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Germany Says Copying of DVDs, CDs Is Verboten

Billosaur writes "In what can only be seen as the opening salvo in an attempt to control what users can do with content, the German parliament has approved a controversial copyright law which will make it illegal to make copies of CDs and DVDs, even for personal use. The Bundesrat, the upper part of the German parliament, approved the legislation over the objections of consumer protection groups. The law is set to take effect in 2008, and covers CDs, DVDs, recordings from IPTV, and TV recordings." A few folks have noted that this story is incorrect. The original link seems to be down now anyway. Sorry.

2 of 230 comments (clear)

  1. Re:what about copying comments? by LWATCDR · · Score: 5, Informative

    "The law does not prohibit the copying of DVDs or CDs; it disallows the circumvention of anti-copying technologies like Macrovision et al.,"
    So exactly how does one make a copy of a movie to their hard drive without circumventing De-CSS?
    Seems like the DMCA to me.

    --
    See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
  2. Re:what about copying comments? by RMingin · · Score: 5, Informative

    Unfortunately for your grand plan, reality conflicts.

    Recordable DVDs have the area which would be used to store the CSS keys pre-burned to 000000000. This is *precisely* to keep the end user from making a bit-for-bit copy.

    Furthermore, you can't make a bit-for-bit copy of even just the contents of the largest dual layer silvers. A dual layer silver can hold roughly 9GB, while a dual layer recordable maxes out at 8.5GB. It doesn't really do much to stop anyone from anything, but sometimes bit-for-bit is legal while a re-encode is not.

    Laws sometimes suck.

    --
    The preceding comment is my own, and in no way construes an opinon of the Emperor of Mankind.