Sony Doing An End Run Around Its Own DRM 353
glassgnost writes "According to a story at CNN, Sony has an odd response to complaints from fans who have discovered they cannot import their CD content to an iPod. Individuals who complain to Sony BMG about iPod incompatibility are being directed to a Web site that provides information on how to work around the technology. In short, some labels appear to have been instructing customers how to defeat DRM -- which, IIRC, is a violation of DMCA." From the article: "For now, the copy-protected discs work only with software and devices compatible with Microsoft Windows Media technology. Apple -- the dominant player in digital music -- has resisted appeals from the labels to license its FairPlay DRM for use on the copy-protected discs. The DRM initiatives are generating complaints from fans, many of whom own iPods. The message boards of artist fan sites and online retailers are filled with complaints from angry consumers who did not realize they were buying a copy-protected title until they tried to create music files on their home computers."
Blaming Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
I think this situation is bound to happen, when your right hand doesn't know what your left hand is doing.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:4, Funny)
3. How can I get tracks I rip from my CD into iTunes and/or onto my iPod?
Apple's proprietary technology doesn't support secure music formats other than their own and therefore the music on this disc can't be directly imported into iTunes or iPods.
Sony BMG wants music to be easily transferable to any device that supports secure music. Currently, music from our protected CDs may be transferred to hundreds of such devices, as both Microsoft and Sony have assisted to make the user experience on our discs as seamless as possible with their secure formats.
Unfortunately, in order to directly and smoothly rip content into iTunes it requires the assistance of Apple. To date, Apple has not been willing to cooperate with our protection vendors to make ripping to iTunes and to the iPod a simple experience.
If you believe that you should be able to easily move tracks from your protected CD to your iPod then we encourage you to use the following link to contact Apple directly and tell them so. http://www.apple.com/feedback/ipod.html [apple.com]
That said, while there is no direct support on the disc for iTunes or iPod, SONY BMG has worked out an indirect way for consumers to move content into these environments, despite the challenges noted above. If you'd like more information on how to move content to iTunes please CLICK HERE [slashdot.org].
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:4, Insightful)
Parse error on line 6: can't interpret "protected" applied to derivative of trademarked name "compact disc".
There is no such thing. If it's copy-protected, it's not a CD. Simple as that, really.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:4, Informative)
It is certainly a CD so long as its 120mm in diameter and all the other usual disc-shaped properties. It is NOT an audio cd as it doesn't adhere to the Red Book audio CD standard.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:5, Informative)
Technically, though, FairPlay won't even work when distributing CDs. FairPlay works by encrypting the song with the iPod's key. When the CD is pressed, they obviously don't know the key to your iPod. So this isn't even possible.
Actually, when you download a song from iTMS, YOUR computer applies the DRM to a clean copy it gets from iTMS. Running tcpdump and reassembling the file results in a non-DRM'd file. FairPlay, like all DRM, is a joke.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
You underestimate the power of the dark side of the farce.
The DRM guys have, like you, realised that DRM is impossible on general purpose computers. Their solution is not to stop trying, it's to get rid of the general purpose computer.
Welcome to "trusted computing". I.e. soon your computer will trust microsoft/apple/sony instead of you.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
I guess we all just imaged that Motorola iTunes phone then?
Apple is willing to license the DRM. Sony would rather use this incompatibility as a competitive advantage for its portable players over the iPod (Gee, we've never seen this strategy from Sony before have we?). Once again Sony fails to realize that you can't annoy your customers into buying their crap.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:5, Insightful)
The customers should be able to purchase a CD unencumbered with DRM'd files - I don't have any problems converting real CDs to MP3 on either PC or Mac.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:3, Funny)
Are they trying to pull a fast one? (Score:5, Insightful)
So, they are trying to convince me that the reason THEY are DRM-ing their CD's is because of Apple? Im sorry, but who do they expect will be convinced by this? We're not talking about Momma and Poppa Joe here who will be complining- this will be educated individuals from the internet generation. These people will easily be able to see right through this decieteful childsplay. This is a foolish act by Sony that makes them sound like even more of faceless evil megacorporation than they already do.
