Xbox 360 Backup Discs Bootable
An anonymous reader writes "The firmware of the Xbox 360 DVD drive has been hacked, allowing users to boot backups of games on the new Microsoft console. A group of hackers on the xboxhacker.net forum managed to trick the DVD firmware into reporting a recordable disc as an original Xbox 360 disc. This means that it will not allow booting of unsigned homebrew code (like Linux), as the signature check is not bypassed. This hack will just trick the Xbox 360 into thinking you inserted an original Xbox 360 disc, so it'll only boot unedited executables. A video has been released, the hack has not been released to the public (because it will be mainly used for piracy), but all the research of the last few months is publicly viewable."
how long until a game is released that checksums the DVD firmware and "updates it" to soemthing more secure?
( + reporting to MS Live if you have a hacked verison and cancelling your account? ala Blizzard?)
This is the "piracy" hack. A way to cleanly boot non-Microsoft content would be more useful. Microsoft probably couldn't do much about that legally; if you own the unit, you have no obligation to play only approved content.
I always thought that was a pretty good area of attack right there.
Ryan T. Sammartino
"Ancora imparo"
From the post:
the hack has not been released to the public
From Jane Austen's "Emma":
'It's to be a secret, I conclude,' said he. These matters are always a secret, till it is found out that everybody knows them. Only let me be told when I may speak out.'"
Rome taught me patience and assiduous application to detail. Virtues which temper the boldness of great, general views.
I remember hackers speaking of how easy hacking the Xbox 360 will be, that it will only take hours once it is released.
Now, 4 months after the release, they manage to hack a disc. Microsoft sure has given them a challenge this time.
"the hack has not been released to the public (because it will be mainly used for piracy)"
Then why did they bother? Testing XP or linux to see if its security is working is one thing. That has real world consequences. Testing it is a noble cause IMHO. Hacking the firmware of a gaming system make get done to "boot linux" but we all know the real world implication here. I don't frown on this morally one bit but let's not kid ourselves here. Information may want to be free, but people want free games even more.
If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
Wait a minute, playboy has articles?
Does this sig remind you of Agatha Christie?
I suppose microsoft could detect this on live by scanning the dvd drives firmware, but the data contained on the firmware itself could easily be spoofed. The other software on the xbox has to relie on whatever the firmware itself says it has. Somebody could just add code to the firmware that sends false data to external reads. All it has to do is report whatever data the console would expect it to have and then detection would become impossible.
People who would want to cheat on xbox live would be out of luck, since afterall, the signature checks are still in place.
Careful with names containing L slashdot.org/~AiphaWolf_HK slashdot.org/~AlphaWoif_HK slashdot.org/~AiphaWoif_HK
I thought that was just when users moved or tilted the 360 when it was powered up. If they'd wait until the disc wasn't spinning there wouldn't be a problem. Anyone smart enough to understand this doesn't get to use this as an excuse to backup their games.
How about Fair Use? Weren't music cassete back ups declared legal in a court of law in the 80's? Is that a good enough "excuse" for you?
Why in the world is a backup considered piracy? I have all my cds/movies on my harddrive precisely because I don't want to damage the discs and therefore have to buy the same crap again. It's the content industry that wants their products to have the advantages of both a physical medial and pure license, but without the downside of either.
actualy my brother told me that he downloaded his copy of eclipse on the playboy mirror.
Just because you're smart enough to know better (and I'm not saying you are) doesn't mean that someone else who might have physical access to your game console is also. Therefore, stupidity is not the only valid excuse (let alone the fact that you don't need an "excuse" for Fair Use anyway)!
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz
Wasn't there something on Slashdot recently about someone getting mini-DVDRs (that would fit in an unmodified GameCube case) to work?
"[Regarding the 'cloud,'] ownership was what made America different than Russia." -- Woz