Has the RIAA Wormed 95% of P2P Networks? 887
DancingSword was one of many to submit links to a strange story about
the RIAA hacking back by sending a worm through the major peer-to-peer networks, supposedly with a 95% infestation rate. Hoax or not?
Remember (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Remember (Score:5, Informative)
That said, I really doubt the veracity of this. To me, it's more likely to either be a hoax by someone trying to get noticed, or scare tactics to get people to stop using p2p and delete their mp3s. It seems to me very unlikely that anything with such a high rate of infestation would have gone completely unnoticed.
Re:Remember (Score:5, Informative)
I wish I could agree, but from reading the article and the Bugtraq post, it seems that for now, all this thing really does is sends the RIAA a list of what MP3 files you have on your system. It apparently doesn't destroy anything, and the post vaguely describes the method of contacting the RIAA as "specially crafted requests over the p2p networks." For both of these reasons, it may very well go unnoticed on many systems. It is unclear, however, what happens on machines with infected MP3s, but no P2P software.
However, the post also goes on to mention that the OpenBSD release song MP3s on the ftp.openbsd.org server are/were supposedly infected with this worm, and that Theo De Raadt was none the wiser to this fact. This is not surprising, since it's clear that Gobbles does not like Theo, but it is significant if it is true.
Re:Remember (Score:5, Insightful)
Gobbles??!?! Case closed - it's not real. (Score:5, Insightful)
Gobbles?
Jesus, then it's probably not real.. anyone remember his "security alert" [attrition.org] about awhttpd? Basically, the "vulnerability" he described was Lynx retrieving the file from his local filesystem via a file:// URL-type.
A reply, showing just what an idiot this "Gobbles" is is here [hcsw.org]
Re:Remember (Score:4, Funny)
RIAA Math... (Score:3, Funny)
they probably just got it to run on a couple of systems and then multiplied that by the number of users on the p2p net.
outbound network monitoring (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:outbound network monitoring (Score:5, Insightful)
Well... (Score:4, Interesting)
An MP3 based virus is possible these days, and it could easily spread to all your mp3s once activated. (even on unix, since obviously your mp3 player is going to have access to those files, unless they are read-only)
Re:Remember (Score:3, Interesting)
rule breaker (Score:5, Insightful)
the RIAA and the MPAA dropped the ball and now want someone else to clean up their messes. let them clean it up. don't allow any industry to become vigilantes protecting its own interests. banks are not allowed to hunt down suspects in robberies. it would be a terrible precedent to set.
these "free" copies being distributed on the internet are lower quality than the originals they come from. if the free stuff bothers the industry, the industry should give consumers a reason to buy original copies other than, "we want you to." put DRM all over it. require new players, whatever. but make sure the consumer has incentive to accept all of that. do not bite the hand that feeds you. the industry feels cheated. if consumers didn't feel cheated by what they are offered, they wouldn't go looking elsewhere for free alternatives. if the content were compelling, people would pay for it.
Never buy another again (Score:5, Insightful)
As a professional in the IT industry and as an American citizen (NOT CONSUMER!), I care so much more about the usurpation of the American political process by and transfer of control over my rights regarding my personal property to big (mostly global) corporations than I do about what you mischaracterize as "piracy" -- piracy is commercial activity, passing out tapes for free on the streetcorner is not, and may even be protected under the Audio Home Recording act -- THAT I SIMPLY WON'T SPEND ANY MONEY ON ENTERTAINMENT AGAIN!
Read this, Rep. Goodlatte -- if that is really who you are -- over the past 5 years my income has been significantly higher than the national mean, due to my profession. I have spent an enormous amount of money on entertainment, computers and consumer electronics.
But with each step further into my home that the Entertainment industry attempts to exert power, my consumption has dropped and will continue to.
I do not, AND WILL NEVER own a DVD player thanks to CSS, region coding and other corporate attempts to control my private behavior.
I do not, AND NEVER WILL own an HDTV thanks to the broadcast flag and rules and legislation being proposed which seem to be designed to make things like the Linux computer which so empowered me (by, for instance, providing me with a learning platform which I used to leverage myself into this income bracket in the first place) illegal.
When ALL TV broadcasts are digital and protected, I won't be watching TV, and I'll just be one high-income but UNREACHABLE to advertisers "permanently potential consumer" thanks to you. Ask GM, Proctor and Gamble, and Pepsico how they feel about that. I will also be unable to view your campaign ads or those of like-minded fools who run for office in my district.
When ALL movies are only rentable on DVD (about 50% are only on DVD at my local Blockbuster now), I'll stop renting movies, AND MPAA MEMBER COMPANIES will stop receiving that much more of my large income -- as a frame of reference, I currently rent about 3 movies a week. By then, maybe even my wife will be so incensed that I'll be able to convince her of what I've been unsuccesful at convincing her in the past -- that we should stop going to movies alltogether.
