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Cactus Data Shield Tries Again

autocracy writes: "Midbar, an Israeli company that developed the breakage of standard called Cactus says that they have released more than 10 million CDs to the U.S. and Europe. They now claim that there will be no issues playing it but you will lose quality if you try to copy. I'm just wondering how it is that you can play it on a system at perfect quality, but when you copy it things don't sound right. Do they not know about optical output? Lame quotes including comments by the makers of how this is a 'proven technology' can be found at C|NET."

378 comments

  1. The myth of 10 million? by The+Llama+King · · Score: 3, Insightful


    I seriously doubt there are 10 million "on store shelves." Probably 10 million in warehouses. And I suspect they're not putting this copy protection on the most popular artists' CDs ... probably more apt to be on other Charlie Pride titles!

    --
    C'mon, baby, kiss The King.
    1. Re:The myth of 10 million? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "I seriously doubt there are 10 million "on store shelves." Probably 10 million in warehouses."

      Score: -1, Redundant.

      Quoth the article: " P.J. McNealy, research director for GartnerG2 , a division of the Gartner research firm, noted that although more than 10 million CDs have been released in the market, it "still doesn't mean 10 million have been bought" or that the technology has been perfected."

      RTFA.

    2. Re:The myth of 10 million? by digitalunity · · Score: 2

      That was simply a misinterpretation by CNet. Here is the accurate quote:

      "Each executive was given 10 million dollars to put these broken things on store shelves."

      So, Phillips has the different standards for CD's. Red book, Orange book...
      how about a new one:
      *black book*, that's what we can call it. And, instead of the traditional CD symbol, it will say:
      ddd Compact
      d d iii ccccc
      ddddd d i i $$$$ c ccc c
      d dd d i i $$ c c cc
      d d d d i i $$$ c c
      d dd d i i $$ c c cc
      ddddddd iiii $$$$ c ccc c
      Cactus Broken Audio cccccc

      What do you think?

      --
      You can't legislate goodness. Let each to his own destiny, by will of his freely made choices.
    3. Re:The myth of 10 million? by The+Llama+King · · Score: 1
      You missed my point.

      Yep, the article said they may not have been sold. I repeated to arrive at the notion that they may have been placed on unpopular CDs as a trial balloon, and thus may not be selling at a high rate.

      Sigh. I forgot. Geeks get literal. Gotta spell it out for most of them. 1's and 0's.

      --
      C'mon, baby, kiss The King.
  2. I'll believe when I hear it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I like what philips has to say about it.

    "Its NOT CDDA"

    'nuff said.

  3. Taking bets on how soon it'll be hacked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    I guessing 1 month before this "copy protection" will be subverted and widespread copying occurs.

    Shouldn't be too hard to write a mod for your CDROM to read these discs

    1. Re:Taking bets on how soon it'll be hacked by RMSIsAnIdiot · · Score: 1, Funny

      Hah! Soon the bastards will be shipping hardware dongles with audio CDs to plug into the back of our CD players.

      --

    2. Re:Taking bets on how soon it'll be hacked by lowtekneq · · Score: 1

      Shouldn't be too hard to write a mod for your CDROM to read these discs
      From what i understand your cdrom can still play them, there would only be a loss in quality when you copy the cd.

      --
      Carpe meam simiam!
  4. Proven? by topside420 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    How many times do we have to explain that no anti-piracy technology will ever work flawlessly nor will it not be broken over time.

    If they want to make money, they should spend more time getting REAL artists and not just 'performers' then maybe people would be more interested in supporting them and buying their music.

    This technology WILL cause many problems and WILL be able to be copied flawlessly within days if not already. This is how it does and always will work. Do they not see that they are losing more money tring to stop us than anything? Is it not time to give up on the anti-piracy CDs?

    All it takes is 1 person to copy the CD then EVERYONE can get it. Its that simple.

    1. Re:Proven? by tomstdenis · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Here, here.

      Good post. It seems every 2 weeks we go through this on /.

      Also keep in mind when your kid wants the latest and greatest teeny-bopper cd for 29.99$ you can be thankful you are supporting the no-talent hacks ad "Midbar technologies".

      It takes a complete friggin moron to think they can make bits uncopyiable. Like Bruce Schneier said once:

      "Making bits uncopyable is like making water not wet".

      I think the trick will be just not to support the so called "performers" [as you call them] since most of them are just abused hacks anyways [ahem, spears....]

      Tom

      --
      Someday, I'll have a real sig.
    2. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      How many times do we have to explain ... ?

      Until moderators stop moderating up the same, old, boring arguments.

    3. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How many times do we have to explain that no anti-piracy technology will ever work flawlessly nor will it not be broken over time.

      Why is it necessary to be flawless or timeless to be useful?

    4. Re:Proven? by kfg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I have a friend who cut an album for Shanachie. Her next album she produced herself. Why?

      She wanted to support the "artist."

      When someone pays $20 for a CD at Tower if the artist gets a buck of it they're way ahead of the curve.

      When Kenny Rogers was riding the country crossover wave he said that it wasn't until he had had five number one hits in a row that he made any money.

      When I give my friend only $10 for her self produced CD I get a CD for half the price I would pay in a store, AND I know that $9 of that is profit in her pocket.

      I believe in supporting the artist, and when the RIAA records a musical performance I'm willing to hand $10 to them personally for I'd be glad to do so.

      KFG

    5. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...I might as well walk around with horse blinders on.

      Nope. Those aren't proven to work. Sorry.

      ~~~

    6. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "hear hear". dumbass

    7. Re:Proven? by topside420 · · Score: 1
      Why is it necessary to be flawless or timeless to be useful?

      How is it useful if theres an easy way around it? Like I said, only 1 person needs to copy it for it to circulate around the internet, just 1. Then everyone has access and the anti-piracy CDs have become a nice waste of money.

      Personally, I really don't care what they do, they are wasting their time and causing themselves too much trouble. It wont work.

    8. Re:Proven? by topside420 · · Score: 1

      Until moderators stop moderating up the same, old, boring arguments. Or untill they stop posting the same, old, boring articles.

    9. Re:Proven? by DavidJA · · Score: 2

      if the artist gets a buck of it they're way ahead of the curve.

      If the artist sells 2 million CD's, even at $1, they are well, well ahead.

    10. Re:Proven? by psamuels · · Score: 4, Insightful
      you can be thankful you are supporting the no-talent hacks ad "Midbar technologies".
      It takes a complete friggin moron to think they can make bits uncopyiable.

      Hey - they don't think they can make bits uncopyable. They think they can convince the record companies that they can make bits uncopyable.

      Big difference. I don't think Midbar are morons at all. They sold a large load of snake oil to some very big customers for (probably) a lot of money. Not bad.

      --
      "How can you claim that you are anti-crack, while still writing a window manager?" — Metacity README
    11. Re:Proven? by emmons · · Score: 1

      You don't get the point: most artists don't even get $1 per CD!

      --
      Do you even know anything about perl? -- AC Replying to Tom Christiansen post.
    12. Re:Proven? by Anthony · · Score: 3, Informative

      Not if they have been given an "advance" from the distributors. See Courtney Love's Salon Article

      --
      Slashdot: Where nerds gather to pool their ignorance
    13. Re:Proven? by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      All it takes is 1 person to copy the CD then EVERYONE can get it. Its that simple.


      Not so simple. It's like a speed bump or extra Stop signs or traffic lights. It'll slow people down. A few savvy folk know the end-arounds. Sure, you can get Windows XP for free from waReZ sites, but is everyone doing that? Hardly. There are lots and lots of people who still obey they law, because it's not yet opressive.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    14. Re:Proven? by jazman_777 · · Score: 1, Insightful
      Or untill they stop posting the same, old, boring articles.


      We're like a bunch of old geezers sitting around rehashing the same old jokes and stories and ailments, and loving it. We're not happy unless we're complaining about the same old things.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    15. Re:Proven? by fishebulb · · Score: 1

      that is a large IF, the vast majority dont, not to mention a dollar a cd is unheard of. You sell your ownership of the music and your soul to the record companies when you sign a contract

    16. Re:Proven? by pmineiro · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      i'm sorry, but i've heard this too many times now. another altruistic thief who only has the best interests of the artist at heart. it's very convenient to claim to be pro-artist and anti-evil-RIAA. so why are the artists signing this so-called horrible deals anyway? if you want to steal music, fine, but don't pretend your doing the artist any favors.

      -- p

      kissing my karma goodbye ...

    17. Re:Proven? by Pseudonym · · Score: 3, Funny
      Why is it necessary to be flawless or timeless to be useful?

      Excellent point. All the record companies need to do is hold off the CD copiers until such time as the artist has exhausted their fifteen minutes, by which time nobody will want to copy the CDs.


      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
    18. Re:Proven? by Tackhead · · Score: 4, Funny
      > > > How many times do we have to explain that no anti-piracy technology will ever work flawlessly nor will it not be broken over time.
      >
      > > Until moderators stop moderating up the same, old, boring arguments.
      >
      > Or untill they stop posting the same, old, boring articles.

      Or until RIAA realizes that Midbar and all the other copy-control companies are selling nothing more than snake oil.

      Or until RIAA realizes that no matter how much money they have, we're still right - making bits uncopyable is like making water not wet - and they're wrong.

      Or (my personal hope) - until the combined weight of the bullshit coming out of Midbar's technical marketing staff's and Hilary Rosen and Jack Valenti's shared hallucination is sufficient to gravitational collapse and becomes a black hole, thereby putting an end to RIAA, MPAA and the rest of the content control industry once and for all.

    19. Re:Proven? by onepoint · · Score: 1

      Your friend and the artist is doing the right thing. But let's not forget, it's not us to judge the artist contract. the record company is the venture capitolist here, they put up the money in hopes of making it back, and they own the physical distribution.

      I hope that nobody will pirate Shanachie's work, but again, based on the talk's within this community, it's a fair game to rip this artist off also.

      onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    20. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I just sent a check for $10 to MC Paul Barman after downloading his album "It's Very Stimulating" from Morpheus. I enjoyed it, so I payed for it. I'm sure that other artists would accept that sort of payment.

    21. Re:Proven? by dimension6 · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It's as simple as this: as long as it's possible to listen to music, and as long as recording equipment exists, music can and will be copied. The worst possible situation regarding the copying of music means holding up a (high quality stereo) mic to some (high quality) studio monitors (in an acoustically dead room). Basically, as long as our ear drums move as a result of hearing music, we'll be able to copy it. Even a decently high-quality analog transfer of digital music is near comparable to a completely digital transfer (I.E. optical/coaxial digital off of a CD player). For the average listener, sound quality is not of utmost importance (it's trivial, given that MP3 compression itself lowers sound quality rather noticibly at a normal 128kbps or even 160kbps bitrate).

      What I'm trying to say here is......(popular) music artists (and their managers) are going to have to find new ways to make money, whether it be through concerts, advertising (doh!), or other means, such as movie integration. It is becoming too easy for people to download the latest pop tune for free...I personally think that public concerts are going to increase in popularity and complexity over the coming years. Through concerts, the listener can experience an event rather than just hear the music. Interaction is going to become a key role in the future of music, and I think that we'll be seeing some new colors in the shape of the music industry because of the industry's constant need for money. Heh sorry if I got a bit carried away...

    22. Re:Proven? by jag164 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      U2 probably gets a buck for each album.
      Creed proabably gets $.10
      Wannabes (Marketing bands such as Spears, Boyz something) proabably see a penny if that.

      Artist don't make money off of albums, they make money off of tours. New artists don't get to tour much you'll notice. They're usually back in the studio for a sophomore album before they can get make money for themselves. But it's an evil catch. The record industry practically owns the airwaves and store shelves so the musician who wants to make big money signs deals to get exposure and some spare change from record sales. Then hopefully with sucess running into and after a sophomore album they can finally tour.

      Unfortuneatly, I don't see the loop ending.
      It doesn't really take a genius to figure it out.
      They're will be musicians (and wannabe performers) who want to make a buck. The marketing nimrod actually does realize that current pop culture thrives on the shit they put out. Whenever comsumer confidence shrinks, (let's say a wide boycott b/c of non standard CD's) the industry will back off, suck up to the consumer, and then play the consumer again after they have recovered confidence. The few people that don't like the actions now (such as the sampling of readers from /.) do not make an impact on the industry's marketing decision.

      Thank goodness they're will always be that small chunk of local, unsigned music that pleases me.

    23. Re:Proven? by FrostyWheaton · · Score: 2, Insightful

      so why are the artists signing this so-called horrible deals anyway?

      Two Reasons:

      They have stars in their eyes, and are drooling over their "big break" and don't realize they have just mortgaged their entire life on an investment that might just ruin them, or leave them as a slave to the record company.

      2. They realize they're getting screwed, but signing the contract is the only way to get into the club. And artists hope that they make it big, and get to tour and make some real money.

      --
      Comments should be like skirts. Short enough to keep your attention, but long enough to cover the subject
    24. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "slaves","mortaged their life" etc

      You perception of reality is completely skewed.
      Remember, YOU ARE NOT FORCED TO DO THIS SHIT.
      YOU DO THIS CAUSE YOU WANT TO BE INSANELY RICH.

    25. Re:Proven? by FrostyWheaton · · Score: 1

      "YOU DO THIS CAUSE YOU WANT TO BE INSANELY RICH."

      Those people fall into the second category, mostly. They are people that understand what they are getting into, and understand the chance they have at fabulous wealth.

      There are also naive people who don't know any better and get stuck in a contract that leaves them with little money, and no rights to any of their music. Those are the slaves

      --
      Comments should be like skirts. Short enough to keep your attention, but long enough to cover the subject
    26. Re:Proven? by Unipuma · · Score: 1

      The fun part in this is that the one that is making money is MidBar with their Cactus Data Shield. They won't be interested in another way of supporting artists or lowering prices of CDs so that people are more likely to buy them.

      It's a bit like lawsuits, where lawyers are the ones that really bennefit from all the suing that goes around. Copy protection companies are earning lots of money as long as RIAA desperately holds onto it's current business model.

    27. Re:Proven? by SerpentMage · · Score: 2

      This always goes in a loop. And right now we are in a "crap" music wave where talent in dancing is higher than talent in singing and music.

      But as other waves this will pass as well since people will get fed up with it. How come? Because it is a fad. Today on Swiss Music channel I heard the remake of "Saturday Night Fever" and other disco songs. AHHHHHHH.....

      Remember the TV show WKRP in Cinncinati? And remember when Johnny Fever became RipTide? Well right now there are tons of RipTides!!! The riptides died and we got real music again. This is a loop that will die! Especially now since the economy is in a slump and people are more picky about their music. Wait, coincidence DISCO died in 82-83, yes that was when there was a major slump in the economy.

      --

      "You can't make a race horse of a pig"
      "No," said Samuel, "but you can make very fast pig"
    28. Re:Proven? by ichimunki · · Score: 2

      Or better yet, read Steve Albini's original at http://www.negativland.com/intprop.html along with a host of other excellent articles on "intellectual property" matters by people who care a lot more about the real issues than Salon.com does and who understand them better than Courtney ever will.

      --
      I do not have a signature
    29. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Even Michael Jackson only got 0.75 per sale for "Thrller"

    30. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      actually, alot of time new and inexperienced bands do end up as little more then said. a record label will give them a deal that sounds good but with various loopholes and charges and be for the production of say 4 albums. without a decent manager(can many new and upcoming bands find/afford one of these) bands have often times gotten screwed over.

    31. Re:Proven? by Lozzer · · Score: 1

      Pah, in my day we were to busy working 27 hours a day down the mine to site around and rehash old jokes. Old geezers today don't know they're born. Luxury I say, sitting around and rehashing jokes.

      --
      Special Relativity: The person in the other queue thinks yours is moving faster.
    32. Re:Proven? by TheOneEyedMan · · Score: 1

      I don't think the point is stopping piracy flawlessly. I think the point is to delay the spead of the pirated versions of their works until they can recoup their investment. From their perspective, the longer they can stall the pirates, the better. A delay of just a few weeks from release to widespread availiblity may be sufficent to support the entire industry in its current model.

      --
      Reality is that which refuses to go away when I stop believing in it. --Phillip K. Dick (remove SPAM to email)
    33. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There are also naive people who don't know any better and get stuck in a contract that leaves them with little money, and no rights to any of their music. Those are the slaves"

      This isn't a "Coyote Ugly" naif situation. If it's not greed, it's about EGO. The only situations in which i'd feel sorry for those people are the child stars with the JonBenet-ish parents whom manage and control all their expenses, and spending all their money. If it's not that type of situation... it's their own damn stupidity.

      Chao.

    34. Re:Proven? by the_consumer · · Score: 1

      The record industry practically owns the airwaves and store shelves so the musician who wants to make big money signs deals to get exposure and some spare change from record sales

      A good point, except for one point of terminology. A musician who wants to make big money is more accurately labeled a musically talented business-person. It is the inability of the listening public to distinguish between these 2 classes of performer on which the music industry is based.

      Once somebody transfers the risks in producing and distributing their music to some huge conglomerate money-machine, they've lost any claims they might have to the rewards...

      --
      "If you're thinking what I'm thinking, you're right." -
    35. Re:Proven? by billcopc · · Score: 2

      Artist don't make money off of albums, they make money off of tours

      Well, not quite. They do tours to promote the albums, which in turn sell by the buckets and make money. A big chunk of the tour money is blown on rentals and traveling expenses (and hookers and coke for the managers).

      There really isn't a single aspect of big music production houses that doesn't reek of corruption. They own everything, they sell everything, and then they screw everyone. Lather, Rinse, Repeat. It's a flaky business model that's been cruelly mutated into something absurdly profitable. It used to be that a manager would get a cut, generally less than 20%. Nowadays it's the artist that gets a cut, that is more like 2%, the rest is wasted on promo and management.

      Going indie might be scary, but remember you don't need to sell a million albums per year when you're making 60% profit on each sale. That leaves you plenty of cash to buy new gear too, or scale up to bigger and louder gigs that will reach out to more music enthusiasts. Other benefits include being able to produce whatever you want, not what your promoter thinks is "going to sell". More work, but it pays off tremendously if you love what you do.

      --
      -Billco, Fnarg.com
    36. Re:Proven? by kfg · · Score: 2

      New artists who go on tour, in fact, generally *lose* money.

      The record company "fronts" the captial for the tour, which the artist is *required* to go on by the terms of their record contract. The average new artist at the end of their first tour are generally surprised to find themselves an additional $10k in debt.

      Most never manage to absolve themselves of this debt.

      It is only the veteran tourers who make money, just as it only the 'artists' who can string a series of hits together that make money from album sales.

      KFG

    37. Re:Proven? by kfg · · Score: 1

      You are aware, of course, that your reply has nothing at all to do with anything I wrote?

      I spoke of nothing but purchasing music.

      Let me ask you this. If my friend already had a record deal with a fairly mainstream label, *why did she selfproduce her own album?*

      I've already given you the answer. Now all you have to do is go back and read it this time.

      KFG

    38. Re:Proven? by kfg · · Score: 1

      Indeed, but there are only a handful of artists that manage this. Literally.

      Most artists end up with a penny or two credited to their "account" and *lose* money on total sales, the pennies never coming close to adding up to the tens of thousands of dollars they are indebted to the record industry for.

      KFG

    39. Re:Proven? by Jobe_br · · Score: 2

      This is a very true note, however, as my fiancee points out to me, the trade-off for signing with a music label, that ends up paying out less than $1 per CD sold is quite significant to the artist. Promotion of a new artist or an artists new album is a significant cost expenditure in and of itself. Not to mention going on tour (apparently, ticket sales alone are not enough), apparel, fan club sites, recording time, etc.

      I don't agree with any of what the RIAA members are doing, but according to my fiancee, the recording artists *do* get something in return for their contractual obligations, something they cannot get any other way. She should know, she is a certified audio engineer, trained in LA, and she has worked (and sometimes even lived!) with many bands over the years.

    40. Re:Proven? by WNight · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If I wanted to know about Shanachie, before potentially buying an album, how should I go about this?

      1) Download a song or ten and listen.

      2) Wait for it to play on the radio/mtv/etc.

      3) Go to a store that lets you listen and stand there with cheap headphones trying to listen.

      #2 will never happen if the artists isn't huge. #3 involves me taking time to go to a store for a chance of liking an artist, time I'd much rather spend doing something else. #1 might technically be copyright violation, but has a much higher chance of getting me to spend money.

      And even if at the end of this I decide not to buy the music, who has it hurt?

      Certainly not the artist, whose music I wouldn't have bought if I'd never heard of them.

      Perhaps it hurts the stations and the promoters (because I didn't listen to the radio) but I can easily live with that on my consience.

      I think if you examine it and quit spouting propoganda, you'll see that most people fully support the artists and will do so financially, if they like the art enough to collect more than a tiny sample of it.

    41. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Can I copy this post for future use in all copy-protect CD related articles? I've read this so many times...

    42. Re:Proven? by onepoint · · Score: 1

      If you want to find out about the artist Shanachie ( or the Irish music folk style called Shanachie ) all you had to do was a search.

      It would seem that most people want's something for free and will look at any way possible to get it.

      I have a problem with those our action, but I'm willing to take the risk to hold people accountable for thier actions.

      If you download the song, you have stolen the work. You have no title to the work, Unless they are giving it away.

      Airplay issue: unless you are in the entertainment business you should not comment. I am in the entertainment business and could without fail, find atleast 3 staions to play the music in the USA for almost all styles. Now most people are never willing to commit the resources and skill to try to make it.

      They give up to quick. they never contact a lawyer when the contract is infront of them. They get there brother to manage the band. If they get the contract and start touring, they break up the hotel ( there goes the profits because the band has to pay for that ) they don't run the band like a business. Most band that succeed run it like a business till they milk it dry. best example is the rolling stones, once they started running it like a business they kept on making money.

      Also it seems that you are not aware of something. there are over 1000 small "real" labels ( there are thousands more), they control about 60% of the music output, they buy there distribution from the big guys ( whom have about 85% of the market ) even if you take the big guys out, you'll end up hurting the little guys.

      Onepoint

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
    43. Re:Proven? by WNight · · Score: 2

      If I want to know "about" a band I can use google. But if I want to hear them I pretty well need to get a CD, listen to the radio or MTV, or download an MP3.

      I'm not saying that downloading an MP3 is legal, but I'm saying that if I was to do so it would either benefit the band or not affect them. Either I'd not care about the music and delete the MP3 to save space, or I'd like it and want to get more, at which point I'd buy the CD, or support them in whatever way they wanted.

      That said, "Stealing" and "Theft" both require the victim to lose something. If I copy a song it doesn't deprive them of it, so it's not theft or stealing. There's a specific term for it "copyright violation", I suggest you use it.

      As for airplay, are you suggesting that kickbacks and payola don't dominate the industry? If so there are many people with more experience than me and likely than you, who would vehemently disagree.

