Copying HD DVD, Blu-ray Discs May Become Legal 188
Consumers could soon be able to make several legal copies of movies bought on HD DVD or Blu-ray Disc under a new licensing agreement now being negotiated. Rights holders might charge more for discs that can be copied for backup or for use on a media server, however.
The obvious problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The obvious problem... (Score:5, Insightful)
Do they take it back and give you (the same) cd back?
If what we are paying for is the content solely, then shouldn't they?
I think it would make the whole industry more credible if they were willing to do that.
Why should I have to pay a second time for content that I already paid for.
Also, if I have it on tape, shouldn't I be able to trade it in for CD, and same with VHS and DVD? Pay a small fee for the upgraded quality of the content, but still, I own the movie, so why do I have to buy it again?
Re:The obvious problem... (Score:5, Interesting)
I have all my kid's disney flicks on a home media server. I called disney to report that my disk for beauty and the beast was scratched, and that I would like a replacement. I was denied.
Summary:
me: hi, my disk is scratched
them: buy a new one
me: no, I would normally make a backup copy but your TOU forbids this
them: so?
me: well disney has taken the stance that I as a consumer have not bought any rights to the movie, only a license to the content
them: so
me: well that means under normal IP license schemas I can reasonably expect a refreshed copy of the IP for the cost of media
them: no
me: so I can copy the disks I buy?
them: no
me: will you sell me a disk?
them: no, buy it retail
me: but it's out of print and not in stores any more
them: try e-bay
etc.
etc.
Wasn't very productive, but I'll take it to mean I can copy my disks DMCA be damned.
-nB
Re:The obvious problem... (Score:5, Informative)
You can for the 'nominal' fee is $6.95:h tml#common0 [go.com]
http://disney.go.com/disneyvideos/dvdsupport/faq.
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'Neenah Neenah...'
?
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Wish the rep I called on the phone was as educated as you (and now me:)
How did you find the site? as I have looked more than once for it (of course it is not hosted at disney.com, that would make too much sense).
Honestly, this is good thing, though I wonder what they do if you don't still have all the packaging...
At least they don't ask for a sales receipt, as that would be asinine, possession of the disk should be good enough.
-nB
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-nB
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PO Box 3100
Neenah, WI 54957-3100."
Hey I'm only 1hr 48 min from Neenah. I wonder if they have a physical address. I could just then physically walk in and get my replacement copy and not have to wait 6-8 weeks or more for my replacement to arrive.
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Corrupted Discs (Score:2)
I have always wondered if it were possible to get a new / fully working DVD
Re:The obvious problem... (Score:4, Informative)
RMS's essay The Right to Read [gnu.org] is based around reading an eBook for this reason.
Re:The obvious problem... (Score:4, Insightful)
Look, when you buy a copy of a work, such as a book, or a CD, or a DVD, etc. you are simply buying the physical medium which happens to have a copy of the work fixed within it. It is that simple. It is no different from buying a brick or a car.
You can then use that copy however you like, so long as you use it in a lawful manner, just like with anything else you buy. If you buy a car, then you can drive however you want, but you still cannot break traffic laws with it. When you buy a book, you can use it however you want (read it, learn from it, use it to prop up the bed) but you can't do illegal things (e.g. make another copy of it, if it is copyrighted at the time you do so). When the copyright runs out, fewer things are illegal. Depending on your circumstances, something may or may not be illegal while those circumstances hold.
There is no license. In fact, the various publishing companies don't even claim that there are licenses. Copyright warnings (e.g. it's illegal to make copies of this) are not licenses, they're just restating the law. If your car came with a sticker that said 'don't run over people' that would be the same thing.
Software, and works which are accessed over the net (e.g. iTMS music) are really the only exceptions to this in the consumer market. And it's a bit sad, since software doesn't need to be licensed to end users to begin with; users would be able to use the software and make backups of software without licenses, and developers would still be protected. Licenses are only really useful for things like site licenses, or where the work isn't software. And even then, implied licenses (e.g. as used for virtually every web page, allowing users to make copies of the page as is necessary in order to see it, due to how computers work) could handle a lot of the remainder.
I am just sick and tired of all the crap where people think that Disney or whomever is not selling DVDs, but is instead licensing them. They aren't, and they never said otherwise, even. You know how a EULA for software is relatively up-front and in your face? When DVDs do that, then you'll know they're licensed. Otherwise, I assure you, it's not happening, not for the stuff you get from the store.
