Sony recalls millions of CDs
2005-11-17 08:55
New York - Sony BMG announced on Wednesday it was recalling millions of music CDs with controversial copy protection software that experts said could expose personal computers to viruses and hackers.
Sony BMG, one of the world's biggest music companies, said it was ending the use of the software provided by a third-party vendor and allowing consumers who purchased CDs to exchange them for similar items without the software.
The joint venture of Japan's Sony and German-based BMG reacted to a firestorm of protests and the threat of legal action over its use of the so-called XCP copy protection software.
When one of the CDs is inserted into a PC, the XCP software can modify computer settings and, according to some experts, expose the computers to a variety of malicious software programs.
"We deeply regret any inconvenience this may cause our customers and we are committed to making this situation right," Sony BMG said in a letter to customers on its website.
"It is important to note that the issues regarding these discs exist only when they are played on computers, not on conventional, non-computer-based CD and/or DVD players."
Sony said it was halting the use of the copy protection software developed by First4Internet, and providing technical data to anti-virus companies to help fix any problems on affected PCs.
One security firm, Internet Security Systems, went so far as to label the copy protection in the CDs as "malware", or malicious software, noting that it did not allow consumers the ability to remove it.
"This software actively attempts to hide its presence from users and does not offer uninstall functionality," ISS said in a bulletin.
"The software also provides a cloaking mechanism that is being used by different trojans to hide their presence," it said, referring to a common type of computer virus.
San Francisco law firm Green Welling LLP said this week it sent a formal letter to Sony BMG demanding that the music firm fix the problems created by the software on its music CDs.
Sony BMG officials could not be reached for additional comment, but the New York Times reported that some two million CDs with the copy protection had been sold out of some five million shipped to retailers.
Reports have indicated the XCP program was installed on CDs of artists including Celine Dion, Ricky Martin and others.
The Electronic Frontier Foundation, an activist group critical of the software, said several other Sony-BMG CDs are protected with a different copy-protection technology, sourced from SunnComm.
- AFP