    44. Re:Proven? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bah, they're already up to around $22 or so in UK. Not far to go here...+ thank $DEITY for music shops that accept 'I didn't like it' as a reason for returning CDs for exchange with the amount of low-quality music there is around!

    45. Re:Proven? by onepoint · · Score: 1

      >>As for airplay, are you suggesting that kickbacks and payola don't dominate the industry? If so there are many people with more experience than me and likely than you, who would vehemently disagree

      well kickbacks/payola are not as common as they once were. this was due to the information sharing system call soundscan. This basically took it out because the truth was know about the artist and the damand for hte artist. That's why alot of stations sound the same (to everyones loss).

      now I depend on a self made list of every colledge radio station I've made contact with and what the DJ's like and don't like. if the artist has any skill I can easyly get them some airplay, but the sad truth is, there are very few gifted and talented artist. most of them can not follow even a well defined beat. Also as we all know the listening publics taste is varied, so sometimes certain music is not desired. but air play is air play. I've been following this one tiny band here in newark (NJ), they have a neat following and can fill 125 seats without a problem. there manager is the smartest man I've met. they told me once they can fill 200 seats the web site starts. after that touring the entire state and to NYC. runs it like a business.

      >>"Stealing" and "Theft" both require the victim to lose something.

      If the only manner you get to listen to the music is via the music store or the purchase, then your copy of that persons music is copyright violation and in my terms, theft.

      side note:

      Any artist that does not post something on the net for the listening public is a fool. It's only smart business. 30 to 60 seconds if listening time per song will generate sales if you work at it.

      People buy when they have an interest, but the problem comes from those that have an interest but desire the entire thing for free. so the file swapping happens.

      ONEPOINT

      --
      if you see me, smile and say hello.
  5. wouldn't the quality go down on the pc too? by slakdrgn · · Score: 1
    I mean, if you play the cd using, say, SPDIF, then wouldn't you notice the "lower" quality of the track? Are they just making it so the analog will play fine? 'course they are lean on the technicial details, but it would be interesting to know how they can make the quality lower in the copy, but not in the playback on a pc-cdrom.. 'course, I guess if they were to tell us, we'd be arrested 'cause of a violation of the DCMA.. for reading a peice about their method, which could be used to create a circomvention device..

    I still wonder what happended to the "personal copy" clause in the fair use act.. (or am I confused?)

    1. Re:wouldn't the quality go down on the pc too? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I doubt they can afford to muck up the signal passing out the SPDIF connector of a consumer CD player.
      After all, if I want to use the DACs in my Preamp / Processor instead of the (generally poorer quality) DACs in the CD player, that's my business - it's not even a fair use issue.

      They probably just thought of a less obnoxiously obvious method of f*cking with CDDA-frame rippers.

      That's what passes for innovation in RIAA-funded research circles these days ...

  6. Raw? by lowtekneq · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Isn't copying it just coping all the bits.. now how can you lose bits when your copying them? hmmmpf?

    --
    Carpe meam simiam!
    1. Re:Raw? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think they just interject stuff that confuses the encoders.

    2. Re:Raw? by thesupraman · · Score: 3, Informative

      This system works by making the 'bits' (ie: data stream) on the cd *wrong*, and by expecting the error correction used in *audio* playback (but not data readback!) to re-interpolate the data back to what was intended (they hope), therefore a data read gives the wrong data, and an audio play works.
      This makes *big* assumptions about how the cd supplies data in audio versus data modes, and is apparently not true for all cdroms (and very few dvd roms), so does not always work.
      it also assumes that an audio cd player uses a 'standard' interpolation method, any that use a different (maybe even improved) method will produce less accurate 'solutions' to their intentionally introduced errors.

      hmm, the whole thing is a house of cards, and will no doubt fall over before long.

    3. Re:Raw? by spitzak · · Score: 2
      There are more bits than normal CDROMs output to the computer. These are the "error correction" bits. Since the computer cannot see these bits it does not get all the data.

      I think what they are really doing is they put enough errors in a sample that the CD player gives up and "interpolates" across the sample, but for some reason the data player does not do this, and does not report the fact that the sample has an error. It is also possible that the data players never use the error corrector bits but this would have made ripping scratched CD's a problem too, anybody know?

      I expect it will be a very short time before "professional CD readers" are available that report all the bits, or at least report that a sample had too many errors to correct, and this scheme will be thwarted. Not only that, since only some people will be able to afford these expensive CD players, the normal user will be forced to go to the net to get an MP3 of a song, rather than copying their own disk, and this will actually reduce sales and increase piracy!

  7. When _will_ these people learn? by base3 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    There will be no effective copy protection until:

    - there is an authentication server connected to our brain stem

    - there is no "untrusted" way to convert sound into electricity

    or

    - the DMCA is backed by Colombia-style death squads

    To those who would argue that they're "raising the bar on piracy and keeping the honest people honest," I'd ask you to consider which people copying some of these CDs love more:

    - the music of Charley Pride

    - the feeling of power that comes from distributing it after cracking Cactus Data Shield

    --
    One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    1. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by slakdrgn · · Score: 2, Interesting
      - the DMCA is backed by Colombia-style death squads

      You mean its not? :)

    2. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by LilDebbie · · Score: 3, Funny

      Perhaps that will be the RIAA's next "copyright protection software."

      "By including a buffer-overflow string at the end of the audio data that sends your current home address to our central servers when copied, we can now deal directly with software and music pirates with our brand new, combat-ready Customer Service Representives."

      --

      __
      LilDebbie
    3. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Have+Blue · · Score: 1, Troll

      Whoever moderated the parent as "interesting" is a fucking moron.

    4. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by RageMachine · · Score: 1

      This is like locking the door on your car, and thinking. "Oh... Now I am safe.".

      Then a pro comes up to your car while you are in Wal-Mart, and has your window broken, and is driving your Benz down the parking lot within 1.2 minutes.

      --

      --------------------------
      Is this a sig?
      --------------------------
    5. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thank you, Captain Obvious. As always, your insight into such matters is flawless.

    6. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Counterpoint: if you park a Benz at Wal-Mart, you shouldn't be particularly surprised if that happens.

      ~~~

    7. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whoever posted the parent at +2 is a fucking moron.

    8. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by mgv · · Score: 2

      Whoever moderated the parent as "interesting" is a fucking moron.

      And I see you got modded down for making a fair comment. No way would I have called your comment "flamebait".

      Anyway, If you feel strongly about it reading this, go a metamoderate now. Someone will get the above moderations pop up in front of them if enough people metamoderate (even one quick look each).

      Just my 2c worth - at least there is a system here on /. to fix these sorts of strange moderations.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    9. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Icculus · · Score: 2, Funny
      the DMCA is backed by Colombia-style death squads

      You obviously haven't dealt with the LAPD
    10. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by markmoss · · Score: 2

      Sounds good. Just hack that and send them someone else's home address. Hmmm, the possibilities for improving the world...

      My boss's boss
      His boss
      About half the board of directors
      Al Gore
      Dick Armey
      Ashcroft
      Reno
      ...

    11. Re:When _will_ these people learn? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The best theft deterant system for your car is to drive a stick shift. Few potential thieves can drive it, and it won't sell for as much.

  8. Tries again ... by spt · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ... implies they've tried before.

    It was the "More Fast and Furious" soundtrack CD and the resulted in this discussion when it was found the protection could be bypassed with a DVD player.

    1. Re:Tries again ... by slakdrgn · · Score: 3, Interesting
      I love this part of that article:
      This is copy protection? Here's a better question: Are all Dell owners with DVD drives who buy CDS copy-protected discs in violation of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act? Perhaps, if they purchase the NEC DVD drive just for the purpose of circumventing the copy protection.

      It'd really suck if your door got knocked down for buying a dell.. hrmm.. good thought there tho.. the "Dell Dude" would be behind bars =)

  9. Oh it's proven alright. by shaunak · · Score: 1

    Proven to be irritating.
    Proven not to work effectively.
    Proven too lame to challenge the might of The Lords of The Geeks.

    --
    -Shaunak.
  10. Re:Canuks lose again!! by Ignominious+Cow+Herd · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    OK, I agree completely, but Why? Why here, why like that?

    --
    Lump lingered last in line for brains, and the ones she got were sorta rotten and insane.
  11. Look in the last 2600 by Drake58 · · Score: 5, Informative

    I'm not sure if anybody noticed, but there's a crack for this in last quarter's 2600. Ta ta.

    1. Re:Look in the last 2600 by BenTheDewpendent · · Score: 1

      i do rember that. but i dont have that copy i just saw it on the stands.

      if one wanted the info with out looking for a back issue of 2600 where could it be found?

    2. Re:Look in the last 2600 by SgtXaos · · Score: 1

      You saw "2600" on the stands and you *didn't* steal it? You some kinda rabble-rouser?

      --
      -- Don't call me "Sir," I increase entropy for a living!
    3. Re:Look in the last 2600 by arkanes · · Score: 2

      It's kind of ironic that I can buy 2600 at Borders and then use the info from that magazine to rip crappy protected CDs, which I will then return as defective.

    4. Re:Look in the last 2600 by EusophryneDurando · · Score: 1

      Looking in the issue in question, I see that this is for "MediaCloQ" and NOT Cactus Data Shield.

      The two are separate and different products, I say.

  12. copy protection will prove unpopular by GT_Alias · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I think that no matter what technology the recording industry comes out with, the general unpopularity of it will drive it straight into the ground. After we all pay $12+ for a CD, don't we have the right to record it to our computer/MP3 player/mix CD?

    While this does allow it to become freely distributed over the internet, how is the anti-piracy technology supposed to tell the difference between our legitimate copy and the pirated copy. I really don't think they can do it without seriously pissing off the public.

    1. Re:copy protection will prove unpopular by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      don't we have the right to record it to our computer/MP3 player/mix CD? [...] how is the anti-piracy technology supposed to tell the difference between our legitimate copy and the pirated copy

      The "Grand Plan" that the content industry has in mind consists of feature-crippled devices that will transfer content only when they handshake with another "approved" device. In that scenario, you will be able to copy music to your (approved) computer/MP3 player/mix CD, but expect a little counter to be decreased somewhere each time you make a copy, keeping the total number of copies a fixed constant to ensure scarcity. Freaky, isn't it?

    2. Re:copy protection will prove unpopular by GSloop · · Score: 1

      More to the point if you paid $0.79 for it, you should still be able to do anything under fair use. These "protections" really seem more bent at preventing fair-use rather than actually preventing copywrite violations. The industry really wants to prevent you from getting the music to an MP3. I think it's a way of getting you to pay to get the music again, in your favorite format. Personally, I don't think it has anything to do with copywrite violation prevention.

      Basically mega-corps and our gvmt - from, by and for mega-corps is only interested in bending you, the customer over.

      [Mega-Corp] "Hey, you should be thankin me!"

      Cheers!

    3. Re:copy protection will prove unpopular by quintessent · · Score: 2

      How do you know which of your CDs have this protection until you buy them?? A particular CD might be re-released with protection, and we would have no idea, unless we happen to hear about it online. Where is the list of known cactus CDs so people can avoid them? In the present situation, this technology will thrive, because the more people hate it, the more the RIAA will love and support it. And we, being addicted to music, will just keep buying it.

    4. Re:copy protection will prove unpopular by RDskutter · · Score: 1
      How do you know which of your CDs have this protection until you buy them??

      Phillips have said that they won't allow these broken cd's to carry the CD[Compact Disc] logo, so as long as that logo is on the cd case then you should be safe.

  13. Microsoft Kills Yale by analemma · · Score: 0


    Yale Daily News breaks down due to Microsoft here.

    Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC Drivers error '80040e14'

    [Microsoft][ODBC SQL Server Driver][SQL Server]Could not find stored procedure 'latestIssue'.

    /search/default.asp, line 17

    1. Re:Microsoft Kills Yale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dumbass, that is not a Microsoft bug, that is programmer error. Serves (no pun intented) them right for hiring VB lamers.

    2. Re:Microsoft Kills Yale by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VB lamer implies a VB target platform.
      VB target platform implies Windows.
      Windows operating system implies Microsoft.

      The VB lamer is a Microsoft bug.

      Think about it, and Spock will get back to you.

  14. Sector by Sector Copy? by josquint · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Can any media truly be 'copy protected'? If all else fails I can use a program like Ghost2002 or other forensic-certified disk duplication software to do a bit by bit copy. Basically make an exact duplicate of a disc.
    How would this be unplayable?

    1. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there are some technologies not related to audio that are truly uncopyable because the copy is not exactly equal to the stamped master. But that has no bearing on audio media. audio media is defenseless, as you assume and will always be.

    2. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by ToLu+the+Happy+Furby · · Score: 4, Informative

      Can any media truly be 'copy protected'? If all else fails I can use a program like Ghost2002 or other forensic-certified disk duplication software to do a bit by bit copy. Basically make an exact duplicate of a disc.
      How would this be unplayable?


      CDS works by purposely introducing errors into the audio data on the disc. Audio CD players are supposed to interpolate across the errors such that there is supposed to be no difference in sound quality. But CD-ROMs--being designed to read data CDs where every bit has to be correct--don't do this interpolation, and thus they see the disc as having lots of errors and crap out. You can't make an exact copy of the disc if your CD-R can't read it.

      At least that's what's supposed to happen. It has since come out that 1) many DVD-ROMs read the discs just fine; and 2) *certain* combinations of CD-Rs and ripping software can manage alright.

    3. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And not only that, but they actually put little circles on the disk that overlap data at certain points. Therefore, in certain areas of the disc, the bits aren't even in the place the laser is looking for them. Can't read that bit by bit.

    4. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by Mr.+Flibble · · Score: 2

      Exactly.
      Two letters:

      dd

      Protect against that.

      --
      Try to hack my 31337 firewall!
    5. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by trumpetplayer · · Score: 1

      By reading How CDs work I came to the conclusion that CDROM readers collect the data stored in a CDROM in a quite different way than audio CD players use to collect data stored in an audio CD. This is because the binary data stream actually stored by the continuous laser beam has very different formats, mainly due to the implemented error detection and or correction schemes. Thus, their internal digital electronics do different things INTERNALLY (internal microcontrollers and so). Moreover, any of us who has used one of those copiers that broke the protections of that old 5.25" diskettes containing self-loading games in the '80s know that usually it gets more complicated that copying bit by bit.

    6. Re:Sector by Sector Copy? by NeMon'ess · · Score: 2
      Media could be for all intents and purposes copy protected if a new media standard were developed. If the creator of this media created its own chips to read the media. If this company prohibited any production of "burners" for this media it help. What about storing the media on another drive? Well if the chips in the drive refused to read parts of the media to the computer, then an exact duplicate could not be made. The company that designed this system would be smart to force a media-check in the drive before accessing certain filetypes copied onto a drive. Expecting the software to be cracked eventually, the company should include software updates on newer media. This software would be read by the drive and would update the software on the computer. The drive should not play if the computer is not running the latest version of software.

      While software can be defeated, it takes time. If the software can be updated quickly enough, it will remain unbroken for the duration of its intended lifespan.

      Finally, the drive and/or software should insist on connecting to the internet or "secure" hardware every so often to prevent copyright infringers from copying older media with an old, cracked drive and software. If the updates don't happen, the drive and software don't play.

      This is not true copy protection, but it will discourage perhaps %99.95 of potential copyright infringers. If the number of people offering copied and recompressed movies on Kazaa can be kept below a certain threshold, movies will not spread quickly enough to attract users to the service who only wish to download movies. If someone spends a week downloading one movie they spent another week just finding, it is unlikely they will see Kazaa as a worthy way of spending their time.

  15. Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The artists are trying to earn money to live. Breaking copy protection = taking money from them and their families. And don't go saying "oooh, they have all the money" because that is bullshit. Sure, some do, but the vast majority don't. As an independant recording artist, I get pissed the fuck off when I see my stuff on file sharing programs. Do you fuckers think studio time grows on trees? No, it fucking doesn't. Honestly, I am half tempted to quit this shit and go back to my boring ass job doing help desk work.

    This represents a great possibility for people like me. It doesn't help me now, because I'm not high-profile enough to get this on my productions (if I was, I probably wouldn't be bitching... I'd be in the Caymans partying) but if this technology is proven, it will get down to my level.

    Assholes.

    1. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > Breaking copy protection = taking money from them and their families.

      Nonsense -- that's an incorrect conclusion. If I buy a CD, rip it to .mp3, and listen to the .mp3 at home or at work, then how am I taking money from the artist? I *already* paid for the right to listen to the CD. The *medium* doesn't matter as long as I've paid for the music.

      Now *publically distributing* author's music against their [author's] wishes I agree is wrong (and against copyright.)

    2. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Breaking copy protection = taking money from them and their families"

      So does the RIAA, but you seem to think they're the cats pajamas.

      Mussolini made the trains run on time, so Italy should've kept him because it harmed the train industry to get rid of him.

      As an "independant recording artist", you should be pissed off the RIAA and its backers have a monopoly on distribution so that you effectively have to become a serf to them to sell your records in stores.

      You have a right to be mad. You just don't know who to be mad at.

    3. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, I agree that is a problem that has to be addressed. I have no problem with you doing that, or (in more archaic terms) copying my productions to a tape because your car only has a tape deck (like mine). And, as you pointed it, even if I had a problem with it, it is perfectly legal.

      However, you have to admit that it seems that this argument is abused a lot more than it is actually followed. Maybe there is some way to only allow the song to be turned into an MP3 and only copied once?

    4. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, I try to be somewhat realistic. The system isn't perfect, but it is there and it has enough power to stay there (probably until I am no longer recording, at that), so I try to wrok [i]within[/i] the system, which is something you seem to have a hard time grasping.

      Of course, even if there was no RIAA, studio time still isn't free. Nor is producing an album.

    5. Re:Why break copy protection? by dustpuppy · · Score: 3, Insightful
      And how do you think people are ever going to hear your music?

      As an independent musician, you are unlikely to get radio time nor can you afford big promotions. With CDs as expensive as they are, people don't buy CDs to gamble that the music on it will be good. If people can't hear your music, you make zero sales.

      So the more your music is distributed via mp3s, the better it will be for you. The more people who know your music, the more poeople will buy your CDs.

      Those who have mp3s of your music and don't have CDs probably wouldn't have bought them in the first place and therefore constitutes no loss of income to you. Those that have bought your CDs do so because they have heard your music ... and if your music had not been distributed far and wide, they would never have heard it, and you would never have got your CD sales.

    6. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So the more your music is distributed via mp3s, the better it will be for you.

      yeah. I get heard.

      But I don't get paid.

      Please explain to me how some cocksucker in CA downloading my album helps my sales in KY when I have no distribution in CA? It doesn't. This is the most flimsy argument there ever was, and it pisses me off because it is espoused by freeloaders who try to claim thy are doing me a favor.

    7. Re:Why break copy protection? by dustpuppy · · Score: 5, Informative

      So if you have no distribution in CA, what do you care? You weren't going to make any sales there anyway.

      But, what happens if someone in CA happens to visit KY and sees your CD in a store in KY? If they liked your music, they may just very well buy your CD. That would *never* happen if it wasn't distributed far and wide.

      I firmly believe that artists should be paid for their work and I do agree with you in principle that it is wrong for people to enjoy the fruits of your labor for free. But I also do know that as a result of mp3s and file sharing, my purchases of CDs has jumped by a factor of 3.

      So I don't wholly subscribe to the argument that filesharing and mp3s is complete theft from artists or is detrimental to the future of the music industry.

    8. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > However, you have to admit that it seems that this argument is abused a lot more than it is actually followed.

      Unfortunately, yes, not everyone respects copyright.

      > Maybe there is some way to only allow the song to be turned into an MP3 and only copied once?
      Not possible. If it can be heard, it can be copied.

    9. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It is easy to come up with the one in a million chance where it works out in the artist's favor. Sure, there are the occasional times where it works out, but the number of times it does not (and people get my work without compensating me for it) is always going to be much higher. I'll trade the occsaional random sales from CA people who just happen to stop by one of the KY stores that carry my albums for everyone in KY to no e able to steal my music and, instead, shell out a few dollars to support me.

    10. Re:Why break copy protection? by dustpuppy · · Score: 2

      Okay ... but that's my point. How are people in KY going to know about you? I for one never buy a CD where I have only heard one of two tracks on it (the exception being artists that I am already familiar with).

      So which would you prefer? No piracy and 10 legitimate sales or 100 pirate copies and 15 legitimate sales?

    11. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe there is some way to only allow the song to be turned into an MP3 and only copied once?

      HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA.... *sniff*...HAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHA

    12. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I play bars. I had a whole thing written about this, but ended up killing it to prevent writing too much (and then forgot I killed it). Here's the short version of how it works:

      I play bars. Shitty bars. I get enough money saved up to go to a studio and record something. I sell that at the shitty bars. I get lucky and a small store agrees to sell stuff on consignment. Eventually, I get to play at nightclubs and a couple of other stores carry my stuff. I start to get occsaional slots on local radio stations local artists' spotlights (usually late Sunday nights, but what the hell). That's where I am now. That's how people in Ky hear me.

    13. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "And, as you pointed it, even if I had a problem with it, it is perfectly legal."

      If your CD contains a copy protection device of some sort, it is illegal under the good ol' DMCA.

    14. Re:Why break copy protection? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who is going to buy your crap? Better keep posting AC here, because if I knew who you are, you would NEVER see me buy, or use your piece of shit CD, music in any form, or anything else you would produce. Go back to your crap job...you'd probably be better and more successfull at it.

      I am not a wealthy person either...but you can bet your no-talent ass that when I get the fucking money to buy CDs they aren't going to be copy-protected ones...and I and everyone else WILL find out if they are even if you and your cock-sucking distributors don't print that fact. Just do it and wait for the law suits to pour in.

      I pay for CDs and software (yes, I sometimes use shareware, but when I get the money, I get the product), but rarely do I use the CDs. I rip my music to MP3, crack my games to my HD, and you know what, that is fair use of the FUCKING product! You will NEVER be able to control the content of the web...it's nature defies it FOOL...and you shouldn't be pissing off potential customers who like the convenience of playing CDs on comps, ripping there entire CD collection on HD to MP3, and/or creating archival copies of software. have you read an EULA EVER? Go to hell. You will never be able to control it. That is the nature of the net and this world. You shouldn't be allowed to control it to that extent.

