So this one kid, that bragged about it weeks ago on one "grey zone" board to reverse engineer, did pull it off? Though after a quick google, it seems to be a "new group" rather than one individual person.V0RT3X wrote:So after poking through a few NFO files, it looks like they have managed to develop a wrapper of some kind to emulate the Ilok2.
The crack doesn't need the Ilok2 driver, or the licence manager. It's basically a self-contained setup making it really easy to install.
So... is the iLok3 imminent now? One of the head of the Hydra has been cut off. The question is, when will a new one grow back? And how strong will it be? v2 did hold out for a couple of years (since 2009 IIRC). If there are no counter measures taken, then this "beast" sure isn't worth the maintenance.
Which reminds me of the Syncrosoft Elicenser. Wasn't this also "reverse engineered" and maintained until shortly after Cubase 5 came out? And then the devs were like "not maintaining that anymore - the updates are faster than we can 'emulate' all eventualities". Here, the once cut off head of the monster did eventually grow back. Which makes me wonder, will that happen for the iLok as well?
So to me, it seems that people currently play a "game on time". Who can hold the fort longer than the other?
Don't get me wrong, I still prefer USB keys for managing licenses over C/R. However, this is clearly stating "Hey, we've cracked your code - it's your turn now". So if anything, it shows that these two systems are definitely not 100% secure either, and some "services" like the "ZDT solution" and "transfer fees" are just nonsense.
Actually, the whole manager is kind of moot IMO. Dev's can't delete "timed out" licenses (I encountered this while beta testing, very annoying if you have "dead weight" in your account). And ZDT? Why pay 100bucks a year and then nothing happens? Can't I just pay once in advance, and half at that price? Or remember the transfer fees debacle from... was it last year?! The "removed licenses" drama (that also happened years ago on iLok 1 with Nomad Factory), the iLokalypse that crippled various iLoks for weeks if you force-updated the manager drivers, etc.
So one one hand - yes, this is bad news. On the other hand, I think it's a much deserved smack into the face with a fencepost for Pace/iLok.
And another thing that is mostly overlooked - we talk about the tools in question. More so than before, maybe even more critical. Isn't that kind of a good thing?
I sadly think that you're right in this case.Urs wrote:I'm afraid the biggest losers of this situation are the companies that offer reasonably priced software without intrusive copy protection. Many people will think "hey, why buy the budget version if I can get the pro stuff for free".
Though not every "pro prices" version is also a "pro tool". At least IMO. But... marketing.
Upmarked, yes. Especially on the "our tools can't be cracked part". But I've thankfully seen affordable iLok2 based plugins/modules. Some UVI stuff and Slate comes to mind. If we talk about Sonnox, or certain companies that focus on metering tools however... *cough*Urs wrote:One needs to keep in mind that the iLok ecosystem is not only about copy protection but also about "being upmarket". That is, for a company to be successful in this realm, you need to either be cracked ("can't afford not to") or boutique (not cracked but price up). The opposites however don't mix.
As Beta Tester, I also heard/know about this. And isn't the license to get the SDK also super expensive, not to mention recurring? This is nonsense IMO. If you should (rather "must") support a specific plugin standard, and you want to push it (since you want to be the "leader" in the industry, yet you still refuse to go the VST route and rather cook your own thing), then you shouldn't be forced to invest a lot of money as dev team (small ones even) just to get the content out to the masses.Urs wrote:I for one pray for a day where building AAX does not involve iLok dongles on each developer machine and build server. It's an unnecessary obstacle that cost us a lot of time (just yesterday everything stopped for a few hours, again). It's the obscurity and the helplessness that bugs me.
But maybe I'm thinking a bit too naive in this case.
See, this is a topic I still don't quite understand. By that I mean - what is cracked, not to mention "why", and what is not? Is it the popularity of the company or the tools? And why are some tools still not "cracked" or "warez'd" and others are up and down? I kind of don't understand the selection.Urs wrote:All in all I think the developers and the users would be better off without iLoks. But maybe also I'm just miffed with people who profit from piracy, on both sides of the fence.
Sample Packages and Sound Sets - yes, they were and will always shared (especially if there are no demos, no easily accessible manual and bad presentations). But I've seen a lot of low budget tools being cracked, while other similar priced ones are not (yet the company is fairly popular in the industry/the music realm). And these companies in question don't use any time bombing or C/R systems.
So that's for starters.
However I also agree that those that "profit from piracy" should be branded first. And sadly, the "Future Music" studio videos come to mind again... these folks didn't even see a smack on the fingers. We freelancers in turn work our butts off, wait for deals every couple of months and still(!) can't invest for something new. This can be more than frustrating and let's you easily show beyond the boarders (which is instantly frowned upon, of course).
And if you look for s/h stuff - you can be happy that a company doesn't refuse to resell, turns the licenses in NFR and/or asks for hefty fees on top of that.
This all is a viscous cycle.
And in the 20+ years I'm in this realm, I've only heard "talking" about this whole thing. This... giant balloon of blurb, camp building, etc. I even still remember the initiatives to create a unified USB c/p system without the need for specific USB keys (years before the Plugin Alliance delivered). But nothing improved. Demos are still crippled or "locked away", samples can't be demoed (and the presentations are often misleading), documentation of tools is a luxurity, we're swamped with clones of clones of clones with even crazier pricing and buzz-word marketing. And then there is the trade press, that literally tells us "what are professional tools" and "what are not". Always use this/that - else you're not professional.
And who is the target audience? The beginners - the "upcoming new celebrities", those that don't bother to invest a bit more time with their tools to properly learn them. And those either don't have the funds (and will never have it) or the patience to jump through hoops, but rather see "ooooh - cracked version, might as well use it... since EVERYBODY does it".
Cycle closed.
Summary - I will have an eye on this. See how this develops.
Also this thread...

