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Sony Sues Rootkit Maker

flyboy974 writes "Sony BMG Music Entertainment is suing the company that developed anti-piracy software for its CDs, claiming the technology was defective and cost the record company millions of dollars to settle consumer complaints and government investigations. The software in question is the MediaMax CD protection system, widely derided as a rootkit. Sony BMG is seeking to recover some $12 million in damages from the Phoenix-based technology company, according to court papers filed July 3."

5 of 334 comments (clear)

  1. $12,000,000 is peanuts. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Being able to pass the blame to someone else is priceless.

  2. Responsibility by fastest+fascist · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Seems to me like the responsibility for the functioning of a product should fall upon the distributor. Of course, you could ask if Sony is suing more for the money or as a PR measure to try to shrug off some of the blame for the whole debacle.

    1. Re:Responsibility by AvitarX · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Sony was responsible for distribution to the public.

      Now they are trying to hold someone responsible for distributing to them.

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    2. Re:Responsibility by toleraen · · Score: 5, Insightful

      It was Sony's responsibility. Hence they were sued by the consumers for it. However, if the company provided Sony with software that was not fully functional (overly functional?) without disclosing it, it's definitely court time. The PR certainly doesn't hurt though.

  3. Re:I'm confused by networkBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    A company to hate I think that's microsoft around here, though Sony is up there too I guess.

    Nothing wrong with preventing copy yes there is something wrong. I do not want to buy a song from iTunes for a buck that I already have on disk, just to listen to it on my iPod, or better yet, I don't have an iPod, so iTunes is useless to me, and AllOfMP3 is shuttered so I can't get MP3's there, thus they have to come from my CD or from file-sharing as my only two choices.

    The company they hired pushed faulty software Actually I think this was a different company than the root kit, but since most everyone who understands the media's goal with DRM agrees it's defective by design, then yes I agree.

    As a person who has used sony programs and devices for years ditto, though no more and never again if at all avoidable

    I can attest that normally their EULA's are in your face and pretty annoying. This case just seems out of character for the company. betamax licensing was just as bad, no it's not that far out of character. Just in the consumers face nowdays.
    The Sony I used to love is dead. Management changes have turned it from a pioneering company into a slogging lumbering hulk that only wants more money, not customers' loyalty.
    -nB
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