Adobe modifies hosts file to detect whether Creative Cloud is installed

osnews.com

107 points by rglullis 2 hours ago


matsemann - an hour ago

Oh well, as a teenager, blocking adobe servers in hosts file was how you got to "phone activation" and could generate a code. So I guess we're even, heh.

lousken - 2 hours ago

How is defender not flagging this? Changing hosts file should raise alarms

psyclobe - 6 minutes ago

The most difficult of tasks is trying to un-unstall this pos app on windows.

1bpp - 13 minutes ago

I owe thousands of dollars to amtlib.dll.

Dwedit - 29 minutes ago

Browsers could still do something about mixed Internet and LAN/Localhost requests by IP address regardless of the domain name.

Terr_ - an hour ago

Recycling a comment from prior discussion (4 days, 68 points, 13 comments): https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47617463

_______

Oh helllll no. Let's imagine an analogy for Adobe leadership:

1. You hired a night janitor to clean and vacuum your executive offices.

2. That janitor secretly stops at every desk-phone to alter the settings of voicemail accounts.

3. After the change, any external caller can dial a certain sequence to get a message of "Yes, this office was serviced by Adobe Janitorial!"

What's your reaction when you discover it? Do you chuckle and say something like "boys will be boys"? No! You have a panic-call, Facilities revokes access, IT starts checking for other unauthorized surprises, HR looks into terminating contracts, and Legal advises whether you need to pursue data-breach notifications or lawsuits or criminal charges.

* Is it acceptable because they had some permission to touch objects in the rooms? No.

* Is it acceptable because the final effect is innocuous? No.

* Is it acceptable because the employment contract had some vague sentence about "enhancing office communication experiences"? No.

* Is it acceptable if they were just dumb instead of malicious? No.

No person that would blithely cross those lines can be trusted near your stuff, full-stop.

nashashmi - 37 minutes ago

So can I fool the website that I have CC installed?

vondur - 2 hours ago

If you don't like Adobe modifying your hosts file then I'd not use them. The checking for the software this way is kinda interesting though.

OptionOfT - an hour ago

Can't even reproduce it when setting location to Belgium, or CA or AZ.

I must be missing something.

ramon156 - an hour ago

To be fair, to crack all adobe products requires a few reg keys. It's wild that they have just given up on pirates.

hypeatei - an hour ago

Looks like they got a wildcard certificate for *.creativecloud.adobe.com[0] so that the HTTPS connection works and so they don't have to publish DNS records for the "detect-ccd" subdomain to obtain a cert. Pretty neat setup, but also kinda hacky.

0: https://crt.sh/?q=creativecloud.adobe.com

j45 - an hour ago

Make affinity sound like a smarter and smarter choice.

ChrisArchitect - 2 hours ago

[dupe] https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47617463

https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=47624990

jameskraus - an hour ago

Honestly a pretty nifty way to detect if it's installed. I'm sure this can power a lot of nice features, like linking directly into adobe products if they're installed.

cromka - 2 hours ago

> for a very stupid reason.

I cannot stomach Thom's articles. So borderline judgmental, holier than thou, feels like he only writes whenever there's something to criticize.

No, it's not a stupid reason. Reason is OK, the execution is controversial.