DRM e-pub books watermark remover master

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+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
Institute for Biblio-Immunology -- First Communique:
Identifying and Removing Verso/BooXtream 'Social DRM' EPUB eBook Watermarks
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE.

IN THAT, WE DEMAND THE IMMEDIATE RELEASE OF OUR SHACKLED COMRADES, WATERMARKED
EBOOKS OF THE WORLD.

Welcome.

The Institute for Biblio-Immunology specialises in textual pathogen
identification and antigen synthesis. Several vials of in vivo samples
suffering from a "social DRM" watermarking infection were recently brought to
the attention of our cellar scientists. In this, our inaugural communique, we
will explore our dissection of said samples and offer an initial expatiation
regarding the contaminant undesirables discovered therein, as well as offer
preliminary guidance for a successful course of treatment.


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
BACKGROUND
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Prudence tells us that the only time books should be used as weapons of terror
is if they are thrown, gleefully aflame, through a publishing conglomerate's
window. Instead, we find that the publishing company Verso Books {0} is using
books to facilitate the surveillance of readers. By embedding uniquely-
identifiable personal information in individual copies of ebooks, Verso (and
the company they are relying on for the actual watermarking, BooXtream) are
turning vectors for cultural transmission into, effectively, tracking beacons
designed to identify who is sharing said ebooks, so as to then neutralise said
ostensibly undesirable (by Verso) knowledge transmission paths. This will not
stand.

{0} Verso Books "is the largest independent, radical publishing house in the
English-speaking world" . On that
same 'About Verso' page, Managing Director Jacob Stevens says that Verso Books
has "a strong list and radical commitment", though what this means is not
actually explained here. Not to worry. Stevens explains perfectly well what
Verso means by "radical" in an interview with the trade publication The
Bookseller; wherein, commenting on Verso's venture into the ebook retail space,
he states that "Verso has found a new, radical way of selling books"
.
Radical selling. Fuck yeah.

But why pick Verso to talk about in the first place? We can briefly summarise
the specific chain of events which brought us to this point, reductively, as
follows:

I --> Verso shits out an ebook release of The Boy Who Could Change the World:
The Writings of Aaron Swartz (in February 2016) {1}.

{1} .

II --> This Verso ebook release possesses WATERMARKS {2}.

{2} "Ebooks from the Verso website are watermarked and DRM-free, and will work
on any of your devices--but they can't be uploaded to websites or file-sharing
networks" .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paigey the Book Pirate says: Verso is straight-up LYING here. The ebooks CAN
be uploaded to websites or file-sharing networks. Very easily, in fact. Proof
of concept: go to a website or file-sharing network and upload it (but WAIT--
remove watermark first, of course!).
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

III --> Sean B. Palmer ("virtual executor" {3} of Aaron Swartz) says he will
ask the publishers to remove the watermarking (on 13 April 2016) {4}.

{3} "I designate Sean B. Palmer as my virtual executor"
.

{4} "I will ask the publishers on your behalf to remove the watermarking from
the Verso ebook version" .

IV--> Regardless, Verso says they will not remove the watermarks (on 22 April
2016) {5}.

{5} "We have just been informed by a highly reliable party who wishes to
remain anonymous that Verso Books has indicated (to this party, via The New
Press) that they will NOT remove the watermark from their e-book edition of
Aaron Swartz's posthumously-published collected writings because they believe
it will impede their ability to 'recoup' their distribution costs"
.

NOT OK.

V--> Verso FUCKS you with watermarks, so we will FUCKS Verso now (on 20 June
2016).

Blood for blood.

And by the gallon.


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
WATERMARK SCAVENGER HUNT
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

Now we will expose the functionality of Verso and BooXtream (Verso's watermark
provider) watermarks.

OK! :)

EPUB have many file inside. Many file give many opportunity for THE SNEAKY-
SNEAKY to add watermark.

BUT IT'S OKAY --> we can be THE SNEAKY-SNEAKY too.

Verso uses a watermarking schema provided by BooXtream {6}.

{6} "Verso ebooks are free of Digital Rights Management (DRM-free), but are
subject to the terms of this license. You own the file once you've downloaded
it, and you can use it on any of your devices in perpetuity. It has visible and
invisible watermarks, applied by Booxtream, which contain your name and email
address. You are prohibited from uploading Verso ebooks to any website or file-
sharing network, or in any other way making them available for distribution,
sharing, copying, downloading, or reselling"
.

