Record Companies Sued Over Charley Pride CD
DevNova writes: "This posting describes a woman in California suing Fahrenheit Entertainment, Inc. and its label Music City Records over CDs she has purchased which use a proprietary music encoding scheme that prevents them from being listened to without the user identifying themselves. These CDs won't play on standard CD players, are not encoded in the popular MP3 format, and will not play on a computer until the user enters personal information. A large part of the suit is that Fahrenheit discloses none of this information on the packaging."
Sort of like DVDs vs. DIVX.
she just doesn't want anyone to know that she bought a charley pride cd.
I guess it makes sense to try out their new protection schemes on music no one is going to listen to anyways.
Whatever format this CD uses, I can't see Sony etc scrambling to follow this. Joe User is at least more receptive to privacy concerns than intellectual property issues.
:)
Off topic, maybe its just me, but I kind of enjoy watching big media cos get shafted with lawsuits these days
i am a musician and i give away all of it. i dont sell it.
this is the only way to keep out controls like this.
this shit is just going to get worse, and it makes me very quiet, i feel like everyone around me is a little fascist now. i won't take an opportunity in music although it's not likely i'd get one anyway since i don't look like britney spears.
i guess that i am willing to get sick and die and not go to a hospital, or to have my own teeth fall out because i don't have benefits, so a corporate system doesn't own me.
in a few months my honeymoon will be over.. if i don't post anymore it means i am gone for good.
Goat sex free since 2001
It's one thing to sell CDs that require that the user identify themselves. However, if you're going to make such demands of the customers, at least have the decency to warn them before they purchase your product. What ever happened to the concept of informed consent and truth in advertising?
******
"What makes you think I care about your opinions?"
..Nothing like waking up in the morning and keying in your social security number so you can listen to that new CD.. You're morning relief is sampled by the 'smart toilet' and sent in to the lab for analysis.. The bio-metric toaster needs a finger print confirmation to make toast for you, and a quick retinal scan to send your dreams in to 'Global Corp' .. Why remove the wiring harness ever? But we did away with Piracy! Now everybody is RICH! Hoo-Ray!
air and light and time and space
But the margin is protected by the DMCA and so is to small to write the solution.
So, does this mean that if the cramped label somehow managed to display all of this information alongside the parental ratings and the UPC code in 1-point type, everything would be OK?
Shutting down free speech with violence isn't fighting fascism. It IS fascism!
These CDs won't play on standard CD players, are not encoded in the popular MP3 format, and will not play on a computer until the user enters personal information.
Actually the suit says that they won't play in standard Audio CD drives in computers, not that the CD won't play in a stand alone CD player. I should hope that the music stores them selves would refuse to carry something that won't even play in a regular CD player.
Ad in classifieds: Pandora's Box (no box) $5
The letter makes no mention of the CD not working in normal audio players. Apparently the CD will not work in CD-ROM drives, but allows the user the ability to register with the record label and download a proprietary encoding of the song to play on their computer.
This could be good for those of us who have CD-Burners.
If some sort of precedence in a court of law is found in this case, it may prevent companies from making this type of CD, or at least provide proper labeling of these "BAD" cd's. I know I'd be able to stay away from these types of CD's.
Let's hope she wins over corporate America, and help all of us who burn CD's like mad.
Go see ramdac
There is definitly no way that any company should be able to collect information about a person that has purchased their CD. If this was a promotional CD I could see the point but if you purchase something it becomes yours (and you are free to do w/it whatever you wish) you paid a fee to give you rights. They are invading your privacy.
The fact that they are hiding this from view is an obvious attempt at actually selling the CDs. No one is going to buy the god damn things b/c of this crap. Hell, I hate to shop at Radio Shack b/c of the fact that they ask for my private information and seem to feel it is their god given right to have it. (No, I will NOT give them any of my info even if I purchase my items w/a CC -- this usually really irritates the clerk -- the information they need is how much the item costs, how much I paid, and that's it)
I am sick and tired of this crap. If I don't want to be known I don't have to be. Once you buy something you own it. That's it. Their ownership of the item stops when money exchanges hands.
Fuck that.
This is SCHWEEEEEET! I'd like to see the end result of this one :)
I am Lord Snowbeam. Heed my call!
They're probably using this as a test for the RIAA...and they knew no hacker would try to break it cause no hacker would ever want to.
I can hear the sales committee to RIAA 6 months later.."See, our propritary technology hasn't been cracked - it's safe to implement for all CD sales...
Two weeks later...teenage munchkins find out they can't listen to Limp Bisquit and break the encoding...end of story.
Funny as hell...why Charley Pride? Covering Jim Reeves, no less?
----------
ah honey, we're all resplendent - Bill Mallonee
Chuckie is well known in his own field (blues/country, if I recall correctly). This isn't a mix CD or a giveaway, and Mr. Pride himself agreed to be the guinea pig for this CD format a while ago. I hope it costs him dearly in terms of sales.
Virg
I couldn't tell from the artice, does the cd play on NON computer cdplayers?
Acually, no. It was a regular old buy-it-at-the-store cd by a fairly famous country artist.
-- Give me ambiguity or give me something else!
CDNOW does mention the protection scheme in its synopsis of the CD. But they do call it a "ham-handed and unjustifiable response to the problem" of piracy.
My wife just bought a cd (arg! I can't remember the artist name, Toby sumthin-or-other, your basic country crapola [metal rules, imho]). Anyways, there was NO indication anywhere on the cd that it was copy-protected, but it absolutely could not be backed-up with ezcd (she likes the security and convenience of having copied-cd's for use in the car, and leaving the original at the house). After a couple of tries, I moved on to attempting to just rip the tracks to
My point (having wandered a bit away from the original topic), is that more than one record company seems to be trying to sneak this sort of crap past consumers.
This posting describes a woman in California suing Fahrenheit Entertainment, Inc. and its label Music City Records
Hmmm.... Music City Records... Is it ironic that MusicCity is also a decentralized filesharing service based on the same technology as KaZaA?
Would it be further ironic if somebody figured out how to decrypt Circuit City DIVX movies and encode them with a DivX MPEG-4 codec?
