MP3 Tool Pulls Satellite Radio Into Piracy Fight
A independent programmer has written an MP3 tool that will directly record XM satellite radio broadcasts into your computer and label them with the correct tags. The tool has put him in the middle of a piracy controversy.
Source: ZDNetThe software, TimeTrax, also neatly arranged the individual songs from the concert, complete with artist name and song title information, into MP3 files. Then MacLean started selling the software, putting him in the thick of a potential legal battle pitting technically savvy fans against a company protecting its alliance--and licensing agreements--with the music industry. MacLean says he is simply seeking to make XM Radio--the largest U.S. satellite radio service with over 2.1 million members paying $10 a month for about 120 channels--a little more user-friendly.
0
Comments
Anyway...i am all for xm recording software.
Actually I think that you are wrong on that, keto. It's just like you recording shows on a vcr to me. Anyways, I think the RIAA is a bunch of jerks who are grasping at straws trying to keep their golden baby(the music industry) all to themselves anyways. It almost makes me want to go buy an XM radio deal and get the software to record some songs.:D
If they are stupid enough to send signals across my property, I figure it is my right as a human being to try to capture and record them if I want too. As long as I'm not selling copies of what I've recorded, who really cares? The RIAA has already gotten their last ill-earned dollar out of me anyways; I don't buy music any more.
I'm not so sure satellite radio would be covered under this ruling.
I'm not so sure, either. However I was responding to Keto.