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Thread: Is this possible? Can they really acomplish what they say they will?

  1. #1

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    Is this possible? Can they really acomplish what they say they will?

    NEWS 9/30/2003 They Had Their Chance!


    I don't know what to think anymore... I just don't know, but when I think about it...
    If all the hackers around the world will unite, they can acomplish anything, since most of the "entertainment industry is well pluged in to the net.

    I'm not sure, but I'm a believer... are you?

    <edited/updated>

    I have copied and pasted an articule, describing in plain english how it all supposed to work. It's posted in this thread on page 2.

  2. #2
    KiwiTHUGG's Avatar

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    LMAO, ROFL, I dunno if I am on the right track but I think hackers will hack the "ENT" industry soon! its just a matter of time b4 they really get messy!!!!!!!

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  4. #4

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    I'm with you anotherjustme. I don't know what to make of those "BigHack" guys.

    They seem serious. They seem to have thought it out.

    Here's what they plan to do, for those who have not been following it

    The Big Hack

    Will it work? Got me. I can't pretend to understand it. Near as I can figure it has something to do with creating a system where they upload random code. You download it, and you have a way of decrypting it on your end. Is that right?

    Apparently these guys believe this technique will destroy the idea of online copyright, and change the face of the internet.

    I don't know. I know I've browsed around their forums and I'm not impressed. It's like a small group of geeks talking in code, and clownishly prancing around giving each other the secret handshake, congratulating each other on how clever they all are. I don't see any widespread public support originating in that forum.

    Even if what they have is as amazing, and clever as they seem to think it is, I'm not convinced this particular collection of nerds has what it takes to pull it off.

    Also they seem to keep hinting they want investment. Is this all just some silly get-rich-quick scheme? Pressure the entertainment industry, then sell out to them?

    I'm not quite ready to shout "Hooray!", put them on my shoulders and parade them around the town square, just yet.

    It's an interesting show to watch though.

  5. #5

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    Quote Originally Posted by Shadow Lane
    Will it work? Got me. I can't pretend to understand it. Near as I can figure it has something to do with creating a system where they upload random code. You download it, and you have a way of decrypting it on your end. Is that right?

    Apparently these guys believe this technique will destroy the idea of online copyright, and change the face of the internet.

    I have a little understanding of coding and stuff, but here is a quote of someone that seems to know a thing or two...

    Originally posted by l33ts0n
    Hai. The fine art of social engineering (or "Hacking" as they call it) can be very powerful if wielded by the slick and mentally agile.

    As for the brightnet, OFF, it sounds like a very revolutionary concept--the inability to copyright a number combined with 128KB blocks of irrelevant data being cached makes it a very tempting premise; since its not trying to be "anonymous" and there's nothing illegal about caching an unrecognizable block of data, you won't have to worry about having to proxy content everywhere and hide internet protocol addresses. After all, you're not doing anything illegal.

    Although, it makes me wonder how the RIAA will try to adapt. They would have to monitor your downstream and check every incoming block of data against every file in their database, and hope to collect enough aggregate data to find out if you can assemble those particular blocks in the right order to be something copyrightable. Even then, its shaky standing in court.

    Alternatively, they can do it BlackOPs style and burst through your windows in the middle of the night with laser-sight equipped guns and mow you down, but I don't think the Government would like that very much.


    On the other hand, there's no RFC or "protocol document" anyone can follow, which can lead to haphazard implementations (see: Gnutella) or just botched jobs.
    If you wan't to check out the rest of this discussion, follow this link...

    http://forums.shareaza.com/showthrea...6736#post46736

  6. #6
    Psilaxs's Avatar

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    I read their site and saw nothing technical per se.
    Pseudo philosophical banter will not bring down any industry.
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  7. #7

    Free at Last (R.I.P.)

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    Actually there is technical stuff on the site: there are sketches of the protocol in the Hack 2 Discussion area.
    Dick Laurent is dead...

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    What am i missing, my initial thoughts are that this seems to be pretty daft
    You have to download at least 2x as much info as you actually need ie if you were working in decimal and want to download the number 8 , you'd have to download 5 and 3 ie 2 sets of information each of the same length as the desired information (works in binary as well especially since they are using XOR)

    Plus I'm guessing that legally speaking this is just a really lame type of encryption.