The consequences of this are that 1) it's illegal to make copies (often even backups) due to the law; 2) if your copy breaks, you are not entitled to a replacement or to make a replacement if you hadn't (lawfully) done so already; 3) you aren't entitled to get better quality copies merely because you have a lower quality copy.
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Why bother making new technology??? Are you serious???
Let's just say I happen to be a large corporate entity with holdings in both the production of 'media platforms' and a large back catalog of 'media content' --- let's call me Sony. Now what would be the benefit to me to produce an new format that would require consumers to purchase new technology and new media to go with it? What's the economic incenti
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And didn't need to (Score:3, Insightful)
Fair use means *copying of your "content" that we are *legally entitled to do. *Without asking for *permission. We do not have to sit down with you and work on the problem, try and strike a balance that pleases everyone, come to an acceptable price. We get to just do it.
Missed point: it's not the DRM, it's control. (Score:5, Insightful)
In order to solve certain issues with the Front Row software I already have to make reference movies; however, this enables my entire distributed multi-platform (TV and computer client) home set-up hum. Want me to give you odds that this new "licensed copy" won't work?
I didn't think so.
While it's encouraging that they are noticing that stomping on basic fair use is a Kobayashi Maru scenario for them (as other posters rightly point out, people will just break the DRM and copy it anyway); it should go without saying that a non-interoperable, proprietary system that dictates not just what software (or possibly hardware even) I run on my "media server", but also the software/hardware options for the clients as well?
Thanks, but no thanks. I'd argue they've still dropped the ball, and this does not consitute picking it back up. More like when you see a kid reach for the ball but in reaching for it they kick it with their foot and push it even further out of reach.
Oh well. Status quo I suppose.
--
~AC
So, Pay a little extra ... (Score:2)
So, basically, if you are poor, we consider you a criminal and you don't deserve to have the constitutional rights due to everyone else.
Two interesting ways of interpreting the scheme where you pay more in order to be allowed to do something that's legal anyway.
As long as people keep buying no matter what these companies do, we'll continue to see our rights eroded away.
I am (Score:2)
In my case, it's not copying I care about so much as ability to play on an HDTV with component video input, not HDMI.
Any word on if this proposal would allow that?
Heh (Score:4, Funny)
Exactly (Score:3, Insightful)
Excuse me? The RIAA/MPAA people argue that DMCA forbids us from making backups of our media, but that is hardly FACT -- merely their legal position -- and as far as I know one that has NEVER been challenged. I'm sure they'd like for the public to think they are "
appropriate? (Score:3)
No, they're saying "please use the item you've purchased from us only in the ways we approve."
This comes after attempts 1) to restrict the kinds of technology you can buy ('trusted' computing, broadcast flags); 2) to restrict what you can do with your hardware (anti-circumvention laws) and 3) to redefine "purchase" so that it actually just means "rental" of their 'content
Re:Exactly (Score:4, Insightful)
Copyright law is a bargain that is made between creators and society. Society agrees to enforce a temporary monopoly on distribution. In exchange, the creator agrees to allow certain fair-use rights during their period of exclusivity, and release the work into the public domain at the end. If the creator is now allowing fair use rights, then they are unilaterally nullifying the bargain, and their copyright should no longer be enforced. They can't have it both ways.
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I hate those fuckers.
Re:Heh (Score:5, Funny)
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Yea, I'm definitely tempted to write them a little thank you note!
Yeah, same here. I'm tempted to write it with my ass, in a box. Then mail it to them. Feces package anyone?
Pfft, you need to do it with style. (Score:2)
Re:Heh (Score:5, Insightful)
** for a small fee of course. That's right we're going to CHARGE YOU for exercising your RIGHTS under Fair Use, including the right to make a backup for archival purposes and to use your legally purchased media on your own devices.
They can blow it out their ass. I'll just keep cracking the DRM, thanks.
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All 'affirmative defense'
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"Since you guys keep cracking our DRM schemes, we're going to be really nice and grant you fair use rights* for the stuff you're paying for. See how cool we are!?"
* (For a nominal one-time additional fee)
Ooops (Score:2)
Anyone have a paper towel I can use to get this pie off my face?
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Pay more? (Score:4, Funny)
Re:Pay more? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Pay more? (Score:5, Insightful)
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It's how business creates tiers of product quality in a system where the original tier was already high-quality. A) downgrade quality on product sold B) introduce new high-quality version, similar to original product, at a higher price.