Re:Are they trying to pull a fast one? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Are they trying to pull a fast one? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:2, Funny)
Witness the huge number of completely different and incompatible memory card formats Sony keep making.
Re:Blaming Apple (Score:4, Interesting)
So then get a recording of a support rep stating the web site, and then post it here for all to hear. One of us is an attorney, and will start a DMCA action.
Of course, the victim is Sony, so the attorney will have a difficult time getting their client's agreement to pursue. But if the caller asked, "So, does this work for this other CD I have?" And Sony's rep answers in the positive, then the manufacturer of "this other CD" might have grounds to sue. And if the caller worked for the (other) manufacturer, it'd be even easier to turn this into a DMCA-killer event.
Incorrect (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Incorrect (Score:3, Funny)
Its not Apple's fault fot not getting behind their DRM, its Sony's fault for including it, although I guess they would argue its our fault for "pirating" their music in the first place. Like when pops you use to beat you mercilessly for disobeying him.
Re:Incorrect (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Incorrect (Score:2, Insightful)
Where in the DMCA does it say that? Sony isn't doing the circumvention themselves. Sony is telling others how to circumvent a copy protection mechanism. From the text of the DMCA, on its face it would appear Sony is in violation of the law.
Re:Incorrect (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:blatent troll, plz ignore (Score:2)
So I can say that I have some downloaded MP3s to play on the computer, but I bought the CD first.
I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:2, Funny)
Yeah, but when would that generate as many page hits as "SONY VIOLATES THE DMCA AND TELLS YOU HOW TO CIRCUMVENT ITS OWN DRM LOLZ?"
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:3, Insightful)
--
The top ten PalmOS apps [arpx.net]
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:3, Informative)
Ideally that would be the case however violations of the DMCA are criminal and as such are not regulated by the copyright holder. You may recall the case a couple of years ago where Adobe, with the cooperation of the FBI, had a Russian programmer speaking at one of the hacker-cons arrested under the DMCA for his speech (and software he had written for his company) regarding how to bypass the trivially weak pro
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:3, Informative)
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/sci/tech/1454489.stm [bbc.co.uk]
http://yro.slashdot.org/article.pl?sid=02/12/02/17 47248&mode=flat&tid=103 [slashdot.org]
http://www.freesklyarov.org/ [freesklyarov.org]
http://news.com.com/2100-1001-270082.html [com.com]
http://news.com.com/2100-1001-270440.html?legacy=c net [com.com]
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:3, Informative)
Entrapment is a legal term used only when the other party is a law enforcement agency, I believe.
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:2)
Re:I don't think it is a violation of the DMCA... (Score:4, Interesting)
IANAL, but I did attend a talk held by one, and this is one of the peculiarities of the act that he pointed out. He gave a hypothetical example of database access controls. What if you buy a database, and put your own copyrighted work into it, but then your license expires and the DB locks you out using those access controls? Can you break the access controls to get your work back out?
Not under the letter of the DMCA. But of course, this has not been tested in court.
Violating the DMCA? (Score:3, Interesting)
Even if that does violate the DMCA, only certain people would have standing to sue about it...mostly Sony. Anyone else getting a piece of the profits would, as well, but it's possible that their contracts surrender that particular right to sue to Sony. Also, the artists may be just as interested in Sony in getting around this particular manifestation of the law of unintended consequences, so they might not want to sue, either.
Of course, if the artists' contract required Sony to put DRM on there (maybe from an extremely anti-file-sharing artist like Madonna), then they would probably have a breach of contract action against Sony. I'm not sure it would succeed, but I'll bet it'd survive summary judgment.
Re:Violating the DMCA? (Score:2)
As I understand the DMCA, violating the no-circumvention clauses are a *criminal* offense [cornell.edu] if done "willfully and for purposes of commercial advantage". Seems to me that:
a) Sony are getting a commercial advantage by placating users who complain about the horrid DRM schemes they want to us by providing them with circumvention information.
b) There is no pro
Re:Violating the DMCA? (Score:3, Informative)
In the US, DMCA is a criminal law; that means that disobeying it is a crime aga
Has anyone received the reply? (Score:3, Interesting)
I'd fill it out myself, but it's been over a year since I bought any music that wasn't from iTunes.