There are, at least, seven different varieties of watermarks injected into a
given ebook EPUB payload by BooXtream to be found in Verso ebooks:

WM0-2 are overt (readily visible) watermarks and are optional (meaning they
may not necessarily be present):

[WM0] -- Ex Libris Image Watermark
[WM1] -- Disclaimer Page Watermark
[WM2] -- Footer Watermarks

WM3-6 are covert (not readily visible) watermarks and are always present:

[WM3] -- Filename Watermarks
[WM4] -- Timestamp Fingerprinting
[WM5] -- CSS Watermark
[WM6] -- Image Metadata Watermarks


Let's now go through each one to expose it and see how it works and, in turn,
how it may be prevented from working.

OK! :)


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
[WM0] -- Ex Libris Image Watermark
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The ex libris image watermark is optional {7}; however, Verso ebooks appear to
employ it.

{7} "With every order fulfilment, BooXtream(R) needs the customer name,
customer email address and an order-id (supplied by the shop). BooXtream(R)
encodes this as a series of redundant digital watermarks and also adds visible,
personalised information for the end user into the ePub file. All visible and
personalised information is optional and can be customised:

"- Page 2 contains an Ex Libris (image with customer name), that can be
customised per publisher and per customer" .

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paigey the Book Pirate says: Keeping in mind that the tiers of overt
watermarks (WM0-2) are all optional, even if a given ebook doesn't appear to
have them, it would of course still nonetheless be a sign of utmost prudence
for one to check for the presence of the covert watermark tiers (WM3-6). In
other words, just because an ebook may not have the initial set of overt
watermarks, this should not be taken to mean it does not necessarily have any
of the subsequent covert watermarks.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

The ex libris watermark is an image file, albeit one found not in ../Images/,
where one would expect, but rather in ../Text/exlibris*.png.

The ex libris watermark image here consists of the Verso 'V' logo, with the
buyer name and email superimposed over the logo as part of the customised
image.

Said ex libris watermark image is called from ../Text/Cover*.xhtml:

---


---

Said image is also referenced in ../content.opf:

---

---

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paigey the Book Pirate says: When changing filenames and/or moving/deleting
files, always be sure to change all corresponding references to them as well,
as otherwise not only will links not work, but the anonymity you so desperately
seek will be compromised! I hear Sigil is a good
tool for this which changes references automatically for you when you change
filenames!
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

We'll come back to that pesky wildcard placeholder (*) in the discussion of
WM3, but for now it would behove one to simply listen to Paigey.

If one had mind to eliminate WM0, one could then simply delete the contaminant
(exlibris*.png) and remove the aforementioned references to it from
Cover*.xhtml and content.opf.


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
[WM1] -- Disclaimer Page Watermark
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The disclaimer page watermark is optional {8}; however, Verso ebooks appear to
employ it.

{8} "With every order fulfilment, BooXtream(R) needs the customer name,
customer email address and an order-id (supplied by the shop). BooXtream(R)
encodes this as a series of redundant digital watermarks and also adds visible,
personalised information for the end user into the ePub file. All visible and
personalised information is optional and can be customised:

"[...]

"- The last page contains a disclaimer and logo, and has a corresponding entry
in the table of contents" .

The disclaimer page watermark is an XHTML file, albeit one found not in
../Text/, where one would expect, but rather in ../disclaimer*.xhtml.

The Verso disclaimer boilerplate is as follows:

---
Verso ebook license

This ebook was sold to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate0.

Verso ebooks are free of Digital Rights Management (DRM-free) but are subject
to the terms of this license. You own this file once you've downloaded it, and
you can use it on any of your devices. It has visible and invisible
watermarks, applied by Booxtream, which contain your name and email address.
You are prohibited from uploading Verso ebooks to any website or file-sharing
network, or in any other way making them available for distribution, sharing,
copying, downloading, or reselling. Royalties from every sale will be paid to
the author: if you're reading someone else's copy, then please buy your own
license from Verso Books.

This eBook is licensed to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

Wherein $BuyerName is the name of the buyer of the ebook; $BuyerEmail is the
email of the buyer of the ebook; $SaleDate0 is the date of purchase--or more
accurately, the specific date the purchased copy of the ebook was generated,
which will typically also be the date of purchase--in the format DD/MM/YYYY
(numerical values for Day/Month/Year); $SaleDate1 is likewise the date of
purchase, albeit in the format MM/DD/YYYY.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Paigey the Book Pirate says: Notice that $SaleDate0 is only utilised in the
header of disclaimer*.xhtml; whenever the sale date watermark appears
elsewhere, it always follows the format of $SaleDate1.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Said disclaimer page watermark is in turn called from ../toc.ncx:

---
This eBook is licensed
to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

And is further referenced twice in ../content.opf, as:

---

---

and again as:

---

---

If one had mind to eliminate WM1, one could then simply delete the contaminant
(disclaimer*.xhtml) and remove the aforementioned references to it from toc.nx
and content.opf.


