Xbox Hacking Book Prepares to Fly Off Shelves 319
SecurityFocus posted an article today about a new book that covers hacking the Xbox. The book's author, Andrew "Bunnie" Huang, reports that it's selling well, even though the release date has not yet arrived. Presumably, this is because the book covers soldering techniques and adding features like blue LEDs and modchips to Xboxes, most of which violate the DMCA. If this stuff is interesting to you, you can order a copy from Huang's site. It amazes me that a book such as this could be banned, yet car service manuals can be sold in most bookstores.
The heart of the debate? (Score:5, Interesting)
At the heart of the modding debate (or very close to it), I think that Microsoft wants to prevent hacking and modding of the Xbox because it reveals to the consumers the true identity of the Xbox: a PC that is being sold far too cheaply; an entry into the console market that would be completely unsustainable if Microsoft were not a monopoly (I.E. able to sustain gross losses in many other markets in order to direct/force attention back to their OS and Office suite).
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:5, Funny)
This message serves to notify you of your violation of a Microsoft(r)(c)(TM) trademark ("I.E.") in the previous post. We take infringements on our intellectual property very seriously.
You may settle this case out of court by agreeing to pay us an unspecified sum of our choosing and signing a non-disclosure, indentured servitude agreement. If you refuse, I remind you that our legal staff is large enough to fill a football stadium but smart enough to know better than to go out in public together.
We eagerly await your reply.
Sincerely,
Microsoft Legal Team
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:4, Funny)
This message serves to notify you of your recent attempt to impersonate the Microsoft Legal Team. We take all such infractions seriously and prosecute them to the maximum extent possible under any and all applicable laws, and some that are not applicable too. We urge that you:
1. Cease and desist from any such attempts at impersonation in the future.
2. Issue a statement that clearly and unambiguously establishes your comment to be unofficial.
We eagerly await your compliance.
Sincerely,
The real(TM) Microsoft Legal Team.
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:5, Insightful)
I find it amusing that the open source crowd shows such great interest in a closed piece of hardware, hardware that is defended by DMCA-supported lawyer jargon and manufactured by "The Great Satan" of digital freedom.
I find it even more amusing that after 5 years under the DMCA, someone still has the cojones to basically thumb his nose at "The Great Satan" of digital freedom.
I think that this only helps further the idea that if the various media/software companies do not provide what the user wants, the user will figure it out for themselves. When the bottom line of company Y starts to really shrink, they will provide the customer with what they want to maintain the revenue stream on related products (think IBM and SUN selling and supporting Linux so that they can keep selling servers).
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2, Interesting)
Info on Nintendo and Sony taking losses? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2, Funny)
That's the whole business plan with the i-loo!
I pose a question. (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2)
Why would you need to open the Xbox to know this? You've never opened one and yet you know. All of that stuff is public knowlage.
Xbox because it reveals to the consumers the true identity of the Xbox: a PC that is being sold far too cheaply; an entry into the console market that would b
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2)
"an entry into the console market that would be completely unsustainable if Microsoft were not a monopoly (I.E. able to sustain gross losses in many other markets in order to direct/force attention back to their OS and Office suite)."
Um, yeah. Because Sony and Nintendo don't sell their consoles at a loss or anything. Come on dude, look at the Xbox's competition. Whether MS is a monopoly or not is a moot point in this argument - Sony and Nintendo both have other revenue streams to allow them to sell cons
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2, Interesting)
The only companies to have sold consoles at a loss are Sega (and only with the Dreamcast) and Microsoft (only with the Xbox). The PS2 may have been sold at a loss early in its lifespan, but it was a very small loss.
As consoles continue to be manufactured, the parts get cheaper, and the process gets streamlined. Thus consoles become more and more profitable over their lifetime. Nintendo has th
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:3, Interesting)
I find it amusing that the home gardening crowed shows such a great interest in inexpensive "bedding plants" that are defended by nursery-supported patents and grown by "The Great Satans" of home lumberyards. It goes to show you how strong and creative this community is, and highlights upon some of the beneficial fundamental values that the gardening crowd holds: freedom of expression in horticulture. Sappy huh. =)
At the heart of the gardening debate (or very close to it), I think that Big Box Stores w
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:3, Interesting)
Several years ago, I was suckered into becoming a retailer for ColorCo thermochromatic t-shirts. I paid a lot of money to get a license so I could buy the shirts, then more money on the shirts. I had to buy some large quantity of t-shirts at a time, too. Unfortunatetly, I was unable to sell them, at least not at a profit. Over the years, I managed slowly to whi
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:2)
Good point. This would definitely require some tweaking. For starters, we could try it just with corporations, not individuals, and see how it works. Lotsa luck singling out corps though...
