SEATTLE - Microsoft Corp. is once again on the defensive against hackers
after the launch of a new program that gives average PC users tools to unlock
copy-protected digital music and movies.
 Shelves are organized shortly before the official release of
the new Microsoft windows operating system called "Vista" and "Office
2007" in this January 2007 file photo at the MicroCenter computer store in
Fairfax, Virginia. [Agencies]
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The latest version of the
FairUse4M program, which can crack Microsoft's digital rights management system
for Windows Media audio and video files, was published online late Friday. In
the past year, Microsoft plugged holes exploited by two earlier versions of the
program and filed a federal lawsuit against its anonymous authors. Microsoft
dropped the lawsuit after failing to identify them.
The third version of FairUse4M has a simple drag-and-drop interface. PC users
can turn the protected music files they bought online - either a la carte or as
part of a subscription service like Napster - and turn them into DRM-free tunes
that can be copied and shared at will, or turned into MP3 files that can play on
any type of digital music player.
"We knew at the start that no digital rights management technology is going
to be impervious to circumvention," said Jonathan Usher, a director in
Microsoft's consumer media technology group, in a phone interview.
Usher said Microsoft employs a full-time team to combat such breaches, and
that the Windows Media DRM system was designed to be quickly modified to shut
down this type of attack.
He did not say how many songs have been stripped of copy protection, or how
long it will take for Microsoft to combat the hack again. But the music industry
is aware of the nature of Microsoft's technology, he said, and added that he
does not expect record labels to lose patience with the process.
The Recording Industry Association of America, a trade group, declined to
comment.
While Usher said Microsoft will remain committed to copy protection,
attitudes around the industry are starting to shift.
Apple Inc. has modified its own online store, iTunes, to block similar
efforts to break its FairPlay copy protection scheme. But Apple's chief, Steve
Jobs, started calling for an end to digital music-locking earlier this year.
"There are many smart people in the world, some with a lot of time on their
hands, who love to discover such secrets and publish a way for everyone to get
free (and stolen) music," Jobs wrote in an online essay in February. "They are
often successful in doing just that, so any company trying to protect content
using a DRM must frequently update it with new and harder to discover secrets.
It is a cat-and-mouse game."
Apple's iTunes store started selling DRM-free music from EMI Group PLC's
catalog in May. The same month, Web retailer Amazon.com Inc. said its
much-anticipated digital music store will sell tracks in the unprotected MP3
format.
Josh Bernoff, an industry analyst at research group Gartner Inc., said he
expects music DRM to fade out in the next couple of years as record companies
begin to realize selling unprotected tracks online won't hurt sales. After all,
Bernoff said, the same tracks are already circulating unprotected, copied from
CDs and on file-sharing networks.