Winny
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Winny | |
Screenshot of Winny |
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Developer: | Isamu Kaneko (金子勇) |
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Latest release: | v2.0β7.1 / November 11, 2003 |
OS: | Windows |
Use: | peer to peer |
License: | Closed source |
Website: | www.geocities.co.jp/SiliconValley/2949/ |
Winny (also known as WinNY) is a Japanese peer-to-peer (P2P) file-sharing program that claims to be loosely inspired by the design principles behind the Freenet network and that also claimed to keep user identities untraceable. While Freenet was implemented in Java, Winny was implemented as a Windows C++ application.
The software takes its name from WinMX, where the M and the X are raised one letter in the Latin alphabet, to N and Y. As of September 2003, there were 250,000 users of the program according to the Tokyo-based Association of Copyright for Computer Software. According to P2Pnet, it was the most popular file-sharing program in Japan, with WinMX in second place.
The software was developed by Isamu Kaneko, who is a research assistant in graduate course of computer engineering at the University of Tokyo in Japan. He was also once a researcher at the Japan Atomic Energy Research Institute. Kaneko originally anonymously announced his intent of developing the software on the Download Software board (which was a board filled with copyright infringers) of the popular 2channel (2ch for short) Japanese bulletin board site. Since 2ch users often refer to anonymous users by their post numbers, Kaneko came to be known as "Mr. 47" ("47-Shi", or 47氏 in Japanese), or just "47".
On November 28, 2003, two Japanese users of Winny, Yoshihiro Inoue1, a 41 year-old self-employed businessman from Takasaki, Gunma Prefecture and an unemployed 19-year-old from Matsuyama, were arrested by the Kyoto Prefectural Police. They were accused of sharing copyrighted material via Winny and admitted to their crimes. Shortly following the two users' arrests, Kaneko also had his home searched and had the source code of Winny confiscated by the Kyoto Police.
On May 10, 2004, Kaneko was arrested for suspected conspiracy to commit copyright violation by the High-tech Crime Taskforce of the Kyoto Prefectural Police.
Kaneko's arrest caused an uproar in communities on the Internet, including 2ch, citing it as an unjust arrest. A website set up to raise money for the defense of Kaneko raised over 11 million yen (about 97,000 US$ on May 23, 2004) within two weeks.
Kaneko was released on bail on June 1, 2004. The court hearings started in September 2004 at Kyoto district court.
On December 13, 2006, Kaneko was convicted of assisting copyright violations and sentenced to pay a fine of 1.5 million yen. He is expected to appeal the ruling. [1]
After Winny's development was stopped, Share was started by an anonymous Japanese engineer to pick up where Winny left off.
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[edit] Winny's Anonymity
At the time of the two users' arrests, the Kyoto Police claimed to have "analyzed Winny's anonymity features" to track the users down, but did not disclose the exact method used. It later turns out, as the details of the method used was disclosed at Kaneko's first day of trial, that this statement was not entirely accurate — It was areas where Winny did not provide anonymity that the Police used to track users down.
After failing to crack Winny's encrypted communications used in its file sharing feature, the Kyoto Police switched to a different method, namely tracking users via Winny's integrated forum feature. Unlike its file sharing feature, the forum feature of Winny provided anonymity for users who accessed message threads, but not for creators of threads. Users accessing threads were able to determine the IP address of the originator of the thread.
The Kyoto Police first looked for a thread where its originator was posting the file names of copyrighted material he was sharing, and recorded his IP address. They then configured their firewall to only allow connections to them from the thread owner's IP address. Finally, they confirmed that they could indeed download the copyrighted file from the user who stated (on his thread) that he was sharing it.
[edit] Debate of Winny's Purpose
Critics of Kaneko have stated that the main purpose of Winny is to violate copyright law, unlike Freenet, another peer-to-peer system that Winny is often compared to, which claims to protect freedom of speech. These critics also claim that 2ch's Download Software board, where the software was first announced, is a haven for copyright violators, and that Kaneko himself had said that the aim of development of Winny is to push the tide towards a world filled with copyright infringement, quoting several posts from 2ch.