Will I retire or break 10K?
"Warms my heart to hear" or :)
"Restores my faith in humanity" or
"Makes me feel like taking a dump"
nuclear presidential echelon assassination encryption virulent strain
Whizzmo
Wow, who would've thunk it?! Copyright control and protection mechanisms might hurt sales? While completely unrevolutionary to anyone who has actually USED Napster or other file sharing P2P networks, I'm sure this will just be an extraordinary revolution to Hillary Rosen and her cronies. Don't want to screw yourselves out of a bunch of extra profits? - just screw the customer out of their legally provided rights...
I noticed at the very end of the complaint that a jury trial is requested. This is good because if that request is granted, it will mean that regular Joes and Janes will be the ones deciding this case, and juries have traditionnally tended to lean toward what they personally feel is right, not what is legally right.
Natuarally the defendants will do everything hty can to block a jury and have just the judge.
The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
There was no disclosure on the packaging about the protection, and "rip-proof" means for the average user, a stripping away of fair-use rights such as making an archival copy in case the original blows up.
People do not like to lose the rights they once had. Imagine someone taking away your right to drive a car, for example.
I hope this case goes far, since the DMCA already has gone too far.
... as long as the CEO of Fahrenheit Entertainment is willing to web-cast the details of all the music (s)he listens to.
From the press release:
"that electronic music files made available for download pursuant to purchase of its CD are proprietary in nature, that such electronic music files will not work on portable MP3 players"
While there are certain aspects of this Lawsuit that I would definately like to see successful in a court, it makes me a touch ill that included in the lawsuit is the fact that the encoded version of the CD is NOT mp3.
MP3 as an encoding format has pretty much captured the market, but I certainly don't want it to be REQUIRED by law. bleh.
-Patric
er, no. I have a CD player on my computer that is capable of playing music CDs. I like to be able to play music CDs on my computer, because I don't have a stereo in my office. If you can't stick the think in your computer CD and listen to it, it *doesn't* "work fine". That's at least half of the problem.
*
If I really told you how to do it I would have to:Answer: D!!!
DING! DING! DING!
Your'e a weiner!!
If you're not on somebody's shit list, you're not doing anything worthwhile.....
"Suing for the $20 a CD costs? It costs more in court fees to sue. How can she expect to get any
more than the price of the CD? And why not simply return it?"
Lots of stores won't take opened cds (or any other media) back other than in exchange for an identical item.
You're correct that it isn't feasible to get the $20 back by suing. That's why the next step in suits like this is to seek certification as a class action. If the original suit isn't dismissed, it seems to me that certification as a class action would be relatively simple.
I'll bet that at least one of the claims in the suit includes court costs and attorney fees.
So the next question is :
Is filing a lawsuit to stop the data collection and to stop this practice in fact a violation under the DCMA, and an illegal lawsuit?
you know somebody is going to try to argue that point, and may even find a nitwit judge to agree.
- - -
Radio Free Nation
an alternate news site using Slash Code
"If You have a Story, We have a Soap Box"
"It is a greater offense to steal men's labor, than their clothes"
Plutocracy is government by intellectuals.
If you want to do some research to prove this, you might want to look up irony while you are at it.
If you voted for Nader, THIS IS ALL YOUR FAULT!!
Geez. I hate to correct myself, but....
The disc works fine in a stand-alone cd player. The plaintiff (and CDNow) claim that the disc can't even be listened to AT ALL on a computer though. I presume this could be fixed by turning off auto-run, but who knows? Even forcing someone to take this step seems a bit over the top though.... Guess I jumped the gun a bit on my post. Sorry.
Fahrenheit Entertainment, Sunncomm and the RIAA have announced a lawsuit filed against Ira Rothken of The Rothken Law Firm and his unnamed client for attempted circumvention of a copy protection device. Attorneys for the plantiff claim that by attempting to use litigation to remove a copy protection method the defendant is effectively circumventing that method and thus in violation of the DMCA. They also argue that if their clients were forced to identify products protected by this device it would weaken the effectiveness of the device and could ultimately lead to circumvention; therefore the defendant should be liable for contributory circumvention of a copy protection device.
The RIAA was not available for comment, but the FBI has raided the offices of The Rothken Law Firm on a sealed warrant in search of evidence.
STOP MISUSING APOSTROPHES, YOU MORONS!!!
Perhaps CDNOW could add a "Copy-Protected?" field in the searchable database. Then we could all de-select it (like some de-select Katz) and know that the CDs we buy are, in fact, real.
sulli
RTFJ.
The judge could aware punitive damages of hundreds of thousands of dollars. This is over and above the compensatory damages (which could include not only the original purchase price, but legal fees, lost wages while in court, etc.)
Besides, some lawsuits happen because someone feels that there is an injustice in the world, not out of some sense of personal greed. If you don't understand this, ask some of your Democratic friends to explain it to you.
(Not to right-wing moderators: I have 50 Karma points, so I can afford to lose two or three for being honest here.)
RIAA: All your rights after you bought this cd are belong to us.
.jpg because of pr0n pics are being traded.
Fahrenheit: Someone set us up the worst idea ever.
Consumer: Main screen turn on [then enter my SS#, then my DOB, then my mothers maiden name, then my biometric information]
RIAA Again: Gentelman... all your standards are belong to no one
-=Nothing useful to post, just want to let you know=-
Actually I 99.9% agree with the case against napster and I can't believe I'm downloading unsaid music videos now, but this is out of control.
Trying to kill the mp3 format because of P2P is like trying to kill
Lets all switch to our own formats that only our own computers can read... fu** everyone! Like Bush said yesterday, scared people build walls, confident people tear them down [not his line, of course]
Get your Unix fortune now!
I'm worried that all the recording companies will do is add in the fine print at the bottom of the back side cover that says something like "This CD is protected by the use of the FairUseSucks System and may not play on computers without entering personal information. Please visit www.weownj00.com for our privacy policy; opening of this package indicates your agreement to this policy". Bingo, they have just gotten out of a lawsuit.
At this point, one would then need to envoke the infamous time-shifting case to fight back for fair use.
