Sony Sells Defective, Damaging CDs in Eastern Europe 335
parvati writes: "Newscientist.com is reporting that a new form of anti-piracy technology for audio CDs could potentially damage audio equipment. The new system, called Cactus, developed by Midbar Tech (Tel Aviv), is similar to Macrovision's but prevents both CD-to-PC copying and CD-to-CD copying (Macrovision doesn't prevent the latter). Cactus adds fake control data that's not decoded by the original player but, when copied, is read as music and produces distortion. However, certain audio wave shapes have the capacity to damage the circuitry of the player and/or speaker equipment. Midbar has already sold unidentified Cactus-embedded CDs in Eastern Europe."
Untrue! CDs have a "bozo bit"! Everyone ignores it (Score:2)
Not true. The Redbook Standard specifies that every CD audio track has a "no copy" bit. Every CD I've ever seen, as well as all CD writer software sets this bit. Yet everyone, all hardware, and all software, ignores it. In the HFS file system on Macs, all files also have a "no copy" attribute bit. And because everyone, including Apple's own Finder, ignore it, it is today known as the "bozo bit".
History repeats itself.
Re:God, not again. (Score:2)
1. If it has the little "CD" logo, it must adhere to Red book standard. Therefore these disks, not being adherent to standard are defective
OR
2. By putting "CD" logo on it while knowingly not, companies are violating their license of aforesaid logo and committing fraud.
Which do you think that the companies will prefer.
Not to mention several other obvious factors, such as fair use being legally protected in other countries. Sure America doesn't have any legal protections for fair use, and it only can be invoked as a defense against a claim of copyright violation, but hey, we all know America isn't the world. Right? By using this technology, there is a potential can of corporate whoop-ass being served up.
At least in other countries. It is entirely within the realm of possibilities that this could be used in America.
Re:What about personal use? (Score:2)
Of course, USC 17 gives no rights is because congress no longer legislates new rights. They only legislate new restrictions and punishments nowadays.
You never look in US code alone for the a listing of your enumerated rights, cause there ain't any.
Rights are granted these days through the courts, and not by any other governmental body. USC 17 for instance doesn't say that you have a right to own a device that can record TV shows, but the supreme courts has said otherwise.
Re:Until there's titles, this is all horse-stuff. (Score:2)
I'll be both impressed and pissed off it they can pull it off.
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Re:So much for fair use (Score:2)
You still have the legal right to back up these CDs. It just became a bit more technically challenging to do so.
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Re:Article says ... (Score:2)
Re:This is bullshit (Score:2)
(2) This is also true: just because YOU do not have, say, ribbon tweeters does not mean nobody does.
(3) Finally, the systems that would BE harmed by high-volume damaging sound are also the more expensive ones- in a way, this only underscores the point.
It's true. They are being a bit confused in suggesting that the _electronics_ can be harmed by such content- not unless it excites ultrasonic resonances and blows an amp that way, and the term for such an amp is 'broken'. But the effect on speakers is no different from transistor clipping, and it's widely known that in some cases weaker amps will blow speakers easier (esp. tweeters) for just this reason: clipping, and the high frequency components this produces.
The report is confusing and vague, but there is much truth to it. Just because _your_ tweeters are not delicate enough to be injured by this sort of thing...
Re:Meine Kleine Gruner Kaktus (Score:2)
This reminds me of the old Activision copy protection for floppies that supposedly would damage your equipment if you tried to copy them.
I heard rumours of games (back in the Amiga days) that only used maybe the first 60-70 tracks of the 80 on the floppy, then, somewhere right near the outer edge of the disk, was a chunk of metal attached. Under normal use, these outer tracks would never be touched, but if you tried to copy the disk - BANG! bye bye drive head.
Never believed 'em though.. too much chance of a bug in the game causing it to read the wrong track and destroy your drive. :-)
I want to put one on a scope (Score:2)
If anyone knows for sure of a specific title, I'd like to get a copy just to look at the line output from several different CD players on an oscilloscope and a spectrum analyzer to see whether there indeed is some tweeter poppin' high frequency noise bursts. If they have really done such a thing, it goes way beyond being a mere product defect.
