You can't download the contents of the CD into the CD player in your living room and take it to your car CD player and play it there. Media and content are the same thing in this case.[
Ah, yes indeed I can.
In the case of software that is not true. The media is a means of distribution of the copywrited/licenced material which will eventually be installed on a users HD.
That is only different because the license itself makes it different. The two concepts are identical.
Sure, you can copy CD's to listen in your car, but technically that is illegal as well and with never CD's sometimes impossible because of copy protection.
It has never been illegal to make copies of music or video for your personal use. It is only illegal to distribute or publicly display. If there were license agreements as there are with software, as you seem to think, then this analogy would fit perfectly. Kinda funny really.
I'm not saying its right or wrong, simply stating the facts and showing how your train of thought/justifications would not keep you out of jail...
You're still unclear on the facts. It is not illegal to duplicate audio. I have not seen one microsoft license agreement that did not specifically allow the user to make at least one copy of the source media, and to install the media on AS MANY machines as the user sees fit, as long as those machines, or the software in question, will not be used concurrently.
In fact, Microsoft typically has two models, "per seat" and "per license". Under "per seat", the software can be installed on a single machine and any number of users can access the software, one at a time. Under "per license", you can install the software to any number of machines as long as only one copy of the software is being used at any given time.
This doesn't change the nature of the original argument, but the analogy used in a previous post is proper and many of your premises are incorrect.
The reason that the above analogy is so good is that if you make a copy of an audio CD and then give it to somebody else to listen to, even in your own family, then you are technically breaking the law. Just like software really.
Personally I think that it would be extremely beneficial for many software companies to allow multiple personal use licenses per purchase, because now-a-days many families have multiple machines. Several games, like Total Anihilation for instance, follow this model. Very cool. Either that or bring prices down to a reasonable level.
I don't worry about CD protection. I've been copying safedisc and other protected discs for a long time. It stops the average person who is too lazy to get a copy of clone CD though I suppose.
Slackmaster 2000