When it comes to disposing of inventory, I guess the corps could be required to auction it in bulk lots. That way, inventory clearance can't be used to mask anti-competitive pricing practices.
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:4, Insightful)
What I find amusing at best (and sad at worst) is that the DMCA was passed by our "Elected" representatives in DC. These same people who are telling YOU (and me, actually), the American voter, not to pay "...any attention to the man behind the curtain," are the same ones you BLITHELY allowed to attain their post, either in an act of omission ("I forgot to vote" or "I was too busy") or comission ("I voted for Congressman X, but I didn't know that a kneejerk fundie neoconservative would actually FOLLOW THROUGH on the slow REPEAL of the First Amendment!).
Suck it up crybabies: you let Congress take away your toys, now you have to play with the leavings.
Ok... setting cynicism to off...
Re:The heart of the debate? (Score:5, Funny)
Hi, this is just a reminder that a crowd is, by definition, more than one person. The concept of different people having different opinions must be new to you. Please learn more about this concept. Thank you.
Why they don't want anyone to know the deal. (Score:3, Insightful)
Heh. (Score:5, Insightful)
That's the reason Microsoft will want him to hang over this.
It's also the reason someone has to do it. Someone has to stand up and show how insane this all is. Too bad someone has to martyr themselves in order to get the point across. This guy will ruin his fiscal life in the united states.
uh (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:uh (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:uh (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:uh (Score:5, Insightful)
It's easy - DMCA - Sec. 1201:
(2) No person shall manufacture, import, offer to the public, provide or otherwise traffic in any technology, product, service, device, component, or part thereof that--
`(A) is primarily designed or produced for the purpose of circumventing a technological protection measure that effectively controls access to a work protected under this title;
Emphasis mine. Books qualify as products, don't they? I think free speech violates DMCA - that's the problem.
Read it again (Score:2)
In other words, if you could print it before the DMCA was passed, you can print it after the DMCA is passed
Re:Read it again (Score:2)
Re:Read it again (Score:4, Insightful)
I used to think so too. But then 2600 got blocked from publishing decss, and then even linking to pages publishing decss. There was a reason the new york times spoke up for the magazine, I assume it's the same reason they no longer link to related sites in their stories, but instead inconveniently write out the URL as if it were text. The DMCA ended 'free' speech in the USA. The party is over, all consumers please return to your assigned duties, we've got a war with the Canadian aggressors to organize.
Then how come Felten was threatened? (Score:3, Insightful)
Whether or not part 4 applies, you have to go through the courts to exonerate yourself- and you might not be able to easily do it, having to go through the entire judicial system to do it.
Re:uh (Score:2)
It's also the prime reason that Bruce (Perens) parted company with HP, IIRC. Anybody remember that one?
Re:uh (Score:2)
DeCSS T-shirt (Score:2)
Wait a minute (Score:5, Insightful)
Clearly, the book is not banned, since it is being published directly by the author. However, from his site, the book was not picked up by a publisher for fear of lawsuits. That's somewhat alarming, but it's not equivalent to outlawing a book.
Actually, there are plenty of "survival" manuals and whatnot [amazon.com] out there that describe all kinds of illegal activities, so I would be surprised if tort law could be used to terminate publication of a book (because if it could, it would have been done already in other contexts). However, this doesn't mean that the threat of lawsuits could not be used as a scare tactic.
Re:Wait a minute (Score:2)
Thank you, I was hoping someone would point this out.
"Ban" is relative (Score:5, Insightful)
You refer to tort law. That's certainly a factor. But the DMCA provides for criminal prosecution of violators. If nobody is willing to publish, or even self-publish, books on hacking this or that because they don't want to go to jail -- well then, that kind of book is banned, whatever you call the process.
talk about political corruption and errosion (Score:5, Insightful)
Microsoft has every right to void the warranty if I purposely modify the box. What they don't have is the right to demand I don't violate the EULA and void the warranty. I hate to say it, but corporations should be banned from donating money to political parties or candidates. If a company wants to push their own agendas, they shouldn't get a free write off. Instead, they should have to pay their employees, who then donate the money. This means, for every dollar a company spends to buy votes, they have to pay taxes on it. I have no problem with companies like microsoft buying influence in the white house as long as those purchases are taxes at 33%.
re: censorship (Score:4, Interesting)
DCMA, what's next? (Score:5, Interesting)
if the actual harware mod is illegal then WTF? I should be able to do whatever I want with my hardware (physically). I bought it, I own it. I can hit it repeatedly with a bat If I wish. I can dunk it in a bathtub full of milk, I can throw it through any window in my house I so choose (That is if I own the house, but If I have enough income to fill a tub with milk then I think I would have enough money own the house (maybe in this example I own a barn)).
