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Public CD Copying Machine in Australia

kanad writes: "With all the news of banning cd burners, taxing blank CD-Rs, DMCA, and whatnot in the U.S., here's a breather from Australia. Some stores have installed coin-operated CD copying machines. Basically it's very simple: put the CD to be copied and a blank CD in two different slots and drop your coins and Presto! In 10 minutes you get a copy. It even bypasses some anti-copying measures. ... Obviously the burden of not violating copyright rests with the user under Australian law, which is the same as that applied to photocopiers. Today evening I saw the machine and it's really cool. Wonder what would happen to this machine in U.S. and Europe."

2 of 388 comments (clear)

  1. Pictures, and more info: by viper21 · · Score: 5, Informative

    Can be found at this website

    It actually looks kind of neat. That article will give you the lowdown of how it works, and what kind of profit you can expect. Neato.

    I think that I'll stick with my Pinball Machines or to writing Movie Reviews

  2. Re:Copy protection, eh? by gpinzone · · Score: 4, Informative

    The reason you need a modchip for PSX discs is because the checksum for the "bootsector" is deliberately encoded to FAIL on original PSX discs. No CD burning software can instruct your burner to deliberately encode all zeroes instead of the properly calculated error-correction value. I have heard stories of people hacking CDR firmware to forcibly encode the bootsector like a PSX disc to eliminate the need for a modchip, but I never actually have seen any "pirate" firmware floating around the various PSX sites.

    If this device doesn't use a standard CDR drive, then maybe their copying system CAN make perfect copies.