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MP3 getting antipiracy makeover
The venerable MP3 music format, the technology most widely associated with unrestricted file swapping, is getting a makeover aimed at blocking unauthorized copying.
[blockquote]Thomson and Fraunhofer, the companies that license and own the patents behind the MP3 digital music technology, are in the midst of creating a new digital rights management add-on for the popular format, a Thomson executive said Tuesday.[/blockquote]
[link=http://news.com.com/2100-1027_3-5167841.html?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=news]The full report[/link]
[blockquote]Thomson and Fraunhofer, the companies that license and own the patents behind the MP3 digital music technology, are in the midst of creating a new digital rights management add-on for the popular format, a Thomson executive said Tuesday.[/blockquote]
[link=http://news.com.com/2100-1027_3-5167841.html?part=rss&tag=feed&subj=news]The full report[/link]
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I understand the gripes about copyright and ownership, but if I purchase a CD or a DVD I believe that I should have the rights afforded me under the law, and one of those rights is my ability to make a working backup/copy. I also believe that I should be able to play my CD or view my DVD on my computer, or even be able to allow friends/family to borrow such items. Oh well.
.flac
-drasnor
Hmm not here in Denmark, if it has an "effective copy protection" you are not allowed to do anything.
DVD Movie's are a definate no-no, you can't do anything legally.
Whether or not you can call a copy protection effective when it can be "cracked" using a marker or simple software, is another question.
I stumbled upon a protected cd not too long ago, I decided to see how fast I could "crack" it.
Five minutes later I had downloaded a program and the ripping was well underway.
CloneCD does a good job as well.
Anyway, if it's just an option, who with the intention of sharing will turn it on?
.AAC has digital rights management, so it cannot be the future free medium.
-drasnor
KingFish