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Digital Rights Management on CD's This Christmas?

McDrewbie asks: "Has anyone discovered that the new CD's found under the tree or in their stocking don't play on their brand new CD player? My father got a Brookstone Wafer-thin CD system and several new CD's. Most play fine, however several ones from Sony (with CDextra software on them) and from Columbia, either don't play or play with some crackling and popping, yet play fine on our older CD player. Did these companies decide to quietly unleash DRM on the public this holiday season? Or is this just a problem with the new player (separate from it not being DRM capable)? What are other Slashdot readers experiencing today?"

52 of 529 comments (clear)

  1. DRM for a present by Speedy8 · · Score: 5, Funny

    I think that DRM for a present is worse then coal.

    1. Re:DRM for a present by gooberguy · · Score: 5, Funny

      Yes, you are right. I got a lump of coal for christmas and I can use it to heat my house. I bet those who got DRM are freezing to death. Poor bastards. Too bad they didn't get coal for christmas.

      --


      Karma: Meh (Mostly from meh.)
    2. Re:DRM for a present by CommieOverlord · · Score: 4, Funny



      Well, you could burn the CDs. Plastic is just oil after all.

      Although, the various chemicals would probably kill you if you burned too many.

    3. Re:DRM for a present by Slashdotess · · Score: 3, Funny

      The RIAA execs who gave the DRM didn't need any coal, their coldbloodedness takes care of those problems.

    4. Re:DRM for a present by uncoveror · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Indeed! If the disc won't play, it is defective. Take it back, and join the ever-growing boycott of the recording industry. When you take the disc back, demand a cash refund. Remember, the squeaky wheel gets the grease, and the customer is always right.

      --
      The Uncoveror: It's the real news.
    5. Re:DRM for a present by Dachannien · · Score: 3, Funny

      Yes, but at least now they can keep their coffee tables free of nasty beverage container damage.

    6. Re:DRM for a present by macdaddy357 · · Score: 5, Informative
      Funny you should ask about taking it to court.

      If you bought any of the "copy protected" discs that won't play in your computer, Follow this link to the Milberg Weiss Law firm, and join Dickey V. Universal Music Group et. al, a class action suit against the manufacturers of these defective discs that frequently use the Compact Disc digital audio logo improperly.

      That comes off the links page of a consumer group boycotting the recording industry, for DRM, price gouging, and harassment of file traders. Dontbuycds.org A previous poster gave the link to that organization, but not to the class action suit, so , pay attantion mods, this post is not redundant!

      --
      How ya like dat?
  2. which cd's? by tezzery · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anyone care to offer some insight as to which cd titles are doing this? ... so I can save the trouble of buying them and skip right ahead to downloading the mp3's :)

    1. Re:which cd's? by linuxbaby · · Score: 5, Informative

      They're all listed at Fat Chuck's List of Corrupt CDs.

    2. Re:which cd's? by drDugan · · Score: 4, Interesting

      "the country of freedom and liberty"

      not anymore: [[ from an AC slashdot post today
      http://slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=49046&cid=4962 648 ]]

      """

      here is a snapshot on how these fucks think:

      "If you don't violate someone's human rights some of the time, you probably aren't doing your job," said one official who has supervised the capture and transfer of accused terrorists. "I don't think we want to be promoting a view of zero tolerance on this. That was the whole problem for a long time with the CIA."

      found this in a quick search in TODAY's news. if you are not paranoid about our government, you're not listening.

      http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A379 43-2002Dec25.html

      """

    3. Re:which cd's? by kasperd · · Score: 3, Informative

      They're all listed

      I bet they are not all on that list. The one I got for christmas says "COPY CONTROL" on the cover. So I assume it is YACCD (yet another corrupt CD), but it is not on the list. But then again, I didn't have time to test it yet.

      --

      Do you care about the security of your wireless mouse?
    4. Re:which cd's? by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Hurrah, you get to be the guy that puts it on the list. Take a penny, leave a penny.

      --
      If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  3. Crappy drive mechanisim? by aaronsb · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Playing the "protected" cds in a CDROM drive would quickly reveal if they are truly copy protected.

