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Software cracking

Software cracking is software hacking in order to remove encoded copyright protection. Distribution of cracked software (warez) is generally an illegal (or more recently, criminal) act of copyright infringement.

Software cracking is most often done by software reverse engineering.

The passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act made software cracking, as well as the distribution of information which enables software cracking, illegal in the United States.

A good example would be a "No CD" crack, which edits the program so that the CD is no longer needed to execute the program. Another example occurs when businesses break the copy protection of programs that they have legally purchased but that are keyed to particular hardware, so that there is no chance of downtime due to hardware failure.

Some groups devoted to developing tools for software cracks and the distribution of warez include the Phrozen Crew, UCF[?], Xpression[?], and DrinkOrDie.

History of Cracking

Cracking has been around as long as there has been software to crack, but software cracking started to evolve into a whole underground scene in the early 80s, on the Commodore 64 and Amiga.

People responsible for cracking started to group themselves up into teams, known as "cracking crews" (commonly referred to simply as "groups"). Cracking crews would be made up of suppliers (the people who would get hold of new software, often before its commercial release. These would often be beta testers[?] working at software companies), Coders[?] (programmers who would defeat any copy protection), Traders[?] (people who would then distribute the cracks around the world as fast as possible, either by mail or by uploading the software to as many bulletin boards as possible) and Sysops (people who would run bulletin boards to help distribute the software).

Programmers started adding "Crack intros" to the spare tracks on the disks of the cracked software to show which cracking crew was responsible. Crews would compete with each other to get new software distributed faster than their rivals, and to be the ones that provided the most reliable cracks.

As these crack intros became more complex, people began to appreciate them in their own right, and groups produced intros without having an associated crack. This was the beginning of the demo scene.



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