Sony: Why care about rootkits?

By Ingrid Marson, ZDNet UK
Thursday, November 10, 2005 03:30 PM

'Most people don't even know what a rootkit is so why should they care about it?' says a SonyBMG executive.

A senior SonyBMG executive has hit back at the criticism surrounding the company's use of a digital rights management (DRM) technology on a music CD.

Thomas Hesse, the president of SonyBMG's global digital business division, said in a radio interview last week that its use of rootkits is not an issue to the everyday user. "Most people don't even know what a rootkit is, so why should they care about it?"  he said in the interview with radio company NPR.

The copy-restriction software is hidden so that music pirates cannot find and remove it, according to Hesse. "This is purely about restricting the ability to burn MP3 files in an unprotected manner," he said.

Although Sony does not appear to understand why people are concerned about the use of rootkits, the EMI Group has tried to distance itself from the controversy by stating that it does not use rootkits on its own products.

"EMI is not using any software that hides traces of the program. There is no 'rootkit' behaviour and there are no processes left running in the background," an EMI spokesman said last week.


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Talkback 2 comments

People should care because this rootkit is now being used as a backdoor to install zombie bots. I'm not making this up.
Posted by Kurt Hammond on Friday, November 11 2005 11:15 AM

I say to the consumers out there : "vote with your feet, boycott Sony music CDs till they stop using rootkits" I'm sure they (Sony) won't care if their rootkits cause your PC to be infected in the end...
Posted by Eugene Koh on Friday, November 11 2005 06:40 PM


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