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:5, Informative)
The proprietary Microsoft BIOS ROM is what this whole DMCA spectre revolves around. You own the box but not the ROM inside. It's not your right to modify it. (As dictated by law. I'm all for mods)
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2)
AFAIK, there's only a copyright violation if you take a modchip, and put a copy of Microsoft's XBox BIOS on it.
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:4, Interesting)
Furthermore, I am not a US citizen (Canuck), so I haven't researched the DMCA as exhaustively as I might otherwise have. Still, I believe it's as draconian as I implied above.
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
The notion that the restriction of which software you can run on the X-Box is a red herring designed to divert attention from what, in the EU at least, is an illegal restraint of trade. The BIOS protections are there too ensure that no software producer can sell software that runs on the X-Box without handing over a significant proportion of its revenue to Microsoft. By the time the distributor and the retailer have added their markup to this extorted sum the end customer is paying a lot of money for th
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2)
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2)
Actually, it's very much legal. But what you're not allowed to do is distribute devices that circumvent copyright protection. The issue in the DeCSS case was weather source code constituted speech or a device (or both).
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2)
OR products that are PRIMARILY intended to permit circumvention. A book that provides instructions on how to circumvent a "technical means of protection" is, IMHO, IAAL, no different than selling a modchip until the "Felten issue" is settled.
Personally, I think that both books AND source are protected forms of speech, but Grampa might disagree. (OT sidebar comment: when I was preparing for the Bar exam
Wrong, the DMCA does not outlaw information (Score:4, Informative)
No. 2600 got in trouble for distributing the source code for DeCSS because the source code (while information, at some level) is a "circumvention device" (according to the judge). The functional aspect of the code (once run through a compiler) was key to this. It would be difficult to argue that a book is an actual "device," and the DMCA does not ban anything (relevant) other than the act of circumvention and circumvention devices.
Re:Wrong, the DMCA does not outlaw information (Score:2)
How very ironic it was that one of the owers used the pseudonym "Emmanuel Goldstien". The MPAA Thought Police would have him in the cellar of mimiluv in an instant if they could.
Re:Wrong, the DMCA does not outlaw information (Score:2)
LOVE the sig
Re:Wrong, the DMCA does not outlaw information (Score:2)
Copyleft T-Shirts (Score:3, Interesting)
their t-shirts with DeCSS source code on them.
I think the code in this case does not have that
"functional aspect".
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2)
Actually, at this juncture, that is the ONLY way to fight it. Congress has been bought and paid for (and we all know that an "honest politician" is one who STAYS bought), so the probability that legislation will seriously change the DMCA's more draconian provisions must be considered va
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Insightful)
Well, check it out -- search for 17 USC 1201 on google and read the law. Section c, I think, describes circumvention devices and outlaws them. Also, the act of circumvention is outlawed.
In this case, circumvention and circumvention device are defined carefully, but I believe that x-box modchips would fall under the definition. Certainly the act of using a modchip to play illegally copied games would be a DMCA violation. If the modding community builds
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Funny)
Damn...
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Informative)
http://xbox-linux.sourceforge.net/download.php
xbox bios replacement, no microsoft code. I mentioned in another thread that I'm thinking of chiping an xbox to make a mythtv front end. I intend to use cromwell in the chip, and just turn the chip off when I want to play an xbox game.
No DMCA violation, no copyright violation. Just a dual purpose piece of hardware. Just doing what microsoft wants sometimes, doing what I want other times.
That sounded almost like a defence of the DMCA, bu
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:3, Interesting)
Nope. The first modchips contained code owned by Microsoft. There are new modchips which are Microsoft free. They are still illegal under the DMCA. Huzzah for America, the land of the free.
Re:DCMA, what's next? (Score:2, Funny)
It would be under DMCA if it was Bender having the dream.