In one of the posts in 2ch Download Software board, "47" had pointed out that '... beta 8.1 [of Winny] has a security hole and is not anonymous. Don't exchange illegal files [with it].' [2]. Critics claim that this is one evidence of Kaneko's malicious intent, as that "47" was advising users not to share copyrighted material on beta 8.1 because it was not anonymous and infringing users could be traced.
Others have said that Kaneko's action shouldn't constitute a crime, since he didn't infringe copyright himself, but that he just created software that could be used for that purpose. They also state that the claims of Kaneko's intent by his critics are unprovable (some go as to it being outright false), as Kaneko's noted statements are too vague to be interpreted as having the intent claimed by critics. According to the Free Kaneko website, he warned not to share illegal material using the software.
[edit] Antinny
Since August 2003, several worms called "Antinny" have been spreading on the winny network.
Some versions of Antinny work as follows;
- Upload files in the computer onto the winny network.
- Upload screenshots onto an imageboard.
- Denial-of-service attack to a copyright protecting agency web site.
Some people have uploaded their information unwittingly from their computers because of Antinny. That information includes governmental documents, information about customers, and people's private files. Once the information is uploaded, it is hard to delete.
Recently, highly publicised cases of sensitive file uploading have come to light in Japan's media. In particular, a military agency was forced to admit that classified information from the Maritime Self Defence Force was uploaded by a computer with winny software installed on it.
Following this, ANA (All Nippon Airlines) were also the victims of an embarrassing data leak, with passwords for security-access areas in 29 airports across Japan being leaked over the program. This follows a similar incident from JAL Airlines on 17th December 2005, after a virus originating from Winny affected the computer of a co-pilot.
Arguably the biggest winny-related leak however, is that of the Okayama Prefectural Police Force, whose computer leaked data on around 1,500 investigations. This information included sensitive data; such as the names of sex crime victims, and is the largest amount of information held by Japanese police to have ever leaked online.
[edit] See also
[edit] References
- ^ Ōta, Hiroyuki (2006-12-14). Winny software developer found guilty, fined 1.5 million yen. Mainichi Daily News. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
- ^ (Japanese) 47-shi (2002-05-12). 47-shi hatugen shū (te nuki ban) (#389). winny.info. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.
[edit] Further reading
- Kaneko Isamu (2005). The Technology of Winny(Winnyの技術 in Japanese). ASCII, 201. ISBN 4-7561-4548-5. (Japanese)
[edit] External links
- (Japanese) Winny official site
- The Free Kaneko website
- (Japanese) The Winny unofficial information page
- Japanese police make first file-sharing arrests from Mainichi Interactive.
- Japan police arrest two P2P users, from CNET Asia.
- (Japanese) Kyoto Pref. Police to Winny: 'We figured it all out' from Internet Watch
- Top software developer arrested for 'Winny' file sharing from the Australian Broadcasting Corporation
- Prof held 'for developing P2P software' from the Sydney Morning Herald
- (German) Japanese police arrests developers of file sharing software from Heise.de
- (Japanese) A post on 2ch that critics claim that Kaneko states the aim of development that Kaneko spoke is his will of pushing the tide toward the world filled with copyright law violation
- (Japanese) Hiroyuki Nishimura's e-mail newsletter statement on the nonexistence of 2ch's access logs at the time
- (Japanese) Kaneko's other software page
- (Japanese) The method used by the Kyoto Prefectural Police to track infringers down from asahi.com
- Japanese power plant secrets leaked by virus, The Register, 17th May 2006
- (Japanese) Ōta, Hiroyuki (2006-12-14). Winny saiban: Moto Tōdai joshu no Kaneko hikoku ni yūzai hanketsu - Kyōto chisai. Mainichi Daily News. Retrieved on 2006-12-14.