If it gets to the point where music is only available on media or devices that are likewise crippled, I'll DISCONTINUE ALL MUSIC PURCHASES. I've already greatly curtailed my previously prodigious music buying behavior due to my outrage at this whole DRM regime bullshit.
And you know what? That's all fine by me. I own a guitar and a computer that can record music; I'll make my own music, and probably even give it away -- PROBABLY BECOMING ONE OF JUST MANY PROVIDING COMPLETELY FREE COMPETING PRODUCT for "consumers" to choose over that of your corporate pimps.
I have friends who own conventional and digital flim equipment.
I have a computer with which to compose and disseminate my views.
Unless you plan on making all means for individual citizens to produce their own entertainment and their own news media, you'll eventually fulfill the exact opposite goal of all this legislation; you'll help impoverish the very companies you're trying to protect. Let's see if they continue to fund your campaigns then!
Our forefathers died for (and grandfathers fought world wars for) freedom, NOT FOR DISNEY!
But I guess you can't tell the difference.
You are forgetting something (Score:5, Interesting)
Every time we rent a CD, DVD, VHS, or even game cartridge [216.239.51.100] - we are (again) paying this tax. So we lose there also.
Should we buy a book, a script, magazine, newspaper, or the like we are probably still paying this tax. So we've lost again.
Finally, even if everyone in the US refused to have anything else to do with the RIAA or MPAA they are still powerful enough to have new laws passed. As in "Atlas Shrugged," by Ayn Rand, if they can not take our money legally - then the thing to do is to change the laws so they can take it legally. After all - laws are nothing more than rules by which we play and those who have the money usually get to make the rules.
Sorry if this shocks anyone but the truth is that it is only because we respected each other, had a unified common sense approach to things, a scrupulous populus, and the knowledge that if you did wrong you would be held accountable for it - that we have made it this far. The "Anything goes" way of looking at things, not holding people's feet to the fire for doing something wrong, and (as bad as it might seem) not being willing to put to death those who really are doing terrible things to others (like Enron's execs who have ruined hundreds if not thousands of people's lives) that has caused us to come to this. What these people are doing is, IMHO, treasonous. [constitution.org] Look it up. The act of "Treason" is where two or more groups (whether they be people, organizations, corporations, or whatever) attempt to remove the rights of their fellow citizens. According to the texts it is their "intentions" which merit this stamp So ask yourself this - what are their intentions when they attempt to force upon you their yoke of slavery? What are their "intentions" when they try to sneak, like theives, laws [davehitt.com] into Congress [davehitt.com] which remove our rights and preserve or expand upon their rights. What are their intentions? Those intentions are to take away your rights.
Now, someone will probably say "You don't go around killing people just because they are trying to get laws passed." That's true. You don't. Normally. But this is different. It is different because they are not trying to get laws passed for the betterment of mankind or to right an injustice. No. They are trying to twist the laws and our country (Heck! The world even!) to their needs. To enslave it. To enshackle it to their beliefs. Just like some religious cults have tried to enslave others to their will. It is an evil thing to do and it will have terrible consequences if it is allowed to endure.
Even if they were only brought up on charges it would shake up the corporate world enough that many things companies are beginning to attempt to do through the rewriting of our laws would be stopped. Companies would think twice about trying to change laws so they benefit only them and remove our rights. Which brings up - why do groups think they can get away with this? The answer is - they have in the past. The difference is the internet. Whereas before there was this huge time lag between when something happened and when we knew about it - now it only takes hours or minutes for word to be sent and a transgression found out. The problem is still though the complancey of many of the people in our country. "Oh! I might get involved." some whine. "I don't have the time." another chats. "It's not my place." a third comments. If you don't stand up and write your congressmen/women then you are already shackled. You already bear their mark. You already curl up at their feet, lick their hands, and eat the crumbs they throw to you.
So as always the question is - what are you going to do about it? Wallow in the filth on the floor or write and demand that these groups stop trying to infringe on your god given rights!
Re:Remember (Score:5, Informative)
Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:4, Informative)
Can you say "sue us please"?
No business financed with actual money of actual shareholders will ever open itself up for litigation in such a manner. The due-diligence folks would grill them.
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Informative)
its funny, laugh.
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Informative)
Facts: Suggested reading:
- BugTraq post [securityfocus.com] with the funny RIAA bit, followed by actual mpg123 exploit code
- Gobbles Homepage [immunitysec.com] (sometimes available at bugtraq.org, but currently down there, and up here)
So, in conclusion, the news here is this: You may now return to filesharing as usual.
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:3, Interesting)
>cannot detect this attack, or this type of attack.
