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( July 2009) () () A software protection dongle (commonly known as a dongle or key) is an electronic and content protection device which, when attached to a computer or other electronic unlocks software functionality or decodes. The hardware key is programmed with a or other cryptographic protection mechanism; it attaches via electrical connector to an of the computer or appliance. When used as a software protection device, dongles mostly appear as two-interface security tokens with transient data flow that does not interfere with other dongle functions and a pull communication that reads security data from the dongle. Without the dongle, the software may run only in a restricted mode, or not at all. When used as a device attached to a computer or TV or gaming console, dongles can enable functions that would not be present without it.

Mojo master winamp plugin. For example, a dongle attached to a TV may receive an encoded video stream, decode it in the dongle, and then present this audio and video information to the TV. A Rainbow Tech parallel port dongle PCB, back side In late 1970s/early 1980s, Wordcraft became the earliest to use a software protection dongle. The dongle was passive using a 74LS165 8-bit shift register connected to one of the two ports on the microcomputer. The tape cassette port supplied both power and bi-directional data I/O. The requirements for security were identified by the author of the Wordcraft word processor, Pete Dowson, and his colleague Mike Lake. Through the network of PET users in the UK they made contact with Graham Heggie in Coventry and Graham's knowledge of electronics meant that they quickly arrived at the idea of a 74LS165 shift register connected to the tape cassette port which provided 5V power and lines to shift the bits into the software. The shift register contained only 8 bits but with lines tied to ground or 5V at random it could provide a random number between 0 and 255 which was sufficient security for the software.

The prototype was on which dangled from the tape port edge connector on wires - so 'dangle' became 'dongle'. Pete Dowson wrote special self-modifying 6502 machine code to drive the port directly and to obfuscate the code when not in use. The first device used a commercial potting box with black or blue epoxy resin. Wordcraft's distributor at the time, Dataview Ltd., then based in, UK, went on to produce dongles for other software developers. When Wordcraft International was formed in, UK, responsibility for manufacture was transferred to Brian Edmundson who also produced the plastic moulding for the enclosure.

One of the greatest regrets of Graham, Pete and Mike was that they did not patent the idea when they came up with it. Versions of the Wordcraft dongle were later produced for IBM 25 pin parallel ports, 25 pin serial ports and 9 pin serial ports. Among the computers supported, before the arrival of the IBM PC, were 's Victor 9000, the ACT and the DEC. An early example of the term was in 1984, when early production were shipped with part of the QL firmware held on an external 16 KB ROM cartridge (infamously known as the ' or 'dongle'), until the QL was redesigned to increase the internal ROM capacity from 32 to 48 KB.

Dongles rapidly evolved into active devices that contained a serial transceiver () and even a to handle transactions with the host. Later versions adopted the interface in preference to the or parallel interface. The USB interface is gradually becoming dominant. A 1992 advertisement for claimed the word dongle was derived from the name 'Don Gall'.

Though untrue, this has given rise to an. Parallel port copy protection dongles. Efforts to introduce dongle copy-protection in the mainstream software market have met stiff resistance from users. Such copy-protection is more typically used with very expensive packages and software such as / software, hospitality and special retail software, applications, and some packages. In cases such as prepress and printing software, the dongle is encoded with a specific, per-user license key, which enables particular features in the target application. This is a form of tightly controlled licensing, which allows the vendor to engage in vendor lock-in and charge more than it would otherwise for the product. An example is the way licenses to customers: When a computer-to-plate output device is sold to a customer, Prinergy's own license cost is provided separately to the customer, and the base price contains little more than the required licenses to output work to the device.