And now... (Score:2)
Thanks to the DMCA, we are effectively prevented from exercising our fair use rights even if we are able to. If there is anything that could be construed as a protection of the copyrighted work, we are not allowed to circumvent it in order to make fair use of the content. Thanks Congresscritters!
Re:Article says ... (Score:2)
If the CDs are designed to produce this sort of distortion, and it can lead to the destruction of pc or stereo components, then a consumer would probably have a pretty good case. Copying is a normal use of a CD. If they designed their product in a way that it would damage your equipment as a consequence of normal use, you should be able to sue them for damages.
Wrong... and dangerous... (Score:2)
You just aren't allowed to circumvent it for the purposes of violating copyright. If you circumvent it for fair use, then you haven't broken copyright, so the DMCA doesn't apply.
I don't think you can say that. The DMCA is worded quite vaguely. There is no way to be certain what you can or cannot do legally under this law. Until the courts decide what it really means, free speech and fair use will be severely curtailed. Programs like DeCSS offer the ONLY method for most people to exercise their fair use rights with regard to DVDs. Without the ability to distribute such programs, we cannot exercise our rights. The same will happen with CD copy protection and protection for other forms of media.
We've seen 2600 get sued (twice) for distributing a piece of code that could be used to create a program that could decrypt a DVD. This program would allow people to exercise their fair use rights with regard to the DVDs they own. But the MPAA and DVDCCA seem to think that such a program is illegal under the DMCA.
We've seen Professor Edward Felton threatened with a lawsuit under the DMCA for giving a presentation on SDMI's watermarking techniques. We've seen Dmitry Sklyarov arrested for writing a program, as an employee of a Russian company, to covert Adobe's e-book format into their pdf format. Even though he was not directly responsible for the program's distribution in the US and even though such distribution had ceased, and even though Adobe backed down from their charges against him, he was still arrested and is still being held without even a bail hearing.
Any of these programs and/or information provide what is usually the only way to exercise your fair use rights with regard to such encrypted copyrighted works. However, under the DMCA, such programs are illegal to distribute. Therefore, only those who know how to program and write their own software to allow them to access such works are able to exercise their fair use rights. This constitutes only a tiny portion of the population of this country. The rest of us have lost our rights thanks to the DMCA.
Re:The CDs are NOT defective (Score:2)
but all the hysteria here about suing Sony for 'defective' CDs seems misplaced
You miss the point, the encoding on the disk that creates that destructive effect in a copy does not conform to the CDDA specification, thus, it's defective.
Re:Activision copy protection (slightly OT) (Score:2)
Meine Kleine Gruner Kaktus (Score:3)
I'm hoping someone takes Sony to task over these CDs (though I don't hope someone gets their equipment destroyed). I'm sorry, but damaging customers equipment in the name of copy protection is just plain wrong.
Ironic (Score:5)
sPh
They don't want license terms on the package... (Score:2)
"What? You mean I didn't buy this album? I just paid good money for it- I'm taking it back to the store... What? I can't take it back? F that noise- I'm not buying another one."
They want the change subtle so that people won't notice- like cooking a live frog, turning up the heat slowly, he'll cook, not noticing his peril.
Re:Even if it damaged your gear, who is liable? (Score:2)
In this case, Sony would be liable since they're selling non-compliant discs that can damage equipment.
Re:They don't want license terms on the package... (Score:2)
Oh, and by the way, Kansas might be dusty these days- but the central tenet of that song still fits.
When your time comes, all the money in the world will not another second buy for you. When time weathers away things, they will, at best, guess what you did if you DO manage to make a mark on things.
I've an answer- cdparanoia... (Score:2)
The CDs ARE defective (Score:3)
That's raw data access. I can, if I want, mix real-time, the stream from the CD with any other sound source- and by copyright law I can.
If I can't do that, it's not complying with the CDDA spec and therefore isn't a Compact Disc- it's something that is sort-of one. If it's labeled as such on the package, then the disc is fraudulent or defective- take your pick.
Well, letsee here... (Score:4)
In either of those cases, it's going to hit a piece of equipment with an original disc.
Don't buy off on a fobbed off statement to the public about it won't harm things- think it through.
