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      Denuvo Promises to Kill Nintendo Switch Emulator Piracy With New Protection

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Wednesday, 24 August, 2022 - 15:51 · 2 minutes

    Denuvo Most video gamers will be familiar with the concept of an end-of-level or end-of-game ‘boss’. They take many forms but tend to present as an escalated challenge designed to prevent gamers from progressing any further.

    Anti-piracy company Denuvo embraces the ‘boss’ concept and drops it on its head. Anyone wanting to play a Denuvo-protected videogame without paying for it will have to defeat Denuvo’s protection right at the very beginning, before the game even starts.

    Worst still, only a handful of people in the whole world are up to the Denuvo boss challenge, so until they emerge victorious, nobody gets to play the game, unless they’re prepared to pay for it. This makes Denuvo very unpopular in video game piracy circles but very popular with its clients, some of whom have a new product to consider.

    Nintendo Switch Emulator Protection

    Providing there’s no obvious reuse of copyrighted code or trademark abuse, emulation software is mostly immune to legal attack. Emulators that mimic gaming hardware are mostly legal to develop, legal to distribute, legal to own, and even legal to use.

    In reality, most emulator gamers like to gloss over that last bit. In the time it takes the minority to shout “HOMEBREW”, the rest will have downloaded several hundred MAME ROMs, a few Nintendo Switch games, and will be playing them on a PC.

    Nintendo is concerned about all piracy, but emulator piracy is special in that gamers don’t need to buy games, and they don’t need to buy a console either. Denuvo announced today that it has a new product to bring this to an end.

    It’s called Nintendo Switch Emulator Protection and Denuvo wants game developers to start using it right away.

    Emulation Good / Piracy Bad

    Reinhard Blaukovitsch is the founder and Managing Director of Denuvo, a business owned by cybersecurity giant Irdeto. In an announcement on Irdeto’s blog today, Blaukovitsch acknowledges that PC emulators can bring old games back to life with a wave of nostalgia but warns of the piracy risks.

    The claim that hundreds of free emulators can play Switch games sounds a bit enthusiastic, but that’s not really important. Yuzu and Ryujinx are the most popular and between them cover Windows, Linux and macOS users. All three can be used with entirely legal software but Denuvo would like them to be less useful to pirates moving forward.

    Games Need Protection From Emulation

    “Your Nintendo Switch games need a protective solution. Emulating games may be harmless in some cases, but at the end of the day, it is still a major means of piracy,” Denuvo’s message to Nintendo developers reads.

    “Our brand new Denuvo Nintendo Switch Protection helps prevent emulation from the get-go and stops pirates from getting hold of your game via the PC.”

    Denuvo says its solution integrates “seamlessly and automatically” and works by detecting differences in the way a game behaves compared to what it was designed for.

    “In this way, our software can tell that your game has been tampered with – and will make it unplayable.”

    Denuvo says its solution will stop Switch games from being pirated and help to secure income for developers. As for gamers, they will “simply have to pay” if they want in on the action.

    The Switch hacking/piracy scene is likely to perceive that as a challenge.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

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      A new jailbreak for John Deere tractors rides the right-to-repair wave

      news.movim.eu / ArsTechnica · Monday, 15 August, 2022 - 12:57 · 1 minute

    A new jailbreak for John Deere tractors rides the right-to-repair wave

    Enlarge (credit: HUM Images | Getty )

    Farmers around the world have turned to tractor hacking so they can bypass the digital locks that manufacturers impose on their vehicles. Like insulin pump “looping” and iPhone jailbreaking, this allows farmers to modify and repair the expensive equipment that’s vital to their work, the way they could with analog tractors. At the DefCon security conference in Las Vegas on Saturday, the hacker known as Sick Codes is presenting a new jailbreak for John Deere & Co. tractors that allows him to take control of multiple models through their touchscreens.

    The finding underscores the security implications of the right-to-repair movement. The tractor exploitation that Sick Codes uncovered isn't a remote attack, but the vulnerabilities involved represent fundamental insecurities in the devices that could be exploited by malicious actors or potentially chained with other vulnerabilities. Securing the agriculture industry and food supply chain is crucial, as incidents like the 2021 JBS Meat ransomware attack have shown. At the same time, though, vulnerabilities like the ones that Sick Codes found help farmers do what they need to do with their own equipment.

    John Deere did not respond to WIRED's request for comment about the research.

    Read 11 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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      Proposed Freedom to Repair Act Seems Unlikely to Make Streaming Piracy Worse

      news.movim.eu / TorrentFreak · Sunday, 12 June, 2022 - 11:37 · 6 minutes

    no-drm When Congress passed the Digital Millennium Copyright Act in 1998, section 1201 outlawed circumvention of technological protection measures controlling access to copyright works.

    The base concept is relatively simple. When technological systems are deployed by copyright holders (or on their behalf) to protect access to their copyrighted works, in most cases these systems cannot be circumvented without violating the DMCA. Section 1201 also prohibits trafficking in technology or services that facilitate the circumvention of such systems.

    Anti-Circumvention Goes Beyond Piracy

    When enacting these provisions, Congress understood that technological protection measures would support new ways of distributing copyrighted materials. However, these provisions actually prohibit the very first step toward potential piracy, since copying content behind a protection measure is not required for a finding of illegal circumvention under the DMCA.

    More importantly, these anti-circumvention provisions ( exceptions aside ) not only prohibit circumvention of measures when piracy is the goal but also when citizens want to repair electronic devices they own. Some devices even carry these protection systems for the purpose of restricting the ability to repair.