Re:Has anyone received the reply? (Score:5, Informative)
We appreciate your purchase of our CD and apologize for any inconvenience. Please follow the instructions below in order to move your content into iTunes and onto an iPod.
If you have a PC place the CD into your computer and allow the Sony BMG audio player on the CD to automatically start. If the player software does not automatically start, open your Windows Explorer. Locate and select the drive letter for your CD drive. On the disc you will find either a file named LaunchCD.exe or Autorun.exe. Double-click this file to manually start the player.
TIP: If your CD does not contain either the LaunchCD.exe or
Autorun.exe files, it may not be compatible with this iPod
solution. Please reply to this letter for more information.
Once the Sony BMG player application has been launched and the End User License Agreement has been accepted, you can click the Copy Songs button on the top menu.
Follow the instructions to copy the secure Windows Media Files (WMA) to your PC. Make a note of where you are copying the songs to, you will need to get to these secure Windows Media Files in the next steps.
Once the WMA files are on your PC you can open and listen to the songs with Windows Media Player 9.0 or higher (or another fully compatible player that can playback secure WMA files, such as MusicMatch, RealPlayer, and Winamp). You can then burn the songs to a standard Audio CD. Please note that in order to burn the files, you will need to upgrade to, or already have, Windows Media Player 9 or 10.
Once the standard Audio CD has been created, place this copied CD back into your computer and open iTunes. iTunes can now rip the songs as you would any normal audio CD.
Please note an easier and more acceptable solution requires cooperation from Apple, who we have already reached out to in hopes of addressing this issue. To help speed this effort, we ask that you use the following link to contact Apple and ask them to provide a solution that would easily allow you to move content from protected CDs into iTunes or onto your iPod rather than having to go through the additional steps above:
Re:Has anyone received the reply? (Score:2, Funny)
Hey Sony! Think about what you're fucking saying here, jackholes!
Obviously a strange new usage of the word "appreciate" seen only in the record industry. "The female praying mantis appreciates the male's sexual advances."
anyone else...? (Score:4, Insightful)
"sorry, we're right smack-dab in the middle of one colosal pissing contest with apple right now.
Unless you want to go out and further support us by buying our inferior digital music player, you should just piss off and do what you were going to do anyways: burn a copy of the cd, then use that copy with itunes to put it on your stupid ipod.
sure, you'll have inferior audio quality, but fuck you for going with our competitor. you're just lucky we're not suing you for it."
Re:Has anyone received the reply? (Score:3, Informative)
1. Give the CD to a friend who uses a Linux or Mac machine, which won't recognize the autoplay app that hijacks Windows into seeing only the data section of the disc and not the audio section.
2. Have that friend use their Linux box or Mac to burn a new CD of the raw audio files from your defective purchased -- er, "copy protected" -- disc, NOT the atrac or WMA files.
3. Rip whatever you want, however you want from the burned CD.
Re:Has anyone received the reply? (Score:5, Informative)
1. Disable autoplay in Windows, or simply hold down the shift key while inserting the CD into the computer. This prevents Windows from auto-installing that DRM crap.
2. Rip the CD in whatever audio program you want (Audiograbber, iTunes, Winamp, WMP, whatever).
Re:Has anyone received the reply? (Score:2)
How do the artists feel? (Score:2, Interesting)
Seems to me that an artist would want their art spread as widely as possible, since most of their money is made in merchandising, and touring. Name recognition is everything.
Do as we do in Brazil (Score:2, Informative)
Buy ilegal copies of you favorites CDs, for as cheap as US$ 2,00 (3 for US$ 4).
Seriously. Acting like this is ask for ilegal copies, here in Brazil you really can buy ilegal copies for US$ 2, if you don't care about boxes you can buy for US$ 1,25 (2 for US$ 2), and when you buy a legal copy at local store you can't play it in your linux computer.
For me it seems that they want it!
DRM (Score:5, Funny)
Oh, nooooooooo, DRM will never cause problems for consumers, just a little harmless DRM...
Time to bring in the Holy Hackgrenade, and blow the DRM into little pieces!
