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eanax
09-26-2001, 02:05 AM
Universal to unveil CDs with anti-piracy software
Tuesday September 25 10:07 PM ET
By Derek Caney


NEW YORK (Reuters) - Vivendi Universal said on Tuesday its Universal Music Group, the world's largest record company, plans to start issuing CDs in October with software that prevents music from being digitally copied into computer files.

Following a lengthy legal battle with song swapping software company Napster (news - web sites) and the emergence of several similar services, Vivendi's vice chairman, Edgar Bronfman, said, ``With the extent of piracy and the extent of CD (copying) that's going on, we have no choice but to protect our artists and our rights holders.''

Universal, whose artists include U2, Eminem (news - web sites) and Sheryl Crow, is aiming to have the protection software on all CDs toward the end of the first quarter of 2002, Bronfman said.

Record labels, already reeling from weaker sales, have been fiercely fighting Napster and other upstart companies that enable Internet users to download digital copies of music files from other users' computers.

At the same time, pirated CDs have also taken hundreds of millions of dollars out of record labels revenues, the labels say.

But an aggressive anti-piracy strategy runs the risk of alienating consumers, who often make digital copies for their personal use, similar to the way consumers make audio cassette tapes of albums.

``I think the industry has always tolerated a degree of copying and I would expect that to continue,'' said an executive with a rival label. ``The problem is that technology has advanced to a point where you can make many copies in a short period of time that it amounts almost to mass distribution. That's the kind of thing we're trying to stop.''

He envisioned protection software that placed no restrictions on conventional cassette copies of CDs and some restrictions on digital copies. He also held open the possibility of the software including interactive features for consumers.

``We're not trying to create a quid pro quo situation,'' he said. ``But at the same time, if you're going to place restrictions on your customers, you have to offer them something of value that will make the product attractive.''

Vivendi's Bronfman said he was conscious of consumers' concerns. ``On the other hand, we have a situation where the music market is experiencing difficulty because of the ability for people to copy an unprotected CD, thereby depriving artists and other rights holders of their rightful due,'' he said.

He declined to comment on how the software would work or who Universal Music's technology partner was. The protected CDs can be played on conventional CD players and CD-ROM's, Bronfman said, but safeguards will be in place to prevent copying the music onto computers or ``burning'' them onto recordable CDs.

Other labels are exploring similar moves. Most notably, Sony Music Entertainment said the CD of Michael Jackson's new single ``You Rock My World'' was distributed to European radio stations with protection software, after the song started showing up on the Internet.

There are no plans to use similar technology on the CDs distributed in the U.S., the label said in a statement.

``As responsible copyright holders, Sony Music Entertainment has long been a strong proponent of protecting its artists and copyrights from piracy,'' the label said. ``We continue to test available copy protection technologies, and our goal is to implement copy protection on a broader basis to deter digital piracy.''

A spokesman for AOL Time Warner Inc.'s Warner Music Group said it was considering a number of technology options to stem piracy but declined to comment further.

Bertelsmann AG (news - web sites)'s BMG plans to start testing anti-piracy software on promotional CDs in the U.S., but declined to comment on a timetable for when that software would be used on CDs for sale to the public.

EMI Group Plc (news - web sites), which warned earlier Tuesday that its profits would slide 20 percent this year from the sharp industry-wide downturn in record sales, was not immediately available for comment.

ChaoticThoughts
09-26-2001, 06:50 PM
lol, that would take about a week to hack through the code. If that.

Shadowhawk
09-27-2001, 12:01 AM
I have to agree with Chaotic on that one. Every time someone comes up with an anti-piracy technique, it's defeated before too long.

There's a side issue of copyright laws allowing you to make 1 back-up copy of things for "archival purposes". Then again, the software companies ignore that too with their anti-piracy gimmicks.

The ubsurd part of it all is that according to Clark Howard (a locally based syndicated consumer advocate), the music industry's sales REALLY went down AFTER they managed to shut down Napster. Clark personally didn't believe it was right to DL music you didn't buy either, so it's not like he was biased against the music industry to begin with. Too bad the music industry didn't think that people sampling things on Napster MIGHT just like it enough to go out and buy a "real" copy of the CD it came on.

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AdamJ
10-03-2001, 11:27 AM
Its a digital protechtion scheme. You can completely bypass it by PLAYING the CD on your computer while RECORDING the Wav Output use any sound recorder progam.

You might ask whats the point if its so easy to bypass? The point is the majority of people who are ripping,copying and burning are using programs like MusicMatch etc, which all do digital rips. This encryption will screw up the digital rips.

Its pretty hard to create a copy protection scheme when all the hardware and software code to play the media has already been released.

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ChaoticThoughts
10-04-2001, 03:14 AM
that works, not as nice a copy. As for encryption, I have been burning video games, and run across the problem a few times. Each game has its own encryption, and its not too easy to find cracks. But knowing the idiotic music industry, they would use the same standard for tons of cds.

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