    To address the obvious anti-consumer issues caused by the latter, the proposed ‘ Freedom to Repair Act 2002 ‘ seeks to amend section 1201 of title 17 by allowing circumvention of technical protection systems when the goals are for diagnosis, maintenance and repair. If passed, the legislation would also permit the importation, manufacture and sale of technology to facilitate those three specific uses.

    Of course, alarm bells are already being sounded by those who believe such changes will only herald a new wave of piracy, one that will prove even worse than the last, and the five or ten that preceded them, and those that predate the DMCA itself.

    “Pro-Piracy Legislation”

    “Rep. Mondaire Jones (D-N.Y.) is a fresh, diverse voice in Congress and I am excited he is running for a new seat in the city,” actor, writer and producer Reggie Lochard wrote in The Hill this week.

    “But I’m also pretty disappointed he is sponsoring legislation that would undermine the legal and technological protections that make streaming films and entertainment possible. I would have thought Jones would have the back of artists and filmmakers like myself.”

    Lochard says that the proposed Act would legalize a “vast new market” for digital piracy tools and as such the bill amounts to “pro-piracy legislation”. He also suggests that the proposed solution is being used to “smuggle in other agendas”.

    Precisely who the agenda smugglers are isn’t made clear but it’s not really unusual to see a filmmaker raising the alarm over perceived threats to legal streaming. The Copyright Alliance framing the proposed legislation as the legalization of piracy tools isn’t much of a surprise either.

    Despite the concern, it seems unlikely that these exceptions would deliver a nightmare piracy scenario, at least one that is more of a nightmare than the one currently underway, taking place under even tighter legislation. The reasons for this are numerous but mostly center around the control of legal streaming content and the ease at which that control can be taken away by much easier solutions.

    Cited ‘Threat Devices’ Are Already Thriving

    As things stand the Freedom to Repair proposal relates to digital electronic equipment, dependent in whole (or in part) on attached or embedded digital electronics. As Lochard rightly points out, this would include devices used extensively for digital entertainment such as smart TVs, tablets, streaming boxes, and game consoles.

    In one way or another, all of these devices can already be programmed, reprogrammed, hacked or otherwise modified to receive or display infringing content. More than two decades of the DMCA’s anti-circumvention provisions have been unable to stop that, at least as far as personal or ‘household’ piracy is concerned.

    A complex and diverse piracy ecosystem means that simple explanations can be restrictive but a key issue is obvious – pirates tend not to care too much about the law and if a circumvention device or piracy service is available, they will use it whether the DMCA outlaws it or not. It’s extremely hard to detect this type of infringement and even harder to reach into people’s homes to prevent it.

    Of course, none of this addresses Lochard’s key concerns that streaming piracy would increase due to a “devasting new trade in online piracy tools.”

    Diagnosis, Maintenance and Repair

    The proposed law is clear in that it identifies diagnosis, maintenance and repair as the only circumstances in which it would be legal to bypass the technological protection measures in a device. Bypassing TPMs for any other reason would remain as illegal as it is now so repair exceptions would not improve the legal position of consumer pirates in any way. But again, this misses the key issues related to streaming piracy.

    On the understanding that the proposed exemptions apply strictly to user-owned devices, they cannot possibly apply to systems that are owned by someone else – a streaming service, for example. Digital services (such as Amazon) that deliver protected streaming content would not be covered by any exemption since only the company and its agents have any right to conduct maintenance or repair.

    As a result, importing, selling or distributing any device, tool or service capable of circumventing protection measures on Amazon, Netflix or Disney+ would remain illegal, including if those tools were somehow executed via a hacked or ‘repaired’ consumer device. If any device is modified for piracy purposes it is illegal today and will be illegal tomorrow, right to repair or not.

    Right To Repair Would Not Increase Streaming Piracy

    Lochard says that the current provisions prohibiting circumvention are vital, but his claim that they ensure that “no one can buy tools to rip a copy of my work from Amazon Prime Video and upload it to a piracy site” are hopeful at best.

    Specialist content extraction tools already exist in closed piracy circles and will continue to exist as long as pirates are motivated to build them. If they can’t be deployed, pirates regularly use screen capturing tools and not a lot can be done about that either.

    All said, if today’s position of pirated movies and TV shows appearing online within minutes is the point we’re starting from, the law is already failing to prevent piracy and a limited right to repair consumer devices seems unlikely to worsen that.

    Even if in some future nightmare scenario anyone at all was able to buy tools to download from Amazon ( surprise, they already can ) not much would change since everything is already available for download on pirate sites and yet another copy is no more useful than the ones already there.

    Right to Repair Would Benefit The Majority of Consumers

    This is perhaps the most important point. The vast majority of content consumers don’t pirate, aren’t interested in pirating and if they were, the tools to do so already exist. Not only that, today’s piracy methods are ridiculously simple, far easier than opening up a smart TV and attempting to conduct nefarious ‘repairs’ with a YouTube video for instruction.

    Nevertheless, it’s likely that big rightsholder and manufacturing groups will oppose the Freedon to Repair Act proposals, or at least push for drastic carve-outs that exclude the devices most in need of repair, that cost the most, and are likely to end up as a net loss to the environment.

    Meanwhile, pirates of all kinds – suppliers, distributors and consumers – will continue as if nothing has happened. For many copyright law is a mere inconvenience, text on a page to be shrugged at, if read at all.

    Adding repair exceptions to the DMCA won’t change the fact that pirates will still be breaking the law. However, refusing to add exceptions means that the old mistakes get repeated again – only paying consumers are inconvenienced by such restrictions, pirates are oblivious to them.

    It’s worth repeating that paying customers represent the vast majority in most countries and it is their hard earned cash that allows streaming services to exist. Crafting a right-to-repair law that acts in everyone’s interests may be difficult but, with some work, shouldn’t be impossible.

    From: TF , for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.