Virus writers have already started to exploit
Sony's controversial digital
rights management software, which uses a rootkit to hide
the code and ensure that the CDs are not copied.
A new Trojan,
Troj/Stinx-E,
has been mass-mailed to UK email addresses. The worm is a variant of what McAfee
referred to as the
Brepibot
virus that was first discovered on April this year. BitDefender calls the new
worm
Backdoor
IRC Snyd A and F-Secure
Breplibot.B.
The new version has been altered to exploit a feature in the XCP digital
rights management technology for Windows systems that comes bundled with several
audio CDs from the Sony BMG record label. The software will automatically
install the first time a user tries to play an infected audio CD on his
computer's CD Rom drive.
In addition to digital rights manament technology, CD also installs a
so-called root kit that hides files from the user and the system, including
anti-virus software. Security experts have argued that it is extremely poorly
engineered and that worm authors can exploit it by simply placing the characters
"$sys$" in front of a file name.
The new variant of the Stinx trojan tries to do exactly that.
"Sony started off with the right intentions but did not recognise the
implications of what it was doing," said Graham Cluley, senior technology
consultant at Sophos.
"We've had companies calling up all day asking what to do with this. We feel
sorry for the musicians; if you look on
Amazon right now reviewers
are telling people not to buy the album, not because of the music but because of
the copy protection.
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