Corrupt CDs: Locking up music.

AuthorWalker, Jesse
PositionCitings - Brief Article

IF YOU'RE HOPING to rev up More Music from The Fast and the Furious while you drive, you may be in for a disappointment--even if you like the music. The compact disc features a copy protection system aimed at preventing fans from turning its tracks into computer files and giving the music away online. Unfortunately, it also stops you from creating such digital files for your own use. Worse, some listeners have found that their copy-protected CDs won't play on their computers, DVD players, PlayStations, or car stereos.

Despite such side effects, some record execs have decided that the copy protection scheme is a dandy way to prevent music piracy. One label, Universal, says it hopes to release all its discs in this format by mid-2002. Understandably, this has angered a lot of consumers, and one might expect the companies who release such CDs to feel some heat in the marketplace. Rep. Rick Boucher (D-Va.) would go farther: He wants the government to get involved.

In a letter to two prominent music industry lobbyists, the congressman invoked the Audio Home Recording Act of 1992, which taxes recording equipment and storage media, passing the take along to record companies. According to Boucher, the act "requires content owners to code their material appropriately to implement a basic compromise: in return for the receipt of royalties on compliant...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT