Welcome | Sign In
MacNewsWorld.com
iPod

'DVD Jon' Cracks iPod's DRM Code

Print Version
E-Mail Article
Reprints

The hacker known as "DVD Jon," a.k.a. Jon Lech Johansen, has cracked the digital rights management technology that Apple uses to protect songs purchased through its iTunes digital music store. The Norway native is reportedly considering licensing the code through his firm, DoubleTwist Ventures.


Rewriting the Startup Handbook
Starting up a new software company is not very hard, but making it successful requires a willingness to remake old rules to fit the Internet age. Getting venture capital or angel investor funds starts with nailing your story. [Download PDF: 5 pgs | 162k]

Well known software hacker More about hacker DVD Jon has cracked Apple's (Nasdaq: AAPL) Apple Store Discount on Office 2008 for Mac - Home and Student Edition . Click here. More about Apple digital rights management (DRM) technology.

Otherwise known as Jon Lech Johansen, DVD Jon made a name for himself seven years ago when he cracked the encryption code on DVDs. Now, he has broken the code that prevents iPod users from playing songs purchased from competing online music stores, as was originally revealed in early October and reported by MacNewsWorld.

Apple's iTunes features FairPlay copy-protection technology that forces iPod users to download music from its proprietary service -- and only its service. The 22-year-old Norwegian, who now lives in San Francisco, reportedly reverse-engineered Apple's FairPlay DRM technology and now has designs on licensing it to others through his Redwood Shores, Calif.-based DoubleTwist Ventures.

Keeping Up

Apple could not immediately be reached for comment, but with plenty at stake the company is expected to make a counter move. ITunes owns an 88 percent share of legal song download market in the United States, and the iPod claims more than 60 percent of U.S. MP3 player sales Grow Your Business-Fast! Sign up for a FREE trial of Infusionsoft and double your sales in 12 months..

The digital download service is also making headway in Europe, where music fans have purchased more than 200 million songs from Apple's European iTunes Music Stores in the past two years.

Apple continues to ink exclusive deals with artists, and regularly adds new television content from broadcast and cable television networks. It also continues to add new products to its lineup, including the red iPod nano recently added as part of the Product (Red) AIDS awareness program.

Back to the Drawing Board

DRM issues are troublesome, at best, for content providers, as well as for the electronics manufacturers who host them. This isn't the first time that Apple has seen its DRM technology broken -- and it won't be the last, according to Michael Sutton, a security evangelist with SPI Dynamics.

"The reality for DRM technologies is that they're a deterrent as opposed to an unbreakable fix," Sutton told MacNewsWorld. "Any time that a protection mechanism exists on a client side technology, given appropriate time and resources, it can be broken. Apple is no doubt aware of this and will respond with a revised DRM solution that will send Jon back to the drawing board."

DVD Jon has a knack for drawing the ire of the consumer electronics industry. He was only 15 years old when he wrote and distributed a program that cracked the encryption codes on DVDs.

Much like his recent coup, Johansen's skill allowed many viewers to copy DVDs and play them back on any device. If iPod owners could go to Sony's (NYSE: SNE) More about Sony or Microsoft's (Nasdaq: MSFT) More about Microsoft online music store, or even Real Networks' or Yahoo's (Nasdaq: YHOO) More about Yahoo digital download subscription service, it could open the market for new competition.

A Digital Arms Race

Regardless of Apple's fate in this case, analysts doubt that the news will cause the music industry to shrink back from its newfound love for digital downloads. Sutton likened DRM to an arms race in which technology vendors will continue to advance the technology and hackers will continue to break it.

"Given appropriate time and resources, anything is hackable," Sutton concluded.

Social Networking Toolbox:

Print Version E-Mail Article Reprints More by Jennifer LeClaire   RSS

Don't miss a story -- sign up for our FREE e-mail newsletters and view the latest headlines at a glance.
Tech News Flash [ View Sample ]
E-Commerce Minute [ View Sample ]
ECT News Network Weekly Newsletter [ View Sample ]
Shortcuts
Happy 4th of July From ECT News Network
WiFi Hotspot Locator
City or Zip/Postal Code:
Country/Region:
ECT News Network Information
Reader Services
Corporate
ECT News Network