But if it has infected "95% of all P2P participating hosts" then a few of us should be able to slap on a sniffer and simply look for the unauthorized traffic to prove if this is real or not. I personally don't trade over P2P so it wont do me much good, but there should be a bunch of you out there that could take this test.
If the exploit really is sending out the volume of data it claims, it should be fairly easy to spot. I know he "specially crafted" the traffic to make this more difficult, but how sneaky can it be when a catalog contains a few thousand MP3s? If "all media on the machine" is cataloged but you're only sharing out a subset of that media then a delta in the traffic would be pretty apparent.
The only thing I could think of that would make this really difficult is if the program sent the catalogs and then just stopped doing much until it was contacted or until a predetermined time. Solution: Attach a clean host with an infectable P2P client to your network with the suspected infected one. Make sure it has a HUGE catalog of music that isn't being shared to the P2P network. Then look for corresponding traffic.
Sounds like a lot of work, I know, but as my dad always said, "it builds character." Or, I suppose, we could just sit around and say "I think it's true" or "I think it's phony" all day.
TW
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Insightful)
As for the OpenSSH bug... it was discovered by ISS, announced and fixed by the OpenBSD team, and then, a week later (or so), they released an exploit. All they did was make a diff of the two versions to find the security problem, then write a small script that exploits it... That's more tame than almost all other exploits, since they did not find it themselves, and did not have to do much work to exploit it, since it (the bug) was already explained in detail.
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Windows Clients/hosts? (Score:5, Informative)
More details including the original post can be found here [securityfocus.com].
I still doubt the possible risk/effectiveness - or even that its true though.
Is the RIAA liable to hacking chages? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Is the RIAA liable to hacking chages? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Is the RIAA liable to hacking chages? (Score:5, Insightful)
Even if it was law it would only protect the RIAA if they only hacked machines in the US. Which wouldn't be easy to do. Imagine how silly the US government would look refusing an extradtion request for a "terrorist suspect" too.
That explains... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:That explains...(hold on a minute) (Score:5, Funny)
Wait a minute...
THAT'S NO STRAP-ON !
Creation of viree is a crime (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Creation of viree is a crime (Score:5, Funny)
Dunno about all that (Score:5, Insightful)
This is SPAM (Score:4, Informative)
Shareaza, Gnucleus and Bearshare offer protections against some of these spammers, by blocking their hosts.
Re: Dunno about all that (Score:5, Funny)
That's malicious? I'd say it's pretty damn generous!
Oh, and this is vaguely relevant [penny-arcade.com]
The Register is wrong.. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The Register is wrong.. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sure, if the worm comes into your system over a P2P network, there's a good chance that at least *some* of your mp3s are pirated, but there's no way to differentiate pirated mp3s and those you ripped/encoded from your own CD collection.
I could easily see someone downloading a public domain work via P2P network, getting infected, and having their 40GB mp3 (ripped/encoded from legally obtained sources) library listed to the RIAA "for future prosecution."
I love the whole guilty until proven innocent attitude here. Sounds like a bad "In Soviet Russia..." joke.
Re:The Register is wrong.. (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:The Register is wrong.. (Score:5, Insightful)
isn't it a no-no to put your legally ripped-from-cd tracks into your "share" directory for others to copy?
all digital media on the system is cataloged, and the list is sent to the RIAA.
So what exactly makes you think it'll only search your shared folder?
Re:The Register is wrong.. (Score:3, Insightful)
I Am Utterly Innocent but Possibly Infected (Score:5, Interesting)
Yes, it does. And it shows what criminal, despicable, disgusting excuses for human beings work for, or with, the RIAA.
Sure, if the worm comes into your system over a P2P network, there's a good chance that at least *some* of your mp3s are pirated, but there's no way to differentiate pirated mp3s and those you ripped/encoded from your own CD collection.
All of my mp3 and ogg files are ripped from my own rather large, but no longer growing CD and Vinyl collection (because now I do not buy CDs, ever, nor will I, ever again). All of my avi's are recorded from my own television, my own animations, or my own media, and are not traded, ever. Indeed, none of my stuff is traded, ever.
However, I did install gtk-gnutella in order to download the hiliarious fan fiction Star Trek episode "Savage Empire", because the web site distributing the files had been slashdoted. A perfectly legal download, for which, if this story is true, these unlawful thugs have infected my machine.
I have enough money, and the will, to persue a very harsh lawsuit against these fucks if this story has any veracity, and if I am infected, and I will not hesitate to do so.
"In Corporate Fascist America You and Your Data Belong to the Copyright and Media Cartels. Bend Over and Enjoy the Ride, Consumer."
URL to the original BugTraq posting (Score:5, Informative)
This is the original posting [securityfocus.com].
Reading the posting, it seems unlikely.
Link to Security Focus (Score:5, Informative)
worm code (Score:5, Funny)
RIAA - 0wn3d by....
oooh riaa want's to hack Filesharing Users / Servers ? - better lern to secure your own server...
