Oculus Rift’s new piracy protection somehow made piracy even worse

Last Friday, Oculus released a software update for the Rift that was meant to curb piracy, but it looks like it had exactly the opposite effect.

Back in April, a developer known as Libre VR released a program called Revive which allowed HTC Vive owners to play Oculus Rift exclusives on their headsets. Oculus' update killed off Revive, but in the process of developing an updated version of the software, Libre VR stumbled upon a workaround that might have made the entire situation much worse for Oculus.

DON'T MISS: This is the Netflix hack the world has been waiting for

As Libre VR explained to Motherboard, the original Revive converted Oculus Runtime functions into OpenVR calls, which gave owners of other HMDs (head-mounted displays) the ability to play Rift games.

With the new Revive, created in response to the DRM, the ownership check is bypassed altogether. In other words, the Oculus Rift no longer has any idea whether or not someone playing a game actually owns that game, which makes it far easier to play pirated software on the Rift than it was with the old Revive.

"This is my first success at bypassing the DRM, I really didn't want to go down that path," the developer explained in a Reddit post over the weekend. "I still do not support piracy, do not use this library for pirated copies."

Libre VR wants to work with Oculus on a legitimate way for owners of other HMDs to play Rift games, because if the company continues to push back without offering any solutions of its own, VR enthusiasts are going to keep fighting.

Related stories

IMAX will bring virtual reality to movie theaters this year

Think Google Daydream is cool? This VR amusement park puts you inside a video game

Google's VR play is all about content, not hardware

More from BGR: Watch the Britney Spears BMA performance that the internet is going crazy over

This article was originally published on BGR.com