Auto Makers (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Auto Makers (Score:3, Insightful)
I thought they already did that, well not via the DMCA as yet, but by keeping proprietry engine computer management data out of the hands of the 'unauthorized service centres'.
Re:Auto Makers (Score:3, Interesting)
The chips apparently modify the fuel injection system, pollution control, timing, etc.
It used to be to hot rod a car you installed goodies like NOS injectors, turbo chargers, Holly four barrel, etc..
Now you replace the factory chip with a "HOT" mod chip..
I don't see the car companies invoking DMCA to stop that..
What the hell is the difference?? mod chipping a car to run better vs. mod chipping the xbo
Re:Auto Makers (Score:5, Insightful)
What the hell is the difference?
Perhaps because Joe Sixpack would easily be able to understand that his rights are being violated in this case?
Re:Auto Makers (Score:2)
Re:Auto Makers (Score:2, Informative)
Basically, to service your vehicle, a repair shop needs the help of the car's computer. The car's computer gives the repairman certain diagnostic codes. By deciphering these codes, the repairman can figure out what the computer already knows is wrong with the vehicle.
However, since this information could be considered "encoded" then the automakers can give the codes only to those authori
Re:Auto Makers (Score:3, Informative)
But then we also have modders there are garages that can modify the ECU for better fuel economy, more horsepower, or adjust it for optimal settings for whatever modifications you may have chose to make.
Although now I hear many manufacturers have what they call learning ECU's. They sell it to the consumer as a way to
Bans and Stuff (Score:5, Interesting)
American auto manufacturing started out as a small, boutique industry. Henry Ford changed all that by assuming (correctly, as it happened) that ordinary people would buy cars if he made it practical for them to own them. Part of this was inventing more efficient manufacturing techniques, so he could sell cars more cheaply. But he also specifically encouraged the aftermarket car parts industry, even going so far as to choosing his own manufacturing techniques so that they'd be easy to copy. Thus somebody with a broken Model T didn't have to send away to Michigan for parts. This relationship extends to this day.
they'd have one if one company had a (Score:2, Interesting)
There are no "good" multinational corporations.
Its about the money and if Ford, or GM had a monopoly they'd do it. Lucky for us they make horrible cars compared to Toyota and Honda.
Henry Ford primed the economic pump by paying his workers more than they deserved so that they would be able to afford his product. It was economic genius.
But these are the days of the Microsoft monopoly.
Re:Bans and Stuff (Score:2, Insightful)
Ford is Dead (Score:3, Interesting)
Do you think for one instant this spirit survives? Detroit, at great costs, changes their body styles yearly and supports a far greater than needed diversity of
Nope! (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd argue this is more like a book about how to defeat car alarm systems. If it was "how to repair your X-Box", I don't think we'd see this controversy.
-Erwos
Re:Nope! (Score:2)
Re:Nope! (Score:2)
Illegal Acts (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Illegal Acts (Score:3, Insightful)
The only thing I can think of that would reasonably make people think that a book describing circumvention would be illegal is the threats that Ed Felten received about his watermarking paper. However, I don't see any reasonable argument (or any actual caselaw) that would indicate that such a thing is banned by the DMCA.
The reason Bill's upset about this is (Score:3, Interesting)
BUT he's going about it the wrong way. The RIGHT way to do this is make it a physical bitch to modify the box, not to get lawyers involved.
Re:The reason Bill's upset about this is (Score:2)
But then he's getting into a technical pissing contest with a couple of million geeks 'n' hackers: I know who my money would be on
BOOKS CANNOT VIOLATE THE DMCA (Score:5, Insightful)
A book is obviously not a device, and it is protected by both the 1st amendment and the DMCA itself!
Re:BOOKS CANNOT VIOLATE THE DMCA (Score:2)
you would think not. (Score:2)
Flying Off Shelves (Score:4, Funny)
Freenet (Score:3, Funny)
Dead Tree Publishing Get Mo Bettah Rights (Score:5, Insightful)
While the DMCA makes it easy to shut down a web site, the US Judiciary is VERY leary about restraint of dead tree writing and publishing. IMO, Mr. Huong getting a pro-bono defence would be easy, since any attorney should/would know that a form letter with a law office header is about all that's needed to fend off anything short of a libel suit or national security issues.
For instance, printing and selling a magazine with DeCSS source code is no big deal, but if the same people put links to the electronic version on their web site, it is. As long as the "Anarchist's Cookbook" is still on the shelves, "Hacking the Xbox: an Introduction to Reverse Engineering" hasn't got a problem.