Sorry Admin - had to deactivate ur accounts - they'll be reactivated after 2 hours
greetz : Rage_X, BRAiNBUG, SyzL0rd, BSJ, PsychoD + all the others who want to stay anonymous
wanna contact ? mailto:h4x0r0815@mail.ru
Oh, wait, that was the RIAA's web page. Never mind!
Legally (Score:5, Insightful)
Nah. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Nah. (Score:4, Funny)
We know, thanks.
Love and hugs,
The RIAA
Hoax (Score:5, Informative)
In addition, I find it had to believe that all the antivirus companies are sitting on their collective asses, and completely missed an infection that is supposedly on 95% of computers that participate in P2P.
Further, if anyone was to do something such as this, they would most certainly get in serious trouble for, what is essentially a widespread, illegial, interstate, wiretap.
In addition, I'd just like to say that there is no reason to put much faith in Gobles... As Theo said, he's more or less the next ``fluffy bunny". If anyone can be said to have a severe ego problem, it is him...
Re:Hoax (Score:5, Insightful)
I sincerely doubt that this is true for a number of reasons. First of all, if they were hired to write the software for RIAA, don't you thing secrecy would both, be part of the agreement, and be completely necessary?
Have you considered the possibility that they were hired by the RIAA to *claim* that they wrote the software, to scare people away from p2p networks?
Re:Hoax (Score:5, Insightful)
Have you considered the possibility that they were hired by a group who wants to make the RIAA look more evil (or perhaps are acting on their own), and the RIAA actually has nothing to do with it?
And the #1 Reason this is probably a hoax.... (Score:3, Insightful)
But seriously, let's say this isn't a hoax. Big Effing Deal. So the RIAA gets one day to make the P2P networks all DDOS themselves to hell. Yippie. That's just one day of interupted service. Within hours of this hyrda going off there will be virus definitions and patches from all the anti-virus vendors to fix the issue. And all of the software that is being exploited would also recieve patches.
Does anyone seriously believe that any significant percentage of P2P users are going to suddenly say "wow the RIAA has been right all along I better start paying for things" because they get exploited by Hilary & Friends?
I mean seriously here, the dilema is: a) Don't pay for anything and risk getting hacked by the RIAA *maybe* once. b) Pay for everything.
Wow that's sure gonna be a tough choice for the P2P crowd. What an insane waste of money for the RIAA to even bother with this nonsense.
Antivirus (Score:3, Interesting)
After all the anti-virus attacks of the last few years, consumers and businesses alike have dumped a ton of money into anti-virus software. I find it hard to believe that a worm could get 95% penetration in this group.
These hackers are just looking for some recognition, that's all.
95%? Not likely. (Score:3, Interesting)
I doubt you could get 95% of people on the Internet to agree on anything, much less taste in music, and even if this worm/virus infected every MP3 on a computer, 95% infestation seems really, really unlikely.
On the other hand, this (worming P2P clients) has been talked about a lot in the past--and there are already viruses spreading via P2P, though the community seems to detect them pretty quickly--so I wouldn't put it past the RIAA to do something like this. Much less this Gobbles character; he's pretty infamous on the Bugtraq mailing list for trying to make fun of / piss off as many people as he can. (Incidentally, Gobbles is also known for overstatement, and as he was the one who stated the 95% figure in the article . . . well, you decide.) And it would of course be trivial to "phone home" to the RIAA with information about shared files on the computer.
So while I could believe the existence of the worm, I seriously doubt the 95% infestation figure.
not sure (Score:5, Interesting)
From the little info that is available, I'd give them a 50-50 chance that it's true. That would be interesting.
If It's True... (Score:5, Insightful)
This supposed worm disables functions of a computer. Therefore, it is malicious, as is anything that modifies system performance without the user's knowledge and consent.
If this is true (95% infection rate? Doubt it), then we have one heck of a piece of ammo to use against the RIAA, if indeed they contracted this worm. The Price Fixing settlement, in that case, is just the beginning.
Dubious Legality (Score:5, Insightful)
Dubious? How is there any doubt? Assuming this passes the farmer test (it's not just bullshit in a bag), how can there be doubts it's illegal. At best, it's invasion of privacy. At worst, it's cyber terrorism as defined by the Patriot Act.
The existance of a P2P client doesn't a criminal make, especially since the example given in the article by the l33t hacker is a perfectly legal file: the public MP3s (written to celebrate each OpenBSD release).
It's junk, like the quad-browser yesterday.
The biggest thing to fear is that the RIAA will use this to make up more numbers [guidance.net.nz].
Re:Dubious Legality (Score:3, Insightful)
> just bullshit in a bag), how can there be doubts
> it's illegal.
