A digital rights management (DRM) licensing authority is strong-arming search
firms, bloggers and open source advocates in a desperate attempt to stop the
spread of a software key that disables copyright protection on Blu-ray and
HD-DVD disks.
Copyright reform activist
Cory
Doctorow decided on Monday to remove the information from a
group
blog to which he contributes after receiving a cease-and-desist letter from
the
Advanced
Access Content System Licensing Administrator (AACS-LA).
The AACS-LA is backed by technology vendors including
IBM,
Intel,
Microsoft,
Sony and
Walt
Disney, and oversees the
Advanced
Access Content System (AACS) DRM technology used on high-definition DVDs.
The so-called processing keys published on the blog let users disable the DRM
that prevents users from copying the disks or playing them on unlicensed
equipment or software.
Doctorow is not the first blogger to receive a legal order from the AACS-LA.
Several
other blogs have been ordered to remove references to the key as well as
links to a forum where it was first disclosed.
The AACS-LA has even
issued
legal threats against
Google.
The crack first surfaced in mid-February on a
Doom
9 forum. In an act of defiance, numerous bloggers have
posted
the key on their websites or linked to the website detailing the original
crack.
They also submitted the web pages to social news services such as
Digg in an effort to
spread the information to a wider audience.
Ultimately the AACS-LA campaign has achieved the direct opposite of its
intention. Instead of stopping the crack from spreading, the moves have notified
more people of its whereabouts and how to exploit it.
A spokesperson for the AACS-LA did not immediately return a request for
additional information.
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