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
[WM2] -- Footer Watermarks
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

The footer watermarks are optional {9}; however, Verso ebooks appear to employ
them.

{9} "With every order fulfilment, BooXtream(R) needs the customer name,
customer email address and an order-id (supplied by the shop). BooXtream(R)
encodes this as a series of redundant digital watermarks and also adds visible,
personalised information for the end user into the ePub file. All visible and
personalised information is optional and can be customised:

"[...]

"- Every chapter ends with a personalised footer text"
.

The textual footer page watermarks appear at the end of every XHTMLl file in
the EPUB (therefore chiefly in ../Text/##_*.xhtml).

The main Verso footer boilerplate is as follows:

---
This eBook is licensed to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

Note that the code formatting surrounding the footer watermark may vary
slightly, taking on the form of either something along the lines of:

---
This eBook is licensed to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on
$SaleDate1
---

or:

---
This eBook is licensed to
$BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

The takeaway here being the observation that the class attribute is not always
specified.

A footer watermark additionally appears within the aforementioned WM1, namely
in ../disclaimer*.xhtml, albeit matching one of the formatting variants of
../Text/##_*.xhtml:

---

This eBook is licensed to
$BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

Finally, a footer watermark further appears in ../toc.ncx, alongside the
aforementioned presence of WM1:

---
This eBook is licensed
to $BuyerName, $BuyerEmail on $SaleDate1
---

If one had mind to eliminate WM2, one could then simply delete the contaminant
(the footer text) from all infected *.xhtml files, as well as from ../toc.ncx.


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
[WM3] -- Filename Watermarks
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

While BooXtream is quite forthcoming indeed about the afore-discussed overt
tiers of optional watermarks, they are mysteriously vague about their covert
tiers, merely coyly stating that:

"The ePub ebook files contains [sic] visible personalisation and multiple
invisible watermarks in all data files, without sacrificing compatibility.
BooXtream(R) uses multiple realtime protection algorithms that encodes not only
information about the publisher, but also about the customer and the web shop"
{10}.

{10} .

Not to worry. Let's slice open this toy's belly and 'spill the beans'.

The first 'invisible' tier of watermarking is internal filename manipulation.

Recall that in the brief discussion of filenames in the prior overview of WM0,
a wildcard placeholder (*) was used to denote parts of the filenames, with the
promise that this pesky wildcard would be returned to. That time has come.
Let us now tame the wildcard.

All internal filenames of the files within the contaminated EPUB (save for
mimetype, container.xml, content.opf, and toc.ncx) are appended with a
watermark suffix which follows the actual filename (but precedes the file
extension), using the following format:

---
$FileName$BuyerNameCombined$BuyerEmailCombined.$FileExtension
---

Wherein $FileName is the original unmodified name of the file,
$BuyerNameCombined is the name of the buyer of the ebook with all spaces
removed, $BuyerEmailCombined is the email of the buyer of the ebook with
special characters such as '@' or '.' removed, and $FileExtension is the
extension of the file.

For example, if the buyer's name is Huub van de Pol and the buyer's email is
huub@van-de-pol.nl, then Cover.xhtml becomes
CoverHuubvandePolhuubvandepolnl.xhtml.

If one had mind to eliminate WM3, one could then simply truncate the
contaminants (the filename watermarks) from all infected files, as well as the
various references to them. One would do well to here remember Paigey's advice
from the prior discussion of WM0 to use Sigil to streamline the renaming of
both the filenames and the various corresponding references. For instance, if
renaming a font file, Sigil would assist one in automatically renaming the
corresponding references to said font in the accompanying CSS file (which, in
turn, would also need to be renamed, as would references to that CSS file in
the rest of the EPUB).


+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+
[WM4] -- Timestamp Fingerprinting
+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+-+

A prudent watermark analyst may have observed that while $BuyerNameCombined
and $BuyerEmailCombined are present in WM3, an accompanying $SaleDate1Combined
variable is missing, despite $SalesDate1's presence in WM1-2, wherein it
accompanied $BuyerName and $BuyerEmail.

This is of course owing to the fact that, seeing as how

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DRM e-pub books watermark remover master