Re:Can someone say... (Score:5)
Bull. The problem can be any of the following:
There are lots of fair and legal ways to use MP3's. Interfering with them may not be illegal, but I expect damaging equipment is.
Re:The CDs are NOT defective (Score:2)
Re:True but if they knowingly sell you a cd which (Score:3)
Re:Sony=Hypocrites (Score:2)
Sony is a very large company, dare I say a 'megacorp'. The 99th hand does not necessarily know what the 101st hand is doing, and may well be in competition with it. Sony actually has a track record of some divisions of the company coming out with products that trump another part of the company. The best example that comes to mind is that of digital video cameras from a few years back. The Consumer video division's bottom of the line "no frills except what pro/semi-pro film and video people want" model *completely* trumped the entire Pro video division's lineup of small digicams, and was cheaper to boot. One division of the company had made another's entire product line moot with but one innovative product.
So the deal is this: those working in the consumer electronics division probably actively dislike the whole copy protection business, as it threatens their potential market size and ability to design and market new products that might allow copying (ala Tivo, etc.). The ownz-all-da-media-rights side of the company naturally has other ideas, mostly surrounding protection of their back and forthcoming catalogs of titles.
True but if they knowingly sell you a cd which (Score:4)
note IANAL, just a retired COP so don't bank on my advice.
Re:True but if they knowingly sell you a cd which (Score:2)
(This post is, obviously, entirely objective. I'm sure that someone will reply and say that in their city/country it is, in fact, commonplace to photocopy sandpaper, that photocopiers come with special provisions for this, and so on.)
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CD anti-piracy is like Babel Tower (Score:2)
They can build as many new-amazingly-stupid protection schemmes but we always return to point 0.
IF YOU CAN HEAR IT, YOU CAN COPY IT
That's all...
The ultimate copy protection would be stop selling CD's at all
-OR-
Develop a new distribution system more suitable for this century...
Imagine how far they went that now, the first purpose of CD audio it's being forgotten (HI QUALITY) is being lost for a new concept (HI QUALITY + INDUCED DISTORTION).
I'm sure that companies will charge some extra cents to cover the costs of developing this new-soon to be drop-protection shemme.
Sony is liable (Score:2)
Although IANAL, it is nevertheless obvious that Sony is very liable for damages which occur in at least some scenerios:
Consider: You buy a Sony CD burner (the consumer kind that sits in your stereo rack, not the PC kind, although I suspect it wouldn't matter if the PC brand also came bundled with software that includes audio CD copying capabilities). You buy a sony pressed, unmarked Cactus CD. Or perhaps its even marked with a small icon, but without any message warning you of the consiquences.
Two scenerios where Sony would clearly be liable for any and all damages, and quite possibly punitive penalties as well:
1) you play the original in your high-end PC player, which is connected to your high end speakers via your high-end audio card, in turn via the CDs digital port. Pop, crackle, zap
2) you play a copy of a Sony CD in a Sony player, made by a Sony CD burner marketed to you expressly for copying and burning CDs (perhaps even burnt onto a Sony blank for good measure). It blows your speakers, burns out your amp, whatever. Sony sold you at least one piece of equipment fraudulantly. They cannot have it both ways, either the CD Burner/Player were sold under false pretences, or the CD was sold under false pretences. Consumer fraud at the very least, criminal damage to private propterty quite possibly.
[insert rant here about how CEOs of such criminal cartels should be spending at least as much time in prison as CEOs of other well-known crime cartels]
--
Wow, Hofstadter wasn't kidding (Score:3)
---
It figures, With Sony. (Score:3)
Don't get me wrong, every piece of electronic equipment that I own that can be made by Sony is made by Sony. (Okay, 4/5 boxen ain't bad).
It just figures that they would create a technology that would so damage one of their other products that you would have to buy the second product again.
The funniest part of the whole thing is this (funny as in cynical):
1. User buys new Yanni CD.
2. Sticks CD in Sony CD player, Yanni is so powerful that the CD player starts making crazy noise and then stops making any noise at all.
