Sony recalls millions of copy-protected CDs

Risk is of "pandemic" proportions, says security researcher

By John Borland, 16 November 2005 09:05

NEWS

Record label Sony BMG Music Entertainment said on Tuesday that it will recall millions of CDs that, if played in a consumer's PC, will expose the computer to serious security risks.

Anyone who has purchased one of the CDs, which include southern rockers Van Zant, Neil Diamond's latest album, and more than 18 others, can exchange the purchase, Sony said. The company added that it would release details of its CD exchange programme "shortly".

Sony reported that over the past eight months it shipped more than 4.7 million CDs with the so-called XCP copy protection. More than 2.1 million of those discs have been sold.

The company said in a statement: "We share the concerns of consumers regarding discs with XCP content-protected software, and, for this reason, we are instituting a consumer exchange programme and removing all unsold CDs with this software from retail outlets. We deeply regret any inconvenience this may cause our customers."

The company made the announcement - its second public apology since the CDs' risks came to light last week - just as security researchers found several other potentially dangerous flaws in the software.

Princeton University computer science professor Ed Felten yesterday wrote in his blog that he and a fellow researcher had confirmed that Sony's initial web-based uninstall tool - designed to uninstall the copy-protection software deposited by Sony's CDs - actually exposed a critical vulnerability on computers.

The tool downloaded a program that causes a user's hard drive to accept instructions from websites. But the program remained active on the user's hard drive after it had been instructed to uninstall the Sony software. The program could then be triggered by almost any code from any website, including malicious instructions, the Princeton researchers said.

Felton and fellow researcher J Alex Halderman wrote in their blog: "Any web page can seize control of your computer; then it can do anything it likes. That's about as serious as a security flaw can get."

Sony later replaced that web-based uninstall tool with one that downloads a program with its own instructions, as opposed to one that accepts instructions from websites. The researchers said the new program appeared to be safe.

For anyone who did use the earlier tool, the researchers' blog has instructions for removing the Sony component.

Separately on Tuesday, security company Internet Security Systems released its own new advisory on Sony's software. It warned that flaws in the copy-protection software - not just in the early uninstall tool - could allow an attacker to take control of a user's machine.

Previously, security researchers had spotlighted the online release of several Trojan horse viruses that piggybacked on the Sony software to hide their presence on hard drives.

The Trojan horse software, once installed, automatically connects to an internet chat network and allows an attacker to take remote control of an infected computer.

Although more than two million of the Sony discs have been sold, it's still unclear how many of those were actually played in a Windows-based computer, thus triggering the security risks. Sony notes that the copy-protection software is not activated on an ordinary CD or DVD player, or on a Macintosh computer.

Security researcher Dan Kaminsky said he estimated that at least 500,000 computers had installed the Sony software.

Once installed, the Sony software can relay data, which indicates what CDs are being played, to an outside server. To relay the information, the software has to find its destination by contacting the internet's domain name system address servers, where a publicly available record of that request is left behind.

Kaminsky said he counted more than 568,000 separate requests. The method counts any request coming from the same network but only once. So it might not include repeated requests coming from offices or schools, where numerous computers use the same network, he said.

Kaminsky said: "The thing that's proved here is not the upper bound. This is a lower bound. This is a pandemic."

Sony's copy-protection software was created by British company First 4 Internet. The software is installed on a computer's hard drive when certain Sony compact discs are put in the CD player and the listener accepts a licence agreement.

The software then hides itself using a controversial programming tool called a "rootkit", which takes over high-level access to some computing functions. The rootkit blocks all but the most technically savvy users from being able to detect its presence.

Sony has worked with antivirus companies to help their products pierce this veil of invisibility, and has posted a patch on its website that will uncloak the hidden software. It also said it would temporarily stop manufacturing discs using the First 4 Internet tools.

Lawsuits have been filed against the record label in California and New York, and others are expected.

John Borland writes for CNET News.com

Comments

There are 2 comments. Join the discussion

  1. 1. Zakala

    Good to hear that Sony are finally doing the right thing and I hope it teaches them something about trying to enforce rights with technology.

    Also, did Sony make the users aware of what this software was going to do and that it would pass information to the internet? If not surely this is as much "Unauthorised access to a computer system" as adding ../../../ to a publicly published web address to check for a phishing scam.

    Or does the computer misuse act only apply to the little people and not to the megacorps?

  2. 2. anonymous

    Hmm, Sony getting upset about copying CD's.

    Am i correct in saying that Sony were one of the companies who developed the 'home' cd writer for PC's.

    And what did they think it would be used for?????

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