"Pinky, you've left the lens cap of your mind on again." - P&TB
"I can see my house from here!" - ST:
thank god not everyone listens to tool, rage against the machine.
This is why i listen to punk music. What does tool charge for concert tickets? Like 50 bucks. That's rediculous. I just can't bring myself to believe that someone who says "we do it for the fans" and charges that for tickets is serious.
For the most part, punk bands understand if you download their stuff off of Morpheus and listen to it. Usually people that become fans cause of shows and bootleg'd music will buy the CD's to support the band. There's certainly none of this copy protected bullshit.
Check on prices for punk shows - hardly ever more than $20. In fact, one weekend i saw Less than Jake/ New found glory/ the teen idols/ anti-flag 3 times for less than 50 bucks. These people are serious about doing it for the fans - LTJ is broke as shit. That's the kind of music i want - people who do it for the love of the show, who tour 250+ dates a year, who sell CD's for $5 at shows. Its raw culture.
I, too, am a musician. My band recorded our CD, burned 1000 copies of it ourselves, and gave it away for free. I don't want your money. I just want you to like our music.
You can keep your rage against the machine, tool, korn, limp bizkit, incubus, whatever.
sig?
That is what they are really doing. ALOT of people buy cd so they can use them in their car and computer. They are selling what is thought to be a regular cd when it is really an "crippled" version of a cd. That is really what is going on here. I hope she wins
What can we do about this? We can support companies who make CD-ROM drives that are not affected by the protection. (Several of these have been "discovered" recently.) We can lobby Congress and ask for a bill that gives us our fair use rights again. We can buy a $30 Discman clone and use that to play CDs, like in the good old days. There's no easy answer, but to paraphrase the old cliche, the price of freedom is eternal vigilance.
-all dead homiez
I noticed the complaint letter doesnt list a dollar amount for damages. This is good because the defendants wont be able to offer a cash settlement very easily, like in many other cases. The woman here wants them to fix the problems for the better of the public and doesnt appear to want money in return.
Reminds of a case several years ago when families were suing automakers for problems with airbags killing loved ones. People were suing for tremendoesly large cash settlements, and getting them, but the airbag problems were going unchecked, as newer cars still had the same problem. One man (who himself was a lawyer) lost his wife in an accident because of the airbag in one of those newer vehicles. He sued, but emphasized that settlement would only be reached if the auto makers fixed the airbag problems and refused cash settlements. The judge ruled in his favor and ordered the automaker to repair the problem.
The One Rule Of Chess You'll Ever Need: Don't play someone who carries a kit in their bookbag.
The real damage here, is that being done to his reputation among his listeners.
Not that I was likely to do so anyway, but knowing that his recent CD's are broken would give me a strong inclination not to buy them.
-jcr
The only title of honor that a tyrant can grant is "Enemy of the State."
We are all saying that the disc wasn't labeled correctly to show the end user that it was fu**ed, but what about the Audio Compact Disc Label?
The label that all CDs carry if they are using the standard shouldn't be on this disc.
This isn't an audio CD if it doesn't play in my car, dvd player, sega dreamcast, etc.
So, does it have that label? And if it does can't philips (or sony?) sue them?
Get your Unix fortune now!
The judge might award the lady for damages ensued, all $17.99 of it...
Next time just return it please...
"It takes many nails to build a crib, but one screw to fill it."
Could it be possible that if you do not install their software and then call for a regular windoze cd player it would work as on a regular sound system's CD player?
If people just try to click on a data and audio CD that got a AUTORUN.INF only the promotional software will run.
Am I dumb or what?
Lots of stores won't take opened cds (or any other media) back other than in exchange for an identical item.
Which is ironic, since the main reason they do this is to prevent you from copying the media and returning it for a refund, something this CD supposedly prevents. Try convincing the manager at Best Buy of this, though.
CDNOW says: One non-musical caveat: The CD is copy-protected, and cannot be played by anything but a standard audio player. If you wish to use your computer to listen to the music that you purchased on CD, you'll have to go to the website of the company providing the protection technology and download, one at a time, Windows Media file versions of the 15 tracks (and if you own a Mac, you're simply out of luck). Intellectual property holders have legitimate concerns about piracy these days, but this is a ham-handed and unjustifiable response to the problem So it will play on a standard audio CD player. How long before CD-Drive manufacturers add a "pure audio" mode to drives?
Day One
"Hi, I bought this CD yesterday but cannot get it to play on my PC at home. The other CD I bought yesterday plays fine, so this must be defective. Can I get a replacement?"
Day Two
"Hi, I got this replacement for a CD that wouldn't play on my PC yesterday and this one seems bad, too. Might be a bad production run of CD's. Can I try another?"
Rinse well, repeat as necessary until all CD's of that recording are sent back to label marked "defective".
Deep irony.
plutocracy (pl-tkr-s)
n. pl. plutocracies
Government by the wealthy.
A wealthy class that controls a government.
A government or state in which the wealthy rule.
Oh, never mind.
--- Submission is feudal.
Next will come registering DVD movies. Then web-enabled devices such as game stations. Eventually anything with a microchip and the potential of connecting to a network will require registration.
Imagine registering your web-enable toaster before getting your toasted Pop-Tarts.
--- igiveup ---
Anyone who is active in EFF / CAFE involved in this yet? (sheepishly -- I pitch in with $$)
...in this lawsuit was, I'm sure, working up the gumption to admit that she actually bought a Charley Pride album. Shudder.
--
Don't like it? Respond with words, not karma.
> it makes me a touch ill that included in the lawsuit is
> the fact that the encoded version of the CD is NOT mp3.
This is a bit of an overextension of what was said. The gist of the suit (on this point) is that due to the fact that the CD is unplayable in a computer's CD-ROM drive, they decided to provide encoded files that the purchaser can download to listen to on the PC (a good thing). However, their encoding on those audio files is proprietary (a bad thing, since they can't be used on a personal MP3 player) and they require entry of much personal information to get the files (a very bad thing) and they don't bother to tell anyone about this issue before they buy the CD (a very, very bad thing). She's not insisting that the company make the files available in MP3 format. They are (by the wording of the suit) allowed to do just what they did. The reason for her suit is that they didn't notify her that they were doing any of it, and because of it she was unable to make an informed decision about whether she wanted to buy the CD in the first place.