    I've found that a lot of the stuff you can buy from the sharper image, brookstone, etc. is kind of cheesy. Maybe it's just a crappy drive mechanisim.

    1. Re:Crappy drive mechanisim? by ackthpt · · Score: 4, Interesting
      I've found that a lot of the stuff you can buy from the sharper image, brookstone, etc. is kind of cheesy.

      I've felt the same way about their stuff the past couple years. It looks pretty cool in the catalogs, but there is a Sharper Image store down the road and much of the stuff, up close, looks like maybe a good idea manufactured cheaply. In some cases, a stupid idea, altogether. Catalogs can sell stuff you wouldn't normally buy, because some little deception (usually a hot babe holding/using it) used to redirect your attention from it's faults.

      That said... With all the crap the music industry has been doing lately, I'm less inclined to buy their products. Are they going to dismiss my few hundred $ a year, no longer spent, on music piracy? I don't even download MP3's (I haven't even had a system I could do anything with them until recently.) I'm more likely to visit the local used CD store and pick up old, pre-DRM music (which might become a hot collector's item if the current trend continues.)

      Some day on eBay:

      3034898724 Beatles Sgt Pepper Non DRM Current bid: $57.61

      --

      A feeling of having made the same mistake before: Deja Foobar
  4. Previous Stories by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Informative

    The Corrupted Audio CDs category at the ODP has several background stories, many from /.

  5. I wonder... by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

    "Has anyone discovered that the new CD's found under the tree or in their stocking don't play on their brand new CD player?"

    I wonder if the RIAA realizes that they're pushing me towards MP3's when they pull shit like this. I mean seriously, they'll have no trouble blaming P2P music trading for their downfall if the MP3 is higher quality!

    1. Re:I wonder... by NanoGator · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "I wonder if the RIAA realizes that they're pushing me towards MP3's when they pull shit like this."

      I think Slashdot should start an event called "Music Return Day". Here's how it works: Get as many people to buy a known copy-restricted CD as possible. Then, locate a national store that'll accept returns on 'defective CDs' (Best Buy or Walmart maybe?) then, on a particular date, have everybody return that CD.

      Heh imagine slashdotting Equifax.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    2. Re:I wonder... by Aggrazel · · Score: 4, Interesting

      [i]"I think Slashdot should start an event called "Music Return Day". Here's how it works: Get as many people to buy a known copy-restricted CD as possible. Then, locate a national store that'll accept returns on 'defective CDs' (Best Buy or Walmart maybe?) then, on a particular date, have everybody return that CD.[/i]

      Actually, my wife works at Target. She told me that there are several CDs with "known" issues that they'll take back and exchange for another CD with no questions asked, even though the normal exchange policy is for the same title only if opened. They are returned frequently for not working in people's players.

      I don't have a list of the titles, but from what I gather its becoming more and more common. To the point that it will probably annoy the corporate buyers enough that this stuff will stop before it gets too common, IMO.

    3. Re:I wonder... by Cato+the+Elder · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Many people have CD players where it won't be a problem, but would be scared away by an up-front warning. Futhermore, some people won't bother to return the CD. Together, these probably outway the expense of processing returns for Target.

      It would be interesting to see if they'd show you the list if you asked.

  6. Also post them to the complete list of corrupt CDs by linuxbaby · · Score: 5, Informative
    The world's most complete list of music CDs that can't be copied or played on computers and many other electronics equipment, is at Fat Chuck's Corrupt CDs list.

    Please also post any new corrupt or DRM CDs you find on that complete list, there.

    (While you're at it, boycott the RIAA by buying independent CDs, instead!)

  7. CD EXTRA defined by prisen · · Score: 5, Informative

    From Sony's website: CD EXTRA combines the worlds of Music and Multimedia. A traditional audio CD when placed in an audio CD player, CD EXTRA offers a free interactive multimedia experience when played in a computer's CD-ROM drive *. CD EXTRA offers the music fan a closer look at their favorite artists, with many CD EXTRAs containing exclusive content. Other CD EXTRAs contain Internet Service Provider Software which allows you to connect to the Internet.