      Not only am I saying that I purchase and WANT to pay money to encourage new (hopefully better) music, but even if I didn't want to pay, I would still buy the software/CDs...whatever. I like software manuals...key sheets...mags, storage medium, even the freaking box art, and album covers and track books. I like to read the the damned things sometimes, ya know, at least have the capability to do so if I choose. I will always use and BUY software and music CDs (and future medium) simply for this fact...but not from you struggling artist's who wouldn't mind making the teeny percent off of each CD you sell multiple times because of copyprotection that forces a CD for each new damn device. And if you don't think this is true/didn't know, then look around and get a clue. There's a sucker born every minute and there is a good chance it might be you. And if you don't give a shit, then proced to be a little music industry whore and screw people over because obviously WE ARE THE ONES CAUSING ALL OF THIS PIRACY. If you have the balls, and/or don't care what the people on this site say, why don't you post your band name so when and if you make it anywhere in music I can see if you have reverted from being a media protect whore and you will be subsequently be removed from my shit list. Hek, I might even overlook the fact that you just called us assholes.

      Yes, we are squashing you like a bug! we are keeping you down! Hah, right! No, that comment wasn't ment to invoke guilt on some feeble mind somewhere, it was the honest truth huh! All your little post did was fill me with disgust for you...but hey, maybe you can make that part of your marketing strategy somehow? Well, i'll add something to it: KISS my, and anyone elses who agrees with me, ass! Thank you, goodday.

    15. Re:Why break copy protection? by Drunk4Free · · Score: 1

      Whether or not you feel it is right or wrong, you are speaking to a community that instinctively refuses to work within a system. There are many of us who have learned a great deal by figuring out how a system works in order to make it work better. I think I saw someone's sig that says "If you didn't void the warranty, you weren't even trying." There is an inherent curiosity for some people that is only magnified when someone or something attempts to impose controls upon it. Its almost instinctual,and that is why some of us "have a hard time grasping" and accepting what you call an imperfect system. I should be able to make a CD to listen to at the gym, or have a special Valentine's day cd for when I'm....

    16. Re:Why break copy protection? by The+Bungi · · Score: 1

      I guess in closing we can say 'all your medium are belong to us'

      Hmmmm. No, that wasn't funny.

    17. Re:Why break copy protection? by shepd · · Score: 1

      >Unfortunately, yes, not everyone respects copyright.

      I'd say the ratio of people not respecting copyright is about equal to the ratio of products sold that don't respect people's pocketbooks.

      Just an observation, is all.

      --
      If you could be told what you can see or read, then it follows that you could be told what to say or think - BoC
    18. Re:Why break copy protection? by pathwayX · · Score: 1

      Microsoft has successfully used this approach already.

      (No, guys, this is not an MS-bashing post. Okay? Good.)

      Think about it. Could everybody and their grandmother copy MS CDs, including Windows, Office etc? Yes. Did they try to stomp out piracy? No. Did they froth over installation issues that allowed people to use ridiculously simple series of digits (2s, 0s with a 1 at the end ...anybody remember those?) to install their products? Nope.

      Now you can all claim that was MS being useless. I won't. I'll claim they knew that their products were piratable (is that even a word?) and didn't care. Because there was a good chance it would give them market penetration.

      I'm not saying this is the sole reason for MS's dominance of the home market, but I do firmly believe it is _a_ reason.

      So what about 'activation' schemes and the like, you'll ask. Isn't that making it harder for Joe Blow to pirate their software now? Well, yeah. But now they're the market leaders, aren't they? So piracy is hurting them without helping them anymore.

      This tactic can easily be applied to music, methinks.

      --
      So long, and thanks for all the fish
    19. Re:Why break copy protection? by Gonarat · · Score: 1

      Sometimes "the system" is screwed up beyond repair -- it just takes time for it to come unravelled. Look at the Soviet system -- it was a planned economy that ultimately fell apart. People had to use the black market in order to survive. In a way, the RIAA system is like the Soviet system. It is a monolith that does not want to change. If you work completely within that system, you and your art will be eaten by it. The only way to completely own your own work is to work outside "the system." The RIAA way of doing things is coming unravelled and they are using "laws" like the DMCA to keep from completely falling apart. Copy protection and the DMCA may slow the collapse, but it will eventually happen.


      --
      Beware of Sleestak
  16. Not good. by ratajik · · Score: 5, Insightful

    As someone who generally buys all his music, this is VERY annoying. I've pretty much changed how I listen to music these days, and I wish companies like this wouldn't muck with it. I normally:

    1. Buy the CD
    2. Rip the CD
    3. Throw the CD away (well, OK, store it just in case... but I rarely see it again).
    4. Play the music on my machines (Either directly or via the shoutcast server I run locally, and only locally, on my network).
    5. Sometimes re-burn to CD so I can listen to it on my car.

    This is all legal, from what I can see. If they're preventing me from doing any of the above, then I've got a problem with it. They need to come up with something else, something that doesn't interfere with my fair use of the music.

    I wish they had more details in the article. I can't honestly tell if they're going to muck with any of the above, but I've got to guess at step #2, I'll be out of luck.

    1. Re:Not good. by tempest303 · · Score: 2


      <sarcasm>


      Duh! Dude, don't you know you can just get all your music for free with Kazaa and stuff! You're such a sucker for actually BUYING music!
      </sarcasm>


      but really... I feel ya. I take it up the ass on huge middle-man markup in the name of trying to do the honest thing by paying for my music, and then 10,000 kiddies all go and reinforce the idea that copy-prevention is a required technology for all new media formats. *sigh*...

    2. Re:Not good. by SirShadowlord · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I can go one better. For a long time I stopped purchasing CDs, and just listened to whatever was playing on the radio, or in my Cube (my 4Pod mate has his stereo system wired through 23' of cable into speakers that sit on my side of the cube so as to give him that "real" surround sound. Flatscreen monitors hide the speakers on my side and don't get all gaused up like a CRT. But I digress).

      But, I was kicking back, listening to the Steve Jobs Key Note at MWSF, and I totally and completely got caught up in the patented "Jobs Distortion Field". Part of it was iPhoto (I have close to 6000 poorly organized digital pictures), and part of it was how cool OS X is looking, but withing a month of the Keynote, I am now the proud owner of an iPod, Powerbook 667, and, (and I don't think I'm isolated here), about $200 worth of CDs in the last two weeks alone.

      And my process is identical to yours -

      o Buy the CD (Okay, it's more like, Buy every major domestic album U2 has ever produced),
      o Rip the CDs with iTunes (The 667 get's a little warm, but it works flawlessy)
      o Throw the Jewelcase away and Pack the CD into my CD-208 Binder (which also handily stores software and DVDs)
      o Listen to the Music on the Powerbook or iPod.

      I can honestly state I have not, in over a year, listened to music being played _directly from a CD_. And, while I recognize that I'm in the minority here (I don't drive, so I don't worry about car CD players), I can say with some assurance that for every 100,000 iPods or other MP3 players get sold, the chance of copy protection being acceptable gets diminishingly less.

      That's It, it's all over - If nobody buys copy protected CDs (and nobody with an iPod will or MP3 player will), it's game over. DIVX went down not because it was broken, but because nobody was interested in buying the Discs.

      It's too late - The revolution has been won. There will be no Copy Protection that prevents people from converting their Music into MP3s, because nobody will buy that media.

      You heard it here first. (Err, well, maybe not, but I haven't seen it written anywhere but above before... )

      --
      - Any Day above Ground is a good Day (Michael Rich, 1997)
    3. Re:Not good. by iabervon · · Score: 2

      So now it's:

      1. Buy the CD
      2. Throw the CD away
      3. Download the CD
      etc...

    4. Re:Not good. by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Interesting
      > I can honestly state I have not, in over a year, listened to music being played _directly from a CD_. And, while I recognize that I'm in the minority here (I don't drive, so I don't worry about car CD players), I can say with some assurance that for every 100,000 iPods or other MP3 players get sold, the chance of copy protection being acceptable gets diminishingly less.
      >
      > That's It, it's all over - If nobody buys copy protected CDs (and nobody with an iPod will or MP3 player will), it's game over. DIVX went down not because it was broken, but because nobody was interested in buying the Discs.

      Good point. I never thought of it that way, but when I buy a CD, I, too, listen to it once or twice at the most - either to find out what my downloaded MP3s were missing, and then to gauge the quality of the MP3s I just encoded off it. (Side note: LAME rocks. Rocks hard enough that I've pretty much not had to bother doing CD-MP3 comparisons, as I've stopped being able to tell the difference, even on headphones at 192. I encode at 256, just to be on the safe side. Maybe someday I'll have a stereo system where I could tell the difference, hard drive space is cheap, and I'm not uploading 'em to anyone else, so the space is mine to waste.)

      But after the rip/encode day, it's computer and MP3 player from that point on. Last time I listened to a CDDA was a set of compilations/mixes that I burned for a car stereo and a long trip. Even then, I didn't even bother to dig out the original CDs to create the .WAVs, I just decoded the MP3s.)

      Put it on unprotected CD-DA, and I'll buy it. Hilary still gets her 90% of the artist's money.

      Put it on copy-protected discs, and I might think it's worthwhile to work around the protection to get the format I want. Hilary might still get her cut of that money.

      Make it so I can't work around it, and I'll download it from a P2P source. Ms. Rosen can take a long hard suck on my arse.

    5. Re:Not good. by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1

      read the courtney love salon.com article. I know i've posted it before on this thread, but here it is again. mod me down if you want but dude read this and you might change your mind. use fairtunes.com. don't worry about it any more.

      --


      Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
    6. Re:Not good. by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1

      Did a blind test with high-bit OGG's (about 160 VBR of course) v. 192 Lame MP3's v. cd, all in winamp - I seriously couldn't tell you which one was the "right" one. *shrug*, hurray for technology!

      anyone who tells you that MP3's are low quality doesn't use the right tech, or has better hearing than i do.

      --


      Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
    7. Re:Not good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, this is the way I work as well. What annoys me is that this is does not stop people ripping. At the worst it forces an anolog sample followed by MP3 conversion, and possibly an unsuccessfull digital rip first before the 'copy protection' was discovered. If anything i think it will motivate people more to rip the music to prove how annoyed they are with schemes such as CDS.

      But its hassle.

      The legal situation I think is simple:
      1. You are not breaking the law to make a copy for your own personal use, but..
      2. They are not legally obliged to make it easy for you to do so, so they dont.

      :-(

    8. Re:Not good. by TicTacTux · · Score: 2

      Whoever has kids knows CDs aren't as indestructible as they're advertised as. So, I buy a CD, either copy it or record it to tape and stow the original away (No, nothing fancy here...). Same with the Jungle Book DVD - just copy it over to VHS and voilà if my two barbarians decide to eat/crush/unwind it, easy, no problem.
      And I too consider this 'fair use'.

      BTW: I recently read an article about analog (horribile dictu) copies from CDs/DVDs - they aren't near as bad as one would suspect. Surely good enough for a rainy sunday afternoon...

      If copy protection starts to kick in, well, I'll be out of this game. Be happy with your shitloads of unsellable media and leave me alone.

      --
      Use The Source, Luke!
    9. Re:Not good. by ciscoeng · · Score: 1

      It is legal to make a backup, and considered "fair use". Although:

      1. The law doesn't say the record companies have to make it 'easy' for you to create that backup.
      2. The DMCA makes it illegal to circumvent any copy-prevention they've added. How you get your backup is then up to you.

    10. Re:Not good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "fair use" is only a legal defense to a copyright infringement charge. It is not a right and you are not guarenteed "fair use" of the copyrighted material you purphase. It'll be curious to see if there's a "fair use" defense against the DMCA.

      tk

    11. Re:Not good. by autocracy · · Score: 2

      I listen to music with certain parts of it "highlighted." In other words, I use the equalizer at a point that makes damned near everything sound better to me. Using a blind test similar to yours, I concluded that I can't tell the differenec between the three of them when the equalizer if flat centered (Ogg, MP3, and original CD - I suspect this has something to do with my merely semi-adequate speakers). However, once I set the equalizer to where I like it (and it's accented, not freakin' bassed out or over trebled), then MP3s started having some sound changing properties. In Techno music (which I did the test with since that's what I listen to), this becomes noticeable to me. Very noticeable when compared.

      --
      SIG: HUP
    12. Re:Not good. by WNight · · Score: 2

      Good for you, for doing your own tests instead of just repeating what you've been told, regardless of if it's "MP3s suck" or "MP3s rock".

      I kept getting told that MP3s suck so I got really good earbuds ($80 earbuds aren't the best or anything, but they beat anything else in my pricerange and have better bass than my stereo speakers) and my fiance and I did some tests.

      At 128 with Audio Catalyst, MP3s are easily recognizable (not always bad, but different). At 128 with LAME (and EAC) we could barely tell. At 192VBR (-r3mix) we couldn't tell any difference.

      We really should get an OGG encoder installed and try encoding with it, smaller is always better, if the quality is the same as people suggest.

      btw. Can you name a song or two that stands out in your listening test, and how to tweak the EQ to highlight the difference? It's somewhat academic because we don't listen to music that way, but it would be good to have something obvious we can use to demonstrate audio artifacts. Is it one of the default settings in Winamp, or what?

    13. Re:Not good. by autocracy · · Score: 2
      What I used was a copy of Paul Oakenfold's Ibiza. The song I played with was track one of disc one - Nat Monday, Waiting (John Creamer Remix). Just looping the first 15 seconds gave plenty of evidence. I tried various other songs, but most of my focus was on Waiting. I tried with both the default for the encoders (128 for MP3, and 160 VBR for Ogg. Yeah, it wasn't fair), and with a more "fair" combo of 160/VBR for Ogg and 192 for MP3.

      The EQ I use is a custom one on a 10 channel equalizer. The settings are (no preamp):

      • 60: +6.8
      • 170: +4.8
      • 310: 0
      • 600: +4.8
      • 1k: 0
      • 3k: +4.8
      • 6k: +6
      • 12k: 0
      • 14k: +4.8
      • 16k: +6.4

      There is NOTHING scientific about these settings. It's just what I find make my music sound best to me (brings out the beat, certain vocals, and the treble mix that I like). All I reccomend is that your speaks are at least $30 and not in a 100% cheap case (they don't really respond well if they aren't at least this good). Before you use any sort of audio test for ANYTHING, be sure that you can turn the bass up a great deal and not have it make sounds dissapear at the volume you're testing.

      E-mails from you with further questions are welcome and encouraged.

      --
      SIG: HUP
  17. Does anybody in R&D for these people get it? by Romancer · · Score: 1

    If I can hear it, then I can rip it, then I can P2P it to everybody that wants a cheaper/easier way of getting songs.

    Untill the Industry gives us that cheaper easier way, they lose money, not only on lost sales, but on R&D blunders with no effect on piracy.

    Remember, it only takes one person in the world to rip the cd, but millions copy it from there.

    --


    ) Human Kind Vs Human Creation
    ) It'd be interesting to see how many humans would survive to serve us.
  18. Why do they bother? by Tabercil · · Score: 1

    Hello... they're trying to set the CDs up so it's uncopyable... yet Phillips (the guys who invented the CD spec) has said here that it intends to try and make its next CD burner able to circumvent the copy mechanisms. And since these guys created the CD, I reckon they'll have an edge in any court battles that occur as a result. So why (other than to piss off the consumer) are the record companies doing this???

    1. Re:Why do they bother? by UnknownSoldier · · Score: 2

      > yet Phillips (the company who invented the CD spec) has said that it intends to try and make its next CD burner able to circumvent the copy mechanisms.

      I'm glad Phillips is doing this. It's great to finally see a company supporting people's fair use* and right to listen to music they have bought, regardless of the medium.

      However, I've always wondered if Phillip's didn't have an exterior motivation? If [audio] copy protection worked, would Phillips have less sales of CD's? What do they have to gain by taking a stance against copy protection?

      *I believe distributing music against the author's wishes is wrong. However, if I've paid for a CD, I believe I have paid for the privilege (or right) to listen to it wherever I am, and in whatever medium I choose, aka unlimited private use, or "fair use"

      > So why (other than to piss off the consumer) are the record companies doing this???

      Now this I can answer. The Recording Companies are desperately trying to maintain control of having people buy music. It's a loosing battle -- all you need is one person to make a perfect digital copy and they *believe* sales will go down. Personally I believe more people *buy* music when they are exposed to more of it. (Go Figure :)

    2. Re:Why do they bother? by LoseNotLooseGuy · · Score: 1, Offtopic

      The Recording Companies are desperately trying to maintain control of having people buy music. It's a loosing battle

      Would that be a battle in which the contenders "let loose or release" something? Or perhaps you meant a losing battle, one which will not be won.

      Congratulations! You have been participant #30 in my campaign to rid Slashdot of this error.

      --
      Proudly correcting Slashdot's most irritating linguistic error since 2002.
    3. Re:Why do they bother? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do they bother; simple enough, someone is currently willing to pay for the technology, and if it's the recording industry, I'm predicting that they're making contracts for a much longer time than this technology will realistically be useful/popular...

      Most companies will be happy to make useless things for you if you want them and are willing to pay for them. Or things that are much less useful than you think. Even if the techies at the company understand that the products are silly, obviously the PR-department is going to put a whole different spin on it...

    4. Re:Why do they bother? by Dr.Evil · · Score: 2

      > yet Phillips (the company who invented the CD spec) has said that it intends to try and make its next CD burner able to circumvent the copy mechanisms.

      I'm glad Phillips is doing this. It's great to finally see a company supporting people's fair use* and right to listen to music they have bought, regardless of the medium.

      However, I've always wondered if Phillip's didn't have an exterior motivation? If [audio] copy protection worked, would Phillips have less sales of CD's? What do they have to gain by taking a stance against copy protection?

      It's very simple - Philips/Magnavox is not primarily a content provider. Sony, RCA, and most of the other equipment manufacturers also have an interest in content production. Since Philips makes their money by enabling fair use, they have a vested interest in continuing to do so, against the interests of other manufacturers to inhibit it to protect their content providing divisions. If Philips is swallowed up by the AOL/TW, Sony, or Viacom behemoths, expect that to change instantaneously.

      Always remember - "copy protection" isn't about preventing copying - it's about preventing a level playing field for content production. The thing the RIAA fears most is independent artists and labels not having to pay the cover charge to the party, not that John Q. Pirate is going to take a $.01 bite out of their $9 profit. If they can ruin the CD for consumers, and force an exodus to DVD-Audio or some similarly harder-to-enter market, then they are back in the driver's seat. The CD burner isn't a threat because you can copy their CD - it's because you can make your own.

      --
      Right...
  19. Lame... by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

    Again and again. Good quality analog in mix with nice encode software result: Almost perfect compressed file out. No big deal.

    So it takes a little more work. How long will it take for someone to automate this process like the digital ripping one before?

    Move on..

    1. Re:Lame... by Jonny+290 · · Score: 1

      I agree. Unfortunately, upwards of 50 percent of music that I've downloaded off of NapGnuKazapheus is poorly encoded.

      I think that if anything, this will discourage the 14 year old kids on mom's HP from ripping and uploading with shitty algorithms with no normalizing, and horribly spelled or absent ID3 tags.

      Instead, we're going to have reliable people do it, with good component CD players outputting through excellent cable to semi-pro audio cards. Then they'll hopefully properly equalize to compensate for mp3, normalize, set ID3's properly and encode well.

      I'd rather have 10 hits for a search in my P2P and be reasonably sure that it's a good quality rip, than 120 hits that I have to surf through and download half of to get a decent mp3.

      --
      Hey Taco! Looks like you're using the "infinite monkeys and typewriters" scheme to generate Ask Slashdots again...
    2. Re:Lame... by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

      Totally, if someone actually has to do a little work, then the encode is probably going to matter to them.

      Never thought of that part of it!

    3. Re:Lame... by wackybrit · · Score: 2

      Sure, this will work.. but like everyone else you fail to realize that doing that takes WAY longer than just ripping the CD. I can rip at 12x on my crappy CD-ROM, and have high quality lame-encoded files of a whole CD within 15 minutes.. and I don't need to be present either.

      If I had to do it the long way, I'd be sitting there for sixty minutes.. no way I'm wasting that amount of time, I just won't buy the CD.

    4. Re:Lame... by talonyx · · Score: 2

      Actually, this is the process a lot of rippers used to use, and I'm sure you can find several that still support it. Audiograbber probably does, and you can use LAME with that.

      So what if it takes an hour? There's no law saying you can't be doing anything else on your machine while it happens.

    5. Re:Lame... by thumperward · · Score: 1

      Actually, I think this is a Good Thing, as does miss Courtney Love, apparently.

      The difference between an mp3 encoded using lame -vbr -q9 and an mp3 encoded using fscking AudioCatalyst / RealJukeBox (spit) isn't GALLING, so to speak, but it's enough that you know fine that it isn't a CD track. Which, when you have a whole album encoded like this, gives one a bit more motivation to get off one's arse and actually buy the album.

      Admittedly there are some people who are just criminally poor at encoding mp3s, but they don't tend to be listening to the same bands as myself, so it doesn't matter that much :)

      - Chris

    6. Re:Lame... by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

      Well someone probably is willing and that is really all it takes. Also you could use your machine while doing the initial audio capture.

      Really the only time cost is interactive time either during capture setup, and then again during encode. If you do the whole album or a preset number of tracks, neither time is significant.

      If not then there would be some additional time splitting tracks and such.

      Some drives will digitally capture with error correction at the lower speeds. I have an HP and when ripping at 1 or 2X it handles errors. (This was on scratched media so I am hoping it is the same.... (maybe not)

    7. Re:Lame... by PotatoHead · · Score: 2

      This I have noticed. Often I have to get a number of encodes to find one done right. From the artists point of view this probably is a good thing.

      This really is just a sideline though. The whole point of this really is about how hard the music is to get. Copy protection will just turn into an incentive for people to consider other options.

      If what is out there is easy and flexible, then most of the people are going to pay most of the time. Longer term this is what the Majors really should be looking at. More loyal customers. Why give them a reason to consider otherwise?

      I guess that is why I say it is lame at best. There are no good endings down this path...

  20. Yeah standards! by dfenstrate · · Score: 2

    Midbar says it is continuing to upgrade its technology

    Yep, they don't do it the same way twice, so you'll never know what these disks won't play on! Play hardware roullette!

    Whereas, a bit for bit rip through a player that emulates an audio cd's error correction will work every time, regardless of their new and improved method.

    Anybody think they'll ever figure out it's a little late in the Compact Disc Arena to try to make such a fundamental change as copy (fair use) prevention to the system?

    --
    Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms should be the name of a store, not a government agency.
  21. Re:Does anybody in R&D for these people get it by swordgeek · · Score: 2

    'Tain't R&D. It's marketing and management. R&D does what they're told, but all the good R&D folks I can think of know perfectly well how stupid this is.

    Sometimes ya gotta do what ya gotta do to keep your job. (i.e. until a better one is available, or at least a less sleazy one)

    --

    "People who do stupid things with hazardous materials often die." -- Jim Davidson on alt.folklore.urban
  22. And... by Heh · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As far as I'm concerned, those copy protected will stay in those warehouses and out of my purchase plans. The only way these people are going to learn is to hit them in the wallet!

