Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by 7dk2h4md720ih on
Sat Jun 12th 2004 at 6:20pm
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<a class="NewsHeader" name="Music Industry Seeks Digital Radio Copying Limits"></a>[quote]
Digital radio broadcasts that bring CD-quality sound to the airwaves
could lead to unfettered song copying if protections are not put in
place, a recording-industry trade group warned.
Without copy protections, music fans could cherry-pick songs off the
air and redistribute them over the Internet, further deepening the
copyright woes of record labels, the Recording Industry Association of
America.
Roughly 300 stations now broadcast digital signals or are in the
process of setting them up. RIAA officials said digital-radio players
could soon allow listeners to record certain songs automatically when
they are broadcast, allowing they to build a free library of music they
otherwise might pay for and distribute it to millions of others over
the Internet.
Under restrictions proposed by the RIAA, listeners would be able to
record digital broadcasts for later playback, but would not be able to
divide that broadcast up into individual songs. Listeners would also
not be able to program their players to record certain songs, or
redistribute those recordings over the Internet. The RIAA plans to
submit its proposal to the FCC next Wednesday.
[/quote]
Does this strike anyone else as more petty bulls**t? They will have
absolutely no way of monitoring or controlling people who record
digital broadcasts so why try to enforce restrictions? All they're
doing is further distancing themselves from the filthy song-stealing
public.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Kage_Prototype on
Sat Jun 12th 2004 at 7:05pm
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This ins't even funny anymore. It's almost self-parody.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by 7dk2h4md720ih on
Sat Jun 12th 2004 at 7:14pm
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I agree Jeff. They'll never curb piracy with their current tacitcs.
They did a pretty good job of filling up file sharing networks with
fake versions of songs which was mildly irritating. However with the growing
poplarity of torrents hosted on sites which check them first creating
fakes is no longer a viable option. Then there are the encrypted p2p
programs that are so secure your ISP can't even tell what you're
downloading.
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<TABLE style="FONT-SIZE: 11px" cellSpacing=1 cellPadding=2 width="95%" align=center bgColor=black>
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<TD colSpan=2>? quote:</TD></TR>
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<DIV style="FONT-SIZE: 10pt; MARGIN: 3pt">
Under restrictions proposed by the RIAA, listeners would be able to record digital broadcasts for later playback, but would not be able to divide that broadcast up into individual songs
</DIV></TD></TR></TBODY></TABLE>
Next thing you know, we won't be allowed to record a single television show at a time, and then... ...the next logical step:
Make camcorders and other cameras illegal. Or better yet, we could just make all new digital electronics illegal, to help "protect the record industry". Seriously, there are some near-sighted people out there coming up with these foolishly slaphappy restrictions.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Jinx on
Sun Jun 13th 2004 at 5:33pm
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Maybe the Record and Movie industries should focus on
a) making their products reasonably priced
b) making music/movies that are worth buying for said price
Most movies aren't worth the bandwidth to download for free, much less the $$ to see in them in theatres or on dvd. And I mostly use P2P to try out new music and anime- the best of which I then buy on cd or dvd. I think part of the reason for the anime craze in the US is the low quality of home-grown entertainment.
The real danger of P2P is that it lets people get into more varieties of music- rather than buy the same 5 albums everyone else does, which is what the record industry wants.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by 2-bits on
Sun Jun 13th 2004 at 7:11pm
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Damn, I hate the anime craze. When I walk through the halls at school, and I hear some kids speaking god damn Japanese, it almost makes me feel like their talking of the day of their coming invasion. Gah. But aside from that I have no problem with it.
But I digress.
It's only natural that something like this would happen. The proles find a way to steal something the rich have, and the rich look for new ways to defend it. It's that simple. Only in this case the rich obviously did not get where they are today by their stunning intellect.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by DesPlesda on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 3:39am
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It's been said a thousand times before, and so like a good little Slashdot sheep I'll say it again:
Technological issues are not solved with legislation!
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by wil5on on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 6:47am
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My opinion on this is that there isnt anything the RIAA can do, therell always be ways to copy music/movies, its part of the nature of the medium. I think they should just stop trying (since all they are is a minor annoyance at most).
I've never paid money for music, and I dont plan on doing so.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by SumhObo on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 7:09am
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<DIV>I really don't see what the RIAA's problem is with digital broadcasting anyway. The radio stations must ask the artists whether their music can be released before they broadcast it - if an artist doesn't want their music being open to this form of piracy, they can just say "no" to digital broadcasting. Simple.</DIV>
<DIV>.</DIV>
<DIV>I download the majority of my music, and through this have moved through several different styles (techno, punk and currently metal). Also, my general appreciation of music has increased - so I'm pretty much the same as Yak Fighter. I've bought several CDs which I don't think I would've bothered with if I hadn't listened to the good music so much.</DIV>
<DIV>.</DIV>
<DIV>Has anyone else noticed how tight everything government has gotten since 9/11? They're pulling up near any excuse they can to restrict people and remove civil liberties - usually terrorism. Well, at least that's how it's become here in Aus. Say the word "terrorist", "SPAM" or "pirate" and everybody suddenly turns into a yes-man.</DIV>
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Tracer Bullet on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 7:23am
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As you say Wilson, the ability to copy is in the very nature of the medium. Good god, no mater how good their "anti-piracy" measures are, if you can play it, you can copy it! all you have to do is take that S-video cable, or speaker out, and plug it into a computer! Bingo a perfect copy! are they so stupid that they don't realize this?
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by wil5on on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 8:16am
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They're so stupid that they hope we're so stupid we don't realise this.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Monqui on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 4:00pm
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I think that the main reason why they are trying to curtail this is because these broadcasts would contain metadata regarding the music, and they don't want someone to create a device that essentially just "listens" to the broadcasts, parsing the metadata for every song coming in, then recording the song with metadata intact- essentially creating a virtual library of "free" music ready to copy over to your computer.
I can see that becoming a slight "problem" in their eyes, but it's still a ridiculous effort on their part. Just like the industry heads claimed that personal VCR's capable of recording TV/Movies would be the downfall of the movie industy, and how tape decks in the early '80s would cause the downfall of the music buisness.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Leperous on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 4:21pm
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FFS stop posting in stupid colours and with 'Yippie Ki Yay!' twice at the end of every post!
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Cassius on
Mon Jun 14th 2004 at 5:41pm
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Frankly, I see no reason to buy CDs anymore.
(On a seperate note: and you find me noobaphobic...)
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by scary_jeff on
Tue Jun 15th 2004 at 10:38am
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2004-06-15 10:38am
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Macrovision prevented analogue copying, but as with digital copy proteection, it's only a short matter of time before somebody breaks it.
I would use a mic if I had one. I know they cost bugger all, but I have no real need for one right now.
G.Ballblue - I think the problem is that you insist on typing it and having it in your sig. If you love to type it every time for some strange reason, why not take it out of your forum sig?
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by KingNic on
Tue Jun 15th 2004 at 1:58pm
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Mic's are essential for teamwork games like DOD. I'd have lost pretty much all of my clan matches if it wasn't for a good ol' Mic.
"Where's that sniper?"
"Top-left window"
bang
"sniper down, MOVE! Freeranger, cut left and grab that point. Bleeding angel cut right with me, everyone else straight down the centre"
I'd love to see you communicate that through text chat efficiently.
Re: RIAA at it again...
Posted by Monqui on
Tue Jun 15th 2004 at 2:58pm
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I think that the mic comment was just a little thing that people call "facetious"...