3. User goes out and purchases a new Sony CD player. (Hopefully not another 52k hi-fi edition)
4. User tries to play Yanni again. Good thing that he has the Sony warranty, but I'm sure the warranty doesn't cover damage by the encoding of their own cd's. (smart).
5. User realizes that the cd broke his player, yet Sony still will not acknowledge any fault on their part.
6. User tries to return the evil Yanni cd, yet Best Buy (and any other store, for that matter), will not accept returns of opened cd media. (who would want to copy Yanni anyways?
Yes, I love Sony... but they do seem to shoot themselves in the foot sometimes.
-S
Scott Ruttencutter
This just in! (Score:3)
SonySoftVision today announced that they have introduced a new copy protection mechanism for CDs. The new copy protection mechanism prevents infected.. er, I mean.. "protected" CDs from being copied, both on PCs and on consumer CD players. The new protection, called "KickInDaNutz", has been secretly included on several thousand CDs which are targetted for North American distribution.
KickInDaNutz works by taking all of the music data and replacing it with random noise; or, in some cases, a computer virus. The result is a CD that, when inserted into a computer, causes the computer to email all of the MP3 files contained on its hard drive to the RIAA.
KickInDaNutz has the side benefit of making the CD completely unlistenable, even for those who bought it. According to a spokesman for SonySoftVision, "The customer gets fucked, but because of the 'no-return' policy at almost every CD store, they have no recourse to recover their money. In some cases, that customer might even buy another copy! The great thing is that they won't be able to tell beforehand which CDs are corrupted! Besides, if they want to listen to the songs, they should just turn on their radio where we can subject them to advertising."
The new copy protection does add a bit of overhead into the cost of CD production, according to SonySoftVision. This will force the price of CDs to rise to US$35.00.
Consumer response to this new form of copy protection is not expected to be negative, according to the experts. "Most consumers are used to paying exhorbitant prices in order to get one or two good songs per album; we're only reducing that number by one or two. Besides, some people might LIKE random noise."
In other news...
Guess where the real pirates live? (Score:2)
Pirated music and software is a multi billion dollar/year business in the ex-eastern block. Everybody knows it but who is doing something?
Instead of coming down on guys who have people out on the streets hawking CDs for $2 by the thousands, the industry will have us believe that it is the college student copying a couple of titles given by a friend who will put them out of business.
What would happen if Sony got Interpol to arrest one of these guys poolside?
Use your imagination, or think federal building sized explosion with different logo on the wall...
These are two nasty groups of people: multinational corporations and organized crime. Guess who the little guy in the middle is?
Re:Don't get caught up in the scheme (Score:2)
It's getting big in the industry to protect something with another area of law, because it couldn't be protected with the first.
For example, fair use allows copies. So make any device to make copies illegal, but still allow copies to be made.
Also, Playstation games... The boot rom checks the first n-bytes of the CD, if it matches the boot rom, the disc is allowed to boot. If it differs in a single bit, it isn't allowed to boot. But this code isn't actually used to boot, it's simply checked to see if it's a "valid disk". If you use this boot code, you're copying Sony's copyrighted boot code. They can't sue you for reverse engineering playstation and making games for it, but now to do so, you have to violate a copyright, so it's illegal.
Ditto with other companies who, for instance, put their trademarked logo into binaries, and check for that. If you write code without their logo, it fails to work. If you copy their logo, it's trademark violation..
Similarly, patents can be used. Patent something, then 'open' an API. Catch? To use it, you have to use their software patent. Either license it or get sued.
IMHO any linking like that should render the trademark/copyright/patent either void, or freely usable in that context, by everyone. I'd vote for void, to punish companies that pulled that crap.
Re:Article says ... (Score:2)
(document with a virus. Hah, thanks for that whole fucking concept, Microsoft)
Re:BS Alert (Score:3)
And considering what some people spend on Amps.... If you really want to test your theory, that it isn't possible, create some 'sound files' by encoding some unusual waveforms and try it on your stereo, in your car and on your portable CD player.
Go ahead.