There can also be no doubt that there would never be a criminal prosecution. The best we could hope for would be that the ISPs would file a lawsuit and get an injunction ordering them to stop.
> The existance of a P2P client doesn't a criminal
> make, especially since the example given in the
> article by the l33t hacker is a perfectly legal
> file: the public MP3s (written to celebrate each
> OpenBSD release).
The RIAA objects to the existence of such music: they make no money from it. Their goal is more ambitious than just stopping unauthorized copying. They want to make distribution of music outside their control impossible.
> It's junk, like the quad-browser yesterday.
Very likely.
Re:Dubious Legality (Score:3, Insightful)
No if this BS were true, everyone invloved would be in deep, deep shit.
Re:Dubious Legality (Score:3, Insightful)
Retrieving a list of file names from someone should not be enough to prosecute them. I believe in order to prove you had a copyrighted file, the RIAA would have to download the entire file from that person and then listen to it to ensure it is what they thought it was. Nothing prevents me from creating thousands of fake files and giving them arbitrary names like "Metallica - Ride the Lightning.mp3". Having a file with this name is NOT illegal. I would also have to assume that the RIAA would have to provide some logs above and beyond what a P2P client has that shows where they got the file from and what time, maybe traceroutes and and traffic logging?. There are already tons of bogus files out there, wether they were planted or there by accident there is a chance you have a file name that is not what you think it is. I find it odd they have the power to mail abuse@your.isp and getting anything accomplished with that. You need solid evidence, you will not get arrested for having a file named i_tape_little_girls.mpg (although it may raise questions), but somehow you have less rights by having popular_song.mp3. It is obviously the corporate intrests involved that this is heading where it is. You need solid evidence to support a violation of the law for everything else in the world except for proving copyright violations.
Want to be secure? Use systrace... (Score:5, Interesting)
So, any program you have that opens untrusted content (xmms, mplayer, mozilla, etc) can be run with systrace, and you can selectively enable certain types of activity all the time... disallow certain activities allways, and be prompted for selective approval or denial of everything else.
Even though I believe this to be a hoax, it's certainly true that it could be done, and something like systrace is needed to guarantee a bug in a program you run can't be used to take over your system.
Re:Want to be secure? Use systrace... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Kernel module rootkits == invisible (Score:3, Informative)
First of all, there is no way you could even get Root from an exploit of mpg123, mplayer, xmms, or anything else Gobbles listed... They all run as users, not SUID or anything like that.
Secondly, Systrace is not an antiworm program. It is a program wrapper, which you use to restrict the permissions of other programs. For instance, you could create a systrace script for xmms that would allow it to read all the files in
So, systrace is really a preventative measure.
Of course, you could have done a 2 minute search on google and found that out for yourself.
This is a funny way (Score:4, Insightful)
LOL
If the RIAA release such files... (Score:5, Insightful)
The suggestion that the RIAA might be releasing files with exploits in is worrying on several counts. Firstly, it is an invasion of privacy for such a worm to be reporting back to the RIAA. Secondly, the RIAA, in taking the law into its own hands, does not deserve a hearing based on any evidence it so collects. Thirdly, the RIAA incriminates itself by being the illegal distributor of copyrighted works. Fourthly, the second and third points are likely to be ignored by the law.
I'd certainly hope that this is a hoax - there is a far simpler way for the RIAA to get information on who's downloading files - put a bogus file out with a name conveniently misspelt, a few extra characters in or something in the ID3 tag. Do a search for this file, then View User's Other Files. Instantly, you have a list of what that person's sharing, you can download the file and get the IP address, find their ISP and deal with them. If that doesn't provide sufficient information to the RIAA in a non-incriminating way (you're agreeing to disclose the files you're sharing, right?), I don't know what does.
Hoax (Score:3, Interesting)
No need to worry... (Score:3, Funny)
Typical RIAA stupidity? (Score:5, Insightful)
The SecurityFocus posting has lots of bragging about how network security tools won't find their exploit. I beg to differ. They aren't going to dodge tcpdump running on a machine that is a gateway for an infected machine. The way gnutella is supposed to work is known. To a trained eye, their "cleverly crafted" network requests are going to stick out like a sore thumb. In any case, just knowing a thing exists greatly simplifies finding it. We'll know in short order if they're hoaxing or not.
More commentary (Score:3, Interesting)
http://www.virusbtn.com/news/latest_news/gobbles.
Bugtraq Source (Score:5, Insightful)
MD5 Hash (Score:3, Interesting)
Over at SourceForge eMule is one of the largest downloaded clients on the list...
Change one byte of any file and the MD5 hash for said file changes. This is nothing new or even that clever but it does stop bad files from spreading around the network.
As I understand it, Kazza is still number one when it comes to P2P file sharing. When I last opened Kazza it reported 4 million users. Kazza also uses a file hash to allow segmented downloads as do most P2P clients these days.
