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Post a Comment On: stAllio!'s way

"sony DRM installs malware"

2 Comments -

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Blogger arratik said...

i've only purchased a very small handful of cds in recent years; some of them have been major label releases (i think the last two were the most recent sonic youth album and green day's american idiot [brilliant album, imho, but i widely digress]), but none of them have been sony/bmg releases. i do have a couple of sony md recorders, but one of them is a piece of shit net-md thing that has the most ridiculous drm scheme i've ever seen. (installing that "sony sonicstage" software was probably the most idiotic thing i've ever done to or on a computer - i had to reload windows xp eventually because of it.)

i got to thinking about disc two of john oswald's plunderphonics box, which (iirc) was uncopyable because of a strange quirk in the red book standard. something like that could be used instead of sneaking malware onto the computers of their customers! that's what pisses me off the most about this, the little regard that sony/bmg has for its customers. they'll eat anything the media conglomerates put in front of them, and they know it.

and that's why i started a netlabel.

8:58 PM, November 03, 2005

Blogger stAllio! said...

i thought the problem with disc 2 of 69 plunderphonics 96 was that it actually broke the red book standard... namely, they tried to be cute by having the disc start at track 27, and the result was that the disc was unreadable in many players (and most computers).

i can't find an actual copy of the standard online, but i do know that it requires that all tracks be a minimum of 4 seconds long, so i can certainly see how that disc would have broken the standard.

other than silly arty reasons, i can't really see why someone would want to start anywhere other than track 1 anyway, and i've never heard of anyone else trying that. so i do think that seeland was just trying to be arty and didn't understand the consequences of that choice. kind of ironic that now the majors are intentionally breaking the standard, for drastically different reasons.

9:49 AM, November 04, 2005

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