Western Digital Service Restricts Use of Network Drives 315
sehlat writes "Via BoingBoing comes the news that Western Digital's My Book(TM) World Edition(TM) II, sold with promises of internet-accessible drive space, is now restricting the types of files the drive will serve up. 'Western Digital is disabling sharing of any avi, divx, mp3, mpeg, and many other files on its network connected devices; due to unverifiable media license authentication. Just wondering -- who needs a 1 Terabyte network-connected hard drive that is prohibited from serving most media files? Perhaps somebody with 220 million pages of .txt files they need to share?'" Update: 12/07 03:28 GMT by Z : To clarify, it actually seems as though this is a bad summary. The MioNET service that WD packages with the networked drives is responsible for the rights of users via the network. There are a few (obvious) ways to get around that.
"The Ironside" (Score:2, Insightful)
I hereby dub these crippled drives The (Western Digital) Ironside [wikipedia.org]
Make it part of the vernacular, no amount of advertising $ can beat that.
Re:"The Ironside" (Score:5, Funny)
A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:2, Insightful)
It's easier to point out that you can't use these drives to share your movies and songs. People want network storage for the same thing they use YouTube for, movies of their kids and other fun for out of town friends and family. No avi == no sale.
More devices will be like this until they are legally mandated. This is the kind of network the MAFIAA wants to build. It looks a lot like the old network that served them well. You are only invited to purchase. Government will be happy that way too. YouTu
Ah, Time for the Tinfoil Hats? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:5, Informative)
Please stop the spread of bullshit on the web, do at least a few seconds of research before assuming everything you read is true.
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:5, Insightful)
Sooo, if I want to buy one to use as a server to allow all of my relatives to get pictures of the family and such, it will work. If I throw in an MPG of my son playing soccer, oooops... denied.
Wow. What a great feature.
Point is, it still sucks. Arbitrary limits based on the file extentions are stupid and pointless.
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Chances are that your connectivity provider's terms that you agreed to prohibit running a server over the link anyway.
And that justifies selectively disabling what file extensions can be served from a network-attached device that's designed to work as a server...how, exactly?
If WD cared about keeping your ISP happy, they never would have included any remote-access features in the first place. But they obviously did, but then they blocked it from serving certain types of files. That's not for the ISPs' benefit, clearly. It's for the media companies'.
Besides which, the whole "you can't run a server" rule is barely enforced.
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:4, Insightful)
How is a bash on Microsoft insightful when the article is about Western Digital? Did microsoft force western digital to restrict file types?
Microsoft eats babies. Mod me up as insightful.
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:5, Funny)
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:4, Funny)
Re:A Sign of Things to Come and How to Fight. (Score:4, Funny)
No, It's a rip off. DRM is like that. (Score:3, Informative)
Partial restrictions some people can get around are no less odious. The intent is the same and they are designed to get you used to a restricted world.
It's clear that WD was advertising the device people want but delivering something else. This WD page [wdc.com] promisses:
It even has pictures of music on the beach and images flowing to multiple houses, but this [custhelp.com]
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In Soviet America.... (Score:3, Funny)
Why bother? (Score:5, Insightful)
I wouldn't. This is as stupid as it gets. (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously. There's no way in hell I would buy this thing. The last thing in the world I need is my hard drive deciding what files are and aren't okay to store. Are they on drugs, or what?
Here is a complete list [custhelp.com] of file types it cripples the functionality for.
The funniest part is the "What it holds" section at the bottom:
Re:I wouldn't. This is as stupid as it gets. (Score:5, Interesting)
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I happen to use an Apple Airport Extreme myself, because I can hook any usb hard disk/storage device to it (even though a hub) and share it over the network. It has the ability to have unrestricted access, guest access for the 'public' portion, accounts with passwords and their own private shares (sorry, no quotas, but I think you can setup partitions directly on a computer and it'll work fine). Works with Mac and Windows easily, and probably with Linux si
That defeats the point (Score:4, Insightful)
But without the other features, the thing seems pretty much like an array of hard drives to me, ho-hum. One of the things that would set it apart is the built-in extra functionality. If I just wanted hard drives, I'd go out and just buy hard drives and probably save myself some cash in the process. If I want the built-in extra functionality... Well, I'd still go out and just buy hard drives, because I don't want it deliberately crippling and denying me the legitimate use of those capabilities because of some imagined illegal behavior that I haven't and wouldn't engage in.
It would be a little like buying a GPS unit with built-in maps. The catch is, though, that because someone might rob a bank on Main Street, no streets beginning with the letter M will be shown on the maps.
No thank you.
Re:I wouldn't. This is as stupid as it gets. (Score:5, Funny)
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So rename your files and go on about your business (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:5, Funny)
Metallica_Enter_Sandman.txt is a great "read"
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Really?
Oh well. Their drives are banned here for near universal premature and catastrophic failures anyway.
Figgers.