    It's not DRM, AFAIK. I've got several Sony CD EXTRA CD's that are nothing more than multisession CD's that some audio CD players simply cannot handle. However, I don't think you can get the same CD offered in both CD EXTRA and non-CD EXTRA formats, so you may be out of luck when trying to play those particular discs in those particular audio CD players; in fact, some older CD-ROM drives can't even handle 'em.

  8. Got a Rio Volt MP3-CD player for christmas... by Bonker · · Score: 3, Informative

    Downloaded the manual from Diamond/Sonic-blue.

    I was quite gratified to see that while the Volt supports WMA format, it does not support copy protected WMA files. In fact, the manual walks the user through disabling copy protection in Media Player.

    Now if only the Volt supported Ogg Vorbis...

    --
    The next Slashdot story will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and slashdot the links early!
    1. Re:Got a Rio Volt MP3-CD player for christmas... by exhilaration · · Score: 3, Informative
      Now if only the Volt supported Ogg Vorbis...

      They're working on it.

  9. Re:Take them back... by spanky1 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    What I want to know is how you would go about getting a refund. Most (if not all?) stores have a exchange-only-if-defective policy with music.

  10. -1 redundant by JeanBaptiste · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The only people they are keeping honest with this bull$hit are honest people. The only people they are annoying with this $hit are honest AOL users. Anybody with a /. account will say 'big deal, if I can hear it I can rip it, a hack will be out within hours, no problem etc.' I am not worried about this $hit for my sake, I am worried about this for the non-technical people, whom are 99% of the people I meet.

    DRM won't stop the 'criminals', it will merely annoy those who are honest.

  11. Re:DRM sucks... by SweetAndSourJesus · · Score: 4, Funny

    Wow, that's so insightful!

    I've never read those sentiments anywhere before. I find your completely original outlook on these matters interesting, and I wish to subscribe to your newsletter.

    Keep those stunningly fresh and new ideas coming!

    --

    --
    the strongest word is still the word "free"
  12. Re:Let's review by NightRain · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You obviously missed the question at the end of the article.

    Let me quote it for you . Did these companies decide to quietly unleash DRM on the public this holiday season? Or is this just a problem with the new player (separate from it not being DRM capable)? There. See how he asks whether the problem is related to DRM or if it's an issue with his player? You jump down the writers throat for no reason. Posting it in the context of some of the replies to this article would make sense. But straight off the article itself, as if the author is some sort of dweeb is a little rich

  13. uhhh, wait a minute... by elluzion · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Huge flaw in this logic.

    Before I get started, let me clarify that I definitely hate DRM. I pretty much despise large record labels. So I'm not supporting them or anything, but simply sending a check to the artist is crazy.

    First, where the hell are you going to send a check? Their fanclub? Do you know Timberlake's address? How about Snoop Dogg's address? How about Creed's address? Tim MCGraw? Whoever it is you listen to, you probably don't have any idea how to actually get money to them, unless they are local to you. And that's an altogether different story.

    Secondly, there are TONS of people other than the artist who should be compensated. I mean, just because the CD says "Metallica", it doesnt mean that you are hearing Lars playing the drums on every track. It is very common for artists to hire studio musicians for recording sessions. Especially if they need to meet deadlines while the bassist is in rehab, or jail, or whatever. It happens, a lot, and the session players deserve a cut as well.

    Aside from the actual music, there are the studio people. There's as much talent involved with skillful recording as there is with skillful playing. The cover art came from somewhere, and that person should be compensated. There are lots of people who attempt to make honest livings from the production of music and rely on CD sales for a income.

    What the RIAA would have you believe is that their job is making sure the revenue gets spread out to all of these people fairly. And we all know this is a bunch of BS.

    Really, the best thing to do is to support independant labels when you can. And when you can't, go MP3, Vorbis, whatever. This will (hopefully, if enough people do it) draw the talent away from the RIAA music nazis and empower the independant labels. Everyone benefits.