Heck, didn't Linksys do this exact t
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That's how business works. I don't see that as any different than the organic food market, where they introduced foods that were irradiated or genetically modified, then charged us more to buy foods that didn't contain the new technology.
The analogy would be that people started using technologies to remove the effects of irradiation or GM from the food they bought. Then the FIAA (Farming Industry Association of America, natch) got laws passed that make it illegal to do this. THEN they sell "organic" food for more money. Those first two steps are both missing from the food market, so the analogy is (big surprise coming up here) flawed.
Re:Pay more? (Score:5, Insightful)
You're gonna be paying more for a DRM scheme that allows a limited number of copies, IF all your gear is "trusted" and expensive, of course. They have been consistent in their efforts: they want control.
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If they put a few hundred million dollars into developing the new scheme, this time it might even last long enough for some discs to be released in the stores before it's cracked. But
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I'm denying that there
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strikes me as unnecessary (Score:4, Insightful)
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Until... (Score:4, Informative)
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Just because they tell you it's illegal, it's not. Fair Use is a LEGALLY DEFENSIBLE reason to break the law. IANAL, but I'm pretty sure it's like an asterisk on all laws relating to copyright that says that of course people can protect their copyrights, but copyright doesn't apply a
Re: Sharks (Score:2, Funny)
Ha.. (Score:2, Insightful)
They still just DON'T GET IT (Score:5, Insightful)
Will they let me make a standard HD-DVD, Blu-ray, or DVD copy? No.
Will they let me use a standard video format copy for my computer (like mpg, xvid, etc.)? No.
Worthless. They still think that DRM is the answer, when it's the PROBLEM.
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It's a real racket, almost like selling "protection".
Throwing a bone (Score:5, Insightful)
"Legal" as in the entities that control AACS and MPAA agreeing to 2 copies, yes.
It's still a scoop of gruel in an orphan's bowl. From TFA, it will allow one backup and one media device.
What if I have more than one media device? What if I have one and it gets lost or stolen? Now I can't put it on any others?
One backup? What happens when that backup is too beat up to work anymore. I can't make another backup?
This is just a trick for getting people to say "ooh, well, DRM isn't so bad after all."
They're offering a piddling fraction of the rights we as customers SHOULD have and treating it like we should be kissing their butts for the privilage.
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"The idea is that the content companies could charge a premium according to how many copies are allowed, Ayers said."
That just rankles. Seriously. This is NOT the way to get the rights to make copies - I predict this will be as popular as DAT.
What I want is for the numbnuts we elected to stand up to the showers of cash being thrown about by the content comglomerates and say "DRM is illegal - you sell a product, not a license. Don't like it, don't sell it!" Illegal copying for c
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how much more? (Score:3, Insightful)
They're going to charge *more*?! (Score:5, Insightful)
Uum, yeah. You just hang on to the $49.95 backup-ready copy of "Finding Nemo" there, and I'll take a "protected" one for $19.95. I don't need to put it on a server or iPod or anything, so I'll just take the cheap, "secure" one.
What's my credit card number?
09 F9 11 02 9D...
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Tricky (Score:5, Insightful)
This DMCA crap is copyright abuse. There's a reason copyright wasn't allowed this power-- it was supposed to control who could distribute the product, not how you could use it.
"Managed" copies? (Score:5, Insightful)
This helps me how?
I think I'll just stick to stripping out the DRM. Thanks anyway.
Oh no, more locked down (Score:2)
Managed copies are a crock and I have been saying since day 1 that people touting this ability as a "feature" of HD-DVD or Blu-Ray are fools.
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When did I lose Non-Infringing Use Protections? (Score:5, Insightful)
Sadly though, most people have thrown away all of their personal use rights in exchange for little more than a high-def picture and an ipod. These people get what they deserve. Higher prices.
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However in a world where media is digital, and the cost of replication is negligable (at least, to the supplier - it may take me some disk space or bandwidth t
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The powers that be are putting their thumb down on copies of content intended for mass consumption. They're not putting a gun to my head and saying "Buy this Adam Sandler HD-DVD". They're not infringing on my free speech in any way (I'm belittling them right now in front of a potential worldwide audience). They're simply preventing me from making extra copies of content that I had no intention of watching anyway.