I dare you.
so now I'm a pirate? (Score:5)
-burn copies of cd's so it's not necessary to keep $1800 (100 disks) worth of original cd's in the car
-play cd's on high-end car audio head units that are really the more high-quality cd-rom drives and not the dumbed-down cd players that hav no problem with corrupt and missing data
-rip and encode 300 cd's and place on 30 mp3 cdr's for use with high-end car audio cd-mp3 players
-countless other activities
I would personally be very pissed of if I was one of the companies that have taken risks to bring portable mp3 players, cd copying software, car-audio mp3 players, and very high-end cd players to the market just to have them pissed on by the record industry's anti-piracy campaign of the week!!
what the hell ever happened to trying to please consumers??
Re:Sony=Hypocrites (Score:2)
Seen in a Sony Music Canada complex in Toronto: this famous poster [modernhumorist.com].
Irony; this poster was about 20 meters from a trio of computers in the staff cafeteria for browsing.
Greater irony; several people at Sony that day ripped on the record industry for helping to hold back high-end audio formats by demanding "better" encryption (CSS2) and watermarking (for SACD) schemes. Nice job, shitheads.
ObOnTopicComment: If I ever run across a CD that I can't rip into
The real fix for this could be the patent office (Score:2)
FUD and BS (Score:2)
All this BS leads me to the conclusion that everyone in the entertainment industry is high on crack and they are so desperate to keep their daily fix going they will pay poor engineers just out of uni ridiculously high prices to comeup with theses dumb ideas - Macrovison, CSS, AudioSafe etc. just so they can get that little bit of extra cash to get some blow. The engineers don't care if it can't be done - they're not dumb, they know that if you can hear it your can copy it, they all read
-tfga
Re:Cactus...what an appropriate name... (Score:3)
God, not again. (Score:2)
Aren't there laws in the US about selling intentionally defective goods and not advertising the fact that they have been made defective?
The original CDs are not defective. Stop making it seem like someone needs to contact the Consumer Protection Center, like its "Johnny Switchblade" or something (might be too old for you to remember).
having to face questions about their product quality and safety
What questions about quality and safety?? The CD's don't damage a fucking thing! God I can't believe I'm letting such a troll get under my skin.
the CD's can damage equipment
*No*they*can't!* If you COPY the CD's then the COPY can damage your equipment. Has anyone thought that perhaps this technology is being released in countries that do not require the buyer to be able to make a backup copy?? Sheesh.
--
Steve Jackson
Re:Sony Sells Crap (Score:2)
Hmm, suppose you had a bunch of microscopic springs with weights attached to them, embedded in radial gaps in the polycarbonate around the edge of the disc. On the other side of the gap is an electrical contact. You've also used some thin-film voodoo to create a battery or other store of electricity in the disc.
If you drop the disc to the ground, only the springs on one side make contact. But if you spin the disc at faster than a certain speed (say, 1000 RPM, above the highest speed any CD will spin when playing back music at 1x, regardless of the position of the head), all of the springs make contact with the switches at once.
*boom*!
Foul Play (Score:2)
I'll call Foul. FOUL!
Re:Foul Play (Score:2)
//rdj
Re:BS Alert (Score:2)
//rdj
Re:Sony=Hypocrites (Score:2)
Don't get caught up in the scheme (Score:4)
I don't care if the copy protection scheme makes my stereo taste like a 22oz prime rib steak
What really scares me is that we're making all this furor over the fact that it damages your stereo. If Sony were to licence a copy-protection scheme that
Oh wait, except the fact that Sony denies the existance of FAIR USE. Bah.
A Good Way To Fight This In Court (Score:2)
Re:Set to cause damage? (Score:2)
Re:Foul Play (Score:2)
> I'll call Foul. FOUL!
I guess, that's why they released in the Czech Republic and Slovakia... Less consumer protection, consumers have less resources to fight this in courts... Same reason why the multinationals prefer to put their chemical factories into India.
False Advertising (Score:2)
Re:What about personal use? (Score:3)
The shipping CDs aren't set to produce coppies which will damage equipment. The copy protection system would allow them to create such CDs, but it wasn't done on the ones they shipped.
oh please... (Score:2)
Re:Foul Play (Score:2)
Until there's titles, this is all horse-stuff. (Score:4)
Midbar has already sold unidentified Cactus-embedded CDs in Eastern Europe.