  23. You just lost your bet, physics wins! by Romancer · · Score: 3, Informative

    If I can hear it, I can copy it.
    Total Recorder, a program that records data sent to the sound card is wonderfull.

    --


    ) Human Kind Vs Human Creation
    ) It'd be interesting to see how many humans would survive to serve us.
  24. am I missing something? by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is there all this crap about copyprotecting cd's? Tapes are just as easy to copy. Yet there was no "analog rights management" back in the eighties. Nobody launched ad campains calling you a thief if you tape your favorite show. (at least none I remember) Yet now that it's all digital, there seems to be this attitude that there will be more piracy. I still can't download bootleg movies. Maybe I'm just not a "leet" enough "hax0r" to get copies of "Rush Hour 2 special straight from in front of the projector crooked edition with all those wonderful sounds" As far as I know, "losses of revenue" due to piracy in the eighties and such were compensated by jacked up blank tape prices. Why not just jack the prices on blank cd's back up, and maybe charge a reasonable price for originals. $18 for a cd? I think not. That's what drove people to napster, that and that special rush of "getting away with something".

    --

    Shift happens. Fire it up.
    1. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Oh, the recording industry was always pissed.

      In colleges in the 60's and 70's there were recording parties that would get busted from time to time.

      The riaa is taking another shot with their 'death of the industry' nonsense. I suppose its nothing new from them for the past 100 years.

      However, its not the digital part that has the riaa worried, its the easy distribution method called the 'internet'. Now that over 10% of the usa has broadband, probably 1 out of every 8 people have the equivalent of a T1. The only thing its good for is pr0n and p2p. That's scary when you're trying to screw your customers into paying more for less music all the time.

    2. Re:am I missing something? by BitterOak · · Score: 1
      Why is there all this crap about copyprotecting cd's? Tapes are just as easy to copy.

      Yes, but when tapes are copied the quality goes down significantly from one generation to the next. Digital copies for the most part suffer no generation loss, allowing for exponential growth of pirated copies.

      Yet there was no "analog rights management" back in the eighties.

      Actually analog videocassettes (VHS) were protected with the Macrovision scheme starting in the mid-80's, so your comment isn't quite correct. I don't think anyone developed a copy protection scheme for audio cassettes, probably because the loss in quality with each generation, and the relatively low cost of originals made it economically unfeasible to develop such a scheme.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    3. Re:am I missing something? by thesupraman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      two points.

      Firstly, there was quite a fuss with analogue recording (primarily with video, but also with the start of the compact casette tape), it was, as you say, addressed with a 'media corperate' tax being applied to these items, and the feared drop in profits never happened (infact quite the opposite), so the recording industry made big $$ out of this.

      Secondly, the reason this *should* not happen to newer digital media is that a crapload of this is NOT used to record copywrited, stolen, artistic stuff. Much (most?) of the writable digital media (cdrom, harddrives, dvd, etc) are use for storage of computer data.

      I would be VERY annoyed if these same companies manage to get a tax added to the rice of every HD/writable CD/etc, and believe me, they are trying, as they know this is free money for them!

    4. Re:am I missing something? by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 2
      I would be VERY annoyed if these same companies manage to get a tax added to the rice of every HD/writable CD/etc, and believe me, they are trying, as they know this is free money for them!

      For a tax like this to be really fair, they'd have to allocate a proportional share of money for the hard working, underpaid pr0n stars who's artistry surely fill up a large fraction of these disks.

      Somehow, though, I don't see something like a Ron Jeremy Digital Media Performance Compensation Act making it out of a congressional committe.

    5. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous+DWord · · Score: 3, Informative

      There already is a tax on writable media in the States and Canada.

      --
      "If he thinks he can hide and run from the United States and our allies, he's sorely mistaken." Bush on bin Laden
    6. Re:am I missing something? by jred · · Score: 1

      The argument re: analog tapes is degradation of quality. You never get an exact analog copy...

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
    7. Re:am I missing something? by sfm · · Score: 1

      "no analog rights management" back in the eighties"

      Maybe not, but the music industry was still screaming (and loudly). They lobbied for taxes on the blank tape media, and I believe were successful in some states/provences.

      Tape was a good choice when CD writers were just not (cheaply) available. People these days expect CD quality music so I don't think the tape idea will fly.

      Now if you could capture audio from CD playback then use that as your "rip source", you may have something :-)

    8. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      YOu obviously haven't downloaded mp3s off of Kazaa. Some people are *SO* crap at ripping and encoding mp3s they're full of pops and cracks.. or they record them off the radio or other bullshit.

    9. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fortunately, the $0.21 tax I pay for the CD in Canada gives me the right to go over to a friends house and burn everything I can get my hands on without worrying about the RCMP busting in on my fun. Lord knows they already perform enough illegal busts on 100% legal satellite pirates (I love saying that. Legal piracy. Do it now. Do it often. Stick it to da man!) At least this time the right is specifically written down.

      Or at least that's how I seem to interpret it...

    10. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, I'll bite. Tapes are analog, and they're a magnetic storage format. You can copy 'em, but will lose quality with the non-original material, every time, until you wind up with something that looks like the Zapruder film. CDs and DVDs, on the other hand, are digital. The zeroes and ones can (theoretically) be copied infinitely with no degradation. That's why there's more 'piracy.'

    11. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Blank CD prices are jacked up: Consumer audio CD recorders (like the Philips CDR7xx range) will not record onto computer CDR disks, but require blank CDs with an SCMS coding on the disc, and these have a special CDDA 'consumer audio' designation. The upshot is that every time I use my Philips CDR765 to record music composed 300 years ago and performed live by a choir I sing in, a small fee for the privilege goes to the recording industry because it is assumed that I bought the disk in order to use it illegally and deprive the industry of a sale.

      It wouldn't annoy me as much if it weren't for the fact that the recorder sometimes refuses to record or play back (particularly CD-RW discs) because it fails to recognise the consumer audio coding.

    12. Re:am I missing something? by shippo · · Score: 1

      There were plans by CBS to introduce an analogue system, called 'Copycode', around 1987, although it would only work if all new tape recorders had "Copycode" circuitry.

      It worked by cutting a notch in the frequency spectrum. "Copycode" was quickly nick-named "The A-flat remover" and was soon dumped.

    13. Re:am I missing something? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Although decrypting DirecTV is legal in Canada, how would you deal with having to take your card to be reprogrammed twice a week?

    14. Re:am I missing something? by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

      Notice I wasn't stating a "fact". Notice I said "as best as I remember" or something to that effect.

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
    15. Re:am I missing something? by TheQuantumShift · · Score: 1

      As long as I can go into the local grocery store and pick up a 50 pack for eight bucks, I won't consider it jacked up...

      --

      Shift happens. Fire it up.
  25. Impossible by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is such a waste of time. Let's think about it, it doesn't matter how hard they try and prevent ripping. If ripping really becomes too difficult, there is a little miracle on every single CD player, PC or not in existence: the audio-out jack. Sure it's not as convienant as ripping, but you only have to record once at 1x speed. And if they think people won't do it, that's what I used to do with the radio and my PC long before MP3 ever existed. Sure, hard drive space was an issue and all that, but that never stopped me then. Now with hard drives as large as they are, if we have to record to WAV or RAW or whatever format and then convert, we could do it easy enough. Anti-piracy efforts with music are and always have been a lost cause.

  26. not again by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just another plot to take away our freedom and right to privacy. I do what benjamin franklin always said..."those that pick their nose deserve not friends, but they can pick their private parts".

  27. Macrovision? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm just wondering how it is that you can play it on a system at perfect quality, but when you copy it things don't sound right.

    See subject.

    1. Re:Macrovision? by p7 · · Score: 1

      Macrovision requires circuitry in the playback device. They are trying to do this without having to modify the cd player.

    2. Re:Macrovision? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >Macrovision requires circuitry in the playback device.

      Does not. Unless its a DVD player, but that isn't very 80s. Even LaserDisc (80's equivalent of DVD) doesn't require special circuitry for Macrovision, and (from what I've heard) not all LaserDiscs were Macrovision protected anyways (since people with the $$$ for LaserDiscs often had elaborate setups that Macrovision would screw up -- and they probably had a TBC in the path somewhere anyways, rendering Macrovision protection ineffective).

      Macrovision requires an AGC (somewhat advantageous to have anyways... maybe) in the recording VCR. These were being put in as a feature well before Macrovision was created. Macrovision simply abused this "feature" by forcing the AGC to do wild swings, ruining your copy.

  28. How can you take a company seriously... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Y'know what this reminds me of? If you're sick and the doctor says you're probably going to die, you're very prone to buying remedies from quacks. Even people who know better will do dumb things when faced with their own mortality.

    Well, everybody is telling the record companies that they're going to die, so they react just like a human...any shaman who comes along, even Noam Zur, is worth a shot because they simply don't know what to do.

    The CD is here to stay, and by its nature its unprotected. There's not a thing the record companies can do about that except release stuff that will just piss off their regular customers.

    Meanwhile, they could convince people to go to a different format, but why would you give up CDs which have pretty good quality and the ability to copy freely with some unknown format where (a) people have to buy the same records over again (b) its copy protected so you can't make copies (c) there's an installed based of players that will be around for 15-20 years (notice cars STILL come with cassette decks?).

    They really are screwed at this point. I have no prescription for them because they've gone out of their way to be deceitful and they treat their customers (us) like crap.

    They rejected business models that could make them money (Napster).

    They turn to things like copy protection (proven to fail over 2 decades ago).

    And they stand behind laws like DMCA in an attempt to get rid of first-sale doctrine.

    I am not crying a tear.

  29. If I can hear it I can record it by p7 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Why do these people continue to annoy the consumer when in the long run it will do nothing to stop sharing of MP3s. They actually manage to stop us from running the SPDIF Out into the SPDIF in, then I bet me sticking a mike near each speaker will likely be how I have to make my MP3s. Yeah quality won't be as high, but I bet it will happen. This just tramples our fair use rights. If this continues I will have to call my congressman about supporting the guy that was looking into revoking the CDR charge we pay, because the CDR make be used to illegally copy music.

    1. Re:If I can hear it I can record it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      The fellow you're mentioning is Rep. Rick Boucher of Virginia, and his letter to the RIAA is only the latest step in his approach to Fair Use issues. You can read about the other things he supports in relation to technology legislation on his site.

      Don't bother waiting to contact your representatives until the record industry makes its move; it's already done it, and their position is quite clear: they do not intend for us to have unlimited duplication rights or probably even limited duplication rights for -any- reason, including Fair Use, in the next generation of music media (DVD-Audio and the rest), and they would clearly enjoy stamping out duplication rights in the current generation (CDs). If this disturbs you, contact your representatives now with a simple explanation of the situation, your problem with it, and a copy of Boucher's letter to the RIAA.

    2. Re:If I can hear it I can record it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While you're running your CD audio output to the analog input of the soundcard, why not run it through the trusty ol' BBE sonic maximizer and clean up any signal loss from the analog process.

    3. Re:If I can hear it I can record it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The following is Myth 4 from 'Top 10 Myths' on Soundbyting, a RIAA site mostly aimed at educating colleges and students about the evils of casual copying of MP3s. It gives some insight into what they believe is and isn't legitimate duplication of copyrighted audio:
      ---

      4. If I just download sound recordings from an illicit music site or if I make sound files on my computer from my CDs, it's just a copy for personal use and not a violation.
      Personal use copying was considered by Congress when it enacted the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992 (AHRA). The AHRA was a legislative compromise to deal with certain, specifically defined, categories of digital audio copying. Attempting to balance the various competing interests, among other things, the AHRA provides that manufacturers of covered devices must (1) register with the Copyright Office; (2) pay a statutory royalty on each device and piece of media sold; and (3) implement what is known as a serial copyright management system (or SCMS) which prevents all but first generation copies. In exchange for this, the manufacturers of the devices, which might have otherwise found themselves subject to liability for contributory copyright infringement (among other things), received a statutory immunity from suit.

      Consumers also received something. As long as the copying is done for noncommercial use, the AHRA gives consumers immunity from suit for all analog music copying, and for digital music copying with AHRA covered devices. It is important to note that the AHRA does not say that such copying is lawful; it simply provides an immunity from suit.

      The difference between copying to cassette (for instance) as opposed to a computer hard drive is that audio cassette players (as well as Minidisc and DAT players) are devices covered by the AHRA and a computer is not. The specific reasons are technical but boil down to this: The AHRA covers devices that are designed or marketed for the primary purpose of making digital musical recordings. Multipurpose devices, such as a general computer or a CD-R drive, are not covered by the AHRA. This means that they do not pay royalties or incorporate SCMS protections. It also means that neither the devices nor the consumers who use them receive immunity from suit for copyright infringement.

    4. Re:If I can hear it I can record it by Cynikal · · Score: 1

      Well my old CDrom had something called "read_long" dissabled by the manufactuer, what this means is i was unable to use cd rippers... it would read for a second or two and then quit.. so for 2 years i would simply play the cd, and have an audio program record the wave files, then compress to MP3 (cooledit worked nicely).. it took a while, but it worked.. now a slight variation would be to use a cd player's line out to the sound card's line in, and record a hot enough signal to keep a good SNR, and really you probly wouldn't hear a difference from the orriginal CD... so if you can hear it, you can record it...

      as ofr thos copy protected dvd's? just telesynch your tv ;)

  30. If it's digial data... by npietraniec · · Score: 1

    If it's digital data, there's no way you can make a copy and lose quality. Any freshman computer engineering student can tell you that.

    These companies should stop wasting so much money on these worthless technologies and lower prices on thier products. Maybe the reason people don't buy thier garbage is because it's horribly overpriced.

    1. Re:If it's digial data... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem (temporarily) is that its not only "digital data" its also digital errors implanted on the disc. Reading the disc digitally (and not optically / analog) gets interrupted because existing and legacy cd-roms read these error bits, let out a sharp "doh!" and crap out on the read process.

    2. Re:If it's digial data... by psamuels · · Score: 1
      If it's digital data, there's no way you can make a copy and lose quality. Any freshman computer engineering student can tell you that.

      "In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they are different." --Larry McVoy, {Solaris,IRIX,Linux} kernel hacker

      It is quite possible to get errors ripping CDs, even with no visible scratches. Usually the imperfections are minor enough to be inaudible. But try ripping the same track of a favorite CD five times, and checksumming the five CDDA files. If they all match, you have a better CD-ROM than I do.

      Data CDs have a much better error correction scheme than audio CDs - they would be impractical for data storage otherwise. A sector of a data CD is 2048 bytes; an audio sector is 2352 bytes (do the math: 2 channels, 16 bits, 44100 Hz, 1/75 second). I'm no expert, but I believe the size difference is due to the different error correction mechanism.

      --
      "How can you claim that you are anti-crack, while still writing a window manager?" — Metacity README
    3. Re:If it's digial data... by npietraniec · · Score: 1

      If you mean ripping to an MP3 or OGG, then I'd agree. You're converting your data on the fly to a compressed format... But with digital data, you've got a set of ones and zeros that should not get changed over time. If your hardware isn't reading the data correctly, you've got a hardware problem. Digital data isn't subject to wear like analog data is. An analog waveform is subject to degredation over a few generations. 1010101010 should stay 1010101010 after a million copies.

      In fact, you could test that... Try it - write 10101010 on a sheet of paper and then copy it to a new paper... then make a copy of the copy. Do that about 1 million times, then do the same with a sine wave. after the millionth time you'll still have 10101010 in binary... Who knows what that sine wave will look like ;)

    4. Re:If it's digial data... by volsung · · Score: 2

      No, no, no. You skipped the part of his post about error correction. CDs were designed to carry digital data, but data that the designers knew could tolerate less than perfect retrieval. That won't fly with your kernel, but it's perfectly acceptable to require a CD to interpolate a sample every so often because the CD surface couldn't be read. Audio CD data has suck error correction, and the drives are not designed to be able to read the audio data bit-for-bit the same every time. It just wasn't a design requirement.

    5. Re:If it's digial data... by npietraniec · · Score: 1

      ok, you're right, but... you can take that digital data off the CD, lose a few bits because of the horrible medium it on, and have a near perfect copy... It will sound the same as when it was being played though, because you're getting hit by the same errors as you would when you played it... due to imperfections in the medium.

    6. Re:If it's digial data... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In reality, you do lose quality going p2p. Data corruptions, badly coded files, low bit rates are the type of common problems I have seen.

    7. Re:If it's digial data... by Znork · · Score: 2

      Not quite. Most CD players have fairly good audio error correction, while when you rip, you try to rip a perfect copy. The perfect copy will contain willfully engineered flaws that most ordinary cdplayers will gloss over, just because they arent doing the perfect copy thing, but when you play a wav file ripped from the cd, or encode it, you will have the engineered artifacts making it sound like shit.

      Of course, you're still right tho. Some ripping software is designed to do the same error correction while ripping as an ordinary CD players, so nothing changes except which rippers are popular.

      The whole thing is idiotic. Introducing flaws into digital data that they expect the players to correct, which the ripper can correct just as well, with the only result being the cd's are worse actual quality and wont play on some cd players. Sigh.

  31. Digital - Analog - Digital by Banjonardo · · Score: 1
    Something people on slashdot have been saying all along:

    If sound is playable on one medium, it must be copyable to any other.

    Example: play cd's, sound gets converted from digital back to analog, so human ears can hear it. Bam. All we need to do is convert it back to digital, on our own terms. Ergo, there's no possible way to copy-protect such a thing perfectly.

    However, I think the aim is not to completely prevent good copying, but just to prevent most people from copying it.

    Soon enough someone somewhere will write a program to do this.

    --

    -----

    Score 3? For what? Being wrong, at length? - smirkleton

  32. Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK 0 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Its still just the lame trick of burning a second session that defines incorrect track locations and durations for track locations. CD players that are not multisession (CD audio players usually) will ignore the fake second and third sessions. A second lame trick called Track-O is used that furthermore uses the P subchannel to assert a large region of track 1 as "silent" and it is silent and audio player skip over to second index area where begginning of track 1 audio really starts, but computers see data blocks in the first track in the beginning section with the P channel asseting silence. This hidden data area looks like a standard ISO9660 volume and further screws up players. Its an old trick from 1992 used on nearly 80 major titles, before Blue-Book Enhanced CDs (CDPlus) shipped. It only affects computers. A third sneaky trick of putting heavily corrupted data in the track lead in lead out areas to slow down auto-rippping is usually employed. And furthemore, ANY cd driver modified to trust the first session of a audio cd disk will play correctly, especially if it understands how to IGNORE track-zero tricks. Of course a raw copy of the entire disk will duplicate it, as long as the reaw duplicate deliberately ignores copying session information past the first session.

    It merely needs to copy track 1 explicitely, all 2774 bytes per block on a Plextor or at least 2352 in raw mode.

    Macs and PCs will soon have updated THIRD PARTY cd drivers that will play any of these things. One system will suffer the most... the newest macs... thats because to eliminate EMI audio noise, the macs force users to use digital audio extraction over ATA-ATAPI bus and SCSI bus exclusively. This is fine if the media is not heavily damaged in some sections, but these corrupted disks slow down firware in standard audio extraction modes used on macs. Apple got rid of all their A-D converters, even for audio mics. And now that thier audio D-A out is in usb and uses usb speakers no mother board interference and disk drive head interference emits on speakers cranked to 500 watts.

    I miss track-0 tricks, its cool to see the world using it 10 years later.

    It explains why some cactus cds can be copied except the first audio track, with older tools.

    as for CDDA logo rights being removed by Philips.... Philips abused the tradmark symbol themselves!!! They placed it on some european audio CDs in 1994 that were 79 minutes long. That was in explicite violation of the CDDA logo standard that maintains a maximum of 333,000 blocks of audio allowed (74 minutes)

    Even since that day, Anyone is morally allowed to violate the CD-DA standard logo because it MEANS NOTHING now and is abused even by Philips.

    I wish there was a manufacturer symbol I could trust to look for that meant REALLY-CDDA not violating *ANY* part of the "Red Book" whatsoever. Then these Cactus abominations from hell could be avoided.

    Sony and Universal will soon shut down web sites that explain how a cheap 5 cent resister tied across the leads of a decrypted-USB speaker input can be used as audio in source into a D-A audio card to extract formaerly-protected encrypted limited-access audio.

    ha!

    long live the resister!

  33. You'd think there would be a PROOF by 2nd+Post! · · Score: 3, Interesting

    A mathematical or inductive proof on data quality, access, copy protection, etc.

    Inductive proof. We'll work with a single bit, and assume that it scales to multiple bits.

    A single bit exists on a medium We'll use a stone tablet, and assume that it scales to thin wafers of aluminum encased in plastic.

    A consumer who owns, for legal purposes we'll use own and not lease or license, this stone tablet can see the bit and can identify it as either a one or zero.

    Said consumer can then copy the bit to another tablet, assuming they own a tablet and chisel. Or, theoretically, a laser and a wafer of aluminum encased in plastic.

    If the consumer can see the bit, nothing can stop the consumer from copying the bit, short of a man with a knife standing over the second blank tablet. Or, theoretically, a man in a suit with a pile of papers in his hand.

    1. Re:You'd think there would be a PROOF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not sure how this "proof" is either mathematical or inductive but you do have a valid point.

    2. Re:You'd think there would be a PROOF by thumperward · · Score: 1

      That's not the point.

      The idea isn't really 'copy-protection', it's 'rip-protection'.

      Imagine you have a sheet of paper containing English sentences. You can both copy this by hand to another sheet and read it out (i.e. understand the content).

      Now imagine that there are no spaces or puntuation marks included. Or that there are random extra characters inserted every five letters. You'll still be able to transcribe the letters one-by-one onto another sheet of paper, but whether you can make sense of it or not depends on how smart you are.

      It should still always be possible though, assuming that there is a solution (which, in the case of copy-protected CDs, there must be, because SOMETHING has to be able to play them).

      - Chris

  34. Nothing we can do.... by Peridriga · · Score: 3, Insightful

    We can all argue till we are blue in the face that no one is going to used a crippled product. But, how many times have we seen them come and enter the market (DVD).... This shouldn't just be posted to slashdot. This article needs to be forwarded to everyone you know explaining that this company is trying to sell you a product that is cripplied in a fashion that doesn't allow you to exercise your given 'fair-use' rights....

    Successful efforts are grassroots efforts...

    As Jello Biafra said

    Don't wait for sassy to come around and say it. Get sassy and say it

  35. digital by hanno_barikai · · Score: 1, Insightful

    ANYTHING that is digital will never be uncopyable. The reason is because you always know the parameters of how the digitizing is done. There are only so many ways that 1's and 0's can be put together (or taken apart) that make sense.

    1. Re:digital by droleary · · Score: 2

      ANYTHING that is digital will never be uncopyable.

