Adobe Goes After 27-Year Old ‘Pirated’ Copy of Acrobat Reader 1.0 for MS-DOS

Adobe regularly sends takedown notices targeting pirated copies of its flagship software products but the company doesn’t limit itself to newer releases. F-Secure researcher Mikko Hyppönen has had one of his tweets taken down because it linked to an ‘unauthorized’ copy of a 27-year-old release of Acrobat Reader 1.0 for MS-DOS.

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

acrobat readerThe digital revolution was dramatically changing the world in the mid-nineties.

The World Wide Web started to gain traction, while hardware and software companies continued to innovate at a rapid pace.

This included Adobe, which released a new file format in 1993. This Portable Document Format, or PDF for short, was widely adopted in the years that followed and is now used by billions of people.

Today, there are many popular PDF readers available but Adobe’s original ‘Acrobat Reader’ is still the go-to software for many. Needless to say, Adobe doesn’t want third-parties to pirate its software, so the company regularly sends out DMCA notices to remove infringing copies.

Adobe Sends DMCA Notice Over ‘Ancient’ PDF Reader

While this is totally understandable when it comes to newer releases, F-Secure researcher Mikko Hyppönen found out that Adobe’s takedown efforts go far beyond that.

In a recent tweet, Hyppönen mentioned that the software company removed one of his tweets that linked to an old copy of Acrobat Reader for MS-DOS. This software, hosted on WinWorld, came out more than 27-years ago, shortly after the PDF was invented.

mikko acrobat

The security researcher posted the tweet five years ago and at the time there were no issues. The message was copied a few weeks ago by his own Twitter bot, which reposts all his original tweets five years later.

“They sent a DMCA notice to my bot (@mikko__2016) when it posted that tweet on the tweet’s 5th anniversary. The original tweet is fine,” Hyppönen notes.

While the original tweet is still up, the reposted message was swiftly removed by Twitter. Not just that, the bot’s account was locked as well, which is standard practice nowadays.

locked

Looking more closely at the takedown notice, we see that it was sent by the “brand protection analyst” at Incopro, which is one of Adobe’s anti-piracy partners. It doesn’t provide any further details on the reasons for taking it down, other than an alleged copyright infringement.

Original Tweet Targeted as Well

Things get even more curious when we look at the full DMCA notice, posted by the Lumen database. This shows that the tweet was listed among other links, which all point to ‘infringing’ copies of more recent software.

Intriguingly, the notice also reveals that Hyppönen’s original tweet was targeted as well, albeit indirectly. The takedown notice lists t.co/tbAT0CH25o, which still points to the 2016 tweet today, so Twitter decided not to take action there.

Automated Filters?

We wonder if the DMCA notice is intentional at all. Over the years we have seen many bizarre takedown claims, which are often the result of automated filters. That may be a plausible explanation here as well. In that case, it shows that DMCA takedown process is far from perfect.

However, if Adobe seriously has a problem with the fact that a 27-year-old copy of Acrobat Reader is being shared on an external site, it’s more effective to target the site where it’s hosted. Not the person who links to it in a tweet.

Hyppönen is not very impressed by Adobe’s takedown efforts. He stresses that the software is ancient and he will keep the original tweet online, even if that means that he has to fight Adobe.

“This [software] is antique. It belongs in a museum, not in a DMCA claim,” Hyppönen tells TorrentFreak. “The original tweets stays up. It’s just a link to a site hosted by someone else. If needed, I’ll fight Adobe.”

acrobat1

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

The Ars Technica System Guide, spring 2021: Gaming edition

Supply shortages made building a gaming PC near-impossible—but you can buy one.

hero shot

Enlarge / Our two hands-on gaming rigs are the Lenovo Legion 5i (left, currently connected to the monitor) and HP Omen 30L (right). (credit: Jim Salter)

If you're planning to build a new gaming rig in 2021, we have bad news for you—that's going to be difficult to impossible, due to supply chain constraints imposed by COVID-19. But we also have good news: while you might not be able to build a gaming PC, you can almost certainly buy one.

Don't get us wrong. If you have enough time and patience, you can still amass all the parts to build your own custom rig from the ground up. But that could take weeks or even months at this point in 2021. So instead of selecting parts lists, our next System Guide will focus on recent rigs from three of the major pre-built gaming PC vendors.

HP and Lenovo provided us with an Omen 30L and Legion 5i Tower, respectively. We also wanted to review an Alienware Aurora R11—and although we weren't able to get a review unit from Dell, Senior Commerce Editor Jeff Dunn graciously took a few pics and ran some limited testing on his personal R11.

Read 63 remaining paragraphs | Comments

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