--LWM
Re:DRM (Score:2, Funny)
What "End Run"? (Score:3)
Interesting... (Score:2, Interesting)
Thanks,
cesman
Re:Interesting... (Score:2)
Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:5, Insightful)
Copy protection is a product defect. It is an artificially-introduced capacity for failure that would not exist if it wasn't there. Intentionally selling defective merchandise shouldn't be tolerated.
Schwab
Re:Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:2)
Re:Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:2)
Credit card companies are pretty good about charge backs against companies for defective goods.
Re:Best advice: Bring 'em back (Score:2)
Apple should do what?! (Score:3, Insightful)
How about you ("The Company") give the technology to Apple so that you don't lose their users as customers. How would you like it if Apple published on their website that said "Don't buy your company's CDs, they are incompatible with our technology and refuse to change it." You see, in this case, Apple is driving the market. Either conform, or lose customers.
Re:Apple should do what?! (Score:3, Informative)
Not to burst your Apple is glorious, evil record companies are to blame, but you've read that statement completely backwards. Apple owns FairPlay. Apple has refused to licence their fairplay protection to other companies so someone else can produce iPod compatible music (which is what Sony is asking to do here), and Apple has refused to equip the iPod with the freely licenced DRM the rest of the MP3 industry (players and online stores) are using.
Re:Apple should do what?! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Apple should do what?! (Score:2)
I think we found a new definition for irony.
Re:Apple should do what?! (Score:5, Interesting)
What's more interesting here is that Apple is turning down a potential revenue source (licensing Fairplay to CD distributors) for no other reason than what appears to be the belief that they have enough control over the digital music market to influence the direction of CD distribution as well. It seems they are making a stand to make copy-protected CDs impractical, hoping that distributors will instead keep producing standard CDs. Personally, I am very happy they are doing this, as copy-protected CDs are an incredibly stupid idea that only serves to inconvenience paying customers. I don't buy music from the big labels anymore, so I've never encountered copy protection, but you can be sure I would demand a refund if I was unable to use my purchased CDs as I see fit (within the confines of copyrights). Having Fairplay copies of the music on the CD as well wouldn't alleviate this problem, as I want to rip my CDs to MP3 format, in the bitrate of my choosing. In this case, Sony is clearly wrong, and they need to go back to making standard CDs if they want to sell to iPod users.
Why is it that Fair Use seems to be forgotten? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Why is it that Fair Use seems to be forgotten? (Score:2)
Deceptive? Yes. But they do try to declare on the "CD" that it is not a regular CD. An extreme analogy, no doubt, but no one would complain about "fair use" violation when a DVD doesn't play movies on a CD
Re:Why is it that Fair Use seems to be forgotten? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Why is it that Fair Use seems to be forgotten? (Score:3, Informative)
It would be summarily thrown out, since under US law "fair use" isn't a right, it's an affirmative defence.
Re:Why is it that Fair Use seems to be forgotten? (Score:5, Interesting)
Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:5, Informative)
Thank you for contacting Sony BMG Online.
We appreciate your purchase of our CD and apologize for any inconvenience. Please follow the instructions below in order to move your content into iTunes and onto an iPod.
[Macintosh] If you have a Macintosh computer you can copy the songs using your iTunes Player as you would normally do.
[Windows] If you have a PC place the CD into your computer and allow the Sony BMG audio player on the CD to automatically start. If the player software does not automatically start, open your Windows Explorer. Locate and select the drive letter for your CD drive. On the disc you will find either a file named LaunchCD.exe or Autorun.exe. Double-click this file to manually start the player.
TIP: If your CD does not contain either the LaunchCD.exe or Autorun.exe files, it may not be compatible with this iPod solution. Please reply to this letter for more information.
Once the Sony BMG player application has been launched and the End User License Agreement has been accepted, you can click the Copy Songs button on the top menu.
Follow the instructions to copy the secure Windows Media Files (WMA) to your PC. Make a note of where you are copying the songs to, you will need to get to these secure Windows Media Files in the next steps.