If they start
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2) You want to play the disk on your PC. You have to install non-free software on it, perhaps a whole non-free OS.
Re:When did I lose Non-Infringing Use Protections? (Score:5, Insightful)
What part of, "Fair use is not piracy" do you not understand?
The OP is pointing out, quite correctly, that we have a legal right to fair use, which may include the right to make backup copies. I neither know nor care what you or anyone else feels about the necessity of backup copies. Your experience, needs, desires and wants are totally irrelevant to the legal fact of fair use rights.
DRM is a failed attempt to prevent me from exercising my fair use rights. Again, whether or not you think I'm a moron for wanting to do so is irrelevant. It is not piracy to do so. It is a matter of legal fact that I have those rights. [arstechnica.com] Even the RIAA once admitted that, in front of the Supreme Court no less.
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This isn't just EA putting bad sectors on a floppy. This is EA paying off Senator McCain to throw anyone in jail that tells you how to get around those bad sectors.
You should be mad at both.
Missing The Point (Score:2)
That's what I do now. But the point is not what you or I do. The point is how influential the media conglomerates are.
Here's another way to get a sense of how pervasive the media conglomerates and their messages are: Try going one week without, watching any tv, going to any movie distributed by the media conglomerates, watching a movie _not_ distributed by a media conglomerates, playing a game that the media conglomerates have _not_ produced or funded, reading a magazine not owned o
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"Good artists borrow; great artists steal." Picasso said that.
The truth is, all works of art--which, for the purposes of discussion, we'll count "300" as--are inspired from earlier works. Without access to those works, creativity would be set ba
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Uh, I think it happened a lot less recently than that. How about DVDs and the original DMCA? It happened around 10 years ago. Yes, DRM existed before that, but DVDs were the first medium to really catch on with the mainstream that had DMCA-backed copy protection.
I'm surprised people pick on HD formats so much, when it goes back a lot further than that. Sticking with DVDs is just a
What about DVDs? (Score:5, Interesting)
Also, since CSS was cracked years ago, there's absolutely no reason they shouldn't have allowed DVD copying already, other than to use as a means of sending otherwise law-abiding citizens to jail. With the advent of Apple TV (along with similar products) and the possibility of ripping one's entire DVD collection and making it available in an easily browsable interface (like an MP3 collection), the outcry is probably getting louder.
Since I live in Canada, there's no DMCA, and I'm already paying taxes on blank DVDs, so this is not yet a problem. Still, I figure Stephen Harper and his cronies will bless us with a DMCA-like law soon.
And, yeah, the timing of this announcement is just a little too coincidental, what with the latest AACS crack.
Re:What about DVDs? (Score:4, Informative)
I believe the levy is not on DVDs but on CDs and media playing devices as it DVDs are not considered Audio recording media (see table in link [neil.eton.ca]). And don't blame Harper, well at least not for the copyright law that the govt is trying get through as this was introduced by the previous residents of parliament.
Central Server? (Score:3, Interesting)
Let me get this straight... (Score:4, Insightful)
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What's a right. It's something given to you in a law.
Of course, people believe they have some intrinsic rights they have "by default", like right of life, right of free speech an
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Comment removed (Score:5, Insightful)
"rights holder"? (Score:4, Funny)
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By the way, if you make a frisbee out of it and throw it at MPAA members, they would arrest you and charge you with assault on (incapable
Little late? (Score:2)
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Good question, but the situation is like this:
HD-DVD - theoretical support for managed copy, but it has yet to be implemented. I don't think "mandatory" is the correct word, it's more like a "supported option".
BluRay - ZERO
That was supposed to be the deal in Germany (Score:5, Informative)
as a compensation for fair use rights. Also, we were told
that CDs cost a lot, but that the extra charge covers the
private copies we have an explicit right to create.
Then came the copy protection.
Then came a law that makes it illegal to copy 'protected'
media.
We're still paying the fees.
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Whilst I hated DRM (Score:2)
Way I see it is that a new 'standard' gets pushed upon us, crippled with DRM (DRM which is ultimately paid for by us the consumer).
People hack away at the flakey DRM to produce something that works better, whether it be for dvds, games, m4p, wma, blu-ray, hd-dvd etc.
