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Reprise Records copy protected CDs
Hello all I have bought Eric Clapton "Me and Mr Johnson" on Reprise Records (belongs to Warner Bros, I think). I find to my utter disgust that there are no CDA tracks on it (which would allow me to pick and choose which tracks I want to copy to play in the car etc) but a player software and all the audio tracks packed in one big file. OK - it plays on my hifi system but a) it automatically installs WB player software on my PC and b) it won't play in the car at all (anyway I don't want to use the original CD in the car; so I shall have to illegally clone the whole thing). Anyway I reckon that when I buy a CD I buy the rights to copy selections of the music for my own use - and I can't - using any of the usual legal means. This is taking copy protection to absurd and user-unfriendly limits. It's the last CD from Reprise Records I shall be buying ! Best regards from Ray Russell |
Reprise Records copy protected CDs
Raymond RUSSELL wrote:
Hello all I have bought Eric Clapton "Me and Mr Johnson" on Reprise Records (belongs to Warner Bros, I think). I find to my utter disgust that there are no CDA tracks on it (which would allow me to pick and choose which tracks I want to copy to play in the car etc) but a player software and all the audio tracks packed in one big file. OK - it plays on my hifi system but a) it automatically installs WB player software on my PC and b) it won't play in the car at all (anyway I don't want to use the original CD in the car; so I shall have to illegally clone the whole thing). Anyway I reckon that when I buy a CD I buy the rights to copy selections of the music for my own use - and I can't - using any of the usual legal means. This is taking copy protection to absurd and user-unfriendly limits. It's the last CD from Reprise Records I shall be buying ! Best regards from Ray Russell I've had similar problems with other CD's, but it's quite easy to get around. The way they 'hide' the CDA tracks from you when you put the disc into your PC is by sticking them in a second session on the CD. Because the PC reads the first session and sees a whole load of data, that's what you get. When you stick the CD into a CD player, it cannot read the data session, so skips to the second session where all the (higher quality) CDA tracks are. There are a few tools (free) that allow you to extract different sessions on a CD to ISO files, that you can then use NERO (or similar) to burn back to a standard CD as CD-Audio. The tool I use for this is called ISO Buster (www.isobuster.com). I hope this is of use. |
Reprise Records copy protected CDs
Nick wrote:
I've had similar problems with other CD's, but it's quite easy to get around. The way they 'hide' the CDA tracks from you when you put the disc into your PC is by sticking them in a second session on the CD. Because the PC reads the first session and sees a whole load of data, that's what you get. When you stick the CD into a CD player, it cannot read the data session, so skips to the second session where all the (higher quality) CDA tracks are. There are a few tools (free) that allow you to extract different sessions on a CD to ISO files, that you can then use NERO (or similar) to burn back to a standard CD as CD-Audio. The tool I use for this is called ISO Buster (www.isobuster.com). Having done that, take the so-called 'CD' back to the shop and ask for a full refund on the basis that what they've sold you isn't a CD! The more we let 'them' get away with this, the more copy protection will be added to CDs. Before long there'll be a Microsoft-style online activation required before a CD will play in anything other than a consumer CD-audio machine ;-) |
Reprise Records copy protected CDs
Thanks Nick, Stimpy, et al
ISObuster did the job. I'll complain to the shop and to Reprise Records tomorrow. Best regards from Ray |
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