18 November 2005

12 Songs

For many Diamond fans, ever since the Jazz Singer, the man has put out one tepid album after another. Hey, I’m all for expanding the career and going in different directions, but with the album that went with the movie -and which I think sold more than theater tickets, Diamond went into overdrive with over produced songs with pedantic lyrics and looking like a real bad Las Vegas lounge singer. I mean, he’s not as bad as the creepy Celine Dion, but his fans base became the stereotypical blue-haired lady set that needed umpteen encores of Forever in Blue Jeans.
I started listening to Diamond when the classic double vinyl album Hot August Night came out. Man, that is just one brilliant concert record.
Over the years, I would enjoy the follow ups -like under-rated Beautiful Noise - but some where in the late 1980's, early 90's, Diamond took an odd turn. It began, I think, with Headed For the Future -but I could be wrong. It was then that Kraft should’ve really started to sponsor his live shows, as the he began to really put on the cheese.
Even after he claimed he got his muse back with Three Cord Opera, I still felt that Diamond was more concerned with sequine shirts and entertaining middle aged women who thought he was more romantic than their husbands.
However, with a few exemptions, 12 Songs is a terrific throwback to his early career. Producer Rick Rubin shaves back the glam that overtook Neil in the last decade or so, and in doing so, makes Diamond shine.

Now, here’s something I got from Amazon.com reviewer named monoblocks from Seattle, Washington. It was something I was not aware of, and may have opened my computer to attack.
The good news was he like the CD, but "...The bad news is of course the vile rootkit technology that Sony decided to use in their digital rights management strategy that others here have previously alerted website visitors to, which if you're a Windows PC computer user means VERY bad things in the long term (and not-so-long term, given recent announcements in the past day or so). Rootkits are simply put, bad news. This one that Sony chose to use embeds itself into Windows so deeply that even Windows is powerless to track its operation. You don't and won't know that it's operating, period. That in and of itself is bad enough, because it allows Sony to track and monitor whatever it wants. By allowing this to install on your Windows PC (and to play '12 Songs' on your PC, you HAVE TO allow it to install), you've given Sony that priveledge by clicking 'yes' on the end-user licensing agreement that you DIDN'T read and just automatically glossed over. Virus and malware writers are now grinning ear to ear because Sony, in their own zealous anti-piracy foolishness has released to the world cloaking technology that when hacked will allow the evil doers of the internet to get their trojans, worms and viruses to reside on your Windows computer, to open your machine to WHATEVER THEY want your computer to do, without the user ever being the wiser. Sony's little spyware foray just got REALLY bad. Online banking? The invisible trojan will simply log all your keystrokes and phone home with the data...and you and your firewall, anti-virus and spyware software will NEVER have known. Turn your machine into a spamming zombie? Again, thanks to Sony's clandestine rootkit, you will never know, at least until your internet provider turns off your service because your computer has become one of the worst porn and conterfeit Viagra junk mailers on the Web. Thanks to Sony and their partner, First 4 Internet (the creators of this rootkit), if you use 12 Songs on your computer, you've just opened the door to the worst that the internet has to offer. And as of November 10, 2005, that door has been swung WIDE open. Symantec, the makers of Norton Anti-Virus, as well as other AV companies, have reported the first 'bot' trojans and viruses are now live and living on the internet, taking full advantage of this rootkit's stealth technology. But with this first batch of malware, ONLY those people who have played SonyBMG CDs like 12 Songs or Carlos Santana's latest are vulnerable. I feel your pain, or more accurately, your pain to come. To date, there are few precious measures that will allow you to simply remove this hole from your computer (though it sounds like Computer Associates may now have a tool available soon); Sony's OWN procedure to remove this involves emailing their customer service division to get specific instructions; how EASY those instructions are I don't know...I'm so far rootkit-free (and plan on staying this way). If you're intent on buying the 12 Songs CD (and musically, it's DEFINITELY worth it), please save yourself some agony and use this disc ONLY in stand-alone CD players, or on Apple Mac and Linux-based PCs (rootkits have not been released for those formats...at least yet). Or buy a download version, like from iTunes Music Store. If you're as upset with Sony as I am, you might consider not buying this collection at all, as a form of boycott protest over Sony's own foolishness and hand in giving virus writers an open avenue to your computer; but that's up to your own conscience and whether you mind that by buying this and similar infested CDs Sony will profit from your future infection misery. Musically, this is INDEED one great album, something that DESERVES to be listened to and enjoyed for years to come. It's a crying shame that Sony chose to forever tarnish its luster by releasing this disc with such foolhardy security holes. I still rate this music a 5, but the disc and its malware a BIG FAT ZERO. Well, at least when the Bank of America, GM, Citigroup, your power company, etc., get crippled with viruses and trojans courtesy of this cloaking rootkit, you will know and understand WHY Sony will have gone out of business under the mountain of lawsuits it was buried under as a result.

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