March 21, 2005 11:51 AM PST

iTunes hack disabled by Apple

Apple Computer has closed a security hole that allowed an underground program to tap into its iTunes Music Store and purchase songs stripped of antipiracy protections.

The PyMusique software, created by a trio of independent programmers online, emerged last week as a copy protection-free back door into the popular iTunes store. One of the creators was Jon Johansen, the Norwegian programmer responsible for releasing DVD-copying software in 1999.

Apple released a statement Monday saying the problem had been fixed, and that some iTunes customers would need to upgrade their software.

"The security hole in the iTunes Music Store which was recently exploited has been closed, and as a consequence the iTunes Music Store will now sell music only to customers using iTunes version 4.7," the company said in a statement.

Like all other digital music companies, Apple has been dealing continually with hackers intent on finding ways around the antipiracy protections that are added to songs as they are sold online. The company has upgraded its iTunes software several times to block unauthorized programs' access.

Johansen has been one of the most persistent of those programmers, releasing several tools that have helped others tap into the inner workings of the iTunes software, and even remove the copy protections.

PyMusique itself was the creation of several different programmers, including 17-year-old Pennsylvania high school student Cody Brocious, who last week said he was simply trying to create a way for Linux-based computers to use the iTunes store.

A test of PyMusique on Monday morning showed that it was still able to preview songs in the iTunes music store, but no longer able to purchase music.

An Apple spokeswoman declined to comment on whether the company is considering legal action on the issue.

Only about 15 percent of iTunes users would be affected by the need to upgrade to the latest version of the software, the company said in its statement.

See more CNET content tagged:
PyMusique, Apple iTunes, Apple iTunes Music Store, programmer, Apple Computer

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 9 comments
And next week..
by Bill Dautrive March 21, 2005 12:40 PM PST
There will be a new way to strip music of unfair DRM.

DRM is a bad idea, whose time needs to end soon. Content providers need to concentrate more on not producing garbage content, and less on trying to protect said garbage from fair use.
Reply to this comment View all 2 replies
Correction!...
by March 21, 2005 3:20 PM PST
Jons DeCSS was NOT DVD-copying software, it only decrypted the content!.
You don't need DeCSS for copying, bur for viewing.

Plese get you facts right from now on...
Reply to this comment
Vicious Cycle
by March 21, 2005 3:45 PM PST
What a vicious cycle... Apple keeps creating new software for iTunes, which in turn continues to be hacked into, in which Apple creates newer software, and so on and so on.

This problem is only a tempory fix until the hackers find another way in... it's inevitable.

iTunes Hack Disabled... http://allwaysmusic.modblog.com/

---
Reply to this comment
iTunes for Linux
by M.Rick March 21, 2005 5:49 PM PST
For those who would like to have iTunes ported under Linux, go there and tell it to Apple http://www.apple.com/feedback/itunes.html
Reply to this comment View reply
by aoudong July 12, 2008 11:15 PM PDT
hi
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