Virg
Return it and tell the manager that the contents inside do not match the label on the outside, and demand that you be given contents that exactly matches the label on the outside, i.e. something that plays normally.
now we need to go OSS in diesel cars
If you want to get some EXTRA features that are included at no extra charge, you have to give up something in exchange.
But what constitutes 'extra features at no extra charge'? Can they sell me a cd that's totally encrypted and make me enter personal info to unlock the whole thing, saying that I only purchased the actual physical disk, and the music is just a "free extra"? There doesn't seem to be an industry standard for the price of a cd, so who determines what's just a bonus? If I purchase a cd, I want access to all of the data on it, not "half now, half when you pay us some more"
do not read this line twice.
Deceptive practices indeed!
I think this is a worthwhile fight to have, and might even be inclined to donate my lunch money to help this "cause."
(Now, my drinkin' money, on the other hand, is sacred. The only cause that goes to is getting me drunk. But I'm sure I can do without a few lunches, to "fight the good fight"...)
______
Once: you're a philosopher. Twice: a pervert.
There's also the matter of various principles involved, and questions worth asking, such as...
* Is this fraud? Namely, what should a consumer legally *expect* to be able to do with a CD, and how much can one differ from that without explicit warning before it's deceptive marketing?
* Is space-shifting still legal as fair use? And is it legal for a publisher to take measures to that block this?
We don't know much about the plaintiff -- perhaps she's a lawyer, perhaps she's wealthy enough not to care about legal fees (or it's contingency-fee, or even pro bono for the publicity [!]), perhaps she's interested in establishing a legal precedent before access-protection becomes ubiquitous on CDs, or so forth.
Only the dead have seen the end of war.
sue the bastards for thinking they can seripticiously do anything they want because they so big and bad....
-teknopurge
TechieNews Network help us beta!!!!
Website Hosting
No, Plutocracy.
Government by a cartoon dog?
Come on...she is not being FORCED to register nor is information being collected without her information. This is not like, e.g. companies violating their stated privacy policies. Moreover there is likely no representation that the CD will play on a computer 'anonymously'. At BEST she should be entitled to a refund. I'll this woman doesn't even listen to Charlie Pride. If ever I could imagine a frivolous lawsuit, this is it. Wonder why I don't here the slashbots squawking their usual song about frivolous lawsuits ?
Really?
Think of this: if you went to the record store and told them that you dropped and broke your CD, here are the pieces and the receipts, and could they please replace it - do you think they'd give you a new CD? Or would they laugh you out of the store? Suddenly, it looks like you bought something physical after all, and not the license to listen to the music on the CD, doesn't it...?
"I will take the Ring," he said, "though I do not know the way."
I'm a right-wing nut (libertarian, actually), but I agree with the principles behind this suit. If the company implies that you can download music from the CD, you should be able to and without restrictions.
Right-wing nuts believe in honesty in business, and that's what this case amounts to.
D
How much sound quality would be lost if one plugged the "out" on a moderatly good stereo into the "in" on a moderatly good sound card and recorded that way? The sound is going from digital to analog and back to digital, but it's never leaving the wires. As long as one made a "master" copy at full sampling rate, then made one's recordings from that, I would not think you'd loose much.
I'm just curious, because all these protection schemes seem to leave out the idea of a direct, hardware to hardware, copy being made, once the "appoved" player has decoded the sound. Since most decent sound systems are component systems, I don't see them removing the "out" from stereos, and since more and more people are playing with amatur video editing, I don't see them getting rid of the "in" on sound cards, so all of this is really kinda futile. At least that is how it seems to me, I might be missing something.
I don't need a million points of light, just two points of multi-mode fiber and a 10 Gig-E router.
If the clerk asks what is wrong, you tell them your only cd player is your computer cdrom and your cd program can't play it. If they press further, you prefer a cdplayer program with a buffer and the music is noisy and distorted with it turned on.
People go out of your way to test the unmutilated status of audio cd's you buy. If it won't rip, it is broken, return it.
Just because people listen to country dosn't mean we shouldn't stand up for them.
Novel theory: Modern Man evolved from psychopath
The only person in the world that bought the CD is suing. That's gonna drive the cost of his next recording up.
- - - If the sun is a star, why can't I see it at night?
The real question is: Is plutocracy rule by a planet, or isn't it?
Use a CD player with digital out and a sound card with digital input.
Well, why not? Government by a cartoon mouse seems to be working well enough for the patent office. =P
If the CD carries the "compact disc - digital audio" logo which you see on most CD cases, and so does the drive, then it should work without all this crap.
My CD-ROM tray is empty, a victim of a broken record in-dus-try
I bought Charlie Prides latest, but it wasn't like a regular C-D
The wrappin said nothin' about this copyright protection scheme
oh, this is worse than my wife leavin' me
The "signature virus" you're trying to spread is actually a "signature worm."
It does not spread by itself.
Back on topic, LTJ rocks, I partied with them in their tour bus a couple years ago. Too bad the pot ran out... ;-)
And back on actual topic, there's nothing they (the companies) can do. They're thrashing now, like the buggy whip manufacturers, and they may win some temporary court victories, but they'll never beat constitutional rights. Besides, the world contains far more hackers than any one company can put on their payroll.
The problem with their product is it has to be "unbroken" at some point, so it can get into your ears. Whether they document this process or not, it'll fall into public domain before too long.
I feel fantastic, and I'm still alive.
trying to sneak this sort of crap past consumers.
.
Well there you have the *real* crux of the problem. When see your involvement in this world, and the art you appreciate, as a function of being a consumer then they have you. When you stop to realize, that you are allowing your community, your government to enforce/condone and prosecute based on these kinds of fascist-business laws (intellectual property laws in general) you are in for a very serious uphill battle.
These publishing houses, *MUST* be made accountable to the public they wish to serve. They must not collude (RIAA) to abridge the rights of citizens.
If you think that your 'voting with your dollars' will make change - forget it. This is the way the USA presently works, and it really only works if you have *LOTS AND LOTS* of dollars. Otherwise you have no rights - your rights only exist in relation to your function in the economy.
