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Saturday, June 25, 2016

A Bug In Chrome Makes It Easy To Pirate Movies But You Don't Ever Want To Go There

The vulnerability exists in the way Google implements the Widevine EME/CDM technology that Chrome uses to stream encrypted video. 


And here is why you would never ever want to use that vulnerability no matter how easy it is to use, or any other method to obtain protected content with out paying for it!

From File-Sharing To Prison: The Story of a Jailed Megaupload Programmer

  (arstechnica.com) 

 "I had to be made an example of as a warning to all IT people," says former Megaupload programmer Andrew Nomm, one of seven Megaupload employees arrested in 2012. 

Friday his recent interview with an Estonian journalist was republished in English by Ars Technica (which notes that at one point the 50 million users on Megaupload's file-sharing site created 4% of the world's internet traffic). 

The 37-year-old programmer pleaded guilty to felony copyright infringement in exchange for a one-year-and-one-day sentence in a U.S. federal prison, which the U.S. Attorney General's office called "a significant step forward in the largest criminal copyright case in US history."

"It turned out that I was the only defendant in the last 29 years to voluntarily go from the Netherlands to the USA..." Nomm tells the interviewer, adding "I'll never get back the $40,000 that was seized by the USA." 

He describes his experience in the U.S. prison system after saying good-bye to his wife and 13-year-old son, adding that now "I have less trust in all sorts of state affairs, especially big countries.

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I saw the dark side of the American dream in all its glory..."

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In U.S. court documents Nomm "acknowledged" that the financial harm to copyright holders "exceeded $400 million."

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