  14. multisession in copy protected CDs by Jucius+Maximus · · Score: 5, Informative
    Some audio copy protection methods use an extra session on the disc to confuse computer-based CD players. This is based on the fact that computer CD players will read the LAST session first, while audio only CD players (except certain car players that are actually CD Rom drives) will play the FIRST session first.

    Corrupt data is added to that extra session so computers will go boink when reading it. This is why that magic marker work-around worked -- it prevented the computer from reading the extra session.

    Now a good way to make proper back-ups of your Audio CDs is to remove this extra session. This can be done quite easily if you are using a plextor CD-Rw because the DiscDupe software that comes with it will, when presented with an audio CD, do a bit for bit copy of the first session only. This means that the resulting backup will have the protection removed so you can excercise your home use rights and easily make more copies for the car, ogg encoding, etc.

  15. Re:don't give them money by Chris+Canfield · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You know, this is a good theory, but we did this. We bought 10% fewer recordings last year from the major labels. And, of course, they have used that against us as a sign that we need far MORE DRM in our lives. It couldn't be a 25% reduction in albums produced, or a ridiculous price creeping far above that set around the world, or a rising anti-RIAA sentimentality. Of course it is Napster's fault.

    We can't just boycott the labels. We have to take power away from the labels and give it to the independents. How do we do this? By buying CD's from independent music labels and sharing the first 4 tracks, and refusing to share music from the major labels. Kazaa isn't just a way to avoid the distribution tax... it is a way to discover new music. We need to make sure that music is good, both in quality and in spirit. It would also be great if we could convince major artists to move away from the RIAA labels and strike it out on their own, but so long as they feel that their livelyhood is threatened I doubt that will happen. We'll have to make it happen on our own.

    -C

    --
    This Sig is a mnemonic device designed to allow you to recognize this author in the future.
  16. DRM = Customer screwing.. by Anonvmous+Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

    This is slightly - OT, but at least it's a real life story as to how DRM is harmful to legitimate customers.

    I moved a couple of months ago. My GTA 3 disk was damaged in the move through my own carelessness. I contacted the producer of the game to find out how much a simple media exchange would cost. Want to know how much it'll cost? $18 + S&H. That's just for the disk. They can't throw a copy on the burner for me and do it for $5?

    I should have backed it up. I'm not sure if I could have or not. I didn't try with this particular game, but I've had to go to rather extreme measures to back up other games I have. You'd think I'd have the right to protect my $50 investment, but obviously I don't.

    I find this infurating. It's either a copyright issue or it isn't. Either I'm holding an $18 lump of plastic, or I'm holding an $.05 key to content I have licensed. They can't have it both ways.

    I can't believe that these industries are legally allowed to get away with customer gouging.

  17. Re:Also post them to the complete list of corrupt by G-funk · · Score: 5, Informative

    It doesn't matter a whit what looks wrong to you, it's "CDs". "CD's, CEO's, UFO's" are all 100% wrong. There's no case to be made, no arguments to have, it's just plain old incorrect.

    --
    Send lawyers, guns, and money!
  18. Re:Not only that (Was: I wonder...) by jez9999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What do I do? I ask the guy at the store if I can have them in MP3, if not then I buy something else. Hint: the list is growing smaller and smaller day by day.

    1. Buy CD-RW.
    2. Download P2P file sharing app.
    3. (optional) Pay for a buy CD if you want to pay the record label for it.
    4. Download entire CD from P2P app.
    5. Burn to CD.
    6. Play in car.

  19. Re:DRM? More like bad pressing by sconeu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Sorry, but this sounds like bullshit to me.

    has often been felt that long playing-time CDs (greatest-blah-album-ever type things) sound poor but the wisdom is that digits-is-digits. Until Studio Sound actually tested this assertion. Bugger me if it wasn't true. Something to do with narrow track widths,

    Bullshit. It doesn't matter how long the audio portion is so long as it's less than 80 (or 74) minutes. The track is the same width, regardless, it simply doesn't go all the way to the outside portion of the disk.

    This guy is just trying to sound like he knows what he's talking about.

    --
    General Relativity: Space-time tells matter where to go; Matter tells space-time what shape to be.
  20. Re:Also post them to the complete list of corrupt by slipgun · · Score: 4, Informative

    Ah. A member of the 'because I say so' school of grammatical thought. I can respect that.