Thats just plain wrong. The USA is a Plutocracy, and crap like this (extortion of people in the marketplace) is allowed to persist - you can forget about any 'human rights' and Really start considering yourself a consumer instead of a citizen
Whats my point? Please dont call yourself a "consumer", and dont call me a "consumer" when you do so you give up your power in the struggle, you accept the pretence (above) as being the frame of debate (the 'playing field' or 'perspective') to those who will justify this type of corporate action in the name of 'free markets' (etc), and you re-enforce the myriad of propaganda-enforced memes and words used in your culture. The last 15 years the USA has been bombarded with images/language and crap that tells its citizens they are 'consumers' their involvment in the world around them is embodied in the way they shop - this is a terribly impotent position. When faced with the power struggle that is described in this article, the corporate interests will *always* be served when you accept the master|corporation|king|church - slave|consumer|fife|congregation relationship.
If you think it dosnt matter; your wrong, go read some Chomsky.
Because if so, you have just commited a serious crime. One that is punishable by heavy duty jail time. By linking to a web site which distributed circumvention technology, you are just as guilty as the criminals who are distributing the circumvention tech. At least according to the precedent set in the 2600 lawsuit.
What if a computer CD-ROM drive is the only means you have of playing an audio CD? Is it then your fault that you cannot use your purchased CD?
You are in a maze of twisty little passages, all alike.
I've seen alot of posts saying "Alright! The average Joe is finally becoming aware of copyright abuses!" which may or may not be true in this case. When the problem finally affected her personally, she took matters into her own hands. Kudos to her in either case, because the more things like this happen, the more challenged the legitimacy(*cough*) of the DMCA becomes. Now we gotta wait till the next Britney Spears CD or the next Limp Bizkit CD gets this copy protection crap on it, because then we'll see some REAL outcry... maybe that's why the chose Charley Pride: his CD would be a good test-case without angering a large segment of the demographic.
"Cut word lines. Cut music lines. Smash the control images. Smash the control machine." - William S. Burroughs
Then, "do you have yet?"
"a what?"
She then handed me a bag with a cue-cat in it . . . just a couple of weeks before they folded.
I'd almost forgotten I'd wanted one to manage my library . . .
hawk
You can keep your rage against the machine, tool, korn, limp bizkit, incubus, whatever.Common now - i think you are unjustly lumping RATM with these pissants for no good reason. Rage is a Revolutionary band, both socially and politically - they are hardly limp bizkxjkajzquick
otherwise - i completely agree with your take on punk, the ethos you describe and commend your altrusim... maybe we'll see you in Washington later this month...
-Dave
I'd be willing to bet that the portion of that $50 winds up in the bank account of the artist(s) is pretty low. Hell they don't even get that much off CD sales (I mean, let's not kid ourselves, a lot of these guys are rolling in it, but the real financial winner is always the label).
One of the problems with capitalism in a largely ignorant and illiterate (in sense of "well-read" not in the sense of "can-read") society is that the controlling interests (record industry, movie industry, publishers, etc) will only produce a work if they can profit from it. This means that great but unpopular art never sees the light of day. It also means that most music of any genre is mass-produced and canned so it'll appeal to as many people as possible.
The reason why every pop star looks like Britney Spears, ever Boy band looks like N'Sync, every Goth band wears the same clothes, every rap band uses the same spasmodic gestures, and every Limp Bizkit out there is full of attitude.
They're selling an image to people who desperately want to be associated with a specific social group. And these people are willing to pay $50 to be seen at a Tool concert, and loudly announce that they were there.
Which means the self-described "true" fans who just like the music kind of get screwed, but oh well. It's hard to take any musical artist seriously who sucks up to MTV. MTV is a classic example of a completely vapid construct whose sole purpose is to increase record sales and manufacture image.
I've completely lost my point in my ranting and raving here. I guess my point is that you have to be careful when you throw a dollar figure out. Those aren't arbitrary numbers. There are standard profit margins in almost any industry, adjusted for supply and demand. If they can sell out the concert by selling tickets for $50, why would they charge less? It wouldn't sell out for, say, $150. A little calculus and you know what the "perfect" price to charge is to maximize profits.
And I doubt Tool or any other band has anything to do with determining that figure. They're on contracts. Their job is to play their part, play their instruments, sing their songs, and let the accountants handle the money.
"If you voted for Nader, THIS IS ALL YOUR FAULT!"
If you didn't vote for Nader, you're happy with the Status Quo.
What were you expecting?
> Hell, I hate to shop at Radio Shack b/c of the fact that they ask for my private information and seem to feel it is their god given right to have it.
/. in the real world.
So don't give it. When they ask for your name, reply with: Cash Customer
Address:
Kind of like applying the anonymous coward concept from
Is your band's music on the internet? If so, where? If not, why not? I'm a bit curious, since it doesn't seem that too many "amateur" bands are posting their music this way and having them do so would be a good argument against the all-out attack on the mp3 format.
I'm trying to teach myself to set people on fire with my mind... Is it hot in here?
We DO have the RIGHT to TRAVEL.
2 .html
http://www.ptialaska.net/~swampy/interest/travel_
You can find more links via google : q=right+to+travel
When you "buy" software, you are actually purchasing the license, aka permission, to use it.
Similiarly, if you have a "driver's license" that means you DO NOT own your car.
This record company should be made an example of - someone with very high-end audio equipment should record the full contents of this CD, encode them, and ACTIVELY distribute them on the net.
The fact that the music is crap shouldn't stop us. Let's make this the most pirated CD in history.
I'm sure someone will be twisted enough to try that tack- and you're going to be sorry you mentioned it even in jest!
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
$20? Sweet Jebus, I remember when I was seeing 3 or 4 bands a show for $5 and a can of food a few short years ago.
-Legion
I have a feeling that the little decoder app or whatever you need to download to get the extra stuff on the CD is Windows only.
Great. Not only are we being told that we cannot make legal copies of CDs we purchase, we're being told that we need to use Microsoft Windows in order to utilize the entire CD. That is pure bullshit. *sigh*
Read between the lines. The cd works fine if you just want to listen to the tunes.