Once the WMA files are on your PC you can open and listen to the songs with Windows Media Player 9.0 or higher (or another fully compatible player that can playback secure WMA files, such as MusicMatch, RealPlayer, and Winamp). You can then burn the songs to a standard Audio CD. Please note that in order to burn the files, you will need to upgrade to, or already have, Windows Media Player 9 or 10.
Once the standard Audio CD has been created, place this copied CD back into your computer and open iTunes. iTunes can now rip the songs as you would any normal audio CD.
Please note an easier and more acceptable solution requires cooperation from Apple, who we have already reached out to in hopes of addressing this issue. To help speed this effort, we ask that you use the following link to contact Apple and ask them to provide a solution that would easily allow you to move content from protected CDs into iTunes or onto your iPod rather than having to go through the additional steps above:
http://www.apple.com/feedback/ipod.html [apple.com]
Thank you for the opportunity to be of assistance.
The Sony BMG Online Support Team
CCKM
This message and any attachments are solely for the use of intended recipients. They may contain privileged and/or confidential information. If you are not the intended recipient, you are hereby notified that you received this email in error, and that any review, dissemination, distribution or copying of this email and any attachment is strictly prohibited. If you receive this email in error please contact the sender and delete the message and any attachments associated therewith from your computer. Your cooperation in this matter is appreciated.
Oops.
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:2, Insightful)
Once the standard Audio CD has been created, place this copied CD back into your computer and open iTunes. iTunes can now rip the songs as you would any normal audio CD.
They are saying: take your crappy, damaged, DRM-encumbered CD, and make a "standard Audio CD" out of it. Then rip it normally. Well, WTF, why not just SELL STANDARD AUDIO CDs TO BEGIN WITH!!!! Idiots!!
Please note an easier and more acceptable solution requires cooperation from Apple[.] To help spee
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:3, Insightful)
While I do agree with you I think their reason was to limit the quality of audio that makes it to the internet. Are the WMA files full CD quality? If you burn from their software is it just 128bps mp3 quality music? If so, then ripping the cd and sharing it would have a significant impact on the quality of t
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:5, Insightful)
We are sorry that you are having problems driving the car we sold you without
a steering wheel. An easier and more acceptable solution requires cooperation
from the DOT to install tracks which your car can ride on and be guided to
approved locations. To help speed this effort was ask that you contact your
local DOT.
Thank you for the opportunity to be of assistance.
The Sony BMG Automotive Support Team
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:5, Insightful)
We are sorry that you are having problems driving the car we sold you without a steering wheel but you were a complete sucker for purchasing such a vehicle in the first place.
We realize that you have a choice when purchasing automobiles and are happy that despite our products' defects you still choose to buy them. Your sheep-like loyalty is appreciated.
The Sony BMG Automotive Support Team
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, the easiest and most acceptable solution doesn't require cooperation
Re:Text of the canned circumvention email (Score:5, Informative)
Anyway, if you've never put one of these CDs in your drive and let it autorun, then either (a) disable autorun or (b) hold down the shift key as you insert the disc to bypass autorun. You will then be able to rip it normally.
If you've inadvertantly autoran one of these CDs (and had the device driver installed as a result), Google around for instructions on how to find and remove the device driver.
WARNING! (Score:2)
A label like this should be obligatory.
Sony seems to be of two minds about this (Score:4, Interesting)
Personally, I'm glad Apple hasn't shared their FairPlay DRM scheme with the rest of the industry. It shows the RIAA what's like to be on the wrong side of a closed system. Now they know how we feel when we can't rip our songs to MP3s.
Re:Sony seems to be of two minds about this (Score:3, Insightful)
Well then, don't buy CDs (Score:2)
I quit buying CDs the day after the iTunes music store came online. I've never once had a problem with poorly implemented DRM.
Instructions to sony customers (Score:3, Funny)
DMCRA to the rescue! (Score:5, Interesting)
Enter the DMCRA [wikipedia.org], which, in addition to guaranteeing the right to circumvent copy prevention systems for the purposes of making non-infringing use of a work, also mandates that when companies put copy prevention on a CD, they also add an adequate warning to the case indicating that the CD may not work in all players.