    Presumably you said that to your english teacher when he told you to put a capital letter after a full stop.

    There are no two ways about it, "CD's" means "of the CD" or "belonging to the CD". "CDs" is the plural of "CD".

    --
    SpamNet - a spam blocker that really works
  21. Re:don't give them money by mr_burns · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Hey Einstein? If you want to have the artists CDs and not just crappy mp3 downloads, you have to buy it from the damn store.

    Most record labels aren't majors or members of the RIAA. Same goes for CD releases. Most are on independent labels or the band self-released.

    I spend thousands of dollars a year on music. Shows, shirts, CD's...I spend more on music than I do on food. Not a dime goes to majors or RIAA.

    And you'd think I was missing out on the 'best' stuff but I'm not. While all those major and RIAA labels are wetting their pants writing songs to conform to clearchannel standards and mastering all the dynamics out of the CD (so theirs will be louder than the competition), the independents are recording music that they like. Music which stands on it's own merits.

    As a consumer of music, I have a choice of who I buy music from and why. I choose not to buy music from people who I feel are doing a disservice to musicians and our musical heritage. I actively buy great music from great bands and labels who are not evil.

    The major labels are not a utility like PG&E. They are companies who live and die by convincing consumers to give them money. When I can get music which is as good or better from people who treat their musicians and customers with respect there's no reason to pay somebody who acts without ethics or morals. In fact, I feel it's wrong to reward somebody for negative behavior. Rewards are for people who do good.

    So if you disagree with what the majors and the RIAA are doing and you give them money, you are a hypocrite. You are saying one thing but doing the other. We are not to blame for their behavior, but we are wrong to reward them for it.

    --
    "Let him go, Ralph. He knows what he's doing." --Otto Mann (simpsons)
  22. Re:I wonder... (time bomb) by TheGratefulNet · · Score: 4, Insightful

    consider this. someone has an older analog style (not cdrom based) reader. their player works just fine on some protected cd - TODAY.

    then tomorrow their cd player breaks and they buy a new one. all of a sudden, that new player (and all other new players) refuse to play a disk that SEEMED ok before.

    I find this very unnerving. if you noticed it didn't play immediately (or in 30 days) you could return it. but suppose you had it for years and then the new player didn't play it? what do you do then?

    this whole thing sucks.

    --

    --
    "It is now safe to switch off your computer."
  23. Re:DRM sucks... by MillionthMonkey · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The thing is, if we censor this fuck, then we're accused of being "un-American" or some shit like that.

    Maybe not "un-American", since shouting down unpopular opinions seems to be in vogue here nowadays.

    But really, you shouldn't censor people just for holding unpopular opinions, especially when they're not even expressing those opinions at the moment. Even a white supremacist might have something to teach you, as long as you know which topics to avoid. I might listen to a racist if he's talking about how to polish a gun or clean a deer, even though I know not to listen when the topic of race comes up.

    Sometimes I hate being libertarian, we're _supposed_ to defend the rights of ignorant sister-kissing cousin-fscking inbred so-and-so's like this.

    It amazes me how many people are attracted to libertarianism and yet don't understand the concepts behind it. Yeah, freedom for other people can sometimes suck, especially when they're expressing an unpopular opinion, but the censoring of unpopular opionions is the first step down a dangerous path.

    And to all the people complaining about the modding up of this guy's post- the moderation applies to the post, not its author. This particular post has no offensive content that I can see. (Although I wouldn't waste mod points on it, because it really doesn't merit an "Insightful".) And the guy is at least honest about who he is. I wish all racists would announce up front who they were.

  24. Why my gifts are fine by autechre · · Score: 3, Interesting


    I bought "It Isn't The Fall" by The Lesser Birds of Paradise (Loose Thread Recordings) for my mother, and "High Society" by Enon (Touch and Go) for my brother.

    I know I sound like a broken record (ha ha ha), but these smaller labels actually want people to listen to their music. They have enough trouble promoting the stuff; they're certainly not going to put up any obstacles, or do things that would tick off the few customers/loyal radio stations they have.