      While this statement makes sense, the reasoning

      The reason is because you always know the parameters of how the digitizing is done. There are only so many ways that 1's and 0's can be put together (or taken apart) that make sense.

      is very flawed. Copying isn't about the ability to "make sense" of data. A CD press doesn't need to figure out that one sequence of bits can represent music and other set can represent images. That is why most people make a distinction between copy protection and copy prevention.

      Further, the "so many ways" that data can be [en|de]coded is actually infinite. I make a good deal of fun on this issue on my Data Fetish web site. The same data can easily make sense in more than one way based on different coding schemes, with my favorite example (to date) being the DeCSS prime.

    2. Re:digital by Ziviyr · · Score: 1

      Further, the "so many ways" that data can be [en|de]coded is actually infinite.

      Just a pedantic quibble here, but infinity is significantly more than 2 to the power of 6731988480. Just because my calculator can't handle it doesn't make it infinite.

      Be cool if I could back 100 gigs up to a CD with infinite (-100 gigs) room to spare.

      --

      Someone set us up the bomb, so shine we are!
    3. Re:digital by droleary · · Score: 1

      Just a pedantic quibble here, but infinity is significantly more than 2 to the power of 6731988480. Just because my calculator can't handle it doesn't make it infinite.

      I think you misunderstand my point. I'm saying that data can mean what you want it to mean, however many bits are involved. If I give you 01100101001010 (or any sequence of any length), you can't really say what it represents without context. I'm not talking about compression, but rather the combination of data and decoder needed to assign "meaning" to any bit stream.

  36. hrmm how about keeping it digital? by davidsmind · · Score: 0

    Have your favorite player (winamp XMMS) play the song but redirect the audio to a file. How would they possibly stop you from doing this?

    --
    I'll Sig you!
  37. Cactus Data Shield by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Imagine a beowulf cluster of these! It would be both unusual, and, I daresay, quite hilarious.

    1. Re:Cactus Data Shield by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ouch! and prickly too!

  38. More casualties... by ebbomega · · Score: 3, Funny

    And the geek vs. Corporate war continues.

    Once again, the corporations losing this war on the basis that corporate types don't seem to be thinking on the same level as geeks.

    And this is why the corporations are never going to win. They are predictable, and the geeks are innovative.

    This is how it works. Picture if you will a major record company meeting room... for the sake of argument, let's call them the Big Music Guys. Systems analysts #1, #2 and #YesMan are meeting with big corporate pointy-haired type.

    Management: "This Copywrite stuff is getting out of hand and making us obsolete. Help us control people's money again by providing a useless service."
    Geek #1: "How do you expect to do that?"
    Management: "Well, we're gonna make some way that stops them from copying our releases."
    Geek #1 breaks out into laughter. Manager fires him.
    Geek #2: "Y'see, the problem is that any way that we can possibly work on it to make it inaccessible, the rest of the world will find some other way around it. We can't possibly keep up with the public domain."
    Management: "You're not being a team player. You're fired."
    Pseudo-Geek YesMan: "I'll get right to work on it."

    And YesMan, having attained his stature through ass-lipgluing as opposed to technical know-how, will spend much of his time working game #4711 of Freecell. Once he has attained this, he will spend about 12 hours putting together some simple encryption device that will fall to the suggestion of Geek #2. Management type returns to stockholders, says "We're currently working on a state-of-the-art encryption device to keep copywrite crackers from getting to our music" and stock prices go up. Shareholders revel in their smart investment as the company releases inferior technology developed by a yes-man which will get worked around approximately 12 hours after its release. Cycle continues.

    Especially since these days, with the ever-rising popularity of free-information and licenses such as GPL that companies are finding it harder and harder to set standards, because the geeks are beating them to better ones, and as a result they can't make anything with any built-in security to it...

    Yay geeks! We rule! Keep it up, kids.

    --
    Karma: Non-Heinous
    1. Re:More casualties... by Matthaeus · · Score: 1

      And YesMan, having attained his stature through ass-lipgluing as opposed to technical know-how, will spend much of his time working game #4711 of Freecell.

      I just beat that game of freecell in under 3 minutes. And I'm drunk!

      Maybe I shouldn't be posting to slashdot drunk?

  39. *sigh* by Perianwyr+Stormcrow · · Score: 4, Funny

    "Dude, you're gonna go to jail!"

    --

    What we call folk wisdom is often no more than a kind of expedient stupidity.-Edward Abbey

    1. Re:*sigh* by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1

      Just had to tell you - got my good laugh for the day. Thanks. I was beginning to get annoyed with slashdot.

      --


      Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
  40. Putting up paper walls to stop a bulldozer... by p24t · · Score: 4, Insightful

    C'mon, seriously. Does anyone really expect 'copy-protection schemes' to actually work? How many different methods have various industries come up with to try to hinder use and/or copying? Macrovision? All that did was make me want to get a GoVideo. CSS? Cracked in so many different ways that to outlaw them all, the government would have to destroy all computers in the US. How long will it take for someone to crack this crap?

    I mean, AudioCD protection? Get real. I refuse to buy CD's for just this reason. (Don't get me wrong, I like to buy CD's, and I still buy local artist's albums) But I don't listen to CD's. They get stored. Ripped and stored. It's just easier to listen to my music when it's stored on a server in the closet. Not to mention, I don't have to worry about losing the disc quite as easily. I've had them stolen, scratched, lost, etc. Does this mean I no longer have the rights to the information on it? Just because my R.E.M. CD won't play anymore, does that mean that it was illegal for me download the entire disc off the internet? (to quote the great Stigmata:) FALSE.

    There will be some problem with trying to implement this new technology. I have a CD player. It came with the stereo that's hooked to my computer. It plays Red Book format discs. I don't know that it's going to play Cactus format discs. Do I expect it to? No. From here on out, I plan to buy Philips equipment, because I know that it is going to work the way I expect it to, and play the CD's I buy the way it's supposed to. If I want to buy CD's that I can't listen to, I'll just buy some bricks. At least those I can throw at RIAA executives.

    And don't throw the DMCA into this. I'm sick of this stupid law. It goes against so many things I believe in, and the very basic tenant of our freedoms. This will come to a climax, and one side will fall. Whether it's the people or the corporations, is yet to be seen.

    1. Re:Putting up paper walls to stop a bulldozer... by Skuld-Chan · · Score: 1

      In some ways this reminds me of the old C64 days where people used to try 1001 different copy protection schemes - since 99% of all C64 have the same disk drive you could do this. A lesson to us all - most all those C64 games people download off various websites were copy protected with some wierd ass scheme at one point.

      Eventually you had copy programs (list fasthackem) that had parameter files so the program knew exactly what to do to copy it - I suspect soonish if we don't have paremeter files, we'll have instructions on how to get nero or whatever to rip your latest cd.

  41. Tell us more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Sony and Universal will soon shut down web sites that explain how a cheap 5 cent resister tied across the leads of a decrypted-USB speaker input can be used as audio in source into a D-A audio card to extract formaerly-protected encrypted limited-access audio. "

    Sounds interesting. can you clue us in to a link or at least some search parms?

    1. Re:Tell us more! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Haha -- You really have no clue about
      electrical stuff, do you...

  42. What ever happened to fair use? by topside420 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    So, when did we lose the right to make copies for ourself? This is obviously taking that freedom away from us. Not all copies are illegal, therfor how does this copy protection hold up?

    So, we can make copies for ourselves by law...unless someone decides they dont like consumers to have that right?

    This is just another common example that you really dont have any rights, they just like to make you think you do.

    Ask ANY cop -- if they want something they will get it.

    Example:
    Cop: Can I search the vehicle?
    Person: No.
    Cop: Well, I ran out of tickets, going to have to bring you down to the station to write it up.

    Meanwhile -- your car is towed for the moment (can't leave it on the street) and a mandatory 'inventory search' is put in place. Your car has been searched. Good thing we have that 4th amendment :)

    1. Re:What ever happened to fair use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cops can only search your vehicle after they tell you that you are free to go. aka, after they've given you the ticket. Anything else can get the cop fired. When they ask you if they can search your vehicle, you are free to drive off without even answering the question.

    2. Re:What ever happened to fair use? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So, when did we lose the right to make copies for ourself?


      You never had the "right" to make copies for yourself. "Fair use" is only a defense against a copyright infringement charge, it is not a legal right. Content producers can do whatever to keep you from copying content you have purchased. If you find a legal way to copy it for "fair use" you have a defense if they bring charges against you.

      tk
  43. Proven? by Pengunea · · Score: 1

    Just like the Alex Chiu Immortality rings. PROVEN to work. Pft, if I actually accepted that kind of heresay I might as well walk around with horse blinders on.

    Nay I say, it's not bloodly likely that the quality will go down due to copying. Information always ends up as 1's and 0's sometime and more dedicated people than I will be sitting there with their compilers and linkers already with a soloution to decode and transfer.

    Come to think of it that's like saying a .bin file is unreadable and untransferrable because it's in binary and therefore you can't read it right away.

    --
    Starkle, starkle, little twink.
  44. Linux is shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I guess whenever Slashdot barfs and won't let you log in, or forces you to the static homepage, or comes up with invalid pages, it's Linux's fault then?

    Please... get a clue, a life, or a lobotomy. Pick one and stick with it.

    1. Re:Linux is shit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since every single hit referred by slashdot to that site required a hit to slashdot, and considering the much other traffic the other stories present, its is quite obvious your troll is shit.

  45. R&D? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't be silly. The people in R&D know that what they are doing is futile. But they also know that in the dot-bomb era, taking the PHB's money is better than standing in the unemployment line. They're smirking behind their bosses' backs.

  46. alternative MP3 encoding technique by JPawloski · · Score: 1

    along the same lines, has anyone else heard about certain artists creating extra "noise" on their music (something in a range that is so high that humans can neither hear it nor will it affect sound quality). When converted to a lossy format, usually for pirating (like MP3 format), it garbles extremely easily.

    1. Re:alternative MP3 encoding technique by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 1

      They are wasting their time. Before doing the compression, you just filter out the ranges that you cannot hear anyway, and *then* compress it.

      --
      You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
    2. Re:alternative MP3 encoding technique by cyril3 · · Score: 0
      Isn't lossy compression based on getting rid of the stuff humans can't hear in the first place.

      This could also explain why my dog hates Charlie Pride.

    3. Re:alternative MP3 encoding technique by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Shouldn't matter. Those frequencies are the first to go in an MP3 compression engine; should this prove effective, simply lowpass filter it.

      My guess says that, if this technology is out there and working, it has more to do with the ripping process instead of the MP3 process, and that the garbling is basically the result of some sort of intentional aliasing (assuming that audio CD players have a better brickwall filter than computer CD players). Nevertheless, there's prolly a workaround, and anyone who thinks they're putting sound of any kind (even if it is above 20kHz) on a medium without it affecting sound quality isn't listening through decent enough speakers. High frequencies affect spatialization of a sound (hence the push for a higher sample rate)

      Basically all you have to do is send it through a lowpass filter. Hell, you can probably fix that in Sox...

    4. Re:alternative MP3 encoding technique by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't put anything above 22.05KHz on a CD anyway. Anything above it will get aliased into audio range.

      Since CD ripping is dealing with the same sampled sound, you should have problems removing any frequency ranges you want using DSP algorithms.

  47. Greatest Anti CD copying ever!!! by Kasmiur · · Score: 1

    they don't even have to put it on the CD.

    All they have to do is release a list of the CD's that are susposed to have it and many audiophiles will be too scared to rip them because they will lose quality.

    Security through Fear and through obsecurity.

    --
    -THIS SPACE FOR RENT!
  48. $5... by Shifty+McFlamebait · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...That's how much I spent on a dubbing cable from Radio Shack to break the last 5000 or so ridiculous copy protection schemes.

    Until a player comes out for a new type of media in which every part of the transmission uses new technology, including sending the audio to the speakers, piracy will be as easy as plugging in and clicking twice.

  49. It's not about Optical output, it's about Roger... by stefanlasiewski · · Score: 3, Funny

    They now claim that there will be no issues playing it but you will lose quality if you try to copy. I'm just wondering how it is that you can play it on a system at perfect quality, but when you copy it things don't sound right. Do they not know about optical output?

    It's not about optical output, silly. When they find out that you made a copy, Roger-- The RIAA Enforcer, comes to your house and rubs a key across your copied disk. Therefore, you will lose quality.

    As if the pain of losing a CDR isn't enough, the noise made during this scrating is supposed to be untollerable.

    Losing 1 CDR, the CD Scratch Noise, and Roger's body oder will prevent you h4x0rz from copying CD's in the future...

    --
    "Can of worms? The can is open... the worms are everywhere."
  50. A little math by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Let's see.. the RIAA has said it lost $300 million dollars a year to piracy. In 2000 they shipped 942 million CDs.

    Now that they've eliminated all music piracy through their innovative copy protection techniques, we should all enjoy the price drop: $300,000,000 / 942,000,000 = $0.32 per CD. Since they are no longer losing all that money to piracy, we can look forward to paying 32 cents less for each CD! They are basically a trustworthy group, so I'm sure they'll pass the savings along to consumers.

  51. Remember: by Guppy06 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If it's copy-protected, it's not really a CD. Thank you, Philips.

  52. The obviously needed clairification of above post by Romancer · · Score: 1

    If the people in R&D get it they would try and explain to the marketing and management.

    One of them would eventually listen, especially if that person was shown a simple rip in progress between a portable cd player and a microphone input of a computer.

    It's the people in R&D that come up with the actual protection methods, if they said it's useless and showed them the above example they would ask what could be done then.

    in conclusion, it's the R&D that has the best chance to change this practice of copyprotecting CDs cause they can best explain it's futility to the management and marketing morons.

    --


    ) Human Kind Vs Human Creation
    ) It'd be interesting to see how many humans would survive to serve us.
  53. Screwed by BEST BUY by Veramocor · · Score: 2, Informative


    No my problem isn't this,

    "I bought a 129 GF$ and now they won't honor the price (Offtopic -1) "

    Its with their return policy and FF2/cactus data shield.

    I thought I'd buy the Fast and Furious 2 to see if the copy protection really works. The "cd" of course said I could return it if defective. I went to return it and it was a no go. I tried to explain that it didnt work, but they didnt get it.

    BTW eac is able to fix the defective TOC and then rip. Not sure about the ripped audio quality, i'm not an audiophile.

    Ver amo cor

    --
    Veramocor
  54. For better or worse by alsta · · Score: 2, Redundant

    Some people may wage this "battle" by breaching the DMCA. As you know, circumventing a restrictive mechanism which aims to prevent serialized copying, is a fellony these days. I am not going to break that law, no matter how dubious it is.

    Instead I will not buy music CDs anymore. I can live without music. And if you can too, I would suggest that you'd consider doing the same.

    But I think we're missing the big picture. Why are these companies doing this? Is it because it is a fashionable thing which one can make a buck on? Possibly. Could it be that they know that the days of the CD are counted? Perhaps. Are they afraid of the Napster-like services becoming more authoritative than the labels? Damn right they are and they should be.

    These companies have been feeding off the public because they are the authoritative source of music albums. What if that authority was to change? They would have nothing. Why should somebody go buy an album for some rediculous amount of money when the same content can be downloaded for very little or nothing?

    These companies may be doing this because of the Napsterization of the world. Think about it. Napster was shut down, no biggie. Napster was based in the U.S. Clear juristiction. However what if the infrastructure was put in place and such a service was to move to say... ...Russia? There is no way Corporate America could get to that unless a) sabotage was an option or b) the U.S. Government was to issue sanctions against such a country.

    Either one could be feasible in dire straits, but certainly not considered lightly. Most likely these companies will perish when people have had enough.

    --
    Wealth is the product of man's capacity to think. -Ayn Rand
    1. Re:For better or worse by WhiteKnight07 · · Score: 1

      However what if the infrastructure was put in place and such a service was to move to say... ...Russia? There is no way Corporate America could get to that unless a) sabotage was an option or b) the U.S. Government was to issue sanctions against such a country.

      See freenet.

      --


      We're going to make information free Mr. Anderson, whether you like it, or not.
    2. Re:For better or worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "These companies have been feeding off the public because they are the authoritative source of music albums. "

      They are not.
      Bands are opposed to Napster.

      "Why should somebody go buy an album for some rediculous amount of money when the same content can be downloaded for very little or nothing? "

      Why should anyone bother purchasing anything if all one needs to do is to enter store with a huge gun ?

    3. Re:For better or worse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who cares if bands are opposed to Napster. The only choice bands have if the authority changes is to quit making music.

      Bands don't get to choose where the public finds music.

      That reference to a gun is so utterly stupid that I will not comment on it.

  55. Why is this wrong? by gartogg · · Score: 1

    When I go into a drugstore, I can buy a drug. I am not allowed to copy the drug, or manufacture it (even for private use.)

    BUT if I go into target, I can buy a crippled "The Fast and Furious Soundtrack" CD. Why do I own the data, and not just a peice of plastic? They didn't sell the data, and that's obvious b/c it's crippled...

    SO... Why can I complain?

    The supreme court says I have "fair use" of the data, but it seems that I am no longer being sold data, I am being sold a piece of plastic. If I want more rights than these, the owner of tha DATA should be able to sell them to me (seperately at a higher price if he wishes,) but I have no inherent right to this data, and no inherent right to "fair use" other than some legal abstraction that was convenient for the supreme court at a time when they could not see the full consequences that the particular interpretation they gave would be used for.

    If we want DATA, we need to get it sold to us. We cannot change the system, by complaining that they aren't using red-book standards, because they have no obligation to. They only have an obligation to provide what they told us they would; One playable copy of a CD (on a medium that is known, or a fair return policy if we can't use it.)

    They did what they needed to. It sucks. It's not nice. It's a perversion of what life should be like. It's an Abomination. We hate them. They are all Evil.

    TOO BAD FOR US. They did what they had to to protect themselves, and their profits. They didn't break the law (in a significant way concerning the sale, not in terms of the use of the CD logo or other inconsesquentials.) They are right. We are wrong.

    I don't like it anymore than the next guy, and I won't buy the CD's. That is my part. If there are petitions, I'll sign them. I'll even donate money to a cause if that's what needs to happen, but I WON'T claim they did anything wrong or illegal.

    --
    I'm a concientious .sig objector.
    1. Re:Why is this wrong? by wadetemp · · Score: 2

      How long have you been reading Slashdot? No doubt people are going to tear this apart and start complaining about the lack of separation between the bits and the plastic, information has no owner, and so on and so forth. But if you believe you only bought the plastic, that's a personal choice. Personal choice about the value of the idea and creations of others is the American way too. Welcome to the vacuum that is the rest of it. :)

    2. Re:Why is this wrong? by gartogg · · Score: 1

      They only sold the plastic. If they wanted to sell the data, they would have sold it in a readable format. I'm not saying it's ideal, or fair. I'm saying that they have done nothing wrong by crippling their CD's

      --
      I'm a concientious .sig objector.
    3. Re:Why is this wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Brownshirt legality??? Fsck 'em in the azzhole see how legal that feels ... hehe

    4. Re:Why is this wrong? by Tackhead · · Score: 3, Funny
      > When I go into a drugstore, I can buy a drug. I am not allowed to copy the drug, or manufacture it (even for private use.)

      Right. That's called "patenting".

      The deal is that in order to promote useful progress in the arts and sciences, the manufacturer has to tell the world how to make the drug. (That's why anyone can read the patent on it.) The government, in return for this service, grants the manufacturer a legal monopoly over making the drug for the next 17 years. After the 17 years are up, however, anyone can make the drug. If you can't make your investment into Prozac or Viagra back in 17 years, then tough titty.

      That's the deal - if you tell the world how to make your miracle drug or cool invention, you get to price-gouge the world for the next 17 years. After that, everyone else gets to join in the fun and you have to compete.

      > BUT if I go into target, I can buy a crippled "The Fast and Furious Soundtrack" CD. Why do I own the data, and not just a peice of plastic? They didn't sell the data, and that's obvious b/c it's crippled...

      Right again. That's called "copyright".

      By publishing 1000000 copies of the CD or DVD with a big pile of bits on it, RIAA or MPAA tell the world how to reproduce a song, or a movie.

      Sonny "I read OT-7 and can communicate with that tree!" Bono was more than just an idiot, a $cientologist and a Congressman (but I repeat myself). You see, Sonny was also working for Disney, and because of that, RIAA and MPAA get to control who gets to reproduce the bits for 75 years after the original creator dies. (And to buy another law that says "100 years after death of creator" as soon as the current "75 after death of creator" starts to threaten Mickey Mouse again.)

      See the difference?

      Funny, neither can I.

      The smart thing to do would be to realize that digital media (software, music, movies) are no different from the sorts of things that patent protection.

      Both involve an initial innovation. Both involve telling the world how to reproduce your innovation.

      Yet one has 17 years of protection, and the other, 75 years after the death of the creator.

      Intellectual property laws need to be reformed in such a way that both copyrights and patents expire more quickly, require renewal, and if not renewed, the works in question (if copyrighted) fall into the public domain, or (if patented) lose patent protection.

      We can quibble over the numbers - and I think "17 years" is too long - but even reducing the time limit on copyright to 17 years would be a damn fine start.

      "If you can't make a respectable profit on a movie or a song in 17 years, give up and find another line of work".

      Say it. Feel it. Think about it. If that's good enough for Pfizer and Merck and the tens of billions of dollars in biotech research, it's gotta be good enough for a fuckin' cartoon mouse, or a chick with big tits who can lip-sync.

    5. Re:Why is this wrong? by radja · · Score: 2

      Actually, patents do not stop home manufacture of (e.g.) drugs. However, you cannot exploit it, commercially or otherwise.

      //rdj

      --

      No one can understand the truth until he drinks of coffee's frothy goodness.
      --Sheikh Abd-Al-Kadir, 1587
    6. Re:Why is this wrong? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The difference here that this is copyright law.
      When purchasing a cd you are buying the plastic and a liecence to its contents. Under copyright law you are entitled to a backup for personal use.

      All that something like this does is hurt the casual (and often very legal) users who wish to make that backup (or like me make the cd the backup and use all the cds ripped to the hd). This will not cutdown the napster style trading, since as soon as one person obtains a digital copy (i fully doubt they will ever stop one person) it will spread expodentually.

  56. It's too late Computers have changed the world by p7 · · Score: 1

    The world has changed. Computers are so powerful now that playing compressed CD quality sounds is a trivial task. The bandwidth available to the average computer user is enough to make the downloading of these files inconsequential. Their is an ever growing supply of intelligent people willing to defeat any system that they believes infringes on their rights or sometimes just because they can. The fact that Napster was as successful as it was, makes me believe that ripping programs that will defeat these measures will get out to the masses. Making it so that even the casual copier can copy their music. The only thing that can prevent this is to come up with something that is not possible for a computer to process in realtime and is so much better that we will not be satisfied with the lesser version. I don't think you can do this with sound/music. We are almost to the point where we can do this with DVD quality video. The only way to stop this would be to enact legislation that limitted the speed of our computers. Unfortunately for the media empire that isn't going to happen.

