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posted by on Saturday June 03 2017, @01:49AM   Printer-friendly
from the crackers-∞-DRM-0 dept.

Submitted via IRC for TheMightyBuzzard

The new Denuvo system 'protecting' the game 'RiME' has been defeated in less than a week. This is notable, not least since the developers promised to remove Denuvo if it was cracked. Furthermore, a report from the cracker suggests that an apparently desperate Denuvo pulled out all the stops to protect RiME, but still failed.

[...] In a fanfare of celebrations, rising cracking star Baldman announced that he had defeated the latest v4+ iteration of Denuvo and dumped a cracked copy of RiME online. While encouraging people to buy what he describes as a "super nice" game, Baldman was less complimentary about Denuvo.

Labeling the anti-tamper technology a "huge abomination," the cracker said that Denuvo's creators had really upped their efforts this time out. People like Baldman who work on Denuvo talk of the protection calling on code 'triggers.' For RiME, things were reportedly amped up to 11.

Source: https://torrentfreak.com/new-control-denuvo-piracy-protection-cracked-170602/


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  • (Score: 2) by bzipitidoo on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:27AM (9 children)

    by bzipitidoo (4388) on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:27AM (#519683) Journal

    It's remarkable how bullheaded the ownership believers are about their wrong thinking and propaganda. They're still trying to force the abundant to function as if it is a scarce good. In the near 40 years that they've been wrestling with this "problem", I have not heard of any copy protection or DRM scheme that wasn't broken, and broken in a matter of days.

    Even if there was a working DRM scheme, it can't stop someone from reverse engineering or just creating a clone. That's how RMS and friends broke the stranglehold private vendors tried to maintain on UNIX.

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  • (Score: 3, Informative) by edIII on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:36AM (4 children)

    by edIII (791) on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:36AM (#519688)

    Unfortunately, you are wrong. The protections on the PS3, PS4, were robust enough to keep people out for years. Only pissing off the true Linux users that were not into gaming caused the environment to be created where it was finally opened.

    That being said, I'm not sure what the current state of Sony is with the hardware. Maybe there is a way to play a backup game, but the fact we haven't been able to completely free a piece of hardware would seem to indicate that some success was made.

    Are they fully cracked, or is there a path to at least disable the DRM and play from a burned disc or HDD content?

    The PSP, which I'm more familiar with, was successfully locked down for long enough. It seemed like forever before there was a new crack, and I think the battery firmware method was not effective on the later generations. Most of it is unlockable, but I think there is still some PSP out there locked up enough.

    DRM on a fully open computer system is much harder to protect, but an awful lot of consumer equipment out there is anything but free now. They have offense in depth going on.

    The good news is that all we need to do is convince the developers, and find a way for them to get paid, and we get good content. I've been pleased with the quality of content with indie games in general, and Humble Bundle has gone a long way to improving the scene. Kickstarting games may become viable.

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    • (Score: 5, Insightful) by Marand on Saturday June 03 2017, @03:51AM

      by Marand (1081) on Saturday June 03 2017, @03:51AM (#519722) Journal

      The protections on the PS3, PS4, were robust enough to keep people out for years. Only pissing off the true Linux users that were not into gaming caused the environment to be created where it was finally opened.

      This is probably the most important thing said in any comment so far. The PS3 DRM worked great until Sony pissed off a subset of its customers by crippling the product they'd already purchased. A happy customer will keep using the product, while a disgruntled one will start looking for ways to get what they paid for.

      Providing a worthwhile service or product and keeping your customers happy is more effective than any DRM. That's why services like Steam and Netflix, when run well, do more to limit piracy than draconian DRM ever will.

    • (Score: 2) by tibman on Saturday June 03 2017, @05:42AM (2 children)

      by tibman (134) Subscriber Badge on Saturday June 03 2017, @05:42AM (#519745)

      Can't forget mod chips for the PS3 and xbox360 that let you play cracked games. I remember one store was selling modded consoles pre-loaded with games for only 100$ more. I haven't looked at consoles in years though. No idea if modding is still a thing. It's so easy to get great PC games nearly instantly these days. No idea why anyone pirates (unless they seriously have no job and no money and would rather play pirated games. Totally understandable).

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      • (Score: 2) by Aiwendil on Saturday June 03 2017, @09:35AM (1 child)

        by Aiwendil (531) on Saturday June 03 2017, @09:35AM (#519783) Journal

        No idea why anyone pirate

        To get a DRM-free copy?

        • (Score: 0) by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 03 2017, @10:35AM

          by Anonymous Coward on Saturday June 03 2017, @10:35AM (#519793)

          No idea why anyone pirate

          To get a DRM-free copy?

          AKA, "the superior product". See: https://torrentfreak.com/new-control-denuvo-piracy-protection-cracked-170602/ [torrentfreak.com]

          I'm willing to pay significantly more for a game on GOG than on Steam, and Steam DRM is not even all that bad.

  • (Score: 2) by Runaway1956 on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:48AM

    by Runaway1956 (2926) Subscriber Badge on Saturday June 03 2017, @02:48AM (#519696) Journal

    Well, to be literal, even if it took ten years, then the protection was broken "in days". Just, like, a lot of days.

    edIII quite effectively counters your claim that protections are always broken quickly and easily. The PS3 does stand out in my memory, because we bought one for the boys, and I wanted to diddle with it. I was only waiting for the "new" to wear off of it, when I learned that the Linux feature was being disabled.

  • (Score: 1) by fustakrakich on Saturday June 03 2017, @03:28AM (2 children)

    by fustakrakich (6150) on Saturday June 03 2017, @03:28AM (#519716) Journal

    I don't know. The DRM on nuclear missiles seems to be holding up pretty good.

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    • (Score: 2) by Scrutinizer on Saturday June 03 2017, @06:50AM

      by Scrutinizer (6534) on Saturday June 03 2017, @06:50AM (#519759)

      I don't know. The DRM on nuclear missiles seems to be holding up pretty good.

      Yeah, not [wikipedia.org] really [wikipedia.org]...

      Just needs a really big rocket.

    • (Score: 3, Touché) by Aiwendil on Saturday June 03 2017, @09:37AM

      by Aiwendil (531) on Saturday June 03 2017, @09:37AM (#519784) Journal

      The standard code for US nukes was for a long time 00000000