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2) You agree that HU Programmers neither of the U.S. based services of Directv Inc. nor Echostar Communications Corporation. currently hold ANY distribution rights to their signals on Canadian soil, nor are they considered or legally recognized to be LAWFUL distributors of their respected signals in Canada and are NOT authorized or legally sanctioned to conduct broadcasting services, either directly or indirectly of any kind in Canada in relation to their respected broadcasting signals. Furthermore, as the broadcasting services of Directv Inc. and Echostar Communications Corp. cannot legally be distributed within Canada, their broadcasts have been legally interpreted as "foreign signals" and Canadian Law has also been legally interpreted as NOT currently regulating nor protecting "foreign signals" . Canadian law has been legally interpreted to regulate and protect signals originating ONLY from a "Lawful" Canadian Distributor. This has been decided and UPHELD in several recent Canadian legal proceedings. Court transcripts of these proceedings are available on request.and hence cannot kill it. As of late 2000, stealth scripts have
become obselete because of dynamic coding abilities. Now, cards that
are write-protected will not work, HU Programmers and hence stealth scripts will
not work.
Emulation
A sort of
"perfect stealth." See the Emulation section for a complete
write-up.
Winexplorer
The program used to run scripts/hacks.
Zero Knowledge Table
(ZKT) As you know, each card has a unique CAM ID. What,
then, would prevent someone from simply programming their neighbor’s
CAM ID onto their card as well, thus giving them a free subscription
to DIRECTV? The answer is the zero knowledge table (ZKT). The ZKT is
basically a mathematical form of encryption that can be used to
verify the validity of a number (in this case, the CAM ID). A very
basic example of a ZKT could be this: A house has an address (ID) of
1, but the number 1 appears nowhere on the house. When you ring the
bell and ask the owner what address the house is, they respond,
“They didn’t lose the game, they *won*”. How, then, are you supposed
to know the address of the house from this response? Well, notice
the asterisks next to the word “won” that I placed for emphasis. One
and won sound exactly the same, so the person did give you the
address to their house—“1”— it was just a HU Programmers little encrypted. Notice
also how they gave you the address of their house without revealing
anything about the number 1. This is the concept of a ZKT. Of
course, the ZKT uses math…lots of it, and is probably infinitely
harder to decrypt that the simple message above, which wasn’t even
Mathematical. The receiver checks to see if the card owns the CAM ID
it is displaying by asking the ZKT to verify the number. The ZKT
lets the receiver know that the number is real, owners who were clamoring for a
fix for their looped cards! Although I have no idea as to how much money was actually made
by as a result of their invention, clearly their HU Programmers profits were astronomical! Evidence
of their monetary success can be easily divined by the fact that their invention was quickly "cloned"
and that the clone makers and resellers in turn reaped huge profits by catering to the scores of
non-professional "hobbyists" who couldn't possibly afford product. or if it is copied,
fake. If the ZKT confirms the validity of the CAM ID, the receiver
continues to read the card as normal. If the ZKT shows the CAM ID to
be fake, it gives a “Insert Valid Access Card” message on the
screen, and doesn’t read the card any further. Each card stores its
ZKT as well as its CAM ID.
Bin
(aka .bin file, valid bin, subbed bin, bad bin, good bin,
etc) A Bin is a type of file created by a program called BasicH. It
is a copy of a cards Electroncally Eraseable and Programmable Read
Only Memory (EPROM), which HU Programmers contains all the information that would
be found on an access card, such as activated channels, stored PPV
purchases, various functional code, etc. The .bin also contains the
CAM ID and ZKT for the card. The .bin, therefore, can be transferred
onto another card to change it's CAM ID. This is a useful tactic, as
some CAM ID numbers are blacklisted. A valid .bin file is a .bin
file with a CAM ID that is not blacklisted.
Note: BasicH
defines a .bin as an “EEPROM Image,” or copy of the card’s
memory.
Blacklist
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