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Potential Hardware Damage

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I'm surprised there is no mention here of the blown speaker incidents. The odd data sends square waves that can destroy some speakers. —The preceding unsigned comment was added by Zerothis (talkcontribs) 10:37, 14 January 2007 (UTC).[reply]

You cant play safedisc on a redbook cdda player the cd contains data not audio frames Cartoonborg 21:34, 14 January 2007 (UTC)[reply]

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The lawsuit (and settlement) against Sony BMG was based in large part on the security risk that their DRM rootkit presented. This article states that the SafeDisc driver grants ring 0 access to the kernel, so it looks like SafeDisc could also be defeated by way of legal remedies. 24.6.99.30 00:47, 20 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Vulnerabilities

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"SafeDisc installs its own Windows device driver to the user's computer, named secdrv.sys."

secdrv.sys is one of the pre-installed XP device drivers, so it's possible that SafeDisc just uses a Windows driver that is already there. Do you mean that SafeDisc replaces the Windows device driver with its own version of secdrv.sys? Is it possible that SafeDisc installs secdrv.sys only on Windows versions that did not have secdrv.sys installed?

Please write a more detailed description of how you think this works.

user sumthinelse

iter praemium est 20:58, 24 February 2007 (UTC)[reply]

I deleted the section on vulnerabilities. Anyone with knowledge of the internal workings of the driver can tell you this is a load of bollocks. Unless you manage to find a way to elevate by reading a debug-register or something similar to that, there is no way to exploit this driver. The secdrv driver is a part of safedisc though, even through a version ships with Windows. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 62.163.0.80 (talk) 23:43, August 25, 2007 (UTC)

I added a sentence to the vulnerabilities section because as it stood, it was misleading, implying that the vulnerability that Microsoft had announced on Nov 7 2007 was still open, and it's not - it was patched on Dec 11 2007. --59.167.55.49 (talk) 08:24, 2 December 2008 (UTC)[reply]

SafeDisc Lite?

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Dungeon Siege has a variation of SafeDisc apparently called SafeDisc Lite. I spent almost a year trying to get help from Microsoft because inserting the DS CD into my notebook would cause violent vibration and rapid overheating to the point that my notebook would sound an alarm and switch off within 20 seconds. All their solutions started with "Insert the CD" (duh, did they even read my email?). Eventually they shocked my by sending a set of replacement CDs without copy protection. They are marked with huge inverted print "DO NOT COPY" and licensing warnings all over. Hopefully this is a trend, providing undamaged disks when customers request them.

Pasted in

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The Versions section of the page seems to be pretty much pasted in from CD Media World, minus a few sentences here and there:

http://www.cdmediaworld.com/hardware/cdrom/cd_protections_safedisc.shtml http://www.cdmediaworld.com/hardware/cdrom/cd_protections_safedisc_v2.shtml http://www.cdmediaworld.com/hardware/cdrom/cd_protections_safedisc_v3.shtml http://www.cdmediaworld.com/hardware/cdrom/cd_protections_safedisc_v4.shtml

Can someone else reword the section? Cipher42 04:49, 30 July 2007 (UTC)[reply]

is C-Dilla a subdivision of Macrovision ?

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when i look who have made the clokspl files ... the company name that show up is C-Dilla SafeDisc....

Copyright (c) C-Dilla Ltd 1997-1998 for SafeDisc 1.0

what do you think about that ?

74.57.107.111 05:30, 4 September 2007 (UTC)[reply]

C-Dilla was the company which originally made Safedisc, before they were bought by Macrovision. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 213.88.221.1 (talk) 13:00, 18 October 2007 (UTC)[reply]

Safedisc and safecast discontinued?

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I have noticed that Rovi Corporation has bought out Macrovision, and safedisc and and safecast are no longer on its website. Also, a scene group released a tool and in its nfo it states "Since the Macrovision Corp. turned into Rovi Corporation and discontinued development of SafeDisc/SafeCast DRM's, we have decided to make this old tool public (after some adjustments).". Can anyone confirm this for me?
Ub3rst4r (talk) 00:47, 29 October 2009 (UTC)[reply]

This does indeed seem to be true.
They are no longer marketing these products publicly anyway and this change should be written about here.
If nothing else, then at least the fact that Macrovision changed name (not bought out, changed name as currently described on their webpage) should be explained here.
85.225.177.156 (talk) 07:09, 17 November 2009 (UTC)[reply]

Safedisc in your registry?

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Does anyone know if Safedisc messes around with your registry? If so, how do you remove it? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 24.215.29.179 (talk) 08:46, 4 January 2010 (UTC)[reply]

"about 10 to 20 seconds"

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(activision's) Spiderman 3, comes with SafeDisc v4.90.010 , and the startup disc auth takes <3 seconds on my computer.. (16 4x4gb 1600ddr3 ram, 2'th gen i7 2360qm at 3.4GHz, 120gb intel 510ssd 500MB/s read);

i suggest removing that claim.. Divinity76 (talk) 02:21, 28 April 2012 (UTC)[reply]