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François Battail
- Messages : 337
Après 15 années d’existence, le forum historique de Framasoft, ferme ses portes.
Pour les nostalgiques et les curieux, il reste toujours possible de consulter les discussions mais c’est maintenant le forum
Framacolibri qui prend la relève.
Si vous avez des questions, on se retrouve là-bas…
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Bill Rosenblatt, president of the consulting firm GiantSteps which specializes in content protection issues, said the intrusion was less of a crisis than the 1999 defeat of the encryption that protects standard DVDs, which allowed movie files to be freely copied and shared online.
“It’s a pretty nice victory for hackers, but this newer scheme was designed to fail more gracefully and not be as brittle as the DVD scheme,” Mr. Rosenblatt said.
However, some security experts said the intrusions were more serious. Bruce Schneier, the chief technology officer of the security company BT Counterpane, said it was unclear what effect revoking licenses would have. If new discs of the movies are updated with new title codes, the old discs in stores will still be vulnerable. And hackers will surely redouble efforts to crack the new discs.
Mr. Schneier said the new DVDs would inevitably be vulnerable to hacking. “Data is inherently copyable, just as water is inherently wet,” he said. “All the technology companies are doing is putting in tricks to make it harder to copy. But all they are is tricks.”
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