A couple years ago, I bought a used Who CD. I should expect to play it and listen to the music, right? Well, it turns out that there were some scratches, and while most of the tracks were playable, one was not.
The reason that the "standard" CDs have error correction is so that it can tolerate a few minor scratches and still play. Without it, I might not have been able to play any of the songs... And this is the problem - these copy protection nuts want to render this feature useless.
Another interesting possibility is that if the error correction data is reduced, minor scratches or other wear and tear will increase the number of sales to people replacing CDs. I'm sure the recording industry enjoyed the vinyl era where they could depend on albums wearing out, and getting repeat sales due to the limited lifetime "feature". This trick with CDs may be a step back to the "good old days".
A dingo ate my sig...
All they need to do is be "burnt" once (and there's a LOT of people out there now with PC's using them as CD players (at work and home)) and they'll look for the warning label- just like I and many others do for Aspartame.
They'll see a drop of something like 10-30%, possibly more, probably real quick on their sales if they did that; and that's why they're not even putting it on the packaging in the first place.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
In other news, song swapping reached a record high level on the Internet in August as 3.05-billion files were swapped using various systems. The peak for the "Napster era" was 2.79-billion files, but, of course, the RIAA took care of that problem.
Unfortunately?!
Fortunately it won't play in newer CD players is how I would put it.
That is one thing that could really kill off this form of copy "protection" (fair use restriction).
I don't think the makers of high end audio equipment are going to just want to roll over and take it. Same with those that make car CD players (which are often CD-ROM based to avoid skipping - even when driving fast over rough terrain).
If it only affects "geeks" and those that do "unconventional" fair use (e.g. MP3s for portable players), it could succeed.
If it hoses over people seen as "conventional" and uses seen as such, such as high-end audiophiles, it is more likely to fail.
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
Considering that the consumer appliance vendors are now selling quite a few home entertainment system solutions that have ONLY a DVD player for playing movies OR music. Those CD's are going to rebound real quick because of that oversight.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
Paypal? I saw a site that asked for a donation with Paypal. I was inclined to contribute, but Paypal wanted SO MUCH personal irrelevent information (well beyond what is needed/customarily used for credit card transactions) and wanted to set up a permanent account that was linked my credit card info and I just said forget it. I was willing to do a one time thing. I didn't want personal info andmy credit card info all stored in one place, long term, with a company I have no reason to trust (my default is to DIStrust companies until proven otherwise).
Anway, it is ironic to mention paypal, considering that part of this case involves the privacy aspects of having to turn over personal info to play a song on a PC. Just as Paypal requires you to give them lots of info they hold on to, just to donate $25 to someone.
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
word.
I saw LTJ, One Man Army and a slew of other groups all at one show for like $8
IBM and Intel both support Linux, but also support fair-use restriction technologies (which subject one to the DMCA) that hurt Linux.
Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
Doing an end-run around the Manager popping the CD into a player problem is easy, as someone pointed out earlier- bring a laptop with a good CD or state that you are using the CD playback on your DVD player and insist that he test it on several of those. In most cases, the manager will pull the stuff in a heartbeat if it's not proplerly and prominently (No fine print will go here on that) labeled "Only Audio Player Use" because they don't want to mess with the hassles of customer returns on the product- it eats into his store's margins severely. They will then be bargain binned and/or returned (Usually the latter) at that point.
The problem with the having to waste part of a day to screw this scheme up is not a problem unless you actually LIKE them telling you how and when you're going to listen to the copy of the music that you've bought. It's only a problem if you don't care what they do to you. Standing up against BS of this kind is never convienent. Standing up to things like the this crap, DMCA and UCITA has it's price- if you don't value your freedoms enough to be put out for a little bit, then you don't deserve them.
I am not merely a "consumer" or a "taxpayer". I am a Citizen of the State of Texas
"First they came for Napster, but I don't use Napster. Then they came for P2P, but I don't use P2P. .... Then they came for a Charlie Pride CD, but I don't listen to Charlie Pride.And then they came for me, and no one was left to help"
when you purchase a CD? I'm a large MiniDisc user, myself. Especially since the advent of MDLP. But lately, at least one out of every ten CDs I pick up has an SCMS copybit, which supposedly makes copying the CD to a MiniDisc impossible. Hell, I /never/ use the CD after the initial MiniDiscing and mp3-encoding. But evidently you aren't /actually/ buying single-user rights to the music contained on the disc. Does anyone know of some sort of EULA by the RIAA? For the time being, I'm glad Sony at least 'includes' little hacks on the players that still manage to let them digitally record CDs, even if there aren't track marks.
So far, we have been ABLE TO listen to CDs on our computers, etc. Whether this is a RIGHT that we obtain from purchasing a CD is an entirely different issue.
The fact that you have been able to use CDs in this way up until now creates the expectation that this particular new CD (from the same manufacturer) can also be used in this way. The labeling does not do anything to correct the impression.
So the CD violates the "implied warranty of servicibility and fitness" - for the purpose SHE intended when she bought it - and is thus a defective product. Because this was done deliberately, the company has DELIBERATELY shipped a defective product. There's lots of nice stuff in consumer law and case-law about that. B-)
Further, if they put the CD logo on the case (I don't know if they did) it is being advertised as conforming to the Red Book standard - which it obviously does not if the error correction code is not correct. That would be false advertising as well.
Could get VERY interesting.
(IANAL)
Bantam Dominique roosters crow a four-note song. Once you've heard it as "Happy BIRTHday" you can't NOT hear it that way
see subject
The shareholder is always right.
Let me get this straight:
Now lately, they've added a new twist: They collect information on you when you try to play your CD.
And then you claim to be deceived.
If it's just now that you think you are being deceived, and that the only issue to you is that your CD has some sort of odd protection on it, I'd think that you were more deeply deceived than you think.
Listen to free music. Go to MP3.com, or one of the other various music sites, and download good music. It'll take some sifting, but you'll find it; it's all there.
Learn about propaganda. Learn how it touches your mind. Then steer the hell clear of it! Otherwise, expect more messes like the one you find yourself in.