Until specific titles of CDs are given, I'm very dubious about all these weekly claims of releases, cracks and damages. It sounds like RIAA-sponsored FUD, not actual discussions of real technologies or real products or real damages of real equipment.
So? (Score:2)
Cactus...what an appropriate name... (Score:2)
:)
- JoeShmoe
Re:Until there's titles, this is all horse-stuff. (Score:2)
This sounds very possible.
Wasn't it just last week that we found out that the BSA is doing a rather similar campaign [slashdot.org]?
I wonder if more artists will start boycotting their record company when pratices like this become more mainstream (ie: in the US). Hummm, now if we could get all artists to start using the web as a medium (example: emusic [emusic.com]).
Re:Double Standard - If the cd player was Outlook. (Score:2)
It is the high amplitude, high harmonics that destroy the speakers. Filter out the high harmonics, and you now have a brand-new lo-fi system, with no high end frequency response, just so some fool (RIAA) can protect their (unethically obtained) income. Personally, I like my high end freqs, and I rather not put too much in the signal path such as relays, or solid state switches that might distort the signal just that little bit more. TimC.
Sony=Hypocrites (Score:5)
Re:Ironic (Score:4)
Fair use means you are not commiting a crime for making backups for personal use.
Fair use *IS NOT* a doctrine stating that companies have to facilitate the process.
Re:Until there's titles, this is all horse-stuff. (Score:2)
You know what, there are whole lists of people that were killed in the holocaust. I've met people who lived through it and can show me their tatoos.
All we are asking for is something similar here. I've heard a lot of talk about this stuff, but no real facts about what CDs this is being done on. Till I hear some, I'll remain unsure of how true any of this is.
--Ty
Re:And now... (Score:2)
Product Liability? (Score:2)
I would expect that this may cause significant trouble for the retailers who sell these disks to the end-users. Certainly, until the retailers know that they are selling Cactus-enabled products, they will end up eating the cost of damage to the end-user's systems.
While this may or may not be a legal liability for anyone involved in the retailing of these products, it is not difficult to imagine that this is exactly the sort of situation that will lead to an increase in the use of sites like MP3.com and the new-and-improved napster.
This is a desperate attempt by the record distribution industry to keep themselves from becoming irrelevant. Sadly, this will probably only accelerate the acceptance of alternative distribution channels. And, at least some artists are begining to realize that they don't need the record distribution services of an AOL/Time Warner or a Sony if they have other partners who are willing to take a lower % of the proceeds.
Re:What's the Law Say? (Score:2)
=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\=\
Re:Sony=Hypocrites (Score:3)
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Looks almost identical to Macrovision's scheme (Score:2)
I glanced at the patent, and it seems to me that it's mostly the same as Macrovision's scheme.
The only difference I could find is the flagging of the altered data by using the P channel. Macrovision's scheme doesn't mention this.
Cactus here seems that it would protect against accidental playback of the corrupted audio samples by this flag. A CD-ROM drive would read the P channel and see that the frame is "data" instead of "audio", and not attempt to play it back. The actual protection technique seems to be the same for both Cactus and Macrovision.
Both schemes work by finding sequences of sound samples that are in a straight line (such as a triangle wave or a gap of silence). You can then safely remove the middle portion of this line, as it is redundant. The CD player will "connect the dots" and exactly reproduce the straight line! The audio that you hear will be unchanged, even though many of its samples might be missing.
The removed samples are replaced with random or corrupted data, and the error correction codes of the CD are set to mark this data as bad (so it won't be accidentally played).
I'm surprised this hasn't been thought of before. What would be funny is if Macrovision and Cactus spent a lot of money fighting over who got the patent first, while the rest of us simply make a small patch to cdparanoia and continue ripping away :-)
Super eurobeat from Avex and Konami unite in your DANCE!
Set to cause damage? (Score:3)
I think that this paragraph in the article bothers me. If the system is set to cause damage, someone had to set it to do that, which means somewhere in the algorithm, someone changed
CauseDamage=0; to CauseDamage=1;
Mabey its just a typo - cause if it can be set to cause damage, then they're knowingly selling a defective product.
~z
I've found one! (Score:5)
Stay away from this stuff, I'm telling you!
