Western Digital Blocks Media File Sharing From Storage Device

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Executioner
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Western Digital Blocks Media File Sharing From Storage Device

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http://www.informationweek.com/news/sho ... =204702710

Anyone else see market share slipping away? I'm sure someone will create a hacked copy that allows you to upgrade.
Some consumers are up in arms, but Western Digital said it chose to stay clear of any capabilities that could be seen as challenging the rights of copyright holders.

By Antone Gonsalves
InformationWeek
December 7, 2007 03:39 PM

External storage units have become popular for transferring electronic media between PCs and other networked devices, but stories surfacing Friday suggest some devices made by Western Digital put the brakes on sharing of the most common audio and video files.

The restriction is embedded in the Anywhere Access software within the My Book World Edition, a 1Tbyte storage device made by Western Digital that provides a backup for Windows PCs, as well as the ability to access files remotely from another computer via a Web browser. The company installed the software in its consumer and small business network-attached storage device to prevent unauthorized distribution of copyrighted content.

While registered users of the software can access any file remotely, files of common audio and video formats, such as AVI, MP3, MPEG and DivX, cannot be shared. Western Digital on Friday said remote sharing of files from one of its storage devices is new to the company, so Western Digital chose to stay clear of any capabilities that could be seen as challenging the rights of copyright holders. Unauthorized use of audio and video on the Web has become a major problem with Hollywood studios and record companies on one side and Web sites, such as Google's YouTube, on the other.

"The company has started out very conservatively in creating a certain set of features and functions," Brian Miller, director of marketing for Western Digital, told InformationWeek. "As we go forward, the goal is to listen to what the marketplace needs and wants, and identify the most appropriate solution that respects intellectual property."

Some people, however, see the issue differently, criticizing Western Digital for deciding on its own what customers can do with their own content, since there's no way for the company to know whether files are being shared illegally or not. "This is the most extreme example I've seen yet of tech companies crippling data devices in order to please Hollywood," said Gary, whose comment was posted on BoingBoing by blogger Cory Doctorow.

Gary went on to say that Western Digital had also limited the value of its device. "Who needs a 1Tbyte 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?"

For customers of My Book World Edition, the restriction has not been a problem, according to Miller. The product, which has been available since February and sells for $380, is targeted for use in homes and small offices, and most of them have been satisfied with sharing documents and photos. "Most customers we're talking to have been pretty happy with the product," he said.

According to SparrowHawk, who left a comment on Gary's post, a workaround would be renaming audio and video files with a different extension, such as "filename-mp3.text." Miller had no comment on tactics to bypass the Western Digital software.

The software within My Book World Edition limits the number of users with unique IDs and passwords to five. The accounts have to be set up by a designated administrator. The Anywhere Access software enables people to access files from a remote computer's Web browser, or any computer with the Anywhere Access client installed.

To share files, a public folder is created, and a link is emailed to people targeted to receive the information. To access the folder, a person would click on the link, which loads a Java applet into the person's browser to establish communications between the remoter computer and the storage device. The applet also handles the decryption of files, since all data in the device is encrypted for security.
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Post by ZYFER »

If they don't want our money then fine, they won't get it. Tney are making this too easy for Seagate...
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Post by Key Keeper »

ZYFER wrote:If they don't want our money then fine, they won't get it. Tney are making this too easy for Seagate...
Haha, I couldnt agree more. The mere idea of a 1Tb drive that cannot be used for media sharing is rediculous. WD isnt thinking very clearly here, the consumers are where they make the bulk of their profit, not hollywood. That would be like Exxon making a gasoline that wont burn in cars that get less than 20 miles per gallon.
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Post by TheSovereign »

seagate is so awesome now their is no reason to buy the crap that is western digital
in fact, i cant remember a time when western digital was good
i mean emachines used them for hard drives
that alone is like whoa!
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Post by ZYFER »

I agree, I don't buy anything but Seagate drives, I have had only one Seagate fail on me, and that was an old 10gig drive, not a single one since has failed. For Western Digital, that is another matter. From what I have seen their failure rate compared to all other manufacturs combined is about 5 to 1.
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Post by eGoCeNTRoNiX »

Hitachi and Western Digital have been on my No Buy list for a long time.. lol. I am primarily SeaGate, but do buy a Maxtor here and there. Never had a SeaGate fail and only a couple of Maxtors, but I know I can count at least 100 Failed WDs and 20 Failed Hitachis...
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Post by TheSovereign »

maxtor is now seagate welcome to buyouts!
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Post by FlyingPenguin »

Keep in mind the sharing restriction is just if you use their software. If you just use the drive as a regular network share, there's no restriction. So I really don't see the big deal. I'd never use any software that comes with an external drive anyway.
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Post by ZYFER »

TheSovereign wrote:maxtor is now seagate welcome to buyouts!
Hehe yes I note the humor. Maxtor buys Quantum and Seagate buys Maxtor :P
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Post by swinada »

good thing I read this now, for I was planning on buying on of those and especially for media files.
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Post by canton_kid »

While registered users of the software can access any file remotely, files of common audio and video formats, such as AVI, MP3, MPEG and DivX, cannot be shared.
What really bites here is the fact NO-ONE respects consumers rights!
Hey, I make original MP3's and DVD's at times and I have the RIGHT to share those with anyone if I want to! CONSUMERS OWN RIGHTS ALSO!!!

The clients I have made stuff for also have the RIGHT to share what THEY BOUGHT from me!

The fact that this file restriction only applies to using certain software is beside the point, they have NO RIGHT to interfere with the files I share nor any other use of my computer!
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Post by Err »

canton_kid wrote:What really bites here is the fact NO-ONE respects consumers rights!
Hey, I make original MP3's and DVD's at times and I have the RIGHT to share those with anyone if I want to! CONSUMERS OWN RIGHTS ALSO!!!

The clients I have made stuff for also have the RIGHT to share what THEY BOUGHT from me!

The fact that this file restriction only applies to using certain software is beside the point, they have NO RIGHT to interfere with the files I share nor any other use of my computer!
They are just covering their own butts for RIAA & MPAA lawsuits. In these lawsuit happy times, companies have to do what the can to aviod costly court costs. I would bet this file-sharing software only reads the extension of the shared file so simply changing the extension would probably allow these files to be shared.
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Post by normalicy »

Actually, I can't remember where, I heard that it ended up not being the storage device, but the network that they were using that was blocking the files (the firewall or router or something).
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Post by FlyingPenguin »

It's only if you use their media sharing software. If you use the drive as a regular drive, share it normally through windows, you can share anything.

The reason for this restriction is because their software allows you to share media outside your LAN. So you could be in a hotel and streaming your videos or music from the house. That would get them in a legal morass with the RIAA and the MPAA.

I'd never use the software that comes with these drives anyway.
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Post by RubberDuckie »

I actually have this unit and love it. 1TB with GigaBit network. However I do not use the software that came with the hardware to access my files on the internet. I really just use it for storage on my home network and it works great.
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