Well although some of your comments are true, I have noticed a common trend in punk music in general. First of all punk is becoming trendy. Punk by definition is not suppose to be trendy, and when you get everyone listening to it it kinda looses something. Some places, (like my home town) 95% of the younger people listen to punk, so how revolting is it? (no pun intended)
On the other hand Tool, and such like that at least make good music. Ok so they charge a little bit more for the concerts, well it only goes to show that the people who know what good music is will go and hear them because they are that good. (and don't even say that backstreet boys charge that much and people go, becuase that's just cause they brainwash teenage girls) Also punk music uses that same beat in every song, (you know the one I"m talking about) Oh well I could argue about music all day....
Later
While you would lose a little bit of quality (as you would converting them to ogg or mp3 anyways) you would have a leagle copy that can be passed on to other people.
The spirit of resistance to government is so valuable on certain occasions that I wish it to be always kept alive
I have several friends who are veterans of the 'big' music industry, and now release their stuff on their own private labels and sell them over the web. They can sell the CD's for less because they cost less when you don't have to pay some old bastard a fat check for him to sit at his desk and sign stuff.
...All I can say is that my life is pretty strange...
Even then that may not work. Best thing is to always buy CDs from a local (in the same state or within 100 miles of your home) merchant with credit card. If the merchant refuses to refund, then inform your credit card company of the issue and to deduct the charge from your next bill. The credit card company is legally required to do so if the charge exceeds $50. If the card company is going to stand on ceremony with respect to the $50 floor, you could buy several copies of same CD in the same purchase. If one works on your PC, don't unwrap the others, and return them (making sure that unwrapped CDs are returnable under your merchants return policy)
If they all fail, then return them all. This is better, in that if say Tower Records finds themselves frequently eating $50 worth of unsellable (is that a word?) CDs, they'll soon get the hint and either require cash for the copy protected CDs (your hint that to not buy them), provide a warning, or stop selling them.
Has anyone thought of contacting the big chain stores such as Wal-Mart and Best Buy and requesting that they not carry these CDs? From the retailer's perspective, these are not good business as a sale may be lost either from people passing over the protected CDs or from people returning the CDs. On top of everything, these guys hate it when a music/movie/software company bullies them around.
Javascript + Nintendo DSi = DSiCade
Suing is trivial, since the cost of a CD is negligible compared to that of a lawsuit.
However, the company is committing a fraud by marketing a device in stores next to redbook-CDs, not stating that it *ISN'T* of the same standard. The personal information part of it doesn't bother me, it's the fact they didn't state the restrictions. If they said, in a little box in the lower righthand corner, the restrictions, on the outside of the jewel case, then fine. let them do that. Just watch them appear on fuckedcompany next week.
Reason, free market capitalism, and individualism
allows the user the ability to register with the record label and download a proprietary encoding of the song to play on their computer.
Which doesn't help you at all if you're on airplane with a laptop.
The revolution will NOT be televised.
Again, she's not suing for money. She's suing to force the company to disclose what they are doing. The idea is to get this information out to the public, so the average Joe will know before purchasing the disc that it won't play in his PC. This is a great way to start a public backlash; enough MP3 players have been sold that the general public would throw a fit if they were unable to convert their legally purchased discs into MP3s. The problem right now is most people have no idea this is going on.
-Ryan, with the unoriginal sig
A merchant or manufacturer OWES me what they've told me they are selling me.
If that includes a nice little logo that means that the CD is compliant to a particular standard, then I am OWED THAT BY LAW, PERIOD.
Your corporate bootlicking is simply not relevant.
If you're going to be an airmchair moralist, at least hold the rich and powerful to the same standards as the rest of us.
A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
Pluto was the Roman god of the Underworld & wealth...that's where the pluto root comes from.
Jaysyn
There is a war going on for your mind.
just searching on google for mediacloq brings a lot of articles (1450), so it does not seems to be a fair new system?
"Science will win because it works." - Stephen Hawking
Okay... I've looked over this and have a concern about the strength of this suit...
We look at the post at politechbot and it says that "Fahrenheit and Music City never disclosed on the shrink-wrap of certain "impaired" CD(s) that consumers couldn't listen to music on their computers anonymously". Yet there is a statement on the outside plus further info on the inside(as mentioned by bigdavex) though neither spot mentions logging as being required. There IS at least some warning...
The Politechbot post says that it "will not work on standard audio CD players found on millions of personal computers", yet the warning on the outside says that "(i)t is designed to play in stardard Audio CD players only"...
Politechbot says that "electronic music files made available for download pursuant to purchase of its CD are proprietary in nature, that such electronic music files will not work on portable MP3 players". The warning on the outside says that "(l)icensed copies of all music on this CD are available for downloading." There is no statement that the files in question are MP3 format.
While I'm still attempting to bend my mind around the PDF file of the actual suit (lawyerese is not the same as English IMOBO), my concern is that there may have been sufficient errors made by the filing attorney to have his case been fatally flawed from the start. What is to prevent the defendant from failing to have the suit dismissed at the start, and by following through to the end, achieving a favorable precedent for this technology?
The existance of a precendent (which all lawyers just love) makes it that much harder to fight this technology since any future suits against it will see the defendants simply standing up and saying "Your Honor, we have a precedant saying X, this suit is sifficiently similar as to be covered by X, we would like it to be summarily dismissed."
Is there a lawyer out there who can put my fears to rest??
Go to MP3.com
Even MP3 is not pure, read this. I like Fabrik Nos (listening to RantRadio.com), and SteveE makes some good points.
PREMIUM ARTIST SERVICE. That's just bullshit!
Someday, Barnaby.
(Equity Lord? The Diamond Age?)
https://www.accountkiller.com/removal-requested
What kind of logic is that? DVD's are not the same format as records - of COURSE it won't work. CD-Rom drives played audio CD's from DAY ONE. This record company is changing the rules saying that CD-ROM drives are no longer allowed to play audio CD's anymore. This is like changing gas so that it only works on passenger cars and minivans, and won't work in SUV's or pickups.