    "But I don't know how to find that stuff / indie music sucks!"

    No, it doesn't suck. "High Society" certainly beats the hell out of Queens of the Stone Age. The new Apples In Stereo is great too.

    As for finding the music, the College Music Journal (cmj.com) is a great starting point. I'd point you to WMBC's own music database, which is (barely) searchable, but it's still a little shaky; I'm hoping to straighten out the code this winter and release it publically (it also does the tracking the RIAA requires for Internet broadcasting).

    [On a nice note, I also got "Big Swing Face" by Bruce Hornsby (RCA) for my father, and it wasn't crippled either.]

    --
    WMBC freeform/independent online radio.
  25. Re:Take them back... by jez9999 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    How smart do you have to be, then, to take your brand-new SEALED copy to a different store to exchange it for whatever you want???

    Smart enough to forge the receipt of that store? I don't think they'd exchange it without you showing them the receipt as well.

  26. I don't believe this by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Yeah, I'm going to have to call shenanigans on this. I have never heard of pressed CD's with a lower track width causing a higher rate of errors. And that's all it would be if this happened, a higher error rate causing the CD player to interpolate more samples. These errors would show up on a good ripping program such as EAC, reading in secure mode. It doesn't seem likely that the pressing process could produce a lower quality CD given a bunch of bytes.. it's not like the pressing machine secretly switches bits on and off. So maybe a longer CD has a higher chance of unreadable frames, although I've never heard of this. But to say that the pressing process creates a CD where the bytes of data on the CD do not equal the bytes on the master, is ridiculous.

    Lucius, if it's true you're in recording you're in a unique position to prove/disprove this theory. Just take the master of a track, at 44/16/stereo. Then get a pristine, pressed CD containing that track. Rip it with a good program and a good CD drive, then do a comparison on the files. Except for the very beginning and end of the tracks, they should be identical. Audiophiles will tell you ridiculous things, it doesn't surprise me that someone out there thinks a CD is 'more than just bytes.' I mean, you'll meet people who say that the quality of your DIGITAL audio cable matters - as if a cheap 3 ft piece of fiber will somehow lose bytes, but an expensive 3 ft piece of fiber will get all those bytes there intact. These are the same jokers who buy the CDs that are pressed with gold.

  27. sue by zogger · · Score: 5, Interesting
    --sue. Sue them, and here's how to do it. Take the LOCAL store manager to court, charge "fraud". Simple fraud is a crime. It's *illegal* to sell something that ain't that something. They offer to sell you a "cd" when it's not-it LOOKS like a cd but it isn't. It's fraud. Buncoism, it's against the law, just so widely done now it appears "lawful". You stick a crippled disk in front of 12 people on a jury and ask them what it is they'll say it's a cd, and cd's should play in cd players PERIOD. It's that simple a concept. Don't try changing the big guys all by yourself it ain't happening, don't try suing sony or walmart, take whomever took YOUR money and sold you something that wasn't as advertised to local small claims court or other appropriate venue for your situation and locality. Use this technique as a force multiplier. Don't even let them skate with a refund or a return, KEEP the crippled disk, that's your evidence of fraud, get some people who are "just following orders" to realise there ARE consequences for their actions. This is a basic problem our society has, "just following orders", it's never anyone's fault, nothing "bad" ever has any named human being attached to it just some vague "corporation" that's a bear to deal with, which is nuts, this goes for politics to economics, people just TAKE IT all the time when you don't have to. Don't let them plead ignorance or pass the buck or just rip off the next guy and the next guy and the next guy. If "anyone you" think this is an important enough issue, prove it! Once you get some judgements against these people, it will force THEM to bump it up, because THEY will in turn sue their bosses for being ordered to perpetuate and expand this scam congame. Work exactly at the level the crime occurred, you and your wallet and someone taking your money at a your local store.