I didn't think that the DMCRA would actually get attention because of the warning label provision, mainly because I'm more interested on the circumvention for non-infringing use provision, but perhaps the warning label provision is the way to get music consumers interested in getting the DMCRA passed.
Repeat After Me (Score:3, Insightful)
Now, for every person that says "No way! The law says..." They may be right, but I submit that the music distributors (via RIAA) are training people to believe and behave according to the statement above and completely ingnoring the law. (not breaking, but pretending it doesn't exist) These laws in particular protect the rich from the poor.
Whatever laws may say otherwise, I submit that a coherent challenge to this mission won't be happening because the resources required to do so are:
-out of reach of nearly all the people consuming music.
-lack of incentive on the part of the people with the resources to challenge the RIAA. They are most likely shareholders garnering a return or otherwise can pay the price without concern.
-Mounting a challenge to this is likely to be criminalized outright because it's easy to label it "they just want to steal our music." (reminds me of the medical marijuana lobby)
-Allowing a CD to be used for more than one purpose is bad capitalism. The owner wants to monetize every single use and the current political climate in the US encourages this.
administrator? (Score:3, Interesting)
-
-
-
- Logged in with Administrator rights
why?
Re:administrator? (Score:3, Interesting)
You need to have Administrator rights to install new device driver on Windows.
the death of music distribution (Score:5, Insightful)
we don't NEED music conglomerates
teenagers pick up guitars to impress chicks, not to become millionaires
if in the future artisits don't become millionaires, do you really think people will stop making music? as if fame and women aren't incentive enough?
and even then, in the future, bands will make their money the old fashion way: touring, stage appearances, and the ticketing that comes with that
and the bootlegs, videos, of that appearance will be free, as well as their entire catalog
so sell your stock in sony, and buy some ticketmaster stock
because the internet has made the media cheap
but there is still only one artist, and in meatspace, as opposed to cyberspace, the artist is a rare commodity, so you can still sell tickets
who loses in this future world?
nothing but the music distrubutors
the fans, and the artists, win
bye bye, dinosaurs
Millionaire artists (Score:4, Insightful)
But the artists who have become millionaires aren't exactly clamoring to change the system, are they? The power is in the hands of artists, but the small number of artists who have benefited by the current system are as a whole uninterested in changing it.
The fact that you and I don't need media conglomerates doesn't mean that they'll disappear of their own accord. Until big-name artists start working for change, and legislation is passed to curb the music industry's excesses, the industry will use its considerable financial and political clout to resist change.
The current music industry profit model is probably doomed, but the labels won't let it go away without a fight. They know they're middlemen, and they know that the Internet is particularly good at weeding out middlement. The problem is no matter how many times they get hit on the head with a cluestick, they still can't figure out a way to shift their profit model. Expect this fight to go on for quite some time before the music industry either is utterly destroyed or is forced to adapt to the new reality.
Silly consumers, you should have downloaded that! (Score:4, Insightful)
Silly consumers, you should know better than to actually pay for the product, since it'll just be broken! You should just go download the song illegally over the Internet, because that gives you a working copy that you can use as you see fit.
So, essentially, with DRM, Sony has succeeded in making the pirated copies of the songs more valuable than the real copies. Brilliant strategy.
DRM always seems to work like that. All it accomplishes is making the "official" versions that much worse. How many people here have wound up downloading the "NOCD" versions of games that you paid for, simply because either the nuisance of having to swap disks was keeping you from playing, or because the copy protection actually crashed? I can't remember which game (C&C Generals?), but I remember I couldn't actually play a game recently because it's copy protection scheme actually would crash.
I can only hope that eventually the media companies will realize that all this DRM stuff is simply taking value away from their product, not adding anything to it. Apparently their solution to piracy is to make the pirated product more attractive than their own. Then they wonder why the strategy isn't working. Hmm...
