| So You Want To Make Your Own DRM Protected CD? |
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Heres a great gift idea just in time for the holidays: Make your friends and relatives their very own copy-protected CDs using the same industrial-grade passive protection technology built into XCP and Macrovision discs. Passive protection exploits subtle differences between the way computers read CDs and the way ordinary CD players do. By changing the layout of data on the CD, its sometimes possible to confuse computers without affecting ordinary players or so the theory goes. In practice, the distinction between computers and CD players is less precise. Older generations of CD copy protection, which relied entirely on passive protection, proved easy to copy in some computers and impossible to play on some CD players. For these reasons, copy protection vendors now use active protection special software designed to block copying. Discs with XCP or Macrovision protection employ active protection in conjunction with a milder form of passive protection. You can create your own CD with exactly the same passive protection by following a straightforward five-step procedure. Ill describe the procedure here, and then explain why it works. What youll need:
Step 1: Burn a regular audio CD Start Nero Burning ROM and create a new Audio CD project. [View] Add the audio tracks that you want to include on your copy-protected disc. [View] When youre ready to record, click the Burn button on the toolbar. In the Burn tab, make sure Finalize disc is unchecked. [View] Insert a blank CD and click Burn. Be careful not to infringe any copyrights! For loads of great music that you can copy legally, visit Creative Commons. Step 2: Add a data session to the CD Start another Nero compilation, this time selecting the CD-ROM ISO project type. In the Multisession tab, make sure Start Multisession disc is selected; and in the ISO tab, make sure Data Mode is set to Mode 2 / XA. [View] Add any files that you want to be accessible when the CD is used in a computer. You might include bonus content, such as album art and lyrics. [View] For a more professional effect, consider adding the installer for your favorite spyware application and creating an Autorun.inf file so it starts automatically. When youre finished, click the Burn toolbar button. Insert the audio CD you created in Step 1, and click Burn. [View] Nero should warn you that the disc youve inserted is not empty; click Yes to add your data files as a second session. [View] At this point, youve created a CD that contains both audio tracks and data files. The data files you put on the CD should be visible in Windows Explorer (in My Computer, right click the CD icon and click Open) and the audio tracks should be rippable with your favorite audio player. To add passive copy protection, youll need to modify the layout of the data on the disc so that the audio tracks are more difficult to access. Step 3: Rip the CD as a CloneCD image file Make sure the CD you just created is still in the drive and start CloneCD. Click the Read to Image File button. Select your drive and click Next. Choose Multimedia Audio CD and click Next. [View] Select an easy to find location for the image file and click OK to begin ripping. Step 4: Modify the image file to add passive protection The CloneCD image you created in step 3 actually consists of three files with names ending in .CCD, .IMG, and .SUB. The .CCD file describes the layout of the tracks and sessions on the CD. Youll edit this file to add the passive protection. Start Windows Notepad and open the .CCD file. Modifying the file by hand would be tedious, so Ive created an online application to help. Copy the entire contents of the file to the clipboard and paste it into this form, then click Upload. Copy the output from the web page and paste it back into Notepad, replacing the original file contents. [View] Save the file and exit Notepad. Step 5: Burn the modified image to create a copy-protected CD Insert a blank CD and start CloneCD again. Click the Write From Image File button. Select the image file you modified in step 4 and click next. Select your CD recorder and click Next. Select Multimedia Audio CD and click OK to begin burning. [View] Thats it! Youve created your very own copy-protected CD. Now its time to test your disc. If everything worked, the files from the data session will be visible from My Computer, but the audio tracks will not appear in Windows Media Player, iTunes, and most other mainstream music players. The CD should play correctly in standalone CD players. Caveat emptor. Yes, your copy-protected CD is industrial strength XCP and Macrovision employ exactly the same passive protection but even the pros have their limitations. There are many well-known method for defeating this kind of passive protection, such as:
And of course, at any time Microsoft could fix the Windows quirk that is the basis for this technique, rendering it completely ineffective. Despite these limitations, who wouldnt enjoy finding a homemade copy-protected CD in their stocking? Theyre a great way to spread holiday cheer while preventing anyone else from spreading it further.Source: Freedom To Tinker. Add your comment
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