    If you went into the store to buy shampoo and dumped it on your head and it was shoe polish, would you take it or sue the ^&^*(tards? If they kept selling shoe polish labeled as shampoo? Over and over and over again? If you went into the store and bought a can of corn and opened it up and it had rat parts in it instead of corn, would you sue, or just take YOUR time and go back and get a 'real' can of corn, knowing that half the cans on the shelf labeled corn that looked like cans of corn were in reality canned rat?

    The deal is these stores, and their corporate/cartel/monopolist bosses, want cowed sheepish brainwashed consumers, they want you to only grumble, maybe a few people exchange the defective products, they don't want to make the hard decisions that follow ethics, they want to skate the cheapest way they can. Suing some humongous corporation is HARD, suing a place local and a named individual for an exact specific crime is a lot easier and cheaper, and if thousands of people did it this crap would stop tomorrow.

    Sam with spammers, in the states where spam is now illegal-WHY aren't there thousands of lawsuits? I'll tell ya why, it's because 99% of people are sheep, easily cowed, don't want to "rock the boat", scared, think their single efforts won't matter, just content to bitch about things but nothing else-whatever, all excuses really for not taking personal indignation and getting shafted right back to the shafter and getting your day in court. If your cause is righteous, you at least have a chance, never even trying means you'll keep getting shafted, which just further emboldens the badguys to keep ripping people off and pulling more and more scams.

    If it was me with this particular issue, I'd tell that store manager (get their full name and job title) ONE TIME to stop selling crippled "counterfeit cd look-a-likes" that aren't "cds", that unless they are removed or labeled and displayed and stocked completely separately from REAL cd's PROMINENTLY six ways to sunday with BIG SIGNS that they AREN'T cd's and WON'T play in most normal cd players that you intend to sue HIM in local court personally,that you will file an official police report, then follow through if they keep ripping people off. Getting ripped off the first time is his fault, twice is "your" fault because "anyone you" puts up with it, generally and non specifically speaking.

  28. Probable explanation by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This is probably because the later tracks are closer to the edge of the CD. Normal wear and tear from handling the CD may beat up the tracks closer to the outside. I don't take any original CDs in my car, it's too easy for them to get beaten up.

  29. This was actually on national UK BBC TV by Rogerborg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Yes, right up there. "Many CD's bought this Christmas will come with little stickers that say they contain copy protection technology designed to defeat music pirates". And so on. Evil music pirates, starving artists, copy protection rather than rights removal. No hint that it's snake oil, no suggestion that all it does it piss people off and actively drive them to P2P. A rather ambiguous assertion at the end that "But some people who have got used to getting music for free might not buy it at all." What the hell that's meant to signify, I don't know, other than that the BBC employs way too many inbred RADA rejects in their features department.

    --
    If you were blocking sigs, you wouldn't have to read this.
  30. You got your formats wrong. by Fross · · Score: 4, Informative

    i dont know what crack they smoke where you work, but...

    Track widths do not vary with CDs so you can stuff more on. Hence there is no such "narrow track width" problem with CD. however, this *does* apply to vinyl, and is one of the main culprits of poor vinyl quality over the last 15 years.
    I've not heard of any "thin allyplate" problems with CDs, however using thin, low quality material has been a problem for sound quality for vinyl. some believe this was intentional on the labels' part to get people to switch formats.

    also, having worked in the music business myself, i'm happy to say that i've never encountered an instance where the producers don't get a test pressing.

    methinks your record exec may not be the only cokehead. ;)

    fross

  31. Wanna end DRM? by 1g$man · · Score: 5, Funny

    The way to end DRM is simple: find someone more powerful than the RIAA.

    And the only one more powerful than the RIAA in this country... is Wal-Mart.

    Get a few thousand geeks to buy copy protected CDs, and then demand a return at the same time because they are defective. If you get Wal-Mart annoyed enough, they'll throw their weight around and make changes.

    Ever wonder why many DVDs at Wal-Mart are fullscreen instead of widescreen? Because enough rednecks returned their DVDs and whined "'cos they didn't fill up mah dam screen!"

  32. Re:uhhh, wait a minute... by FearUncertaintyDoubt · · Score: 3, Insightful
    First, where the hell are you going to send a check? Their fanclub? Do you know Timberlake's address? How about Snoop Dogg's address? How about Creed's address? Tim MCGraw? Whoever it is you listen to, you probably don't have any idea how to actually get money to them, unless they are local to you. And that's an altogether different story.