These **AA infected files would be a drop in the ocean and they would not spread far. If this is a hoax then it's not even a very clever one.
RIAA statistics (Score:5, Funny)
I'm pissed off (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a copy of Metallica's Kill Em All on tape. My tape is pretty worn out. So I hit the Fastrack network to download the songs. Now under Canadian law, this is perfectly legal as I own an original copy of the album.
But now my PC is infected by a worm/trojan because a cartel ^H^H^H^H^H some 'company' believes that everyone who downloads MP3s are doing so illegally. Nice when a company thinks that everyone is a criminal. Congress really needs to wake up and start protecting the people again, and not mega corporations. And other countries need to shove back when the US tries to push it's own laws onto them.
Gobbles is a glory whore (Score:5, Funny)
Besides, if they were working with RIAA, wouldn't the RIAA also have paid them a few bucks to secure their site? If they have, wow, bang up job so far.
Joke (Score:4, Insightful)
> Things to keep in mind:
> 1) If you participate in illegal file-sharing
> networks, your computer now belongs to the RIAA.
Im sure glad there are no illegal file-sharing networks yet!
> 2) Your BlackIce Defender(tm) firewall will not
> help you.
> 3) Snort, RealSecure, Dragon, NFR, and all that
> other crap cannot detect this attack, or this
> type of attack.
Admitting its an attack, and admitting you are purposly designing it to avoid current defences, that will look good to a judge.
> 4) Don't fuck with the RIAA again, scriptkids.
Oh, your 13 years old?
> 5) We have our own private version of this hydra
> actively infecting p2p users, and building one
> giant ddosnet.
So any future DDoS we now can blame on these people who openly admitted to it.
GO get em yahoo and ebay!
> Due to our NDA with the RIAA, we are unable to
> give out any other details concerning the
> technology that we developed for them, or the
> details on any of the bugs that are exploited in
> our hydra.
An NDA is a legal document which cannot in any way override existing laws.
They admit to breaking numerous laws, and yet think a legal document will protect them?
I guess they really must all be under 13.
As a matter of fact, if my PC acts strange in any way shape or form, they now have opened themselfs up to a lawsuit.
They also claim the RIAA now has an illegally gained list of the perfectly legal files on my harddrive. This would be the perfect time for a large company to sue and request discovery, which would allow someone (generally feds, but still) to collect evedence (IE take any/all of their servers on the public network which ever have/had connections to a p2p network) which will cost them time and resources and frustrations. Then hopefully some evedence will be found as well.
My only wish is that alot of companys able to afford the legal fees open petty lawsuits aginst them for admitting all the crimes they have commited, if for nothing else than to cause them grief. Can also be used to harass the RIAA a little (Would be much better if the RIAA admitted this was true, but that will never happen.)
Turn the stupidity of the system aginst the enemy for a change.
People Lack Humor (Score:5, Informative)
This is no different.
If you wanted to... (Score:5, Insightful)
- Coders are, I'm sure, crawling through their code to look for and fix any security holes,
- Users are running firewalls and packet analyzers to check for any worm-like behavior,
- Some P2P users are taking a second look at checksums.
If such vunerabilities exist, I'm sure they won't for much longer. If the Berman bill ever becomes law, there won't be much to hack.
Let's see, how many languages can I say "liar' in? (Score:5, Insightful)
First, the fact that these programs have exploits is no surprise, but one media clip (probably MPEG (maybe MP3)), since while Windows Media Player and WinAMP offer universal playback, do ALL of them? Could one file even hit exploits in all these programs?
Second, since each is likely to have a different vulnerability, the amount of worm data in a file would be a decent chunk. Wouldn't it be noticed?
Third, an NDA would state that there can be no mention of it until it is ACTIVATED and USED. Now, Ad-aware-style programs will pop up to clean it if it exists.
Fourth, how many files would this have to be to get 95% of P2P users? The only way it could is by infecting every file you share, but SOMEBODY would have to notice that, whether the file size changes or some A/V data is thrown out.
Also, the idea of "specially formatted P2P requests" to inform RIAA is laughable. Even if the P2P software itself were compromised, a firewall user could notice it. Furthermore, consider the average media collection - hundreds of MP3s. Considering it would have to send artist name and song name, the amount of data would be well over 1MB unless compressed, and even then on dialup users it would have to be staggered.
Also, what kind of backend would this take? Multiple servers, a huge internet connection. Considering how big the P2P networks are, wouldn't this have to be a massive monitoring system? There aren't that many locations with these resources INSTALLED, so finding the facility would not be hard.
And why mention you have a IDENTICAL worm that you use to build a DDOS NET? Simple. Get those who don't care about privacy too much kicked up about that.
