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February 18, 2005 12:02 PM PST

AOL blocks music-copying feature

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America Online is disabling a feature of its popular music software that had been used to evade copy-prevention features of digital music services, the company said Friday.

The company's Winamp software was identified by bloggers this week as part of a process that transformed copy-protected music downloads into songs that could be burned by the thousand to CD. The tool had potentially affected any subscription service that used Microsoft's media format, including Napster, Virgin Music and even America Online's own music subscription plan.

AOL programmers are taking a series of steps to prevent its software from being used in this way, a representative said.

"Immediately upon discovering this flaw, we worked quickly to address it and to ensure that Winamp can continue to provide secure playback of Windows Media content," spokeswoman Ann Burkart said. "A fix is being implemented today in existing players, and a new player will be posted for users to download."

The technique used in the Winamp process is not a new one and is a part of many other pieces of software available online. Nevertheless, the news rippled though the record industry and online music services this week, causing renewed scrutiny of the subscription music business model by top industry executives.

The process was essentially a high-tech version of recording a song off the radio. Antipiracy software, including Microsoft's, typically prevents a direct digital copy from being made. But some software packages, dubbed "stream rippers," allow a computer to rerecord audio as it is being played.

The resulting files are typically lower quality than the originals, and the artist, album and file information are lost.

AOL has already removed the Winamp plug-in that made this process fairly simple. Programmers are developing a patch that will be automatically pushed to the software's users. The patch will probably disable altogether the ability to play copy-protected songs in Microsoft's format.

A new version of Winamp software will then be released that can once again play the Microsoft-formatted songs, but will block the stream-ripping capability, Burkart said.

See more CNET content tagged:
Winamp, America Online Inc., Napster Inc., song, Time Warner Inc.

Add a Comment (Log in or register) 8 comments
No upgrade for me then
by zeroplane February 18, 2005 2:40 PM PST
Hmm, I guess that means I won't upgrade my Winamp to keep this feature. :) Or better yet, copy the old .dll from my old player and install it as a new plug-in in the new one.

Marketing hype that waists bytes.
Reply to this comment
Automatic Updates without my permission?
by February 18, 2005 3:42 PM PST
So AOL can automatically update WinAMP without my permission? I wonder if they can do the same to AIM? This raises the question of how long have they been able to do this? Well I guess it's time to drop AIM and block WinAMP's internet access.
Reply to this comment
winamp?
by iKenny February 18, 2005 5:47 PM PST
Or switch to iTunes :P
View reply
Reply
by unknown unknown February 18, 2005 9:41 PM PST
You turn off WinAmp automatic update checking. If you're really paranoid you tell WinAmp you don't have an internet connection and/or block it in your firewall.
That may not be enough
by Jim Harmon February 19, 2005 7:38 PM PST
I haven't been an AOL user in about 10 years, but the automatic Winamp update may happen whether or not Winamp has access to the internet. This update may come as part of the "AOL software update" that happens routinely the moment you connect.
Replay Music
by applian February 18, 2005 7:09 PM PST
There are commercial packages like Replay Music that can record from AOL, napster and others, make high quality MP3s, and even automatically tag the files with the artist, album, sing and genre.

I don't see what all the fuss is about,

You can see how Replay Music in particular works from here:
www.replay-music.com
Reply to this comment
Why worry about this???
by Jim Harmon February 19, 2005 7:34 PM PST
According to the EU, Microsoft has got a monopoly on media players... so this Winamp loophole couldn't POSSIBLY be available to all that many people.

(Yes, that was sarcastic)
Reply to this comment
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