackmail too *roll eyes*
NO!!! (Score:2)
(Hackers who support organazations who disaprove of Orwellian futures? They MUST be terrorists!)
sounds almost like (Score:1)
High Definition TiVo Bash Software Hack Claimed (Score:2)
Donate or we'll behead Jack Valenti (Score:2)
Re:bash? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:bash? (Score:1, Funny)
Re:Fishy! (Score:1, Funny)
Of course. It's penguin powered, after all.
(Actually, good point there.)
Re:Fishy! (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fishy! (Score:2)
Re:Fishy! (Score:2)
i think there's a subtle difference between doing what you want with your hardware and requiring the system they put on that hardware to allow you to do so. i really don't know much about the details of the tivo hardware, but my impression is that it's possible to run your own linux install on it (though not very useful). as such, while you're free to do what you want with th
Re:Fishy! (Score:2, Interesting)
not if it means getting service for FREE and TiVo losing money. hacks like this can allow this alteration, and it's just not good for the company and it's investors
NO! This is especially true in this case. Corporate America needs to be taught that "we will make money as long as we contol the use of our product after we sell it" is a bogus business plan.
Capatalism demands that any company that tries this be run out of business. Darwin tells us that any investor that supports a company with such a bus
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you've RTFA, you'd realize:
The forum offered a bounty for a software hack.
The bounty was funded by donations.
The TeAm just asked for the bounty to be redirected to the EFF instead of to themselves.
So basically, the big deal is that the bounty needs to reach $1000 before they'll release the code, but when it does, they're just going to give the bounty to the EFF anyway. What's wrong with that?
This isn't terrorism, you idiot - write the code yourself if you want it. The comparison "leaves a sour taste in my mouth".
Argh. Mod parent: flamebait.
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:1)
The better way would have been collect the bounty, and THEN donte it to EFF. same result, just they would have been showing support instead of forcing support. Lot more up-and-up
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:2)
Maybe. But the original comment was that it was "digital blackmail/digital terrorism." It is not blackmail to offer to release something for free once enough donations are received by a 3rd party. It is not terrorism to to release one's own work, once someone else meets certain conditions.
If that were the case, then I just had
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:2)
How is this "forcing support"? If you don't want to support it, don't. If few enough bother to support it, they keep the hack private. Since the hack is their IP, they can do that.
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:3)
Obviously RTFA didn't help you understand why the principle of this offer is flawed. Bascially this is like saying "If you donate money to GreenPeace we will torch some Hummers." They are using a premeditated illegal action as a sort of endorsement for an organization. Therefore the correct response is for the EFF to denounce illegal activites regardless of wheather or not they believe the laws are constitutional.
Re:I heard of this before... (Score:1)
Disobeying unjust laws are the only way unjust laws get changed. The state cannot afford to put away 95% of it's population, as the top 5% of the population isn't going to pay for their incarceration (crap, they scream and whine about their own transgressions, just look at Kenneth Lay).
Definition of blackmail (Score:5, Interesting)
Blackmail involves the withholding of information in return for a fee. If providing information in return for a fee is blackmail, then we'll have to jail all the programmers and scientists.
Patch Schedule (Score:1)