Suddenly the media companies seem to have realized that the DRM they're forcing on us is causing problems and not working in the wonderfully transparent fashion their PR spiel banged on about. What
Viewing Vouchers (Score:2, Insightful)
As a bonus, the package includes one Party Voucher (tm), allowing the viewer, and up to three approved friends, to view the movie simultaneously from one screen. If the user has no friends, the Party Voucher may be converted t
It's legal NOW. (Score:2)
The only 'legality' is whether or not I can bypass encryption to make a copy, as opposed to a straight bit by bit copy.
we've got that in germany (Score:2, Informative)
we also pay extra for CD-R, DVD+-R, Harddiscs, mp3 players, flashdiscs, CD Recorders, DVD Recorders, VCRs...
still the MAFIAA keeps telling us we were criminals
they even pay for TV spots that say "copy piracy is a crime"
just to scare people (that don't know about their fair use right, which is a right here), away from making LEGAL copies... so that they don't legally give copies to their friends, so that their friends have to pay
Fair use goes way Beyond Copying (Score:5, Interesting)
What they are trying to do is turn a fundamental right into much weakened for pay privilege so they can have control and power over it. They want is to have their cake and eat it to. It should not be up to them to determine what is and is not fair use is. Fair use should be any use that our populace finds to be on average fair to both the consumer and rights holder. Yep that is as nebulous as it sounds and it does change from time to time. That is what they have to accept living in a free society, not this managed copy crap MS is trying to use to keep their walking corpse moving.
HD-DVD vs BlueRay == VHS vs BetaMax revisited (Score:2)
Since the SCOTUS ruled that copying for the purpose of changing format is legal, acceptable and protected use, this whole HD-DVD vs BlueRay thing will likely raise the same issues as the matter begins to come to a head.
Now I know that it's not completely on topic since the offering is to sell you the right to copy at a
Who will ENFORCE the deal? (Score:4, Interesting)
The Audio Home Recording Act of 1991 gave consumers the right to copy CDs as long as they were copied onto specially-encoded blank media ("Music CD-Rs" or "Audio CD-Rs") whose price included a fee paid to the music industry.
I owned a home audio recorder (computerless CD copier) that fell within the scope of that act. I bought the prescribed media. It worked quite well for a number of years. It used a technical mechanism called SCCS which sounds very similar to this "managed copying." It allowed first-generation copies from original media, but would not copy the copies.
Then the music publishers came out with copy-protected CDs. My home audio recorder would not copy these CDs. Basically, the SCCS mechanism cut in, insisting that the copy limit had already been reached and that further copying was prohibited.
It was all well and good that the law gave me the right to copy them, and that I paid for every copy I ever made (in the form of the extra costs of the "music CD-Rs"). But there was basically no way I could take advantage of this right.
I made numerous calls, send emails, and letters to the CD publisher (UMI) and the recorder vendor (TEAC) trying to resolve the issue. I was never able to get satisfaction, beyond returning the CD for a refund.
It's the usual consumer problem. These guys were breaking the law, but it's awfully hard to stop a big company from cheating consumers if they only cheat each individual consumer by a small amount.
What's to stop the DVD publishers from making this "managed copying" available for a while, then using technical means to renege on the terms a few years later?
What's the good of a reasonably fair-sounding deal if David has no way to hold Goliath to the terms of the deal?
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I have a movie server in the basement cobbled together from old parts that plays movies to the main TV through an XBOX. No need to go looking for the DVD (which NEVER seems to get put back in the right container!)
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Correct me if I'm wrong, but isn't that exactly the kind of thing that the MPAA wants to prevent you from doing?
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have you seen what little children can do to a DVD disc? now keep in mind that blue-laser discs are significantly more sensitive to scratches.
just because you have no need for backups does not mean you are the norm.
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Re:How much of a need is there (Score:5, Insightful)
I currently occasionally watch movies on any of:
My DVD player, connected to a standard TV set
My Linux desktop machine, when I'm in my home office
My Windows laptop machine, while I'm traveling (sitting around in airports)
My PDA, while I'm riding the train to work
My music-playing choices are even more varied. According to ??AA, every time I watch a movie on my PDA, I'm breaking the law, if I bought that movie on DVD.
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I just had to throw out an entire wallet of CD-ROM games that my 6-year-old had been playing. The bottoms were scratched to hell, and in many cases I could see through the disk because he had scratched off the top coating (including the metal film that actually holds the data). These are pretty old games (some more than 10 years old), but he still loved them.
Too bad I didn't make backups.
Do you expect that he would treat DVDs any differently?
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As long as you're not di