new anti piracy encoding

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foreverain4

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is there some sort of new encoding that they are doing now that wont allow audio cd's to be played on computer cd roms? i have a cd i just got that i am unable to play in my cd rom. all my older ones work fine...
 
Some of the old drives wont play certain CD-R. Like the old car Cd players wont take in any CD-R or Cd-RW. so that may be yoru problem. Is it a CD-R you are trying to play? How old is your drive anyway?
 
its a newer drive and the cd's were replicated, not duplicated. they were pressed from a glass master. i have figured out, it is just something wrong with my computer. it cd works on a few others....
 
Yeah that anticopy system has been around for a about a year now (maybe longer). Massive Attack and A Perfect Circle have used it. It just makes CD's harder to rip.
 
If they do make it non playable in a CD-ROM drive then just stick it in a cd player then the output to your computer and record. Not the easiest but will work if they do make it impossiable.
 
Here's a bulletin I received a while back about similar technology...

RIAA BREAKTHROUGH
Music Industry Unveils New Piracy-Proof Format

Music bosses have unveiled a revolutionary new recording format that they hope will help win the war on illegal file sharing which is thought to be costing the industry millions of dollars in lost revenue. Nicknamed the Record, the new format takes the form of a black, vinyl disc measuring 12 inches in diameter, which must be played on a specially designed turntable.

"We can state with absolute certainty that no computer in the world can access the data on this disc," said spokesman Brett Campbell. "We are also confident that no-one is going to be able to produce pirate copies in this format without going to a heck of a lot of trouble. This is without doubt the best anti- piracy invention the music industry has ever seen." As part of the invention's rigorous testing process, the designers gave some discs to a group of teenage computer experts who regularly use file swapping software such as Limewire and gnutella and who admit to pirating music CDs.

Despite several days of trying, none of them were able to hack into the disc's code or access any of the music files contained within it. "It's like, really big and stuff," said Doug Flamboise, one of the testers. "I couldn't get it into any of my drives. I mean, what format is it? Is it, like, from France or something?"

In the new format, raw audio data in the form of music is encoded by physically etching grooves onto the vinyl disc. The sound is thus translated into variations on the disc's surface in a process that industry insiders are describing as completely revolutionary and stunningly clever.

To decode the data stored on the disc, the listener must use a special player which contains a stylus that runs along the grooves on the record surface, reading the indentations and transforming the movements back into audio that can be fed through loudspeakers. Even Shawn Fanning, the man who invented Napster, admits the new format will make file swapping much more difficult. "I've never seen anything like this," he told reporters. "How does it work?"

As rumours that a Taiwanese company has been secretly developing a 12 inch wide, turntable-driven, stylus-based, firewire drive remain unconfirmed, it would appear that the music industry may, at last, have found the pirate-proof format it has long been searching for....

END

John Scrip - www.massivemastering.com
 
i read something on the internet the other day about an invention called 'compact cassette recorder' that should be able to decode the signal from 'the Record' and save it as magneticaly coded information.

fascinating technology.
 
this
 

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As long as it makes aoudio it can be copied! Just run it into a mixer or something and from there into a burner! HELLO!:D
 
As long as the copy sounds significantly worse than the original (as in cassette copies taped from the radio with typical DJ banter over the intro), the record industry is reasonably happy. It is the ability of consumers to make perfect copies of CD's that has driven the industry to seek alternatives to the wide-open, non-secure "Red Book" CD format.

I can always run the audio output of a supposedly secure CD, or SACD, or DVD (or even a vinyl record! :D) into the inputs of my Audiophile, and produce a near-perfect copy of the audio. But that works only in "real time", which means it can take up to an hour or so to copy an entire CD. Then I have to spend time splitting the tracks apart, etc. The extra time required makes this method a pain in the neck for me, and impractical/unprofitable for pirates.

If I can rip the CD, though, it takes only a few minutes, and I don't have to worry about levels, etc. This is significantly easier, and the result is perfect without the "near".
 
I have a Tascam CD burner that works in real time. It takes a while but it has an option that automatically seperates tracks based on silences. After I burn one copy I can then copy with my computer burner for faster duplication. It takes stereo reca so all I have to do is run those from my CD player to the burner for an exact copy.
 
^^^

13th_Omen said:
As long as it makes aoudio it can be copied! Just run it into a mixer or something and from there into a burner! HELLO!:D

Once its analog its fair game....
 
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