  57. waste of effort by BigBir3d · · Score: 1

    the largest sector of consumers for music these days is pre-teen and teenage girls. not exactly the ones who will be most likely to gnutella their collection. alot of them want the actual cd, so they can oggle over all the pics of the cute guys or help out the 'cool' girl bands.

  58. Also, digital is non-realtime by andaru · · Score: 1
    If you wanted to copy analog tapes at faster than 1x, you had to take another quality hit.

    Also, tapes just weren't as convenient as most digital storage used now, so copying them and playing them was a bigger deal (don't forget not to record the first drum hit onto the tape leader).

    But as long as you can do a high quality A/D conversion, it only takes one person with an analog line out from their DMCA compliant audio player to the analog input of their (pro) audio card to get a nice, new, clean, high quality, non copy protected copy which can swiftly propagate across the internet (or person to person - once you are no longer constrained to 1x, it becomes much more feasible to make copies for friends).

    Untill they make it illegal to sell any player which does not include a complete closed audio path (from copy protected media, to a player which honors said copy protection, to speakers which are affixed in such a way that they cannot be disconnected without somehow destroying the unit), they have to give you an analog out.

    --

    Why is Grand Theft Auto a much more serious crime than Reckless Driving?

    1. Re:Also, digital is non-realtime by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Untill they make it illegal to sell any player which does not include a complete closed audio path

      I have just submitted a patent to the US patent office on a device that allow you to make recordings even if they implement a completely closed audio path.

      It is an audio to analog to digital conversion device. I call it a microphone. I spoke to the patent examiner, and he said I can expect approval within the next week or so.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  59. reduction in audio quality = 128kbps? by Hadlock · · Score: 4, Insightful

    kazaa was limited to searching for 128kbps mp3s (sans a quick registry hack), and often the "most popular" mp3 of a particular name is of the 128k variety. i'm sure for those of us who didn't rip our own entire collection, or get alot of mp3's off of mp3.com or others, 128 is perfectly fine. if reduction = 56k however...

    --
    moox. for a new generation.
  60. I've said it once ..... by Ashcrow · · Score: 1

    I've said it a thousand times. You don't need to rip audio with xyz brand cd to mp3 software. High quality audio will continue to be online as long as sound hardware is available to people.

    For instance, I have a lot of cables, a decent soundcard, and a nice CD player. I can easily set up the audio out on the CD player to the soundcards audio in and make raw wavs.

    1. Re:I've said it once ..... by mlk · · Score: 1

      it's slowwww thou.

      mlk, does not use illegal MP3's, but rips his CD's for "easy of use".

      --
      Wow, I should not post when knackered.
  61. speed bump? by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1

    1. some geek finds a way to burn the protected cd
    2. geek shares cd on morpheus
    3. 3 weeks pass. it's shared everywhere

    what's the problem?

    --


    Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
  62. Re:Slashdot Commenting Study by Drunk4Free · · Score: 1

    There is a reason you would be modded down. That study is stupid.

  63. How is the RIAA making any money? by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How is the RIAA making money by preventing people from listening to music? Seems silly to me that they'd close a market instead of ivesting in a new one.

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  64. I dunno about that by topside420 · · Score: 2, Interesting
    If you are stopped for a traffic violation, thats all they need to arrest you and bring you to the station. A ticket is just an agreement to goto the courthouse. They can legally arrest you because of it and bring you to the station. You broke a law. So no, you can't just drive off after you are asked that question.

    Not sure if I am just not understanding what you are saying, or if you are misinformed.

    Also, I am from Louisiana -- we are known for corrupt politics. The LA government is out there to make money, and thats it. Threy do everything from re-wording laws to make them easier to enforce, i.e. not needing to prove 'intent' simply by re-wording the law. I just finished a defensive driving class, and the cop teaching it didn't stop mentioning how corrupt the Louisiana government was and how corrupt the laws of the state were. Right down to the cops who are enforcing them. Who knows, some states might care about you, I know mine doesnt.

    1. Re:I dunno about that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      An interesting tidbit from this site:

      "Q. When can police search an individual or premises?

      A. The police can search the defendant for evidence related to an alleged crime at the time of an arrest. They can also search the area that is in close proximity to the defendant, i.e., that he can easily reach. Any evidence the police find during such a search is ordinarily admissible at a subsequent criminal trial. If the police stop a person, but do not arrest him, they will generally need a warrant to conduct a search."

      I guess it depends on wether they oficially arrest you inside of outside the vehicle as to wether they can legally search the car. Fortunately, with all those video cameras on police cars nowadays, you have some kickass evidence to show exactly when you were arrested.

      All I know is that every single ticket I ever get (even the $10 ones for parking 5 minutes over on a metered spot) will always be contested by me, pro se. Considering the time the government has to spend mounting their case against me, and how little time I need to prepare the words "I was going to get change" or "I was speeding because I was ready to shit myself" or, if I am truely lazy "no contest" just so I'm not stuck with saying I'm guilty, unless the ticket has three digits in it it probably isn't even worth their effort. Not that any of these defences would likely win, but who cares? Speeding fines under 20 km/h and meter fines aren't right in my book anyways, and I've heard more than enough stories of the court bargaining with your beforehand to make it worth my effort.

      Fortunately, I've gone 7 years driving without breaking the law, as far as my record is concerned (thank you nice driving tester for not failing me for rolling that stop sign at a whopping 1 km/h! I'd have bought you a beer, but for some reason I think you'd probably have failed me for suggesting that...)

    2. Re:I dunno about that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What I'm saying is that it is illegal for the cop to hold a ticket over your head in order to be able to search your car. If they don't have probably cause (and they can probably make some bs up), then they can't ask to search your vehicle until you are "free to go". He can't say: "can I search your vehicle?", then when you say no blast you with a ticket (or sit there "writing" the ticket for hours until you consent). I've known cops who've gotten taken to court, got sued and fired because they did this. It might be different in some states, but I believe this to be the rule of thumb rather than the exception. One of my cop friends just loves acting like he's going to give someone 20 tickets, then just writes them two. After that, most of the gullible bastards out there are so thankful they let him search their car. But once they ask you if they can search your car, if they don't have probable cause then you are free to go--they can't write you a ticket. Probable cause is the key here.

  65. It's just PR for Charley Pride. Fight back! by mattr · · Score: 4, Insightful
    DUH.

    Of course it won't work, nobody expected it to. It just appeared to work at the demo and everyone *knows* about demos. There are no 10 million CDs. There is no copy protection. There is no spoon.

    What there is a heck of a lot of, is spouting about Cactus Data Shield, which has a really good name. We are helping launch this company, people. But how to keep quiet when the only way to express oneself is to talk / type?

    We could limit ourselves to a minimum mnemonic. Don't waste words on these droids. No flamefest for lurking writers to write about. They can only write, "The Slashdot Community again voted a resounding NO with 853 negative minimum responses against CDS Corp. and 1 for them, which was by an Anonymous Coward, Guess Who."

    Some likely mnemonics:
    "DOWN WITH CDS" (or just "DOWN!@*%") - Full moral support for complete technical, business, social failure of the company.
    "DUH" (or "DUMB", or "BAKA" if you are feeling Japanese) - Breaks the laws of physics and sociology; techies know, and their investors will get it in the end. Embellishment may be added after first keyword in caps; subsequent posters can get away with "DUH (see above)".
    "CRACK IT NOW!" - Call to Arms, etc.

    Now we can mail Perl-calculated tallies to elected officials, RIAA, etc. while 1) redefining target company's name as a mnemonic, 2) limiting time we waste - adds up to a man-month, and 3) creating an intelligent, opt-in, scary voice that is news by itself. Then we distribute our own software.

    Slashdot might like to incorporate top recent keywords (they're in caps at the top) into a handy pull-down item to save irritation - adds up to 4 ulcers per month - while forcing DUH target to provide minimum grim satisfaction.

  66. p.i.t.a. factor by pmineiro · · Score: 2, Funny

    keep in mind, this technology doesn't have to be perfect. if it's cheap for them to do, and stops piracy just a little bit, then it's a worthwhile move, from their perspective.
    it's like the registration requirements on 'doze xp. it'll keep people from "casually" grabbing the cd from work and using it on their home computer. anybody really motivated can work around it.
    -- p

  67. OMG, mod that baby up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I am crying from laughter, funniest post of the week.

  68. Cactus: CD = Cruel Deceiver by Futurepower(tm) · · Score: 3, Interesting


    More clearly: Cactus cannot call these Compact Disks because the trademark owner, Philips says they are not.

    I suggest another name, maybe "Cruel Deceivers". More stories:

    Philips moves to put 'poison' label on protected audio CDs

    FEATURE-CD creator Philips blasts labels over protected discs

    --
    Bush's education improvements were
  69. People will use a crippled product if by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 3, Insightful

    the product is superior in other ways to existing products (as DVD video is over VCD and video tape).

    Crippling an existing format and not offering the consumer anything extra on the other hand will offer little attraction at all.

    Of course with the companies claiming that piracy costs them big bucks you'd think that pirate-proof (assuming such a thing exists) CDs should be cheaper as they would not need to be defraying those costs on those CDs. Having said that I'm fairly sure that the cost of a CD is based entirely on what people will pay and has no relation to any 'costs' whatsoever.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  70. Re:It's not about Optical output, it's about Roger by Tackhead · · Score: 2
    > It's not about optical output, silly. When they find out that you made a copy, Roger-- The RIAA Enforcer, comes to your house and rubs a key across your copied disk. Therefore, you will lose quality.
    >
    > As if the pain of losing a CDR isn't enough, the noise made during this scratching is supposed to be untollerable.

    Hey, I listen to industrial music. I might like that ;-)

    At the very least, it'd sound a hell of a lot better than whatever Titney Spears has put out.

  71. An end to the loop? by Robber+Baron · · Score: 3, Interesting

    But it's an evil catch. The record industry practically owns the airwaves and store shelves so the musician who wants to make big money signs deals to get exposure and some spare change from record sales.

    How about this: Get some artist to produce an album and then market it and distribute it entirely over the Internet. Since the artists don't make money off album sales anyway, they wouldn't lose anything in that regard. They might lose some exposure initally that they would enjoy from radio play, but maybe the 'net could fill the void. They would make make the bulk of their money from a tour...just like they do now anyway. And some of us might just be willing to pony up a buck or two for digital music delivered via the 'net if most of it went to the artists!

    --

    You're using her as bait, Master!

    1. Re:An end to the loop? by jag164 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Sounds great, but it has been tried. Even big name bands (aerosmith??) have tried this scheme to little success.

      The net is still imature compared to big brother media. Beleive it or not, it still not taken seriously by a lot of brick and mortar companies.

      The internet vs. radio/mtv exposure rate is too favored toward the latter for a serious "wanting to break it big" budding band to try it. And for the bands that do try it, good luck. You'll be black listed from major labels b/c your tried to circumvent the industry's system.

    2. Re:An end to the loop? by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      Get some artist to produce an album and then market it and distribute it entirely over the Internet.

      U2 are a pretty cool band for this kind of thing - Bonos into redistribution of wealth - he's rich as fuck - and he's said plenty of times that he's cool with people bootlegging U2 gigs.

      Everyone email them from their site suggesting they do a charity gig for amnesty or greenpeace or netaid or Drop The Debt, and then sell an MP3 album of the gig from their site for $3, or a physical CD for $10. Get them to send the sales info to the chart compilers world wide and see if they can chart with it. Allow Amazon, and the other online music retailers to sell it - but do not licence it for sale on the streets. And limit the money Amazon can make by only allowing a 10% mark up on cost price 'to ensure the money goes to a good cause'.

      This could be bonos live aid - let him look Bob Geldolf in the face without thinking 'flash bastard'. And we get a proof of principle that people want to buy music cheaper, and more directly.

    3. Re:An end to the loop? by squaretorus · · Score: 2

      On further roaming the U2 site I found this -

      http://www.u2.com/homepage/news110601_detail.html where you get free music from those fine irish chaps!

  72. Let me see if I have this figured out by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Run a cable from the headphone port on my stereo to the Mic port on my computer..and hit the record button. Problem solved.

  73. Speaking of Lame quotes by Ace905 · · Score: 1

    This quote pretty much sums up the value of their project / company, "We will continue to upgrade this already proven technology as we embark on the path to the next milestone."

    Sounds to me like they're riding this bad idea until they can get another publicly owned, hype plan to generate spikey stock. Perhaps one of their employees will save the day with an idea to improve standard encryption through using larger keys.

    At least this is a sign that the downfall of tech. stocks is still alive & well. People investing in things they don't understand, specifically because they don't understand them.

    But what would I know.

    --

    Ace
  74. guide to moderation... by Dave_bsr · · Score: 1, Redundant

    you gotta love the mods...

    a cool fact/peice of information - This is informative, maybe.

    "I think this - here's why" - This is interesting, maybe.

    a new way to look at it - This might be insightful

    "it's a joke. laugh." - This might be funny. it might not.

    "slashdot sucks" - A troll.

    "YOU ARE SO WRONG BLA BLA" - flamebait.

    Sure, there are others but that pretty much covers it. Follow these simple rules, moderators, and slashdot will be a better place and the users will be happier. thank you.

    to avoid being totally off-topic, all that needs to be said on the issue of cd-copying was said here, as someone posted above and i'm doing it again so you all make sure to read it.

    As far as breaking some technology to get at a "treasure", duh - this isn't a hard one guys. We will do it, we are humanity, we are users, we can do nearly anything. as for me, i'm gonna go do some homework and listen to ogg's. thanks, again, technology.

    --


    Who is this Anonymous Coward character, how does he post so much, and why is he always such a whore?
    1. Re:guide to moderation... by ichimunki · · Score: 1

      Quit linking to that lame Courtney Love article. Everyone on Slashdot has read it. Try linking to this page instead: http://www.negativland.com/intprop.html. Negativland know a fuckload more about intellectual property issues than Courtney Love does, and they certainly understand the "Math"-- since they have Steve Albini's original version of the same material on this page.

      Not to mention the fact that Courtney Love's music sucks. She is a bleating three year old who wouldn't know punk rock if you pierced her nipple with it. At least Negativland have done some incredibly interesting, funny, thought-provoking, and often fun-to-listen-to stuff.

      --
      I do not have a signature
  75. Re:Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Viva la resistance!

  76. women are scum by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    subject says it all. thank you.

  77. IHBT? Or not? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    >Breaking copy protection = taking money from them and their families.

    This is such a flamingly obvious non-sequitur even the RIAA secretly knows this isn't true and so they really don't dwell on something like that. They'd prefer to say "Trading MP3s harms the artist" since at least you could try to defend it with "If you download the MP3 for free, why buy it?".

    I suppose next you will tell me that throwing away paper kills trees? Not all actions force a reaction.

    Copying a copy-protected CD for my car costs you nothing, and the only benefit I get is that when it melts when I accidentally leave it on my dashboard I can still make another copy for the car.

    I'm not going to abandon fair use in the name of giving you money because acts of God melt my CDs. I hope you really don't expect this...

    >As an independant recording artist, I get pissed the fuck off when I see my stuff on file sharing programs.

    Interesting. Well, if you are a musician, email me on this address on yahoo.ca

    thegroove883

    and I'll get you played on my show. I will promise you some playtime in SW Ontario, Canada, even if the music doesn't fit our format (assuming it doesn't contravene CRTC guidelines).

    >Honestly, I am half tempted to quit this shit and go back to my boring ass job doing help desk work.

    Feel free. There's lots of space on people's gnutella HDDs for more music from other artists...

    >because I'm not high-profile enough to get this on my productions

    If you are all over the gnutella then you are high profile.

    Make a plan out of all these songs being shared. You know, like releasing a few on there that have ID3 links to your website and comments like "If you enjoyed this, why not buy my CD? Check my link in the url above".

    Better that you have good MP3s with non-intrusive advertising built in than crappy sounding MP3s that may or may not even include your name.

  78. Kudos to Midbar by FrostyWheaton · · Score: 1

    I must admit that I don't see why everyone is quick to jump onto the "Midbar is evil" bandwagon. If one accepts as fact that any protection scheme can be (relatively) easily broken, I have no hatred for Midbar at all. The way I see it, they scammed the record companies. They came up with the "copy protection" scheme (which really isn't anything ov consequence. It may break the standard, but it's not too bad) and licenced it to music companies for big bucks. Now the music companies are out X million dollars and no-one in the music-listening public is worse off for it.

    It could be possible that Midbar et al. may end up being the heroes in this whole thing by expensively demonstrating the futile nature of this sort of copy-protection.

    --
    Comments should be like skirts. Short enough to keep your attention, but long enough to cover the subject
  79. terminology by thumbtack · · Score: 1

    copy protected = corrupted. Anytime you read the phrase copy-protected replace it with corrupted. This way you get the true meaning of the sentence.

    The RIAA has, for the past two years, been winning the war of words. The RIAA is the lightning rod for the recording industry, and has been, unfortunately, too effective is doing this slight of hand and ear that would make Houdini proud. Other phrases: fair use = theft, copying a cd = piracy, music fan = thief, etc..

    If you can not back up your CD then it may be illegal under the AHRA in which the RIAA currently collects 2% of the wholesale cost of a CD recorder and 2% of the wholesale cost of blank music rated CDRs. Rick Boucher has asked the RIAA and IFPI to respond to this letter, pointing this out, snd asking for clarification of these "copy protections"

  80. Am I missing something? Yes by Kjella · · Score: 2
    Why not just jack the prices on blank cd's back up, and maybe charge a reasonable price for originals.
    Because CD-Rs are general purpose digital storage media. I don't want to pay the RIAA (mp3), MPAA (divx), PACA (images), BSA (appz&gamez), AAR (books) and everybody else that can claim losses due to digital copying (read: everybody) every time I make a personal backup of something. Just my .02

    Kjella
    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  81. Uncopyable media? by miffo.swe · · Score: 1

    The only way to get close to this is by hardware/OS schemes and since Microsoft seems to be the only ones really interested in this i dont think it will fly anytime soon. If windows get built in copyright protection people will go to other OSs. And even with hardware protection you can alvays intercept the signal by hardware hack and extract the music before it gets out of the preeamp. Its a loosing game they are playing and we are the ones ending up tossing coins in the slot for it. I doo buy records if i like them after i have yanked them from the web.

    --
    HTTP/1.1 400
  82. Two words: Value Added. by Kjella · · Score: 2
    But, how many times have we seen them come and enter the market (DVD)
    DVDs added value to consumers for which they were willing to accept other inconviniences:

    a) Better picture quality
    b) Better audio quality
    c) Multiple audio tracks (languages, extras)
    d) Multiple/optional subtitles
    e) Doesn't depreciate over time
    f) Instant jump to scene
    g) Optional extras (Making of, screen savers+++)
    h) Multi-angle

    What does CDS add?

    Kjella
    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  83. Support Philips by Vainglorious+Coward · · Score: 1
    ...the company's ongoing endeavor to combat digital piracy...

    Blah blah piracy blah. "Ongoing" is right, and digital rights infringment is becoming more a media battle of language than a discussion of our constitutional rights. Meanwhile, Philips are at least one corporation who appear to be on the side of John Normal. Thanks to Philips challenging the legal right for these copy inhibited products to be called CDs, and carrying the associated logos, the way is open for these issues to be subjected to rigorous legal examination. If you want to do something other than whinge on /., then support Philips by buying their products, in favour of other manufacturers, and then tell both Philips and their competitors that you did this and why. We live in a consumer society. The least we can do is make use of it.


    --
    My next sig will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush
  84. Don't punish the customer. by NanoGator · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What offends me most about copy-restricting CD's... (copy restriction sounds far more accurate than 'protection', I'd like to thank whoever it was from Slashdot that coined that term.) ...is that they're punishing the legitimate customer, but not the people 'pirating' the music.

    Now first let me clarify: Ripping an MP3 is not piracy. By definition it couldn't possibly be. You need the CD to rip. Though I'm sure a small # of people rip from borrowed or copied CD's, the vast majority are likely to be from legitimately owned CD's. Piracy happens when somebody gives away this MP3 to people who haven't paid for the song.

    Here are two legitimate uses of ripped MP3's:

    1.) Use in a portable system that is far more compact than a CD player

    2.) Backup copy. Example: If my CD gets destroyed, the RIAA won't replace it. Well now I can keep my CD in a safe place and listen to the MP3 version.

    By preventing these two uses, you are preventing the user from legitimately protecting and enjoying their investment. The worst part is, there's nothing to soften the blow of it.

    What if the RIAA were to offer a couple of incentives to buy the restricted product? "Well, since these copy restricted CD's will help combat piracy, we'll take $2 off these titles. It's our way of showing how grateful we are for your support." I'd have more respect for the RIAA then, but it wouldn't be enough for me personally.

    They still need to address the issue of fair use. If they won't let us make MP3's of our songs, can they at least provide WMA versions of the song with Digital Rights enabled if we have the CD?

    So far, the legitimate users have been punished severely. But what about the pirates? Now this time I'm talking about the guy who rips his songs for the express purpose of distributing them for free. Ok, so he can't rip the song directly from the CD. Yah, I bet that will last long. All he has to do is hook up the analog out to the line in and boom he an just record it to a .WAV file, and then encode it.

    If that's what it boils down to in order to make the MP3's, then people willing to do that will be in demand. When people like that are in demand, then they become internet-celebrities. "Oh I know this guy, he ripped that song." As long as somebody can achieve celebrity status, they'll be willing to jump through all sorts of hoops.

    So to summarize, the RIAA is putting piracy into demand, and punishing the legit customers for it. Wonderful business practice! If this succeeds, next Disney will open a ride called 'The Wedgie".

    --
    "Derp de derp."
  85. Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by Shiny+Metal+S. · · Score: 5, Informative
    CDS works by purposely introducing errors into the audio data on the disc. Audio CD players are supposed to interpolate across the errors such that there is supposed to be no difference in sound quality. But CD-ROMs--being designed to read data CDs where every bit has to be correct--don't do this interpolation, and thus they see the disc as having lots of errors and crap out.
    Take a look at CDDA Paranoia. I use it to rip old CDs, full of scratches, which are unplayable on any CD audio player I have. But after I rip them with Paranoia, I can't hear any defects.

    One of the answers on Paranoia FAQ nicely explains all of the problems with ripping CDs, and generally all of the differences between playing CD on audio CD player, and reading audio CD as a stream of bits with a computer. These differences are exactly what is addressed by all of those so called "copy-protection" techniques.

    The "copy-protected" "CDs" have to be played by audio CD players (otherwise no one would buy them), but not ripped with computers (like it made any problem with copying them, even if it's possible to make CDs completely unplayable on CD-ROM drives... When will they learn?) so all they can do, is to address the differences between them. It's very good to know, how it really works.