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Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:4, Insightful)
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You would have to associate
Doesn' scale (Score:5, Funny)
Oh sure that works great for "Shiny Happy People".REM. But then you need "Sunday, Bloody Sunday".U2 and so on - imagine the size of the file association list!
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It's not like this is high tech or anything. There are probably at least 20 chinese manufacturers that will gladly sell you something with the same functionality, but none of the restrictions.
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:5, Insightful)
Better Idea (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:2)
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:2)
loop mounting or FUSE is better (Score:2)
Use FUSE and a shim module that renames files.
There. Two quick ways to get around this.
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:2)
Re:So rename your files and go on about your busin (Score:5, Informative)
It works in: Pocket PC, Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X, and MS DOS. I love it so much I *GLADLY* PURCHASED IT! ($29) So call me a WinRAR fanboy.
It is a superior replacement to WinZIP (and other zip clones) with better compression algorithms (and you can also encrypt your compressed files AND their filenames WITH authenticity verification plus it handles everything WinZIP does).
WD My Book driver suck. Stick with Seagate (Score:3, Informative)
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Re:WD My Book driver suck. Stick with Seagate (Score:5, Insightful)
The LAST thing I need when buying hardware is to have a fucking piece of HARDWARE deciding what files it will / will not hold. Hardware is hardware - do what I tell you to do, do it reliably and without questioning my motives, intent, or desires.
This is tantamount to a car that won't turn left because the onboard GPS doesn't think there's a road there - well guess what, I'm not driving to work by committee. When it comes to hardware, when I say 'jump' your ONLY question better be 'how high?'
The important thing to remember is : I'm going to forget ~why~ I don't buy Western Digital hardware long before I forget that I ~don't~ buy Western Digital hardware. A year or now it will simply be 'I don't remember why, but there's no fucking way I would buy a WD drive.'
This makes a lot of sense. (Score:5, Funny)
^Satire.
Actually... (Score:4, Interesting)
should read
from the drm-means-don't-read-media dept.
I don't understand why all these corporations feel like they are suddenly in the business of policing for the RIAA/MPAA
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In Soviet Russia (Score:2, Funny)
Not the right question... (Score:5, Insightful)
The question we need to be asking is - "How can I replace the firmware on that thing and make it my bitch?"
Re:Not the right question... (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Not the right question... (Score:5, Insightful)
No, the question we should be asking is "who sells a device that we don't have to jump through hoops to do what I want?"
Seriously, why even bother giving money to a business that restricts usage like this?
... don't buy broken stuff (Score:2)
I'm the guy behind most of the disposable digital camera hacks (to allow people to get their pictures), and there are some parallels with this product. It would have to be heavily discounted or offer some other unique novelty before I'd touch it.
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How do they check? (Score:2)
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Until they decide compressed files are a sign of piracy, I suppose.
More like... (Score:5, Insightful)
Latest-Movie[axxo].txt (filesize 700MB)
Seriously, I don't know why they even try to bother any more. Regardless of your political position on piracy, it's a hole that they can't plug, no matter how many DRM methods they devise or U.S. senators they bribe.
Re:More like... (Score:5, Funny)
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(Note: Yes, I'm abusing my work's terminal server.)
personal firmware (Score:2, Interesting)
Customers? (Score:2, Funny)
I believe (Score:5, Informative)
*Due to unverifiable media license authentication, the most common audio and video file types cannot be shared with different users using WD Anywhere Access. A list of the non shareable file types can be found here.
Just remove WD Access Anywhere (MioNET) (Score:5, Informative)
Shouldn't be a problem (Score:2)
2) Those who know will avoid this thing and get something else.
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Contradictory sales pitch (Score:2)
Seen on the WDC page touting the uses:
Now how in hell is one supposed to do that when virtually all music type files are locked out? Stream them as a .WAV file?
(FWIW, .WAV files are not on the list)
What the ..... (Score:2)
MP3 and other media CAN be stored... (Score:5, Informative)
Comcast would likely throttle down your Internet connection anyway once they saw all those MP3's being streamed.
From the manufacturer's product page: (Score:5, Funny)
What it holds:
Up to 285,000 digital photos
Up to 250,000 songs (MP3)
Up to 25,000 songs (uncompressed CD quality)
Up to 76 hours of Digital Video (DV)
Up to 400 hours of DVD quality video
Up to 100 hours of HD video
Re:From the manufacturer's product page: (Score:4, Insightful)
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Or 250,000 MP3s hidden in zip files.
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I'm sorry, Dave (Score:2)
Come to think of it, same goes for the .jpg files, too. Hmmmm....
But ISOs are fine (Score:2)
It's irrelevant (Score:5, Informative)
If you really want to know the travesty about the internet access to it, read up on the web. It's a java-based system called Mionet which requires a special client on your windows machine that you'll use to access it remotely. Did I mention the $50/year that you pay a 3rd party to access your own files? Mionet inexplicably forces you to go through their server to get to your files. Do a google search to find horror stories of Mionet being down and people being unable to reach their own files for more than a day. I'm a programmer - I know of no reason to create it this way other than to extract ongoing revenue from those who don't know better. Using dyndns and an open port will let you get to your files reliably from anywhere.
