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could someone explain how exactly the TwinPeaks method of making (maybe only temporally) working copies of SecuROM v4.8x works?
I think I understood how SecuROM works but I'd like to understand this also...
Sergei
"I was inappropriately blunt, wasn't I? Sorry, I do that a lot."
The TwinPeaks-Method simply inserts new Sectors, where the Speedchanges on Original-Disc occurs. F.E. you remember the BWA-Builder?
Ever noticed the "squares" that identify a original Securom-CD from normal CD? Twinpeaks inserts Sectors on the CD-R that contains the same data. Let me explain:
NORMAL CD:
--> Read Direction:
f.e. Sectornumber 3000,3001,3002,3003,3004 and so on
However this is just an example, it shows the "trick" that let SecuROM "think" it's an Original CD: The additional Sectors are placed as good as it gets to fool the protection (time-delay).
As you see above, there are Sectors that contain the same data and the same Sectorheader. This is in fact a violation of the standards, but many cd-roms (burners, dvd's) just throw the following sectors away if same sectornumber is detected twice or more often. But Plextor-Drives f.e. detect them and aren't amused about :mrgreen: (which is in fact fully ok, as this is after all a non standard-disc anymore) and therefore you can't install those discs as readerrors appears on Plextor-Drives. This can or cannot maybe "cured" by Firmwareupdate or fooling the Plextor-Drives (I'm currently working on that)
The whole "trick" with the TwinSectors is (what a irony :mrgreen: ) is first developed by a company named "Thompson" and the protection was knowned as "Tagкs"--- I managed to copy such discs by manually generate Sectors with new Sectorheader/data
hope you now understand why it should be difficult (if not impossible) to generate 1:1 copy of new SecuROM
So if I understand this correctly, the varying structure on the disc only changes the time it takes to read out a sector. And TwinPeaks throws in the additional sectors to 'fake' that delay?
Now that's interesting...
I always confused the name TwinPeaks with the sometimes so-called TwinSector, that Mode2-sector in the Mode1-stream and wondered how manipulating it could fool SecuROM v4.8x...
What happens if e.g. the whole disc had a structure that would make it necessary to throw in EVERY sector at least twice? Wouldn't that create disc content being about 1.2GB in size?
Hope I understood all this correctly...
Sergei
"I was inappropriately blunt, wasn't I? Sorry, I do that a lot."
I thought about this a bit more... does this mean Alcohol's DPM does not really read the structure of the disc but only the delays between the "delivery" of the sectors? That would explain why the DPM process is so extremely time critical (as it is said in the Alcohol forums)...
for every answered questions, two new questions arise...
Thanks for the information so far!
Sergei
"I was inappropriately blunt, wasn't I? Sorry, I do that a lot."
Yes, Sergei, you understand it right, and yes, that's why it's so time-critical (the dpm-function). But, on the other Hand, even SecuROM needs to distinguish original from copy this way (time-checks);
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because there is no "build-in" proof-function. And yes, the additional Twin-Sectors increases the amount of disc-space that is needed.
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