• DocumentCode
    1368255
  • Title

    How disks are `padlocked¿: The software industry tangles with technical, legal, and ethical questions as it seeks to prevent unauthorized copying

  • Author

    Voelcker, John ; Wallich, Paul

  • Author_Institution
    IEEE Spectrum, New York, NY, USA
  • Volume
    23
  • Issue
    6
  • fYear
    1986
  • fDate
    6/1/1986 12:00:00 AM
  • Firstpage
    32
  • Lastpage
    40
  • Abstract
    Copy protection uses special techniques to write information on a floppy disk, that the disk drive of an ordinary personal computer can read but cannot write. When a user makes a copy of this disk, that information will thus be lost. Software embedded in the application program can check for this unique data. If it is there, the disk is legitimate; if it is not, the disk is a copy, and the program terminates. The methods described for protecting a disk against copying are: bad sectoring; the use of spiral tracks and offset tracks which depend intimately on the hardware characteristics of the system involved; extra sectors slipped into the outer tracks of some disks; fake sectors; super sectors (write-splicing); sector alignment; wide tracks; and weak bit encoding. The legal, technical, and ethical questions that arise are explored.
  • Keywords
    floppy discs; security of data; bad sectoring; disk copying; fake sectors; floppy disk; offset tracks; spiral tracks; super sectors; write-splicing; Companies; Computers; Disk drives; Floppy disks; Hard disks; Reliability; Software;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Journal_Title
    Spectrum, IEEE
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • ISSN
    0018-9235
  • Type

    jour

  • DOI
    10.1109/MSPEC.1986.6370930
  • Filename
    6370930