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Copy-Protected CD to Be Released
The Los Angeles Times ^
| December 17, 2001
| By JON HEALEY, TIMES STAFF WRITER
Posted on 12/17/2001 12:50:06 PM PST by StoneColdGOP
Edited on 09/03/2002 4:49:48 AM PDT by Jim Robinson.
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By the way, I don't anticipate Universal selling many of "More Fast and Furious", probably they planned it that way to check out the response to the new cd technology.
To: veronica
anti-piracy software from an Israeli company, Midbar Tech LtdThis proves it! The Mossad knew all about 9/11 ahead of time!
2
posted on
12/17/2001 12:53:59 PM PST
by
wideawake
To: StoneColdGOP
You plug yer CD output into yer soundcard input, and rip them MP3's. They really shouldn't try to out-geek the geeks.
3
posted on
12/17/2001 12:54:12 PM PST
by
Ratatoskr
To: wideawake
Somebody call Carl Cameron - QUICK!!
4
posted on
12/17/2001 12:56:01 PM PST
by
veronica
Comment #5 Removed by Moderator
To: StoneColdGOP
Whoohoo! I will try to go and download it right now.. har har
6
posted on
12/17/2001 12:58:11 PM PST
by
Smogger
To: Ratatoskr
Get a burner that reads in "Raw" mode. Get Clone -Cd. No problem. Now I do not advocate ripping off people. BUT I want to be able to make a copy for my own use so that I can protect the original CD, and not have to pay over and over for the same item.
7
posted on
12/17/2001 12:58:39 PM PST
by
Kozak
To: StoneColdGOP
I make lots of compilations from my legally purchased collection of 1,600 or so CDs. I don't sell them.
I will never buy a copy-protected CD.
8
posted on
12/17/2001 1:14:50 PM PST
by
dead
To: Kozak
There's also a freeware prog out there called "PSX2 copy"
which has little or no respect for any copyright protection.
9
posted on
12/17/2001 1:19:36 PM PST
by
damnlimey
To: StoneColdGOP
Headline, December 19: New Copy-Protected CD Cracked
Unless there's some hardware arrangement that's preventing the reading of the CD (like copied Playstation games before the hardware mod), there's nothing stopping someone from copying it. There is software out there that will most likely already do it, and if not, there will be pretty soon. What a waste of brainpower coming up with this new copy protection scheme.
10
posted on
12/17/2001 1:21:59 PM PST
by
July 4th
To: StoneColdGOP
Here is how to copy such an album
1-get MusicMatch, a free download
2-get a cable that will allow you to connect your CD player to Line-In on your sound card and connect the two. If your CD plyayer has line in jack, use that. If not, use the phone jack.
3-Select "Line In" as the recordng source from Options-Settings-Recorder Menu item in MusicMatch
4-Turn the volume on the CD player ALL THE WAY DOWN, turn the player on, slowly increase the volume. If you dont hear the music, double click on the little speaker icon in the system tray, the one on the right hand side on the task bar. You might have to unmute the line in or enable it in the first place from the Options menu
5-Start recording by pressing record button on the MusicMatch panel. You will have to enter the artists name, the album name and the track name before recording each track.
To: wideawake
That does it. Declare war on Israel now.
12
posted on
12/17/2001 1:31:08 PM PST
by
Dog Gone
Comment #13 Removed by Moderator
To: StoneColdGOP
There was a very good article this morning in - of all places - the Wall Street Journal, regarding copy protected MP3 files and CDs. Their solution: refuse to buy them. Nobody should be able to "sell" you a CD/MP3 file that not only can't be copied, but can only be played on certain machines, or played only a certain number of times, etc., etc.
Time for music consumers to just say NO!
14
posted on
12/17/2001 1:34:20 PM PST
by
livius
To: StoneColdGOP
Don't be looking for any of these "copy-protected" CDs to be cracking the Billboard 200 anytime soon. Nobody's going to buy them. Certainly not I.
I don't mind buying CDs but I plan to burn them onto blank CDs to make my own compilations that I can play in the car and while walking, etc. I also rip MP3s with them for my MP3 player or just to play off the computer without having to put the disc in the CD tray. If I can't do any of that stuff, why I'll just download the songs off WinMX or some other file-sharing service (of which there are many).
To: livius
Time for music consumers to just say NO!
What peeves me even more is the Region coding on DVDs. If I buy a DVD in England and want to play it on a US machine, I can't. Why was this a good idea??
Oh well, no problem...that's been hacked too. Many of the Chinese DVD players can be made "region-free" with minimal effort.
16
posted on
12/17/2001 1:38:15 PM PST
by
July 4th
To: July 4th
IIRC, it's because that different sovereign nations have different copyright laws. (So that Chinese DVD player not only funds the People's Liberation Army, it promotes the globalist New World Order!)
17
posted on
12/17/2001 1:41:25 PM PST
by
Poohbah
To: StoneColdGOP
Easy, from the line out plug to the line in plug....copy protection defeated.
To: livius
I guess the whole DIVX debacle didn't teach them anything.
When people buy a copy of something, they expect to own
that copy free and clear.
19
posted on
12/17/2001 2:34:33 PM PST
by
the
To: SamAdams76
I can't think of any artist on a Universal affiliate label that I just HAVE to have a CD of, so this doesn't particularly bum me out.
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