Finally, this sounds very strangely like RIAA-induced hypnosis - here are a few lines which show that they probably are lying and not even working with RIAA, just agree with RIAA's ideas.
"victim" (not the hard-working artists who p2p technology rapes, and the RIAA protects)
4) Don't fuck with the RIAA again, scriptkids.
Until we became RIAA contracters, the best they could do was to passively monitor traffic. Our contributions to the RIAA have given them the power to actively control the majority of hosts using these networks.
There are some spelling mistakes. There are factual holes that they cover with the claim of an NDA. In short, the probability of a hoax is about 98%.
Gobbles was -kidding-, but has a point. (Score:3, Insightful)
He's trying to make a point - that running all this P2P crap blindly on your systems, -especially- Windows boxes, is a security nightmare.
Think about it; he's managed to get thousands upon thousands of people worldwide nervous and antsy about whether or not their boxes are in a semi-0wned condition. Why?
Because it's within the realm of possibility that something like this could be done. Not by the stupid RIAA, who can't even secure their own Web site, but by somebody a) more skilled and b) motivated to do something Really Bad, like build (and use) a gigantic DDoS network, or steal any kind of account/password info it can find, or any kind of documents which might contain proprietary information, etc.
The intellectual property aspect of filesharing aside, I personally think that anyone who runs a P2P app is asking to get burned. There simply hasn't been the kind of scrutiny turned on these things that we see on other types of apps and utilities (and we already know that the concept Gobbles is preaching about is valid due to the earlier KaZAa worm, etc.).
Did anyone think P2P was good for security? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't pretend to know much about the gory details of how it works, but P2P has never struck me as the best way ever invented to ensure the integrity of your system.
Last week a client asked to bring his PC into the cybercafe to download some files using eDonkey. After a couple of days, my observations were that
So I told him to take his eDonkey elsewhere... is there any way to know what you are really connected to with this sort of system?
Re:Did anyone think P2P was good for security? (Score:4, Informative)
It is normally for a 700MB ISO to take 2-3 days on the eDonkey [eMule] network. Remember that you are not downloading from an FTP site or web server; you are downloading from peers with a finite amount of bandwidth. Most people, like me, have a capped upload speed which is 25% of my download speed. The quality of files on this network is the main reason people use it - not the speed.
200 connections is normal too. I currently have 90 connections because of the limitations with Windows 98. You are constantly asking other peers for files at the end of the day.
100 used ports is wrong though and I would be worried about this too. I only use two...
Why are you all so gullible? (Score:5, Insightful)
"My Subnetwork ping redistributer is down! I need to reboot my LAN before the virus infects my ethernet cable and gets everywhere!!!"
And yet I see people saying "this is probably not true" or "this may be a hoax", or "if they're doing this it should be illegal!". Come on. For Christ's Sake, this is totally idiotic and anyone with an iota of computer knowledge should immediately dismiss it.
I don't care if Linus Torvalds himself came out and said he'd done it, I'd laugh and point.
What's the worm? (Score:5, Funny)
Not to worry.. (Score:5, Funny)
Please view some screen shots from the last 96 hours.
http://iworktoomuch.com/images/riaa.com-download.
http://iworktoomuch.com/images/riaa.org.jpg [iworktoomuch.com]
http://iworktoomuch.com/images/riaa_tooled_again.
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:5, Insightful)
Could this be FUD straight from the RIAA to scare people into not running p2p apps? Is it a rumor started by GOBBLES to create a stir against the RIAA, or is it legit?
Who cares? I'm gonna fire up my gnutella client and share open source software until the day that p2p is illegal.
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:3, Interesting)
Would a NDA be legally binding for something as illegal as creating a worm that "hacks" itself onto peoples computers?
Wouldn't the one approched with a deal like that be obliged by law to report it to the police?
If someone asks me to do something illegal in exchange for money, am I breaking the law if I don't report it? Even if I turn the offer down? =/
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:5, Insightful)
Please, I can't even believe this got posted.
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:5, Insightful)
I think it's interesting, and I'm glad it was posted, although my first reaction was the same as everyone else, BOLLOCKS! But as lots of other people, including the mighty Register have pointed out, Gobbles has a good record for making apparently silly claims, letting people scoff, then proving them wrong. I think the real story is "Gobbles makes outraegous claim, what the hell is he up to?"