--SC
So much for fair use (Score:4)
Re:Well, letsee here... (Score:2)
DMCA - fair use illegal, Constitution overridden (Score:3)
Circumvention itself is now illegal too. Fair use is illegal unless the content provider decides to not stop you.
Fair use is kind of pointless if the content provider can make it illegal for you to engage in it, even the DMCA claims to not hurt fair use right in one of its clauses, but the fact stands:
At least one judge (Kaplan) won't let that inconsistency or the Constitution stop him.
And as a Federal judge he can get armed marshalls to enforce a judgement, and take almost everything you own. Or, if you "profitted", lock you away 5 years like Dmitry Sklyarov (in this case the US broke SEVERAL international laws in the process - just like our "enemies" are known for doing).
Re:Foul Play (Score:2)
Re:Article says ... (Score:2)
They can't stop you from making a copy, but what law prevents them from making changes to their product that affect your ability to make perfect copies?
(I don't know the answer, I'm just asking because all the posts I've read so far claim that the user has a right to copy the CD, but I haven't seen a clear explanation of what Sony's actual legal obligation is to facilitate that copying.)
--- .sig in order to have your advice
Hi! How are you?
I send you this
Re:Foul Play (Score:3)
What about personal use? (Score:3)
Surely the implication is this protection will break the terms of the licence I have for my media (i.e. the right to make a backup, or a copy for personal use)?
There ARE specific titles! (Score:5)
This is bullshit (Score:2)
Not true. There is lots of electronic music/noise out there. Any decent synthesizer can reproduce virtually any waveform at any audible frequency, and this stuff has been recorded. If Pictures at an Exhibition by ELP doesn't damage your speakers, its unlikely that this would.
Intelligence: Finding an error in a Knuth text.
Re:Back the muh fu*kin' truth trolley up! (Score:3)
Well here in Ireland, it is not illegal to copy and distribute, it is illegal to copy and distribute for profit. If I want to, I can run off a copy for my own personal use (if you want the law references - give me a few days. My grandfather's law books are in storage. He was a TD (see congressman) so they were very up to date) If I cannot copy a disc for my own personal use, I can return the disc to the shop and by law I will get a refund (sale of goods act - not fit for purpose. It is a cd, I should be able to copy for my own use).
Off-topic: Nice thing about Ireland/Europe, the majority of the disclaimers on product licenses and manuals are illegal/ irrelevant. You cannot have your rights as a consumer under law removed/restricted by the licensing practised by a lot of american megacorps.
Re:Can't I back up CDs? (Score:2)
Dear Federal Mint,
I am wondering here about my right to make a back-up copy of dollar bills I earn. I damage and/or lose my cash regularly because I am not careful with it.
Thank you for your consideration in this matter.
So long USB speakers (Score:2)
It sounds like this system affects audio transfered in the digital realm (as in between the cdrom of your computer and a set of USB speakers). This is where the actual media is likely to prove 'defective' and damage you sound system.
Also I wonder how it will work with external Analog-Digital converters used in premium sound systems (of course Sony is likely only encoding N-Sync albums, limiting the potential damage to quality audio equipment).
Finally, by ripping to WAV and using an audio package (like soundforge) to remove artifacts you should be able to clip the claws off this beast (without much ADDITIONAL damge to the music).
Lawsuit (Score:2)
I'm not a lawyer, but wouldn't they have to warn users what the end result could be, and cisually mark the CDs with a special logo or something. Especially since people could just be making copies to listen to in their car.
Re:What about personal use? (Score:2)
Re:What about personal use? (Score:3)
"You have the right to make backups of this media, but that does not mean the company has to make that process available to you"
------rhad
Re:Until there's titles, this is all horse-stuff. (Score:5)
They (mainly BMG in Germany) tried it in Europe already in 2000. I still have Ministry's CD [excite.com] that won't play on CD-ROMs or DVD-ROMs but plays perfectly on an ordinary stereo CD player.
I am not an electrical engineer (Score:3)
I am not an electrical engineer, but I wonder, can this data be captured, made avaiable and reproducable in mp3 format, then inserted into say, Britanny Spears or BackStreet Boys MP3's, then 'made available' to teeny boppers everywhere, with the intention of damaging their equipment?
