Friday, December 29, 2006

ByD:sign / EyeFi unveils antiquated 42-inch plasma

It's one thing to be fashionably late, but to arrive at a party that essentially ended months ago (at least) and expect to shake things up is probably an ill-advised move. Nevertheless, Japan's ByD:sign (badged as EyeFi here in the States) is offering up a 42-inch plasma TV (PE-4202DFK) that sports a built-in digital terrestrial tuner and manages to include an HDMI input, but somehow touts a completely uninspiring 852 x 480 resolution. Just in case the rest of the specs even matter after that blow, it also features 1,500 cd/m2 brightness, a 10,000:1 contrast ratio, Genesis DCDi chip, S-Video / composite, VGA, analog / optical audio, and removable 10-watt stereo speakers as well. While the lowly resolution may suit your Wii playing needs just fine, you won't enjoy any crisp HD DVDs or Blu-rays in their full, unadulterated glory here, and at a whopping ¥170,000 ($1,430), you can do a whole lot better for your money anyway.

http://www.engadget.com/

HD-DVD and Blu-Ray AACS DRM Cracked

Can it be? Is Hollywood's new DRM posterchild AACS (Advanced Access Content System, see more here) actually quite breakable? According to a post on our favoritest of forums (Doom9) by DRM hacker du jour muslix64, his new BackupHDDVD tool decrypts and dismantles AACS on a Windows PC. Just feed the small utility a crypto key (it comes bundled with keys for a few popular HD DVD titles, with the promise of more on the way), and it'll dump the video right off the disc onto your hard drive, supposedly playable in any HD DVD compatible player. If true, this would instantly become the DeCSS of high def optical (where you at, Jon?), as AACS is the copy protection scheme used not only by HD DVD, but by Blu-ray as well. Code and source posted in read link, let us know what you find!

Note: We're working on testing this ourselves, we'll report back with our findings asap.

[Thanks, Max and Adam]

Update: Well, it definitely does something. Click on for some pics and our experiences using the app.

So we have our Xbox 360 HD DVD plugged into our system with the Toshiba HD DVD / UFS 2.5 file system drivers going on, and are able to read the directory contents (drive G:).

We pulled the TRAILER.EVO file down and named it encrypted_TRAILER.EVO. We then ran BackupHDDVD on the disc (Full Metal Jacket).


We quit after we hit TRAILER.EVO, since that's what we wanted to compare against.


We then ran a binary compare against the two. You'd think an unencrypted movie file would have more than just a few hex offsets changed by the unencryption process, but we haven't yet been able to test playing back the files, namely because WinDVD and PowerDVD both totally blow as demos. More shortly.

http://www.engadget.com/

Spam a lot worse in 2006

Robert Jaques, vnunet.com

2006 has been categorised by a "relentless escalation" of spam activity throughout the year as annual average levels of unsolicited junk email reached 86.2 per cent, security watchers have estimated.

According to the 2006 Annual MessageLabs Intelligence Report, this hike in spam volumes has been driven largely by new targeted techniques and an increase in the sophistication of botnets.

The report adds that adoption of new levels of ingenuity has changed the focus of the threat landscape significantly, with spam overtaking viruses as the dominant menace over the past 12 months, a trend which is predicted to continue through 2007.

The study noted that corporate and industrial espionage attacks are also on the rise through targeted Trojans intended to steal intellectual property and confidential information.

MessageLabs reports intercepting two attacks per day, compared to a much lower rate of one per week at the same point in 2005.

The targeted approach is prevalent in phishing attacks too, an increasingly dominant force in all malicious emails intercepted by MessageLabs, with levels rising from 10.6 per cent in January to 68.8 per cent in December.

A key component in the success of these highly targeted attacks, according to MessageLabs, is the distribution of spyware and adware which has grown into a multibillion dollar industry and fuelled an increase in the number of botnets.

Botnets have the ability to retrieve information such as usernames, passwords, credit card numbers and other personal data stored in the web browser's auto-fill database.

MessageLabs analysts saw an increased number of bad guys renting up to 2,000 bots for just $50-$60 a week, with the option of trading payment for stolen credit card numbers. This trend is likely to continue in 2007.

"2006 was the year that spammers took the security industry by storm and sho wcased their new tactics and techniques for mass disruption," said Mark Sunner, chief technology officer at MessageLabs.

"Now accounting for almost nine out of 10 emails, spam has categorically shed its title of being a nuisance and is a perilous threat which all companies need to be protected against.

"The next year will certainly bring more targeted and sophisticated attacks as the bad guys continue to sharpen their tools. Companies need to take a layered and proactive approach by fighting cyber-criminals from 'the cloud' at the internet level."