The Norwegian hacker who cracked the encryption mechanism used by DVDs has turned his attention to Google's new Video Viewer.
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Video Viewer, released Monday, is a modified version of the open-source VLC (VideoLAN Client) software that can play only video files hosted on Google's servers. In a Weblog posting published Tuesday, Jon Lech Johansen released a patch that circumvents this restriction.
When launched in January, Google Video returned excerpts of close-captioning transcripts of television programs, still images from broadcasts, and other programming information. It didn't return actual video clips that users could play back.
Google began allowing users to upload video to its Web site last April; and with the release of the Video Player, it has developed a way to let users view video on the site.
Google Says Just Say No
The search engine company based in Mountain View, California, would not say whether it approved of Johansen's modifications to its open source software, but it is not encouraging anyone to download the patch, according to Nathan Tyler, a Google spokesman. "We strongly advise users not to download this modification," he said. "It could result in security vulnerabilities in their computer and may disrupt their computer's ability to access Google video."
"We've designed our player to work well for our service," Tyler said in an e-mail message. "Once the player has been modified we can't guarantee whether it will work well with our service."
Johansen, also known as "DVD Jon," is a celebrity in the Linux community because his DVD decryption software permitted Linux users to run DVDs on their PCs. The software also cracked the CSS (Content Scrambling System) copy protection mechanism that DVDs use, and in 2002 Johansen was charged with violating Norwegian law.
Johansen was acquitted of the charges a year later after a Norwegian court found no evidence that Johansen--who was 15 at the time he wrote the software--had used his code to produce or watch illegal copies of DVDs.