Car repair manuals (Score:5, Funny)
What the...no! No! I was only adjusting the carburetors! Nooooo!!!!!
Car service manuals don't tell everything (Score:3, Interesting)
Not really. The Haynes manual for my Chevy Malibu does not even admit there's a harness for the seatbelt alarm (and other alarms), so I can't disable it without trial and error.
Banned books... (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess you're too green to remember Abbie Hoffman's "Steal This Book"... [eriswerks.org]...and a bit too charming to know that this kind of 'publicity' helps to sell such books.
"Laugh while you're faking it and smile while you're taking it."
Surfs in the techno-fiefdom (Score:2)
Well you see, car manuals don't deal with the black arts of technology that need be kept secreted away to protect the sanctity of Licensing Agreements.
In order to insure this sanctity, you must command total control. Which of course requires that you exclusively own that property so that you may unleash a horde of briefcase toting henchman to act as enforcers across the land.
So, when you pur
Re:Surfs in the techno-fiefdom (Score:3, Informative)
Since I have not purchased an X-Box, I might be wrong... but I'm sure that Microsoft lets you know of the fact that they consider your X-Box THEIR property AFTER you open the box.
What if Ford did this? (Score:5, Insightful)
Ford has a copyright on the engine design and wants to control access to the design. By taking an engine apart you can thwart their control and get the engine design. They bolt the engine togther pretty tight, so that is their copyright protection.
Why I won't purchase an X-BOX (Score:5, Insightful)
I am not an open source zealot, but I do have serious concerns about many of the projects that Microsoft has on the horizon, such as Palladium, the whole Trustyworthy Computing scheme, and Microsoft's push toward their proprietary Windows Media format. I see the purchase of an X-BOX as a $200 endorsement of Microsoft. And that's not something I am comfortable doing.
The whole DCMA debate leaves a bad taste in my mouth. I follow most of the discussions pertaining to the DCMA on Slashdot. In fact, it seems like the X-BOX is the focal point of much of the DCMA debate on this site. And while I agree that the DCMA is a terrible piece of legislation, I don't see the logic of buying and modding an X-BOX to protest the DCMA. It seems like the easiest thing to do is to avoid the DCMA entirely, or at least, to avoid the corporations that use the DCMA to prosecute consumers. I can render Microsoft's enforcement of the DCMA moot by not purchasing an X-BOX. If I want to hack around on a console, I think the best choice is a Dreamcast. I can run NetBSD on it, and since it is no longer a revenue stream for Sega, they are not going to go to legal expense of throwing the DCMA at enthusiasts who hack around on it.
Microsoft is making it difficult to buy an X-BOX without also making additional purchases, namely X-BOX Live! Some of the newer games, and especially many games on the horizon and in development, will simply not be playable without an X-BOX Live subscription. There is also at least one game out now for the X-BOX that virutally requires the purchase of an additional controller which costs nearly $100.00. It seems that this is a trend that Microsoft will continue. And it's a trend I have no desire to endorse.
Simply, I can write all of the vehement arguments I want against Microsoft and the DCMA. But if I were to open my wallet and plunk down the cash to buy one, I'd feel very hypocritical because the best way for me to protest the DCMA is to avoid the X-BOX altogether.
Re:Why I won't purchase an X-BOX (Score:2)
So who's going to buy it? (Score:2)
Note: I just preordered one via Paypal. Even if I don't use it to help me hack my Xbox, I think this guy deserves support.
Free pre-testing of Palladium (Score:4, Insightful)
What about (Score:5, Insightful)
R-Type (Score:5, Funny)
Re:R-Type (Score:2)
It's a Type-R ... and don't touch my paint job, asswipe.
Re:Blue LCDs (Score:2)
Re:Blue LCDs (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: Car Manuals (Score:3, Insightful)
Oh come on, he didn't write a book about how to hack a PRC-90 to pick up secure broadcasts. He wrote a book about how to mod a PC thinly disguised as a game platform in order to run software other than that supplied by the platform vendor.
That said, Wiley & Sons has every right to refuse to publish anything it doesn't want to (that's part of "free speech
Re: Car Manuals (Score:2)
Re:War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is. (Score:2, Funny)
Oh, wow. that would be quite the PDA. You could cut a hole in the side of the XBOX and it would be the office. It would be pretty cool to see.
Just don't try to put it in your pocket.
Re:War is peace. Freedom is slavery. Ignorance is. (Score:3, Informative)