Buying a nice CD at the local music place, possibly listening to it at home (I currently use a Sega Mega CD as a CD player), or listening to it at work (I just bung the CD in a CDROM drive and expect it to start playing), or maybe listening to it on the go (I have an MP3 player that plugs into the bottom of my Ericsson T28) should not be a battle between me and the music companies. If you want to lock down your music, fine, just don't expect me to bother trying to play it. Thus, don't expect me to buy it.
I haven't been asked for my personal info at the shack for some time now, but there's a computer store chain in Las Vegas that tried to. I told the clerk he didn't need my address and phone number, and he replied "Well what if there's a problem with the card?" and I said the little card authorizer gizmo will tell him if there is, and no other merchants ever ask me for that information. He disappeared into the back room for a moment, and returned with the news that his manager had approved the sale without collecting the personal info. I said fine, then he tried to make a lame joke, "You're not a criminal, are you?" and I replied, laughing, "No, I am not. Nor am I a customer of yours." And I put down the cable I was going to buy, and put my card back in my wallet.
"But I was just joking!" he said, as I headed for the door. "Yeah I know, but it wasn't funny."
I like to think I made an impression on the PFY running the checkout, but I doubt it.
Edith Keeler Must Die
A curious as it sounds, doesn't it strike you odd that someone would sue over an $18 CD?
Nope. At worst, you'd take it back.
You wouldn't sue because what are the damages? At most, $18.
So it is possible the RIAA is essentially suing themselves to get a particular legal precedent? Are they looking for a judge to say:
"Consumers have no right to expect an MP3 of their CD"
I'm just speculating, but this doesn't add up.
You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
Actually, perdida, although this AC probably needs to be hit over the head with a cluestick, the AC's right to challenge your point of view. But the point he should have made wasn't just random insults but rather that you seem to have gone too far.
Take this statement for example: "this shit is just going to get worse, and it makes me very quiet, i feel like everyone around me is a little fascist now."
There is something in how this is worded that jumps out at me. It's that you don't really believe that everyone around you is a little fascist. It's that you feel that way. And that implies to me that you don't really think things are only going to get worse, either.
I understand how you feel, because I've been there myself. There is a simple way out: History. Read your history.
The stuff going on with the RIAA has countless precedents. You know what? None of it stood then, either. There's nothing about this time around that's going to make it significantly different. From banned books during the Renaissance to the CDA just a few years ago, these things just don't survive for very long. That doesn't mean we shouldn't fight it; rather, we should be heartened by the fact that our hard work to fight it will pay off.
This person suing the record companies is doing a very good thing, not just for herself and other music lovers, but for artists like you and me.
Actually, the fascism comment comes from my thoughts on things that are not necessarily related to the music biz.
However, the mentality that permits more and more of this sort of thing does lead to fascism in my opinion.
This is a deeply held belief and that's why I jumped out at the AC. More politely phrased disagreement I tend to reply to..
The demand that the user identify himself or herself is a little checkpoint, especially when computers are connected to the Internet and the cd can't be played on a cd player.
If this propagates, a known criminal on the run can't listen to his own music collection if it might tip off the police. Or a pirate might get fined off his or her credit card or debit account, like the speeders in the rental car.
The more checkpoints we accept in our daily lives, whether they exist on a computer or at a "sobriety checkpoint," the more fascism we are tolerating in our lives. People who go along with this unthinkingly are at least collaborating with the fascists, because they are a security risk to people who think outside the increasingly tiny legal box.
It's a long conceptual jump from typing your name in to listen to music, to going along with a national ID card/chip. But it's a jump that can happen overnight.
Goat sex free since 2001
Maybe they should have named their company "Fahrenheit 451" instead.
There were a few albums released by BMG in Europe during 2000 that used this protection scheme (one was by Finnish posers HIM, as I recall; the rest was obscure stuff). I was working in a record store at the time, and we had perhaps an 85% returns rate on that album (ie, 17 of 20 people came in and returned it because they either objected on principle or were having problems playing the CD on regular home equipment). BMG eventually re-released most of these albums without the copy protection, and hasn't made any more attempts in that direction that I'm aware of.
Hate to burst your bubble there, but a "wav" file ripped off of a CD is an exact copy a track from that CD. Unless your CD is scratched beyond belief or your ripper is worthless, there will be no loss in quality whatsoever. Any "audiophile" claiming that they can tell the difference between a CD and a "wav" file is full of it. Of course, somebody could come along and point out that you could encode a "wav" file at 8000 Hz, 8-bit, mono -- that would indeed sound worse than a CD (or most MP3's, for that matter), but hey...
Deliver yesterday, code today, think tomorrow.
musiccity records OWNS the musiccity network.
I went looking for evidence. The "about this company" pages of musiccity.com and musiccityrecords.com do not mention any affiliation, but the fact that both the label and the network are headquartered in Nashville supports the assertion. Nevertheless, doesn't the availability of Charley Pride's music on the MusicCity Network make this whole issue a moot point?
Will I retire or break 10K?
I say that we all should go out and purchase this CD (or any other "protected" disk), try to play it on all CD audio players in your house/car/work/etc. If it fails on any one of them take it back to the store and demand a new, non broken disk or your money back. Repeat indefinitly(sp).
KangarooBox - We make IT simple!
As I understand it, while file swapping is on the rise, so are CD sales!!
Soon the RIAA will wake up to the fact that their precious "right" to collect revenue on their artists' creations is not in jeopardy from song downloading; in fact free downloading exposes more people than ever to new bands and artists.
And the end result will be that file swapping will eventually be accepted by even the RIAA.
I hope.
Oh, fer cryin' out loud, I never said, nor even implied, that !=MP3 is bad and MP3 is good, and I don't want any legal precedent for the particular format for online offerings. That was the point I told the original poster that he/she missed. I couldn't care less what format they offer as long as they say they're doing it. More to the point, I'd rather they just didn't fsck with the CD in the first place, so if I care to I can rip whatever format I please. I don't rip CDs to MP3 to begin with, because I'm an audiophile, but if I went out and bought an MP3 player and then found that a particular CD couldn't be converted to that format (and the company didn't tell me that up front) I'd have a right to be bent out of shape.
Virg