-Mynn the Museless
Re:So much for fair use (Score:3)
What happened to our right to back up our own cds?
Please point out where this right is given to you? There is such a thing as fair-use. It is the legal copying of audio/video. However, nowhere does it state the manufacturers MUST enable you to copy that audio/video. So I have no problem whatsoever (legally-speaking) with the manufacturers releasing CD's under this technology.
Here's what should be pissing EVERYONE off to the point of massive letter-writing campaigns, protests, demonstrations, etc...
It is legal for companies to prevent fair-use with their technology, but now Congress has made it illegal for us to take back fair-use with our technology!
Re:Meine Kleine Gruner Kaktus (Score:3)
Activision? I don't think so.
I do remember Gunship, the first famous program called Apache. :)
it had a really innovative copy-protection routine. extremely difficult to break. (on the then-king of games, the commodore 64.) there were a few downsides. you had to have a plain-vanilla 1541 floppy drive to run it; IIRC even little things like drive alignment would cause it to not work.
it took about a year before the underground broke it. (this was at a time when the underground usually released games 2-3 months ahead of their commercial releases.)
everybody liked the broken version. why? it would run on a lot of different floppy drives, with non-optimal alignment, even on 1571s. also, it didn't wear down the head the way the commercial version did.
yeah. the commercial version killed your drive. play it for a few hundred hours, and no more drive.
they never learn.
How to get Sony (Score:5)
2. Copy a Sony music CD using the Sony recorder.
3. Play the copied CD on your Sony stereo using stock Sony speakers.
4. Sue Sony when their CD blows their system.
Protest by not buying their music CDs anymore and avoid purchasing their music equipment.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
~~ the real world is much simpler ~~
Nope (Score:3)
You don't have the right just because you assume. Legally you don't have the right to copy a CD unless they explicitly give you permission, as often done on computer CDs.
Yes, you have the right to make a copy due to fair use; however, fair use does not guarantee any degree of quality, it just says you have the right to make a copy, and you can still make an analog copy to tape.
This is what came up earlier regarding copying DVDs and CDs.
Just because a similar media gives you the right doesn't mean all creations of the same media offer the same right; again never assume.
That distortion has a common name. (Score:5)
That "garbage" is called "New Country" and belive it or not, some people like it.
The CDs are NOT defective (Score:5)
Red Book CD Standard (Score:3)
Self-Publishers take note: (Score:4)
Article says ... (Score:4)
At least the original product will not damage your system, so maybe the manufacturor will claim that they didnt sell a defective product!
As long as the original still sounds perfect and cant damage your audio equipment then is there really any chance of us being able to lodge a reasonable complaint.
What really worries me about these copy protection systems is the effect it will have on the durability of the disks. If they have already killed the error correction in some parts of the CD so badly that the played has to interpolate then you had better hope you dont get any dust/scratches near-by!
The Precedent (Score:4)
Microsoft's New Slogan: We're taking you somewhere today dammit, and you can't stop us.
Can't I back up CDs? (Score:3)
Microsoft's software comes with a EULA (as does most other software) that says, among other things, that I MAY make a copy for archival purposes.
CDs do not come with a EULA of any kind however. They do not say what my rights are and are not. I would assume I have a "right" to make a copy for backup purposes. I suppose Sony could sell me a CD saying "No, you don't have the right to make a copy of this", as if I buy the CD I agree to the terms.
I however find it unfair for Sony not to inform me that they are selling me a CD which if I use the rights I assume I have (since I haven't been told otherwise and as I pointed out is a right I have in similar media) and make a copy, I will damage my equipment. I think this is potentially inviting lawsuits for damaged equipment (IANAL).
Can someone say... (Score:3)
IANAL, but Sony selling cd's that don't exactly conform to the CDDA standards (which is a whole other deal) and will possibly damage sound equipment under normal operation has got to be illegal underom SOMETHING.
And "unacceptable" to harm a consuer's audio equipment DELIBERATELY? Uh...yeah, that's about as unacceptable as them just breaking into my house and smashing my speakers with a crowbar.