As for mine, I got shell, disabled the mionet stuff, made sure sshd was coming up every time, and I use it as a really slow Linux machine with a large disk. Be forewarned, it's dog slow. It has a gigabit ethernet port on it that typically pumps out about 50Mbits/sec. Seriously, a 100Mbit port would be half-wasted. Let's not even talk about write speeds.
If you buy one, note that you also don't need to use their windows setup utility, it has a complete web interface.
I paid $300 for a 1TB drive, which, frankly, was little more than I would have paid for a plain external drive at the time. Bonus is that I can connect another usb drive into it and share it on the network.
And one other bonus - it comes with a complete toolchain on its 3GB linux partition, so you can build software on it without having to install other toolchains on another linux machine. The 200MHz processor isn't the fastest at building, but it does fine.
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My guess would be to allow the device to work with internet connections that don't allow incoming connections. The Mionet server acts as a known connection point that both the WD device and the user computer can access. The downside is that content has to flow through the Mionet server, but at least it works. A better solution would be for the Mionet software to attempt a direct connection
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In that case, they should do it like the Hamachi VPN - use a mediation server to make the initial connection between the two machines, then drop out of the loop.
The way they're doing it, you have to spend money to use their server. Hamachi can do it for free because their servers aren't hosting the data flow, merely the initial connection protocol.
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Making something easy for someone and charging them for the privilege isn't evil.
Using dyndns and an open port will let you get to your files reliably from anywhere.
Some people do not know what those things are. Fortunately, there is a service they can choose to purchase.
Too bad it sucks, but that's another issue.
Dvix? Oog? (Score:4, Insightful)
I hope the device genuinely blocks the extensions 'dvix' and 'oog' instead of 'divx' and 'ogg', that would be too funny.
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Simple solution (Score:2)
no oog files (Score:2)
False advertising? (Score:4, Funny)
Is this really WD's place to be a cop? (Score:2)
Is it your place to be the cop here? Shouldn't I - as a fully aware (or not, the law doesn't make a distinction) adult - have the freedom to share whatever type of file I wish?
Wouldn't (and shouldn't) it be my butt on the line if I'm sharing my 19 volume set of "The Best of Barry Manilow" all willy-nilly across the Internet?
Please get your industry-browned nose out of my business, and let me worry about the repercussions if I get caught violating copyrights.
WD had better be careful (Score:2)
even then... (Score:3, Insightful)
I still wouldn't buy one. Furthermore I'd demand a refund including shipping costs on any product I accidentally bought that didn't make this functionality VERY clear on the packaging, and also on the web-page if I bought it online.
Fixed the title... (Score:2)
ggself
What about .NFO? (Score:2, Funny)
QNAP (Score:4, Informative)
Here [newegg.com] is a bunch of their different devices (newegg.com link).
I'm considering getting the TS-209 (or the PRO, haven't made up my mind), personally. I have two 320gb SATAII drives sitting around not doing anything since I've stopped running WHS and could really use a nice low power device to replace the computer I was using for this task.
Lost sale. (Score:2)
Count the ways WDC sucks (Score:2)
I have a two-disk version and one of the disks failed. It should be pretty simple to replace it under warranty, right? Oh, hell no.
Never again will I buy another WDC product if I can help it.
220 million pages of txt? (Score:2, Funny)
Madness (Score:5, Insightful)
Crazy.
Whatever happened to "substantially non-infringing use"?
One could imagine an archive of freely redistributable video. I would have a use for such a device.
Last time I buy a WD drive... (Score:5, Insightful)
Why would I buy such a large drive if I don't intend on using it for media.
It really isn't WD's place to restrict filesharing.
This is truly a troubling precedent. The problem is that by building a device which automatically attempts to enforce copyright law, they build a precedent which can be used against them in the future:
Electronic devices don't decide what's legal and illegal - the courts do. When people think that they are capable of doing so, two key things are going to happen:
It is really unfortunate when our fear of what someone might do with technology overrules the good that they are doing with it.
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Re:Here's the deal. (Score:5, Insightful)
What if Joe has Worldwide distribution rights?
How does Joe explain to his hard drive that he's not a criminal by default?
Why does Joe have to explain to his hard drive that he's not a criminal by default?
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Re:Here's the deal. (Score:4, Insightful)
What kind of sad world is it when a manufacturer makes a device that can share files on the Internet. Joe puts his files on there and puts it on the Internet. Jane (and everyone) can access all of Joe's private files because he was too lazy/ignorant to bother securing them. Joe and record companies sue product maker because product performed AS EXPECTED!
There's been a lot of using the legal system to get compensation for people's own stupidity lately. It's sad that it's spilled over to products that now carry spurious warning labels (the frisbee that says "do not throw toward people") or functionality so limited as to make it not worth buying in the first place.
Of course, this whole post is based on the postulation that WD have implemented this blocking of files to cover their asses from legal action.