  9. #9
    aqlo's Avatar

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    2x as much info
    No only 1/2 as much say under normal circumstances because you will already have a lot of the necessary chunks cached.

  10. #10

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    Quote Originally Posted by Psilaxs
    I read their site and saw nothing technical per se.
    Pseudo philosophical banter will not bring down any industry.
    Here is something more detailed about the technical stuff...

    http://thebighack.org/modules.php?op...article&sid=78

  11. #11
    aqlo's Avatar

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    still \.ed it looks like
    only fair, goes round comes round
    :ass

    hey in the meantime who is going to 2600 tomorrow?
    http://www.2600.com/meetings/mtg.html

  12. #12
    Malicious Intent's Avatar

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    I thought that Aqlo said it was a satire site. Its taking the piss - with "OFF systems" and "Brightnets". It is suppose to be a laugh, although it seems long winded for a joke.
    I think it is a site dedicated to the steady stream of newbies who think that if you upload information that can't be used without other information, then you can't be sued. As we have explained to them, if a copy of the song is made, then copyright law has been broken.
    I'm not really malicious. I'm a nice guy.
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  13. #13
    aqlo's Avatar

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    Naw I said your gripes at that time were due to satire. And that OFF was right up there with CREEP as a sneaky acronym. :fire

    site's back

  14. #14

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    I don't think this is all just a joke, and if it is, color me punk'd.

    I was initially skeptical of this "Big Hack" plan, but they're starting to sell me on it, because I'm thinking even if they do sell out, or get shut down, enough of their plan is out now, that it's got people thinking. Bits and pieces at least are going to be borrowed by others in the future. There's no way to stop it.

  15. #15
    jonnymnemonic's Avatar

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    Sure

    Their intent is absolutely possible to do, theoretically speaking. But doing it *efficiently* will be the key. If they use chunk sizes too small, the inefficiency really bogs down. For example, let's say they use a chunk size of one byte. Then the "assembly descriptor" for a 4 megabyte file will BE 4 megabytes - it will basically BE the file to be assembled, in fact. Which would have the same legal problems we have today. And if EACH chunk needs a TCP/IP packet to be transmitted (as looks like the plan), then transferring a 4 megabyte file with a 1-byte chunk size would actually involve the transfer of closer to 500 megabytes of data. Obviously, that can't work.

    So, they will have to use chunk sizes larger than 1 byte. The problem with too LARGE a chunk size, however, is that the larger it is, the less likely that chunk is to exist in multiple files. Take a 16-byte chunk size, for example. Any particular sequence of 16 bytes has only a 1 in 256^16 probability of being the same as another 16 byte sequence. And 256^16 is one HUGE number. It's quite possible that some files would contain a specific 16-byte sequence that exists in NO other file. And if it's a copyrighted file, then it's possible that just that tiny little 16-byte sequence could be used as evidence of copyright infringement.

    So, 1 byte is too small a chunk size, but 16 bytes is probably too large. 4 bytes would probably work okay, although there are still 4 billion plus different 4-byte sequences. But 4 billion is small enough that many, if not all, 4-byte sequences *would* in fact be found in many different files. But sending a TCP/IP packet for every such 4-byte chunk would still involve sending a LOT more data than simply sending the data from the original file normally, as P2P networks do today. I mean, a LOT more data. It'd basically turn your average cable connection into a 56k modem so far as transfer speeds are concerned.

    So, at the moment, I don't see this happening. For it to actually be doable AND be useable at reasonable speeds will first require massive improvements in bandwidth technologies, such that bandwidth itself becomes a non-factor. Until that happens, this concept will remain something that is only theoretically doable. Oh, sure, someone may create it, like the people did with their CPIP (Carrier Pigeon IP) network, but no one will USE it because either it will be too slow and inefficient OR the chunk size will be so large that it offers no legal protection TO use it.
    "The only difference between a dead skunk lying in the road and a dead lawyer lying in the road is that there are skid marks around the skunk." -- Patrick Murray

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