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Jon Johansen Breaks iTunes DRM Yet Again

ikewillis writes "Remember earlier today when Apple released an update supposedly blocking the hole in iTMS recently discovered by Jon Johansen? News.com reports that he has already worked around the update, and iTMS can now be accessed from non-Windows/MacOS X systems using the new version of his PyMusique software. You can view his blog entry on the issue (ironically titled So Sue Me). More power to you, Jon!"

19 of 1,286 comments (clear)

  1. Re:So sue him? by ikewillis · · Score: 5, Informative
    Jon Johanson has already been repudiated of any crime in Norway, a country which isn't part of the EU and doesn't have any DMCA-style laws.

    He's likely acting as a front for another group doing the grunt work who doesn't want the legal exposure.

    Given the current legal precedent he's acquired in Norway, it's highly unlikely Apple will be able to prosecute.

  2. Re:A Name! by ikewillis · · Score: 5, Informative
    Apple merely locked out all clients not using the iTMS 4.7 protocol, which previous versions of PyMusique didn't support. The new version of PyMusique merely adds support for the new protocol revision. The unencrypted, DRM free songs are still sent to the client from the music store.

    The only way for Apple to actually fix this hole is to handle DRM encryption server side, unless you consider the problem is unresolved due to the fact that DRM is a fundamentally flawed concept.

  3. Blog Message by Ken@WearableTech · · Score: 4, Informative

    His server seems to be /.ed The blog entry is: The iTunes Music Store recently stopped supporting iTunes versions below 4.7 in an attempt to shut out 3rd party clients. I have reverse engineered the iTMS 4.7 crypto which will once again enable 3rd party clients to communicate with the iTMS.

  4. Breaking the DRM? by p0rnking · · Score: 4, Informative

    If I remember correctly, he never did break the DRM, instead he captured the audio file before it went through the iTunes software, which puts the DRM into the audio file ... therefore there is no DRM to break.
    And no, I didn't RTFA

  5. Re:As a record store owner. by portwojc · · Score: 4, Informative

    Funny this was posted back in 10/22/2003

    Here you go:

    http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=83129&thresh ol d=1&commentsort=0&tid=141&tid=188&mode=thread&cid= 7278955

  6. Re:So sue him? by Zocalo · · Score: 4, Informative

    Is "sosume" really slipping into IT history already? For those that don't know, and thus get the in-joke, Apple Computers was once sued by Apple Music, the Beatles record label, over the use of the name "Apple". This was back when the Macintosh was still in the early stages of development, long before the much more recent legal spat between the two Apples over iTMS. Part of the settlement agreement that resulted was that Apple Computers would not enter into competion with Apple Music. When Apple shipped the Macintosh with audio support one of the included sound files was called "sosume" - a pun at the expense of Apple Music.

    --
    UNIX? They're not even circumcised! Savages!
  7. Re:Companies won't let us "Get over it" by ballantrae_j · · Score: 5, Informative

    there are options. there's magnatune.com for starters. Look, there is "someplace else" to buy or download stuff. It drives me crazy that mostly everyone here bitches and complains about the Evil Music Industry, but no one is willing to try out alternatives. Guys there are alternatives. If we would all make use of them, then the artists would sign contracts with those alternates! Besides, it's honest. -ron

  8. Re:More power to you, Jon! by Spoing · · Score: 4, Informative
    1. Anyone that gives me back my legal rights, is someone who deserves encouraging.

    A tip for you and others just in case you didn't know about this company.

    --
    A firewall can not protect you from yourself. Turn off what you do not need. Do not use the firewall to do your work.
  9. Re:So sue him? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, it was sosumi, and it didn't show up until System 7 (at the same time as the ability to record audio via a built-in mic was added to the Macintosh line).

  10. Re:So sue him? by koehn · · Score: 4, Informative

    That's a great story, pity it's not true, IIRC.

    "Sosumi" was the name of the sound, and it came from the equally amusing battle between Apple Computer and Carl "Billions and Billions" Sagan.

    It seems Apple code-named the Power Mac 7500 "Sagan". Not that they were going to call the shipping unit by that name mind you, but just internally they needed to call it something, so they named it after the great scientist, probably out of respect.

    In any case, somebody with Carl's crew found out about it and got torqued, and filed a lawsuit. Apple, after an initial WTF? reaction, obliged, and changed the name to the supposedly innocuous "BHA". Turns out that BHA stood for Butt Head Astronomer, at which point more saber-rattling was heard in the Sagan camp.

    In any case, the System Software released with the Power Mac 7500 included a new sound, "sosumi." I don't recall it having anything to do with Apple Music.

  11. Re:An arms race by FuzzzyLogik · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm going to mention it here but someone else has already brought up the so sue me title...