    The legend of characters on Paranoia progress meter gives a good introduction to what Paranoia can and what it can't fix (yet):

    • A hyphen indicates that two blocks overlapped properly, but they were skewed (frame jitter). This case is completely corrected by Paranoia and is not a cause for concern.
    • A plus indicates not only frame jitter, but an unreported, uncorrected loss of streaming in the middle of an atomic read operation. That is, the drive lost its place while reading data, and restarted in some random incorrect location without alerting the kernel. This case is also corrected by Paranoia.
    • An 'e' indicates that a transport level SCSI or ATAPI error was caught and corrected. Paranoia will completely repair such an error without audible defects.
    • An "X" indicates a scratch was caught and corrected. Cdparanoia will interpolate over any missing/corrupt samples.
    • An asterisk indicates a scratch and jitter both occurred in this general area of the read. Cdparanoia will interpolate over any missing/corrupt samples.
    • A ! indicates that a read error got through the stage one of error correction and was caught by stage two. Many '!' are a cause for concern; it means that the drive is making continuous silent errors that look identical on each re-read, a condition that can't always be detected. Although the presence of a '!' means the error was corrected, it also means that similar errors are probably passing by unnoticed. Upcoming releases of cdparanoia will address this issue.
    • A V indicates a skip that could not be repaired or a sector totally obliterated on the medium (hard read error). A 'V' marker generally results in some audible defect in the sample.
    So, however the next copy-protection of the week which this time really works!(tm) will work, I'm quite sure that it will be no problem to Paranoia, maybe after few days, because Paranoia simply interpolates over any missing/corrupt samples, like audio players do. No need to say, thay it will always be no problem to audio input on my Sound Blaster...
    --

    ~shiny
    WILL HACK FOR $$$

    1. Re:Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by timftbf · · Score: 1

      Paranoia doesn't successfully rip Natalie Imbruglia's 'White Lillies Island', which is a CDS disc. The TOC is mangled in some interesting way as well as the data, so it can't recognise the last five tracks.

      However, CD-DA X-tractor (Windoze, but GPL) successfully ripped everything but the first track, so between the two programs I've managed to save some .wavs and burn an audio CD to replace the strange data CD I was sold.

      (Paranoia on a SparcStation2, external SCSI CD, CD-DA X-tractor on a no-brand peecee with some random gray-box cd-rw, for reference).

      OK, so two OSes and two programs and a big of juggling is probably too much like hardwork for Joe Public, but it ain't rocket science, and it only needs *one* person to rip and file share for all the Joe Publics to download it. If I was a record company, I'd be talking to Midbar about some penalty clauses ;)

      Regards,
      Tim.

    2. Re:Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by SilentChris · · Score: 2
      "on a no-brand peecee"

      Wow, people still use that term?

    3. Re:Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by Shiny+Metal+S. · · Score: 2
      Paranoia doesn't successfully rip Natalie Imbruglia's 'White Lillies Island', which is a CDS disc. The TOC is mangled in some interesting way as well as the data, so it can't recognise the last five tracks.
      Have you posted it to paranoia-dev@xiph.org?
      --

      ~shiny
      WILL HACK FOR $$$

    4. Re:Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by Quaryon · · Score: 2, Informative

      The latest version of ExactAudio copy ripped White Lilies Island perfectly using a Toshiba DVD-ROM drive, after enabling C2 error correction.

      I don't know if this is the drive or the new version of the software making this possible, but it is definitely one of the CDS protected CDs since it won't rip with anything else (and has the CDS logo on the back cover).

      Q.

    5. Re:Take a look at CDDA Paranoia website by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can fully assure you that cdparanoia CAN rip Natalie Imbruglia's White Lilies Island. I personally did it the day I bought the disc, and it flawlessly ripped the disc (the process only showed '+' marks, as mentioned by the previous post).

      I don't know how I can be able to convince you of this, but right here on this screen my XMMS is showing pure, clean self-ripped Ogg Vorbis files of White Lilies Island. Without a hitch.

      And in case you're wondering... Yes, it IS a CDS protected disc, says so on the back. I am sure of this also because my MiniDisc recorder totally flips on it since the 'errors' on the disc garble up any SPDIF output I have.

  86. D-A-D just right by trumpetplayer · · Score: 1

    People interested in these copy protection technologies worry about the mass consumer, not the consumer demanding high quality music. Just about any soundcard has nowadays enough recording quality for the mass consumer. The majority of Turtle Beach soundcards (even the old ones) have enough quality for almost anyone, moreover, and they are cheap.

    As we have the natural right to do so, let's plug our audio CD player to our soundcard with one of those RCA to jack cables and that's it. AND ANYWAY: If any of our audio hardware is poor, then bad luck you artist, your music will sound poor for ALL that guests in my next party at home and then all those friends of mine will not buy your music.

    Too bad we will not be able to copy at 16x..

  87. Re:Canuks lose again!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    dude, this is fucking hilarious.

  88. Mod this up! by ZxCv · · Score: 2

    Finally, a comment on this issue with a little bit of insight.

    The only time record companies take notice is when their bottom line is affected. So when they see that spending $XX million on copy protection isn't helping them sell anymore CDs, they'll ditch it. It's only a matter of time. They'll keep trying--perhaps even a couple more generations of copy "protection"--but they won't ever succeed in selling more CDs because of it, so eventually they'll drop it because it will become apparent that its a waste of money.

    --

    Perl - $Just @when->$you ${thought} s/yn/tax/ &couldn\'t %get $worse;
  89. Perfect Copying Solution Found? by devin15 · · Score: 1

    Here's an idea to copy the protected CDs perfectly why don't you just use the optical out on either your home or portable cd player? You could connect it to your MD recorder or the S/PDIF in on your sound card.

  90. Analog CDs? by alex_ant · · Score: 1

    I've thought about this for a while, and was wondering if anyone would like to offer their thoughts.

    Since what apparently makes content producers nervous is consumers' ability to make an infinite number of perfect copies of their products, why not develop an analog CD? Laserdiscs were/are analog, and looked great. The technology has to exist for SACD-quality analog audio on an optical disc. I'm sure the technology also exists to extend such a disc to a longer shelf life before degradation than vinyl, current CDs, magnetic tapes, etc. (especially laserdiscs).

    Thanks to the analog CD's very high fidelity, you'd be able to make 24/96 digital copies that sound even better than current CDs, but are NOT master-quality. Inherent "copy protection." If the RIAA thinks that the digital copies are too high-fidelity, well, then they can just tone down the analog quality a notch. There has to be a threshold that will make (almost) everyone happy, or in any case, many more than are happy now.

    It seems to me that an analog CD would be the vinyl that's better than vinyl, and the CD that's better than the CD. Comments?

    Alex

    1. Re:Analog CDs? by rufusdufus · · Score: 1

      Your own logic answers your question. You say that the digital copies are higher quality than CDs. But the market has clearly shown that CD quality is "good enough". Thus, no higher quality master is necessary [since digital copies are losses]

    2. Re:Analog CDs? by alex_ant · · Score: 1
      Your own logic answers your question. You say that the digital copies are higher quality than CDs. But the market has clearly shown that CD quality is "good enough". Thus, no higher quality master is necessary [since digital copies are losses]

      That makes sense, but what if the digital "rips" of the analog CDs were approximately equal in quality to normal CDs, while the analog CDs themselves were marketed as being "phenomenal, audiophile quality, whiz-bang, woo-woo, unbelievable, amazing, you have to have this!" and priced no more than digital CDs (or maybe even less than digital CDs in order to establish themselves in the marketplace. I mean, if the RIAA can sell the Backstreet Boys and Kenny G, they have to be able to sell anything.

      I suppose you're right about the market being content with the quality of current CDs, but perhaps with enough clever marketing, the industry would be able to "raise the threshold" and increase people's expectations. Perhaps they could throw in other gimmicks like 5.1 analog channels or something.

      My whole train of thought is trying to recreate the days when we all made cassette copies of music and the music industry didn't care because the copies were inferior to the originals.

      Of course, this could be applied to DVDs as well - a 720p or 1080i analog picture and analog, CD-quality 5.1-channel sound on a 5 1/4" disc. We have the technology. Sure, the discs could be digitized, but when selling to a home theater crowd, it's all about quality, and the copies wouldn't be quite as good.

      I just want to come up with an idea so simple and beautiful that it will change the world. Why is that so hard to do? :)

      Alex

  91. Its worse than that... by rufusdufus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Many people here has commented that copy protection will always be broken by crackers. But in the case of music and movies, the reality is "worse" than that. The logic of the corporations is that it will take time and effort to crack each version of the protection, which will ensure the short-term value of a new cd or DVD.
    What their logic misses completely is that the copy protection scheme *does not have to be cracked*. A one-time digital-to-analog-to-digital copy is indistinguishable from the original. Thus, all one needs to do is play the thing normally and record it digitally.
    You can see how the suits think about this: they know that copying loses quality, and that people care about that. What they are confused about is that although in fact multi-generational analog copies lose quality quickly, a one-time analog copy to digital copy does not.

  92. This will only end with... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...me not buying anything that isn't a CD tm by Philips (and that means any protected pseudo-cd with dubious handling of cd standards to twist the bits)...

    Get real and listen to real musik...

  93. Reproduction vs. new material by Kjella · · Score: 2

    I think companies should be allowed to control how to make *new* material using the characters they've created. At the moment Mickey Mouse expires from those 17 years of protection, I don't think you should be able to make a porn cartoon (or whatever) starring him.

    However, they shouldn't be allowed to control *reproduction* of material released more than 17 years ago, regardless of format. So if someone wants to reprint old magazines they should be allowed to, or for that matter scan it and release it on CD. If they want to take old filmrolls and make a DVD they should be allowed to. If they want to rerelease the music as an audio cd they should be allowed to. The mickey mouse game created in 1980 should be free to spread and/or port (but not to create a derivate in content)

    Companies usually have a very long interest in characters created, much longer than the actual instance of them. Think of James Bond or the Star Wars movies, the Star Trek series, Super Mario Bros (how old is the first game there anyway) and so on. I don't mind them protecting that, but that's different from having a monopoly on reproduction.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    1. Re:Reproduction vs. new material by Tackhead · · Score: 2
      > I think companies should be allowed to control how to make *new* material using the characters they've created. At the moment Mickey Mouse expires from those 17 years of protection, I don't think you should be able to make a porn cartoon (or whatever) starring him.

      "I didn't say Minnie was cheating on you, Mickey, I just said she was fucking goofy!"

      *ahem*

      That out of the way, you're right -- that's the third IP thing, namely trademarks. IIRC, they last as long as you're selling the product. So in my imaginary world of "copyrights only last 17 years", if I make a new Mickey Mouse cartoon, and purport to sell it as my own creation, Walt could still sue my ass.

  94. Its a rip OFF! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    The error correction system that Cactus is tampering exists to allow for problems with reading, specially, small scratchs that always appear no mater how carefull one is with a CDDA. By introducing NOISE/ERRORS in the tracks, they are in reality reducing the life time of the product and that is, a no-no. CD's are by definition to have a life time of at least 10 years...

  95. Costs by Big+Dogs+Cock · · Score: 1
    This is fair enough, but the problem that record companies face is that it now costs so much to get an artist anywhere in the charts. On singles, record companies generally lose a shedload of money. They spend millions on videos, TV & Radio adverts etc. and the return (on singles) is nothing like the outlay. Singles are definitely a loss-leader. Record companies are making lower profits than ever because of this.

    This could be because of two reasons:

    All the other record companies are doing it so it's just competition.

    The records are such bland, boring shit that it would never sell itself.
    Either way, the record companies have done it to themselves.

    The problem with bypassing the record companies is that to get the same sales, you'd need to spend the same amount on publicity. Would you rather have 90% of $100 or 0.1% of $1,000,000?

    Established bands (like U2) probably require very little advertising to get a new album to sell. It's the manufactured teeny-bopper people who are going to get bad deals because it costs so much to generate the media hype that will get the little girlies to shell out for that crap.

    Last point, IMO, without widespread broadband, Internet piracy is never going to be that much of an issue. When it takes 10 times as long to download something as it does to play it (assuming your connection stays up for that long), only the most dedicated will spend the time. I've got ADSL but, 90% of the time, the Morpheus user I'm trying to grab stuff off has a dial-up and it still takes ages. Admittedly, that's because I'm using Morpheus to get rare stuff which is not obtainable elsewhere.

    Now go ahead and flame me.

    --
    "Under the iron bridge, we fist" - The Smiths, Still Ill
    1. Re:Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      nah if you are dialup you just hop on an ftp, que up a bunch of downloads, and let them go overnight while you sleep.. wake up, viola, new free music in the morning to be burned to a cd and played in car going to school/work/prison.

    2. Re:Costs by Big+Dogs+Cock · · Score: 1

      Free viola music?

      This is fine if nobody wants to use the one phone line that most people have.

      --
      "Under the iron bridge, we fist" - The Smiths, Still Ill
    3. Re:Costs by grahamm · · Score: 1

      So why continue to make singles? Why not just produce albums, DVDs and VHS of concerts? Or change the single format to DVD or VCD and put on the music video as well as the audio.

      I have been buying music for about 30 years and I have only ever bought 3 vinyl 7" and 2 CD singles, but 100s of albums (on vinyl, Cassette and CD) If I hear a track I like on the radio, TV or internet, then I will buy the album not a single.

    4. Re:Costs by Gonarat · · Score: 1

      Radio is now as corrupt as the Music Industry. The Labels pay big bucks to middlemen who pay Radio Networks (I won't say stations, because most stations are owned by a big conglomerates such as Clear Channel). This is the reason that the Labels push the McMusic Groups. That's why the RIAA was so stupid in killing Napster. This was a perfect opportunity to find an alternative to the Radio money hole -- only Hillary and company were so worried about losing control (and perhaps a few bucks here and there), that they lost a chance to work with (or buy out) a thriving alternative.

      --
      Beware of Sleestak
    5. Re:Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      • Record companies are making lower profits than ever because of this.

      Then why are we always hearing about "record sales"? It's not like the price of CDs is going down. I'd like to see some concrete numbers behind your statements.
    6. Re:Costs by Big+Dogs+Cock · · Score: 1

      Which part of "loss-leader" are you unclear on?

      Singles are a marketing ploy to sell the albums and the tours to the young and gullible.

      People who care about music don't, generally, buy singles. I don't have any at all. We're not in the same market as the Britney/Backdoor Boys/Nolife bands. The singles charts and "music" are getting further and further apart all the time.

      --
      "Under the iron bridge, we fist" - The Smiths, Still Ill
    7. Re:Costs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The figures you are looking for can be found here.

    8. Re:Costs by kfg · · Score: 1

      The point being that you don't need to make the same sales to make much more money.

      90% of $100? That's a fraction of what she sells *per appearance.*

      How about 90% of $100K, per album, as owner of your own record/publishing company, while retaining full ownership of your own songs, as opposed to signing away all rights to your own songs, selling 1 million albums, going on tour for six months and finding out after all of this that you owe the record company $20K?

      What's more, since you signed away all of your rights if anyone covers your songs you recieve *nothing,* ever. In fact, if YOU rerecord your own songs you have to pay for the rights, just like anybody else.

      Many bands find that they don't even own their own *name* anymore.

      Me, I'll take the first scenario.

      KFG

  96. My Columbia House thievery has increased 3X... by Blaede · · Score: 1

    ...since the advent of the .mp3 format. Before, I would "order" CDs a a slower pace, since I had limited knowledge of what to get. With Napster style music sampling, I can now more quickly develop a bigger, more comprehensive list of CDs to scam Columbia House out of. I use .mp3s honorably, I make sure I delete them the minute my free CDs arrive in the mail.

    1. Re:My Columbia House thievery has increased 3X... by debiansierra · · Score: 1

      why delete the mp3's, if you OWN the album, you OWN the right to copy them for personal use. It's twits like you who don't even realize "they" are trying to take this right away.

      --
      I would like some milk from the milkman's wife's tits
  97. Raging Cactuar Data Shield? by stuffman64 · · Score: 3, Funny

    I think a more reasonable data protection scheme is the Raging Cactuar Data Shield. If an attempt to copy a "protected" disc is made, a cactuar will appear and attack you with his "9,999 Needles" attack. You will quickly learn your lesson that when the record companies want more money, they will do anything to get it.

    --
    --- At my sig, unleash hell.
  98. Re:Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK by quintessent · · Score: 2

    Yeah. The logo was just to get customers to trust CDs. Now that that's done, the logo serves no point to the RIAA. They certainly wouldn't use it to undermine their own scheme. Nope, the only protection for consumers would be a big database of CDs to avoid and a few million people who paid attention to it.

  99. Re:Tell us more! (resister is to drop). it works by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    to get raw speaker leads to correct levels applicable to usage in a mic-in or audio line in port of a standard pc sound card from the insode of a USB speaker can be achieved by use of a sinlge resister tied across a lead. It works. It may not be elegant, but its the cheapest hack.

  100. Re:A little math by Bnonn · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Not to put down your interesting post, but there's an easy rationale--and one that I think any fair-minded person would accept--to refute this.

    If the RIAA is currently losing money on CDs due to illegal copying (pirating is a ridiculous term), then it seems only reasonable that, if they can prevent this copying, the revenue they'd previously been losing should rightfully belong to them. I agree that the consumer should see some benefit, but it's not something that you could morally hold the RIAA to. As an analogy, think of if you wrote and sold software, and 50% of it was used without paying. That's a 50% revenue loss, and you would be justified in saying that if you could somehow reduce that loss, the money you saved should belong to you. Right? And, since you were barely covering your costs before the savings, that money should go into making your life a bit easier. Right?

    All this is, of course, purely hypothetical. The RIAA is hardly lacking for money, and I personally think the Hellmouth should open and swallow them, the MPAA, et al back to whence they sprang.

  101. .COM to .BOMB anyone... by MosesJones · · Score: 2


    Reading the above I thought back to the heady days of 1999 when all of those old companies were going to go bust. Boo would win, Travelocity would crush everyone, Amazon would shutdown Borders, no-one would ever want to buy anything from a normal shop again.

    Well call me wierd but I thought it was stupid back then. And I think the idea of not having Record Companies with marketing might and recording studios is also stupid.

    --
    An Eye for an Eye will make the whole world blind - Gandhi
    1. Re:.COM to .BOMB anyone... by WNight · · Score: 2

      Will Amazon win over Borders? Who knows.

      Would either of them survive if all book ever printed were on the net in nice format, and free?

      That's what the music companies face. There's *no* way they can stop it. They can slow it, and inconvenience people, but they can't stop it. In fact, short of buying opressive laws, they can't even slow it much.

      I'm sure the big music companies will be around in ten years. Hell, Rome "fell" in the 400s but the "Roman Empire" in a lesser form lasted until the 1400s.

      What the big music companies won't be doing in ten years is controlling things the way they do now. Sure, it'll always take huge marketing muscle to make a Britney, but if radio stations and MTV (the publicity arm of the music companies) lose popularity you'll be able to buy that publicity like with anything else. I doubt you'll ever make it *huge* without backing, but that backing could be from a marketing firm that's not considered part of the music industry.

      And really, as long as it breaks the monopoly and the industry associations, who cares what the exact form is?

  102. Slow Americans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    If it's digital data, there's no way you can make a copy and lose quality. Any freshman computer engineering student can tell you that.
    Are Americans slow, or was I a child prodigy?
  103. I give them 1h 30 min... by fok · · Score: 1

    ...to have a copy-protected CD on the Net (including buying the CD) with 192kbps quality...

    --
    \m/
  104. Re:Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK by The+Smith · · Score: 1

    "You are under arrest for violations of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act. You do not have to say anything, but... What? You're Anonymous?! Right, that does it! All Anonymous Cowards are under arrest!"

  105. Let's make this clear.... by Catiline · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There is no such thing as copy protection. Any method attempted to stop copying is bound to fail: the hardware sees copying as just another read command, and if done in software, well, what if you don't use that software?

    The only way to stop piracy with 'copy protection' is encryption. After all, what good does a copy do you if you don't understand it? (Look at CSS and the details of Cactus: rearrange some or all of the information, and suddenly the old reading methods don't work.) As if we needed another reason to hate anti-encryption legislative proposals! You can be sure that they would exempt copy protection schemes while making sure your 'private' emails remain an open book to law enforcement.

    The executives of these companies seem to be completly oblivious to two points. First is, of course, that any encryption will only deter for so long (and if you use not-that-strong stuff like CSS, that isn't long at all.) Second is that (obviously) we aren't buying from them the physical disk, but the information on it.
    But when we look carefully at what they are doing, we can see how they do understand these issues. They're using the kiddie-level encryption right now. I've wondered why, and came up with only one answer: they're waiting for SSCA to pull out the big guns. Could you imagine a CDROM encrypted with Rinjael, and 'kept encrypted' by SSCA??? They know that by trying to extra-legally limit the ways or means of access to that information, they would lose customers. Well, first they need to make that limitation legal...

    If not for the SSCA gambit the RIAA seems to be playing (more like betting the house on!), I would suggest the proper response to this nonsense would be, like with the BSA raids, to encourage it; the faster access protection schemes are shown to be nonsense by the open market, the better off we will be in the long run. But when you throw proposed SSCA legislation into the mix this idea just gets worse. All I can suggest is to not touch these disks at all. Don't buy them, don't pirate them, and if you're a store owner, don't sell them.

    I'm off to write petitions to the big retailers now. I just realized that the only way the RIAA can't raise the cry of piracy when these disks don't sell if if the vendors are the ones who don't buy them!

    1. Re:Let's make this clear.... by wedg · · Score: 1

      Books had pretty good copy protection going for quite a while. No one wants to hand-copy 500 pages of a book to make $0.35 profit per copy. Except maybe monks, but they give it away anyway.

      Hell, books would've had the perfect protection if it weren't for those damn libraries! Like Napsters of the past-- er... wait.

      You want perfect copy protection for your songs? Label them all "Barbara Streisand", or, better yet, sing them in Kazbechiztanian. See if anyone bothers copying them then.

      --
      Jake
      Dating: while( 1 ){ call_girl(); get_rejected(); drink_40(); } return 0;
  106. Funny you should mention that by Kibo · · Score: 2

    That's exactly how I found both They Might Be Giants and Bare Naked Ladies. Sure it might not have been mp3's and might have been cassette tapes. But without those illicit copies I never would have found either of those bands, and in the case of TMBG I own every on of the albums they've put to CD. I wouldn't have gone to shows. I simply wouldn't know any better. Well when BNL got famous I probably would have found them. But still...

    --
    --Jimmy has fancy plans; and pants to match.
  107. reverse economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the funny thing is people are actually LESS
    likely to buy copy protected items then free
    to copy items. So, although you cant copy it
    LESS people buy the thing anyway!

  108. 5c resistor by dmaxwell · · Score: 2

    It's been pointed out by earlier posters that a 5 cent resistor across the decrypted input to a USB driver (the actual speaker) makes a great source for a line-in. If they get cute and try potting it up with "tamper-proof compounds" the we can always decone some cheap USB speakers and get access that way.

