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RE: [OT] LIMITED-PLAY DVDS TAKE A STEP CLOSER


  • To: <ukha_d@xxxxxxx>
  • Subject: RE: [OT] LIMITED-PLAY DVDS TAKE A STEP CLOSER
  • From: "Kenneth Watt" <kennwatt@xxxxxxx>
  • Date: Tue, 29 Jan 2002 20:46:21 -0000
  • Delivered-to: mailing list ukha_d@xxxxxxx
  • Mailing-list: list ukha_d@xxxxxxx; contact ukha_d-owner@xxxxxxx
  • Reply-to: ukha_d@xxxxxxx

Pretty much yeah…here’s the scenario…

 

  1. artist invents some music
  2. publisher copyrights said music
  3. publisher finds a way to stop us copying the music
  4. everyone finds a way around the copy protection
  5. go to step one and repeat

 

K.

 

-----Original Message-----
From: Scott Crowther [mailto:scrowther@xxxxxxx]
Sent:
29 January 2002 18:01
To: 'ukha_d@xxxxxxx'
Subject: RE: [ukha_d] [OT] LIMITED-PLAY DVDS TAKE A STEP CLOSER

 

this is an interesting one.

 

did you know that the RIAA (US music industry body) are being

questioned by Senate about the legalities of copy protecting audio CDs?

 

apparantely all the MP3 and CD duplication eqpt we buy has a percentage

of its sale cost taken by the RIAA to distribute to its members as

compensation for loss of CD sales (ie to pay the artists with)

 

The Senate see CD copy protection as a breach of this royalty agreement, and are

considering making it illegal to build in copy protection to CD's.

 

This will rumble on for ever, by which time a new format/compression

software'll make it all redundant anyway...

 

Scott Crowther
Intamac Systems Ltd

t: +44 (0)1604 679262
e. scrowther@xxxxxxx
w. www.intamac.com

-----Original Message-----
From: Kenneth Watt [mailto:kennwatt@xxxxxxx]
Sent:
29 January 2002 17:55
To: ukha_d@xxxxxxx Subject: [ukha_d] [OT] LIMITED-PLAY DVDS TAKE A STEP CLOSER

LIMITED-PLAY DVDS TAKE A STEP CLOSER

 

SpectraDisc, a US optical electronics manufacturer,

has been issued a US Patent for its limited-play

CD/DVD technology. Aimed directly at the rental

industry, SpectraDisc's new technology can create

DVDs with a special coating that causes them to

become unplayable after a set period of time. Such

is the functionality of its new coating,

SpectraDisc say their DVDs can be made to expire

anywhere within minutes or weeks of the DVD's

packaging being opened.

 

Oh bugger, another bloody format protection racket!

 

K.

 



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