Speculation: Theoretically, I guess it's possible that there's an overflow in a library widely used in mp3 players. Remember the SMTP vulnerabilities last year, or the zip library hole that affected everyone from RedHat to Microsoft? Heh, that's the trouble with those pesky BSD licensed libs ;) Suppose Gobbles did find a zero-day hole. Remember that 95% of p2p users are going to be Windows users, so they're probably all using the same OS libs in their clients - for network access, say, if not for mp3 playback. Bear in mind that this worm would be pretty silent - it wouldn't be throwing rude messages up on the screen, it'd be sneaking around and trying to hide itself... Suppose it was only released in the wild a week ago. Perhaps it used the Kazaa auto-updating features to distribute itself over the network . Hmmm, this is actually starting to sound feasible. Now, obviously if the RIAA hav done this, then they're in deep, deep trouble: even the copyright mafia and Bush junta would have a problem trying to make out that this is anything but deeply criminal action. Posit: Gobbles, or another ethically challenged researcher, decides to try to discredit the RIAA... what better way to do it? Can you imagine the 9o'clock TV news headlines if there turns out to be a whiff of fire behind the smoke?
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:4, Informative)
Sorry... I can believe they found an exploit for mpg123. But the other claims they make are unbelievable, and border on just plain silly.
Re:*cough* bullshit *cough* (Score:3, Insightful)
Now that I have read the fine article... (Score:4, Interesting)
BUT...
Unless I am mistaken (already happened once today), this is just a buffer exploit. By the end of the work day, there should be patches for mpg123, xmms, and any other open source mp3 player affected. Then what is the RIAA going to do? Bang its collective shoe on the table and scream "Kill them! Kill them!"?
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
Re:If you can't beat 'em (Score:5, Funny)
Hm. Interesting.
By the way, where are you from, son? If I was to judge you from your post, as you have seen fit to judge others, I'd say, hmmmmm, let's see... Arrogant... Cowardly... ridiculously placing foot in mouth by mis-using it's while criticizing another nation's school system...
France?
Re:The RIAA as a terrorist organization (Score:4, Interesting)
(a) sell yourself to the RIAA,
(b) spend wads of cash letting people know you exist, or
(c) wither into oblivion.
Do *you* have wads of cash? No? Well, don't ever try to write music and expect anyone but your friends to hear it, then.
Some artists get lucky and get their name out via the Internet, or sign with an independent label.. but 90% of the artists you hear all the time are formerly-no-name guys that the RIAA noticed and invested in.
Re:Sue RIAA for screwing legal data? (Score:4, Interesting)
Of course, you can sue anyone for anything. It is just a matter of whether you win (and can pay the lawyer) or not.
Now, could the RIAA be charged with many many felonies? Yes.
I hope the EFF has a PC running some P2P clients with 100% legit recording on it. That would be great if the RIAA went into the EFF's PC and messed up legit software on it. Priceless.
Re:Sue RIAA for screwing legal data? (Score:3, Insightful)
That was why, when I submitted the item, I wrote:
Since I can't afford the bandwidth to http-serve 23-minute audio-files ( meditation-'tapes', I'll be putting them up sometime after my next retreat in Apr... ), I have to use a p2p system to spread-out the bandwidth, but thanks to this *IA* terrorism ..
( George Bernard Shaw wrote something about "all professions are conspiracies against the laity", didn't he? ) .. using gnutella-net won't work:
I'd be setting myself up in their frame-up job, no matter what files I make public, if this is true -- as another observed, it sends-back an all media files on my system listing to the RIAA, even though that doesn't match what my system would be sharing...
So, I'd be forced to use either Freenet [freenetproject.org] or GNUnet [ovmj.org], even though that'd mean contributing to serving stuff I really don't believe-in...
And the comments about "free speech means accommodating what one doesn't agree-with, censorship is inherently wrong" I don't buy, either: any immune-system is censorship, and I wouldn't want either me, my friends/loved-ones, or my system without an infection-stomping, virus/bacterium/paramecaeum/worm/trojan-censoring immune-system, eh?
I don't find suppression-of-diversity, enforcement-of-conformity, or 'obedience/authority' religions valid ( they suppress not merely speech, but living, god-itself/essence-of-gnosis-itself given essence-of-one ), but open inclusive harmony still need silence the predator/tumour determinations that murder whole-culture ( or whole-ecology, or whole-community, or whole-family ) wellbeing...
To put it otherly: wellbeing is exclusion of disease, they are mutually exclusive, so mistaking the wellbeing/disease dimension for some political 'dimension' isn't correct perception...
.. ah, sorry for getting slightly sidetracked, but the issues are entangled so...
Re:Poor choice of headline (Score:3, Funny)
My dog ate road-kill and got all wormed up.
The typical cure for this is (if you have money) to get the wormer from the vet/wal-mart/pet store and hope... Or...(if you are poor and the dog means alot to you) you force feed the pooch a huge wad of "Chaw"... Chewing Tobacco.... Several times. It does the trick, but it's like chemotherapy - you're just hoping the worms die before the dog does.
Okay - maybe this is a Southern Redneck Hunting Dog thing...I dunno.
Re:Where's the counter-exploit? (Score:3, Funny)
easy enough to write a counter exploit that hunts down and removes the Gobbles virus/worm
And then send the riaa a fake list of digital media