The digital rights management (DRM) technology that Sony BMG uses limits the number of times a CD can be "ripped" to a computer. To prevent the DRM software from being easily circumvented, the copy protection's creator -- a U.K.-based company called First4Internet -- uses a rootkit to hide the DRM's files.
Both stressed that rootkits are most commonly used by malicious code writers -- hackers -- and the use of it by a legitimate company such as Sony was alarming, they warned.
"Once the rootkit is there, there's no direct way to uninstall it," said Mikko Hyppönen, F-Secure's chief research officer, in an online brief. "The system is implemented in a way that makes it possible for viruses (or any other malicious program) to use the rootkit to hide themselves. too. This may lead to a situation where the virus remains undetected even if the user has got updated antivirus software installed."
Russinovich, who stumbled across the rootkit after a long investigation that involved a number of advanced PC forensic tools, agreed. "Not only had Sony put software on my system that uses techniques commonly used by malware to mask its presence, the software is poorly written and provides no means for uninstall."
In fact, when Russinovich tried to uninstall the DRM software, all he got for his trouble was a dead CD drive.
"Most users that stumble across the cloaked files with a RKR scan will cripple their computer if they attempt the obvious step of deleting the cloaked files," he said.
Removing the rootkit is so fraught with possibilities of calamity that F-Secure recommended users don't try it themselves. Instead, Hyppönen urged users to fill out a Sony BMG Web form and ask for instructions on how to remove the software. F-Secure has tested the resulting removal process -- which relies on the installation of an Internet Explorer ActiveX control -- and has confirmed it works.
According to one anti-spyware expert, Sony has no excuse for leaning on a rootkit to copy protect its content.
"Rootkits are always malicious," said Richard Stiennon, director of threat research for the Boulder, Colo.-based anti-spyware vendor Webroot. "There's no legitimate use of a rootkit, whose only purpose is to hide code from the operating system." Stiennon is intimately familiar with rootkits, since they're often by spyware writers to disguise some of their nastier work, like password keyloggers.
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