Beastie Boys CD installs virus

Found on The Register on Wednesday, 23 June 2004
Browse Software

A new Beastie Boys' CD called "To the Five Boroughs" (Capitol Records), is raising hackles around the Web for reputedly infecting computers with a virus.

According to a recent thread at BugTraq, an executable file is automatically and silently installed on the user's machine when the CD is loaded. The file is said to be a driver that prevents users from ripping the CD (and perhaps others), and attacks both Windows boxen and Macs.

But assuming that the unconfirmed reports are accurate, we have here a media company infecting users' machines silently with a file that affects a computer's functionality, without first obtaining informed consent: a likely violation of pretty much every jurisdiction's anti-hacking laws. It's possible to foresee criminal charges being brought at some point: after all, having a good reason for spreading malware has never been much of a defence in court. And a file that alters a computer's functioning without the owner's informed consent is the very definition of malware.

Wow, you get more than just music for your money. The music industry is unable to realize that this does not make people happy; and it cannot even do its job and stop copying at all. Plus, it is very intelligent to sell the CD in the US/UK without protection. I assume people there would never rip it. Well, hope dies last.