  109. Question: audio CD player vs. computer+sound card by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    Ok, I have a tangentially related question. For some reason it seems like the audio I get out of my CD player (Panasonic) sounds qualitatively "better" than that I get out of my computer (Sound Blaster Live Value + Altec Lansing ACS40 [w/ subwoofer]). It's not that the clarity of the sound is worse (indicating speakers), it just doesn't seem as rich. I always thought this was because my CD player has some special audio DSP in it that made the sound "better". Am I crazy? Or is my audio CD player really playing the music "better" than my CD-ROM player + audio card + speakers?

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  110. Re:Question: audio CD player vs. computer+sound ca by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Sound cards suck. get a test CD with white noise etc; get a microphone, do some spectral analysis of the CD played from computer and from cheap discman. Cheap discman wins because it introduces a bit less distortion.

    "Sound cards" with external A/D boxes are signal processors, and don't count for the purposes of this whine.

  111. Re:A little math by jamescford · · Score: 1

    Let's see.. the RIAA has said it lost $300 million dollars a year to piracy. In 2000 they shipped 942 million CDs.

    Now that they've eliminated all music piracy through their innovative copy protection techniques, we should all enjoy the price drop: $300,000,000 / 942,000,000 = $0.32 per CD. Since they are no longer losing all that money to piracy, we can look forward to paying 32 cents less for each CD! They are basically a trustworthy group, so I'm sure they'll pass the savings along to consumers.

    Don't forget that they may be spending, say, $1 per CD to implement their new protection... but being trustworthy and fair, I'm sure they'll only raise prices by $1.00 - $0.32 = $0.68!

  112. Re:A little math by Hard_Code · · Score: 2

    "then it seems only reasonable that, if they can prevent this copying, the revenue they'd previously been losing should rightfully belong to them."

    It doesn't say anywhere in the constitution that anybody is guaranteed profits. The issue is not whether they are losing money, it's over the extent of copyright. If I make a product, and people discover uses for the product that I hadn't intended but can charge for, do I *deserve* that "lost profit"? Am I being cheated? What if the people who use the product for the non-intended use *wouldn't* buy it if they couldn't use it this way?

    "I agree that the consumer should see some benefit, but it's not something that you could morally hold the RIAA to. As an analogy, think of if you wrote and sold software, and 50% of it was used without paying. That's a 50% revenue loss"

    NO. It can only be considered a revenue LOSS, if that 50% would have otherwise been PURCHASED. For piracy (illegal copying, whatever) this is not the case in many cases. I.e. people WOULD NOT have purchased your product anyway, if they could not pirate it. So no, you aren't being cheated of some hypothetical profit. "Hey, people in mud huts in Africa aren't using my product! They must be *depriving* me of my rightful *profits*!"

    "and you would be justified in saying that if you could somehow reduce that loss, the money you saved should belong to you. Right?"

    No. Am I justified in saying that if I could somehow beat up people and steal their money, that that money should belong to me? Does might make right? If so, let's go over to Africa and beat up those cheapskates for *depriving* us of our *profits*.

    "And, since you were barely covering your costs before the savings, that money should go into making your life a bit easier. Right?"

    Hmm...I guess I was barely covering my $1000/day drug addiction, so the money I get from beating people up should go into making my life a bit easier. Right?

    --

    It's 10 PM. Do you know if you're un-American?
  113. desert island discs by Yiddishkite · · Score: 1

    "Midbar" is Hebrew for "Desert", as in, expect them to dry up soon.

    --
    "Time flies like an arrow. Fruit flies like a banana." - Marx
  114. Copying CD by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Informative

    I tried to copy the Linkin Park CD.
    I tried so hard, and got so far.
    But in the end, it doesn't even matter.

  115. More like Yale's ComSci dept. isn't up to snuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    More likely it is shitty programmers at Yale.

  116. Not with the Secure Audio Path by yerricde · · Score: 2, Informative

    If I can hear it, I can copy it. Total Recorder

    Will not be signed by Microsoft. Microsoft doesn't sign any audio driver unless it has a way of letting applications disable all digital outputs (such as Total Recorder's waveOut to waveIn redirection) that users cannot override. (Read More...)

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:Not with the Secure Audio Path by Matrim9 · · Score: 1

      Which means that you'll have to click the little "Install Anyway" button when you install the drivers? So what? It still works.

    2. Re:Not with the Secure Audio Path by yerricde · · Score: 2, Informative

      Which means that you'll have to click the little "Install Anyway" button when you install the drivers? So what? It still works.

      Secure Audio Path applications can tell whether or not a device's driver is signed and will not open a device with an unsigned driver. If a media player insists on the Secure Audio Path, it will not output through Total Recorder.

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
    3. Re:Not with the Secure Audio Path by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, there are so few CD playing applications out there... I'm sure they all check for registerd drivers...

      And everyone uses Windows...

      *Blink*

      Who are you?

  117. It's simple, fellas. by Matrim9 · · Score: 1

    PHB: Hey guys, we need to protect our cds from the evil MP3. R&D 1: Uh... I don't think that's possib... R&D 2: *punches R&D1 in the throat* Sure thing, boss. We'll come up with something in a jiff! In short, all of these guys need to justify their $70,000/yr jobs, even if they know it's a futile protection system.

  118. Watermarks are supposed to prevent this by yerricde · · Score: 2

    I have just submitted a patent to the US patent office on a device that allow you to make recordings even if they implement a completely closed audio path. It is an audio to analog to digital conversion device. I call it a microphone.

    Not if Congress (or your local equivalent) passes Son of SSSCA which requires all consumer audio recording devices to contain policeware that detects and responds to watermarks (which are designed to survive D/A/D conversion) and bans possession of possessing non-consumer audio recording devices by people who aren't licensed and bonded audio professionals.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  119. Re:A little math by dachshund · · Score: 1
    If the RIAA is currently losing money on CDs due to illegal copying (pirating is a ridiculous term), then it seems only reasonable that, if they can prevent this copying, the revenue they'd previously been losing should rightfully belong to them.

    They're a bunch of private companies, they can set prices wherever they want. However, the fact that they're only losing $0.32 per CD is certainly an eye-opener... Considering that CD prices have run as high as $18 in the past (and they've still sold like hotcakes.) If customers have to eat that additional 32 cents so their CDs will play in car CD players and computers, it seems it'd be worthwhile.

    Or, on the other hand, the record companies could completely screw things up for their customers-- encouraging them to take their business elsewhere (or more likely) start downloading and burning un-copyprotected MP3s.

  120. Reduces Error Correction by LewK2 · · Score: 1

    I brought the latest Natalie Imbruglia album, White Lillies Island, in the UK a few months ago. I always listen to my CD's on my computer, and use the CD's in my car. However, the CD's often get a bit of a hard time, and many of them have some little scratches. I have used and abused many a CD over my years, and have plenty of experience being able to tell how 'damaged' the CD is just from looking at the back of it.

    The new CD, however, is already broken on two tracks! It has some tiny marks on it, which present no problems whatsoever to a normal CD, but completely hammer this CD. My Sony car stereo gives up and ejects the CD after 10 seconds of struggling.

    I am absolutely appalled that the recording industries, that heavily pushed the durability feature of CD's when they forced the standard on us, are now crippling one of the features of the medium.

    Couple that with the fact that part of my work requires me to try and digitally copy CD's into an electronic radio station playout system, and I have to say that this new system is not welcome to me at all.

    1. Re:Reduces Error Correction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Natalie's new album uses the Cactus Data Shield. I got it from Amazon, and was appalled when I realized what was wrong - won't play on my G3, won't play on my Intel linux box. Played on my Dell laptop running Win98, but it popped up this horrible Midbar CD player app to do it. It also wouldn't play at all in my Panasonic 'Discman', and in the DVD drive of my friend's PowerBook G4, it locked up the whole system! It did play in his Sony Discman, but when I tried to make an optical dub to my MiniDisc machine, it was SCMS protected. (This is particularly wrong. The SCMS is only supposed to stop second-generation digital copies; not first. MD is a lossy format.)

      Now, having said all that - it WAS rippable, so the copy protection is pointless. It's also interesting to note that the disk and packaging (I had the import version) did NOT have the "CD" logo on it, anywhere.

      Anyway, it was returned to Amazon as defective, which it clearly was; I wrote a long comment explaining exactly what was wrong, and why they should not carry this type of product. When I tried to go to Midbar's website, to do the same thing, Netscape crashed. Next stop, Natalie's webpage. The only way to deal with this, is to make it economically untenable to peddle this crap.

      (Whew. I feel better now.)

  121. Son of Sonny Bono Act by yerricde · · Score: 1

    The upshot is that every time I use my Philips CDR765 to record music composed 300 years ago

    Watch out! That composition might be copyrighted in the European Union if the next retroactive copyright term extension bill passes. Unlike the USA, where once it's expired, it's expired, EU copyright term extensions typically re-copyright works whose copyright has expired.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  122. Re:Question: audio CD player vs. computer+sound ca by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    ]). It's not that the clarity of the sound is worse (indicating speakers), it just doesn't seem as rich. I always thought this was because my CD player has some special audio DSP in it that made the sound "better". Am I crazy?

    Unless your CD player advertises that it has some kind of DSP in it then it probably doesn't (for instance, do you own one of those sound systems with have built-in EQ or reverb? One of those "X-BASS" switches?) Computer sound cards are notoriously lousy, computer speakers are worse.

    I couldn't tell from your post whether you're running both signals through the same speakers. If you aren't, try doing so and compare the output. If you are comparing the output from two different sets of speakers, then that's most likely where your problem is.

  123. If you can hear it, you CAN'T record it by yerricde · · Score: 2, Interesting

    so if you can hear it, you can record it

    Not necessarily. Watermarks are designed to survive D=>A=>D conversion, and if the legislative bodies of the USA, Europe, and Japan (the major electronics markets) pass a law that makes it illegal for consumer audio equipment to ignore watermarks, you're screwed. (The DMCA already makes it illegal to remove watermarks or other copy management information from an existing signal.)

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  124. Why is the country relevant? by yoshi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why is it relevant that this is an Israeli company? I've done a search, and the country of origin is almost never mentioned, and yet here it's the third word of the blurb. It's given higher priority than any other piece of information. Why is that?

    I'm not saying that I know why the author chose this contruction, but when labels are used like this, especially in the context of a critical (indeed, ridiculing) comment, it's hard not to wonder about the motivation.

  125. ALbum info? by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    Hey, comon, some of us might want to buy your friends stuff!!! Seriously!

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  126. does that mean ... by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    ... If I can see it I can copy it ?

    Now I know why those Boy Scouts of America (BSA) are outrageous mad for "their" merchandises to be copied ...

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  127. Re:A little math by carrier+lost · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Actually, I believe there was a Congressional investigation last year which revealed that the recording industry has been overcharging for CDs for the last 10 years.

    Supposedly, IIRC, the CD was originally touted as being cheaper to manufacture than the vinyl LP and that consumers would eventually see a drop in recorded music prices. The results of the investigation were that that drop never ocurred.

    MjM

  128. its allready hacked! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    http://www.cdmediaworld.com/hardware/cdrom/cd_prot ections_cactus_data_shield.shtml

  129. Re:Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK by Reziac · · Score: 2
    Someone says, Its still just the lame trick of burning a second session that defines incorrect track locations and durations for track locations. CD players that are not multisession (CD audio players usually) will ignore the fake second and third sessions.

    DOS and Win3.1 (and some very old CDROM drives) cannot see anything but the first session of a multisession CD. Does this mean that such CDs would be easier to rip in DOS?

    I don't own (and wouldn't knowingly buy) any of these bogus audio CDs, so I can't test this.

    --
    ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
  130. Be paranoid, even with cdparanoia by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 2

    I believe the copy protection is designed to create an error so bad that the CD-ROM refuses to read and pass on the data to the system.

    If that is the case, the firmware would need to be hacked - which would "violate" (*) the DMCA.

    (*) Making a CD-ROM deal more gracefully with errors shouldn't be considered "circumvention" and there is also the interoperability exemption, fair use, the provisions of the US Constitution, etc.

    But in Judge Kaplan's court, those parts of the law (or the Constitution) that protect you do not count, only the ones that can be used to attack you.

    Also, it may be that in a year or two cdparanoia is as "illegal" (again, by an unconstitutional law which is wrongly interpreted) as DeCSS.

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
    1. Re:Be paranoid, even with cdparanoia by Shiny+Metal+S. · · Score: 2
      If that is the case, the firmware would need to be hacked - which would "violate" (*) the DMCA.

      But in Judge Kaplan's court, those parts of the law (or the Constitution) that protect you do not count, only the ones that can be used to attack you.

      Also, it may be that in a year or two cdparanoia is as "illegal" (again, by an unconstitutional law which is wrongly interpreted) as DeCSS.

      I live in Poland.

      When I was a kid, I was seeing the United States as the country of freedom.

      Now I would be affraid to live there.

      It's sad, really sad.

      Who will win this endless battle? People or corporations?

      --

      ~shiny
      WILL HACK FOR $$$

    2. Re:Be paranoid, even with cdparanoia by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who will win this endless battle? People or corporations?


      Corporations. Due to some remarkable bits of legistation last century, corporations have very few laws that they're responsible for. They can kill thousands and not face a court...
  131. Boycott Israel by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Let us not discuss products from Israeli companies
    as if they were the same as if from any other country.
    Israel is a pariah country. We need to boycott Israeli
    products so as to push for peace in the Middle East.

    You may say that we should pressure the
    Palestinians. That is already being done.

    Increase the oppression? Being done.
    Cut food supplies? Being done.
    Cut water supply? Being done.
    Assassinate more people? Being done.
    More torture? Being done.

    Give them their human rights? Not even being considered.

    These are people who do not have enough to eat,
    fighting an army equipped with the most lethal
    weapons available. They are heroically resisting
    with what they have. What more can be done?
    Give them their rights.

    Now it the time to put pressure on the Israelis.

  132. DVD audio by Frank+T.+Lofaro+Jr. · · Score: 2

    Meanwhile, they could convince people to go to a different format...

    2 words: DVD audio

    It doesn't matter that we only have 2 ears and can only hear up to 20 kHz (if we are VERY lucky) and that CDs can handle that.

    DVD's with 5 audio channels and 96 kHz sampling rate (48 kHz maximum frequency response) is just so much "cooler".

    Well at least your dogs can enjoy the high notes. ;)

    --
    Just because it CAN be done, doesn't mean it should!
  133. My experience with a copy-protected CD by agent+oranje · · Score: 2, Informative

    A few days back, I purchased The Avalanches' new album, and put in my dvd-rom only to discover that this disc "was unformatted. Would I like to initialize it?" I was stunned. I felt dirty. I had purchased a copy protected CD. And I couldn't even rip the damn thing so as to add it to the massive mp3 collection!

    So, I brought the CD over to a friend's room, asked him to try it in his machine, and it worked just fine. In both his drives. Go figure.

    Of course, the worst-case scenario is that I had to use analog ripping, and pump the output from a CD player into the line-in on my soundcard. It'd take all of 5 minutes to wire up, and would have to be done in real-time... To the best of my knowledge, there is no way to protect against this kind of copying. And if push comes to shove, I'm sure that mp3s will appear on the net which have been ripped via this method.

    -Agent Oranje

    --
    -agent oranje.
  134. Re:Question: audio CD player vs. computer+sound ca by Cul8rZ · · Score: 1

    Actually... the quality of your DAC (digital analog converter) will make the night and day difference in sound quality!!!

    most CDROMs have cheap DACs in them.

    The best way is to run everything digital to an external DAC converter. But they re expensive anywhere from $500-$15,000.

    A tube DAC is definetly a good choice for smooth high end frequencys.

    -Cul8rz

  135. Get 'Em Phillips! by Glock27 · · Score: 2
    Phillips should sue unless these are clearly marked as something different from CDs. Phillips has already made it's position clear on this issue.

    Content providers using copy-protection like this are fools. All they will do is drive their customers underground to find unencumbered content that the customers can use on whatever media/player they desire, as provided by fair use.

    299,792,458 m/s...not just a good idea, its the law!

    --
    Galileo: "The Earth revolves around the Sun!"
    Score: -1 100% Flamebait
  136. ripped version and quality by ragnarsedai · · Score: 1

    I wonder how Cactus is planning that. Whatever the
    case, it will take two shakes of a lamb's tail to subvert it.

    If I wanted to create a stumbling block (and an impassable wall is impossible, as demonstrated many times over), then I'd look at encoding techniques of compression functions, and insert noise or disturb the sound at an interval relatively prime to the period of the compression function (if there is one), so that in compressing, the noise jumps out to be as loud as the target music.

    But then, who wants to buy those CDs?

    Screw this! I'm going back to LPs! Who's with me?!

  137. Re:A little math by kcbrown · · Score: 2
    I won't believe that any company has lost any money to piracy until they explicitly put that amount of money as an itemized loss on their quarterly balance sheet.

    Until then, I have to consider it a sham. I mean, in real life, if a business really does take a loss on something, they report it as such on their quarterly financial statement.

    --
    Use 'slashdot stuff' in the subject line in any email you send me if you want to get past the spam filter.
  138. The truth is out there by tuxlove · · Score: 2, Informative

    I have proven to myself that Cactus-protected discs can be ripped successfully with the right hardware and software. I have heard tons of evidence from others that corroborate my experience. It's useless protection, and serves only as a minor annoyance.

    In addition, their "protection" degrades the actual audio quality over time, because they're essentially using up the error correction bits for data. You need error correction to do just that - correct errors. You waste them on something else, like correcting purposefully-inserted errors, and you end up with a disc that is much less robust and able to withstand wear and tear.

    This means that you must rip and burn a new copy of any Cactus disc you buy as soon as you open the case for the first time. And you must rip with multi-pass validation to help ensure that you got the correct data off the disc.

    Any claims by Midbar that their protection is just peachy are BS.

  139. Re:A little math by whopis · · Score: 1

    NO. It can only be considered a revenue LOSS, if that 50% would have otherwise been PURCHASED.


    This is a true statement. It is not a loss, money would not have been made because there would have be no sale.


    However, if you use this to rationalize using someone else's product without paying for it, the result is that a product becomes free to those (and only those) who would not pay for it otherwise. Only those who refuse to purchase the product have a right to use it for free. People who would be willing to pay for it, but are just trying to save money by not paying for it do not have the right to do so.


    Does this really make sense?

  140. Re:Its the lame trick of a bad second session, TRK by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    if the drive has multisession capabilities, by default it reports the last session (in this case the bogus one). It has nothing to do with operating systems. It is a funcion of drivers though. But even then, few drivers ever inquire about earlier sessions and instead issue a 0x43 command (Table of Contents) with standard fields only.

    Plus ironically, your idea would fail for other reasons... ancient drives incapable of multisession are almost always incapable of digital audio extraction!!!

    worse... ancient drives require specialized drivers because except for Sony, almost all older drives had conflicting commands. Even still the oldest drives have almost nothing in common with standard modern audio command sets.... though they did as much of the same, and actually more audio commands than modern drives offer.

  141. VCRs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've encountered problems with copying VHS tapes in the past because there is some sort of copy protection. I don't really know how this works, but when you copy a tape from one VCR to another, you get a copy on the destination tape but the signal quality is really choppy and bad. Perhaps a similar system could exist for digital media?

  142. Copy protection == escalation in file sharing by dwsauder · · Score: 1
    If they put out copy protected CDs, then consumers will look more to the Internet to get MP3 files to listen to and to burn into CD-Rs for their cars. So, while the RIAA claims that the copy protection is intended to stop the trading of MP3 files on the Internet, the real effect might be the exact opposite, as they force consumers to stop buying CDs and look to the Internet to get MP3s. I just can't imagine why they want to screw consumers who like to store digital audio on their PCs or in their portable music players. Well, actually I do know why. They tend to think that you can squeeze money out of consumers.

    Really, though, they are going to have to fight an escalating battle against the transfer of MP3 files over the Internet. I would think they (the RIAA) stand a much lesser chance of winning the Internet battle than they do winning the copy protection battle.

  143. You asked for it. by kfg · · Score: 1

    http://www.camillewest.com/

    http://www.fourbitchinbabes.com

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00004SQZ R/ qid=1013653610/sr=8-2/ref=sr_8_83_2/104-2202003-60 18336http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005 A1TF/qid=1013653610/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_83_1/104-22020 03-6018336

    http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005A1T F/ qid=1013653610/sr=8-1/ref=sr_8_83_1/104-2202003-60 18336

  144. Re:Question: audio CD player vs. computer+sound ca by nexthec · · Score: 1

    hmmmmmm.......tub DAC's yum! I swear that is my only reason for being and EE major, is so that I can build my own tube setup........however now there is even cooler shit. digital amplifiers(yeah basically a power-DAC) built around IGBT's

  145. Re:It's not about Optical output, it's about Roger by Treylis · · Score: 1

    Personally, I use Merzbow to scare small children.

  146. the solution by Sparky4ca · · Score: 1

    Few things here -
    1. I know where you can LEGALLY purchase all of the CDs, tapes, records, etc. that you want. Example, CDs: $1 to $7 CANADIAN FUNDS!!! it's called USED!!! Let someone else pay full price. And rest easy knowing that the RIAA never got any money fom you!! Check garage sales, flea markets, and thrift shops.

    2. If you can hear it without distortion, If you can view it without distortion then there will always be at least one way to make a copy.

    3. Whomever pointed out that it's not really about copying CDs, it's about making your own, hit the nail on the head. If everybody can produce their own music, make their own CDs, distribute it on the internet, etc. then the RIAA becomes irrelevant. It's like the iceman trying to sell you weekly blocks of ice 2 years after everybody got a fridge/freezer.

    4. I personally won't buy any music that I haven't already listened to and enjoyed. If I can't download it, then I CAN'T buy it. I also won't go to a movie to watch a sucky movie. But if I download the movie and it's good, I'll take the whole family out to see it.

  147. CD playing apps will die by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Yeah, there are so few CD playing applications out there... I'm sure they all check for registerd drivers...

    CD players maybe not, but future versions of Windows Media Player will. And future CDs will force Windows Media Player because the CD-ROM can't recognize the broken Red Book tracks.

    And everyone uses Windows...

    What other OS is available pre-installed on x86 based machines available at Best Buy stores?

    *Blink* Who are you?

    I am Fuck. Fuck of the Mountain. No seriously, I'm Damian Yerrick, a student at Rose-Hulman Institute of Technology.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  148. Cactus disks in Sony CDPQ-44032 player by timecop · · Score: 1, Funny

    Whenever I play my Britney Spears disk protected by Cactus DataShield in my Sony component cd player, the sound comes out scratchy and weird.
    Those bastards, they are preventing me from playing my favorite tunes!