    The title of the blog was So Sue Me long before Jon went after iTunes Music Store like this. It's not something he's saying to Apple, ever since the DVD DMCA thing he has had this blog titled that way. Don't get the idea he's got that title in there JUST to spite Apple.

  12. Yes, let's lump them together. by Kjella · · Score: 5, Informative

    Because, of course, the court cases that Jon went through (DMCA infringment involving DVD encryption) relate directly to DMA involved with iTunes. After all, DMCA is DMCA, right? Let's lump all the cases together.

    Using this tool might be a problem with Apples ToS and whatnot, but creating the tool is purely a legal issue. And that issue has been clearly settled under norwegian law. There is currently no norwegian law prohibiting you from creating a tool to break any copyright protection mechanism. You have the right to access any "secret" key in your hardware or software. That is why he can do so with impunity. Apple could sue, but they would lose as the law stands today. The public prosecutor knows it and won't do it.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Yes, let's lump them together. by jpetts · · Score: 5, Informative

      Then why did they do it in the first place?

      Because it took the first case to set the precedent. Until then the law hadn't been tested. Now it has.

      --
      Call me old fashioned, but I like a dump to be as memorable as it is devastating - Bender
  13. Re:Apple is the least of his worries... by copper · · Score: 4, Informative

    According to a CNET article I read on this, only a linux version will be released (see last paragraph here. They are explicitly NOT releasing a windows version this time, presumably to minimize any antagonization of Apple by limiting it to such a small target audience that doesn't have "sanctioned" options to shop on iTunes.

  14. Re:So sue him? by rootofevil · · Score: 4, Informative

    sorry, thats completely inaccurate

    the 7100 was "Sagan" (the 6100 was "Piltdown Man" and the 8100 was "Cold Fusion") [link]

    sosumi the system sound was included in system 7, several years before the 7100 was ever created (that shipped with 7.5) [link]

    --
    turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
  15. Interestingly enough by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 5, Informative

    Prior to the iTunes 4.7.x breakage (I don't mean the recent breakage, I mean the anti-Hymn breakage), Hymn would leave all identification info in any files it unprotected. In essence, the files were (lightly) watermarked.

    With iTunes 4.7, Apple changed it so that watermarked but unprotected files wouldn't play.

    The solution? Remove the watermark.

    By breaking the ability to use iTunes music fairly (for example, in a device other than an iPid), Apple essentially forced the authors of Hymn to make their software more suitable to piracy.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  16. Re:So sue him? by RenatoRam · · Score: 5, Informative

    Most of the end user licenses of software and services are completely meaningless in Europe (and in Norway).

    The laws protecting the customer are far stronger here, and the seller cannot impose rules on the buyer without explicit (hand signed) acceptance of EACH clause on a written contract.

    Yes, you guessed it, even Microsoft's EULAs have been proved to be largely unenforceable (for example) in Italy.

    --
    Ciao, Renato
  17. Precedent and common law by sangdrax · · Score: 4, Informative

    To elaborate on this, the 'precedent' system in which past rulings form a legal ground for deciding future cases is part of common law, which as the link indicates is generally found in English speaking countries.

    The rest of Europe, including Norway, basically uses civil law, in which in the end only the written law counts.

  18. Re:BHA SAGAN?!?! NO! Crystal Quest Sound EFX ! by JReekes · · Score: 5, Informative
    in fact it is from a system 6 3rd party video game apple stole it from !!!
    Dear Anonymous Coward,

    "Stolen" is a strong word with specific legal meaning. If the sound originates from the game (and I'm not actually questioning it), I can readily see it as fair use, considering the related lawsuits and legal precedence, but I'm not a lawyer. Janet Jackson sampled my Mac system sound, and used it in one of her songs. My startup sound for the Mac was also used in the movie Jurassic Park (when they rebooted the park's computers).

    Furthermore, if my ears are correct (and they usually are) one of the sounds in that game was "stolen" from Peter Gabriel.
    And dirty lies are sometimes trivial to prove
    If you weren't being so juvenile, you might be more persuasive. Try removing the hyperbole and begin using proper grammar.
    I alone seem to know the damned truth?
    You, alone, know the truth? Well, I'm responsible for Sosumi, the System 7 beeps, and the startup sound (which all remain in use today). I don't actually remember where or how I obtained the original sound. Most of them I created such as the startup sound and others, some I obtained such as the monkey sound that made by a friend's wife.

    Personally, I felt having my startup sound used (or "stolen" in your words) by Steven Spielberg to be a form of flattery.

    Are you a representative of Mr. Buckland? What is your interest in this matter? I'd like to hear from him instead.