Sunday, February 26

Music and frustration: copy protection schemes

Chained pig, BathHaving spent the last few minutes explaining to a friend why a brand-new, legitimately purchased CD will not play in her computer due to the copy protection EMI has included, I am reminded of my considerable indignation about how the music industry is treating their customers. Yes, in this case, it was possible to disable the copy protection program just by holding shift as the CD was inserted into a Windows computer, but there is no guarantee at all that music you buy today is either usable or safe.

In the worst case, such as the notorious Sony BMG rootkit, inserting a legitimate music CD into your computer intentionally breaks it. It also causes it to report what you listen to to Sony, even if you choose 'no' when a screen comes up asking for permission to install software. It also creates really sneaky back doors into your system that can be exploited for any number of purposes, by Sony or random others. While Sony is currently facing lawsuits for this particular, infamous piece of malware, it isn't nearly enough to put my mind at ease. If some 16 year old had written something comparably dangerous, they would probably be in jail.

Legitimately downloaded music is little better. Songs you buy from the iTunes music store may work with your iPod today, but they won't work with another portable player. They won't even play in software other than iTunes, and there is no guarantee that they will still work at some point in the future. Spending a great deal of money on songs from there (and they've just had their billionth download), is therefore probably not very wise. You don't actually own the music you are buying - you're just buying the right to use it on someone else's terms: terms that they have considerable freedom to change.

Personally, I will not buy any CD that contains copy protection software. I will not buy a Sony BMG CD, regardless of whether it does or not, nor will I be buying any of Sony's electronics in the near future. This is a business model that needs to change.

Posted by Milan at 12:37 AM  

4 Comments

  1. tristan Laing posted at 1:56 PM, February 26, 2006  
    One word: Vinyl.
  2. Milan posted at 2:00 PM, February 26, 2006  
    Tristan,

    There is legislation coming up in the United States to ban analog audio out jacks, precisely because of the colossal danger that someone might convert their vinyl albums (or CDs, or whatever) into evil, evil mp3s.
  3. Anonymous posted at 7:25 PM, February 27, 2006  
    In 2002 and 2003, the U.S. motion picture industry publicly discussed the possibility of legislation to "close the analog hole" -- most likely through regulation of digital recording devices, limiting their ability to record analog video signals that appear to be commercial audiovisual works.

    See: Analog hole on Wikipedia.
  4. B posted at 8:28 PM, March 02, 2006  
    Today's photo:

    Documentary value: 4/7
    Artistic value: 4/7

    Humour value: 5/7

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