    A fair question. Answer: http://www.fairtunes.com/

    Aside from the actual music, there are the studio people.
    Bands pay for their studio time to produce the album. And they pay a lot for it. The "studio people" got their money already.

    The cover art came from somewhere, and that person should be compensated.
    If I download the MP3 for a song, why exactly should I pay for cover art?

  33. Re:Also post them to the complete list of corrupt by Reality+Master+101 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Everything2 has the best comments on the matter that I've come across:

    Someone quoting Everything2 as authoritative is the best evidence of the apocalypse that I've come across.

    --
    Sometimes it's best to just let stupid people be stupid.
  34. Click here to sue by Animats · · Score: 5, Informative
    Click here to sue. Milberg Weiss, the well-known class-action law firm, is sueing the record companies over defective CDs. They sue big companies all the time and win, which makes them tons of money. Mostly they do shareholder lawsuits; they're the lead plaintiff in Enron litigation. But they do other class action work as well.

    Here's how they put it in their court filing.

    • Defendants conspired and agreed among themselves to sell defective audio discs which were rendered unreproducible or unstable for use in many personal computers, Macintosh computers, compact disc players, digital video disc players, car stereos and digital video game consoles. Defendants have affirmatively concealed the fact that their defective audio discs interfere with their customers' legal right to play or transfer music to other playback mediums. Additionally, Defendants have collectively misrepresented these defective audio discs as being standard Compact Discs (``CDs''), which they are not. Defendants undertook the acts alleged herein pursuant to, and in furtherance of, this conspiracy and agreement. Defendants manufactured, disseminated, advertised or sold these defective audio discs in such a way as to collectively conceal from plaintiffs, Class members and the general public the fact that these defective audio discs were of inferior quality and deprived customers of their legal right to backup and transfer their own music to other playback mediums. Such concealment resulted in plaintiffs, Class members and the general public paying more for these defective audio discs in expectation that, inter alia, the music would be playable on all playback devices and would be of equal quality to CDs, which they are not.

    That's clear enough.

    They ask that if you've found a defective CD, report it to them by clicking here.

  35. Um by CaptainSuperBoy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Well, your example sucks. If you were running ethernet in 3 foot lengths it really wouldn't matter what you used for a cable. Barb wire would work fine actually, if you had 2 pairs.

    So back to what I'm saying, audiophiles love patting themselves on the back about this shit, and you've bought it hook line and sinker. It's a piece of plastic, a damn tube that blinks bits. Although I'm not convinced, I'll give you the jitter - who knows, maybe a golden ears listener can detect it. I can't, and you probably can't either. Fine, let's talk about coax then. You'll hear audiophiles whinging about true 75 ohm cables, how RCA connectors are bad - we're talking about a two wire digital connector. Have these people heard that a $5 USB cable has more bandwidth than their precious cables? And yes, they'll actually tell you that coax has jitter too. Am I supposed to believe that the sub-nanosecond time it takes for that signal to reach my decoder, actually degrades the audio? Come on. Most audiophile stuff is pure snake oil, bought into by gullible saps who want to pretend they can 'hear the difference.'

  36. Re:Also post them to the complete list of corrupt by Dirtside · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not to flame, but you're all idiots. :) The purpose of language is to communicate effectively; whichever method is easier to understand (using apostrophes to pluralize acronyms/abbreviations, or not, e.g. CDs vs. CD's) should be the one that's used. As language is entirely arbitrary (but, for the sake of simplicity, often systematic), there is no absolute right or wrong -- but if everyone expects "CDs" and you type "CD's", that may make things harder to read, so you should probably use "CDs". And vice-versa, of course.

    Come on, guys. Anyone with enough education to argue about the finer points of disparate style manuals should understand this concept.

    --
    "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
  37. I've been DRM'd by TheScogg · · Score: 3, Funny

    Damnit. Popped in my new John Cage album today. Low and behold...4 minutes and 33 seconds of pure silence.