SecuROM: Difference between revisions

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[[SecuROM]] was a copy protection/digital rights management (DRM) product used in PC games from the late 1990s and throughout the 2000s. It quickly became controversial due to its malware-like approach, installing itself with administrator/root permissions on the user's PC and being almost impossible to remove. Many high profile games that included it were heavily criticized including Bioshock, Mass Effect, and Spore; the latter culminating in a class action lawsuit against its publishers Electronic Arts. It gradually fell out of usage in the early-mid 2010s.
[[SecuROM]] was a copy protection/digital rights management (DRM) product used in PC games from the late 1990s and throughout the 2000s. It quickly became controversial due to its malware-like approach, installing itself with administrator/root permissions on the user's PC and being almost impossible to remove. Many high profile games that included it were heavily criticized including Bioshock, Mass Effect, and Spore; the latter famously culminating in a class action lawsuit against its publisher {{Wikipedia|Electronic Arts}}. It gradually fell out of usage in the early-mid 2010s in favor of newer non-physical technologies such as Steam.


As of Windows 10, the majority of SecuROM games do not run without patches.
Due to higher security in Windows 10, the majority of SecuROM games no longer run, requiring patches to the game to run without SecuROM.


== In ''LEGO Island'' ==
== In ''LEGO Island'' ==
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=== Circumvention ===
=== Circumvention ===
SecuROM is baked into the copy's version of [[Local Files|ISLE.EXE]], and replacing it wholesale with any other unprotected version of ISLE.EXE will defeat the protection.
For versions that implement it, SecuROM is baked into [[Local Files|ISLE.EXE]]. Replacing it wholesale with any other unprotected version of ISLE.EXE will defeat the protection entirely.


== External Links ==
== External Links ==
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SecuROM SecuROM on Wikipedia]
* [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SecuROM SecuROM on Wikipedia]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8ltfyqD3lM Modern Vintage Gamer's YouTube video on SecuROM]
* [https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=u8ltfyqD3lM Modern Vintage Gamer's YouTube video on SecuROM]

Latest revision as of 08:32, 16 May 2020

SecuROM was a copy protection/digital rights management (DRM) product used in PC games from the late 1990s and throughout the 2000s. It quickly became controversial due to its malware-like approach, installing itself with administrator/root permissions on the user's PC and being almost impossible to remove. Many high profile games that included it were heavily criticized including Bioshock, Mass Effect, and Spore; the latter famously culminating in a class action lawsuit against its publisher Electronic Arts. It gradually fell out of usage in the early-mid 2010s in favor of newer non-physical technologies such as Steam.

Due to higher security in Windows 10, the majority of SecuROM games no longer run, requiring patches to the game to run without SecuROM.

In LEGO Island

While the vast majority of LEGO Island copies feature no copy protection or DRM whatsoever, SecuROM was unexpectedly discovered on an Italian copy of the game. It's currently unknown if all Italian copies implement SecuROM or only some. It's also unknown whether any other versions implement it.

Circumvention

For versions that implement it, SecuROM is baked into ISLE.EXE. Replacing it wholesale with any other unprotected version of ISLE.EXE will defeat the protection entirely.

External Links