Re:Silly consumers, you should have downloaded tha (Score:2)
*Raises hand* :)
That's really annoying. Just as well I play just one game, as I'd have to buy a cd drive for every game I play to not go crazy from swapping
Strange and noble decision by Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
If Apple wanted, they could get the crippled CDs out there all using FairPlay to DRM the compressed songs. It's strange they don't. You would think that this would give a further competitive advantage to their iPod line of players, as well as seeing to it that everyone is using iTunes for playback and FairPlay for DRM. Should Apple want to, all of these objectives would be within reach. The strange thing is that they don't seem to want to. Somehow they wait on the sidelines while the music industry seems to default to Windows Media DRM. This is a less useful format for the majority of customers, and with enough of it around, competitors to the iPod get a serious advantage.
So my question is this: Why is Apple holding out on the licensing of FairPlay? Is it simply that they think crippled CDs are evil and they don't want to dirty their hands with it? Strange.
Re:Strange and noble decision by Apple (Score:2)
"[Macintosh] If you have a Macintosh computer you can copy the songs using your iTunes Player as you would normally do."
Re:Strange and noble decision by Apple (Score:3, Insightful)
No. Apple controls the hardware and distribution for iPod users, and they like it that way. They want to break consumers of the habit of buying little discs of plastic.
If buying music on a CD becomes a hassle because of the DRM it helps Apple. If music companies are forced to release only DRM-less CDs, it helps Apple because t
*sigh* ... will someone please explain to Sony ... (Score:2)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Analog_hole [wikipedia.org]
Yes the DRM will be circumvented eventually - but if it doesn't - there always is that pesky analog hole to fall back on
Defective DRM (Score:2)
Why are the music companies bothering to use this DRM if it's causing such an uproar? Why are they just offering ways around it and not bothering to just STOP USING IT? It's cheaper for t
Behaves like a traditional CD in a Mac? (Score:2)
Interesting tidbit from the linked site:
Sounds to me, then, like it would play in a home player, or be rippable under linux. They also say:
An informed input from a trend analyst (Score:2)
The media repackaging and enforcement industry (another generic label for *IAA) has failed to embrace the power of the Internet and will continue to fail (despite iTune meteoretic rise).
*IAA has well-documented and established monopolistic practice of doing the following:
1. Jerry-rigging Top-40 listing
2. Contr
About the workaround (Score:2)
Thank you for contacting Sony BMG Online.
We appreciate your purchase of our CD and apologize for any inconvenience.
Please follow the instructions below in order to move your content into iTunes
and onto an iPod.
Should they really be allowed to refer to these discs as CDs?
Dual Discs (Score:2)
Are Dual Discs (CDs that are CDs on one side and DVDs on the other) all automatically DRM'd or something? Or did I just get unlucky? Anyone else have any problem ripping Dual Discs, or the specific C
Apple's Strategy (Score:2, Insightful)
Sony's perpetual anal-cranium inversion (Score:3, Interesting)
Now the half of the house that sells CDs is trying hard to alienate it's customers by releasing CDs that can't be listened to on iPods. Earth to Sony, if you make your products unusable, consumers aren't going to buy them. In addition, the consumer economy is severely depressed due to energy prices and a really expensive war we are fighting in Iraq. Until these issues are resolved, consumers are going to spend less money on both electronics and content. Meanwhile, you probably shouldn't sacrifice the per CD licensing fees to the copy protection and DRM companies. Instead you should focus on superior products and profitability.
Selling products in a free-market economy is a tricky thing. Good luck! Oh, and one more thing. We are all sick of the movie remakes, please innovate something new and interesting. Herbie, Bewitched, and now King Kong? Geeeeeez.
they're not telling people how to circumvent it... (Score:4, Insightful)
They're not telling you how to circumvent it, they're telling you how to GET IT.
If it said to disable autorun and then use iTunes to rip it, then it'd be telling you how to circumvent it.
It's all a scam to get you into their circle of people already using their DRM system. By then it's too late.
Return the disc as defective. If you pay money for DRMed content, then the music companies will try to sell you more DRMed content. Our only hope here is to return every disc that has protection and hope the retailers stop stocking it due to the hassle. Then the music publishers will be forced to release it without DRM in order to get it on the shelf.
Duh (Score:2)
Re:Anyone actually get a response from Sony/BMG? (Score:4, Insightful)
Step 1: return the cd for your money.
Step 2: download the mp3 with p2p.
Note: Step 1 may be omitted in the future.