Recording Industry Lies About Copy Protected CDs Not Playing In Cars

from the let's-try-that-again... dept

Apparently, the BBC ran a story about new, copy protected CDs in the UK, and pointed out that they often won't play on car CD players. They asked a recording industry exec to explain this, and he claimed that the carmakers haven't kept up on CD standards, which is blatantly false. The truth is that the copy protection breaks the "red book" specification of what a CD is. Two years ago, the music industry was sued for putting copy protection on CDs and still calling them CDs - despite the fact that the CDs now violate the red book standard of what a CD is. The Register article points out that the BBC did a terrible job in simply accepting what the recording industry exec said, even when a representative from Volkswagen pointed out that all of their CD players meet the spec perfectly. A good reporter would notice the contradiction and find out who's right. Instead, they leave it up in the air as if it's a disagreement over issues.

2 Comments | Leave a Comment..


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  1.  

    A defect list?

    identicon
    Adrian Anders, Feb 13th, 2004 @ 3:41pm

    Does anyone know of a site which lists these bad major label CDs? Maybe if enough people refuse to buy their copy protected (fucked up) releases, they will abandon the practice.

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]

  2.  

    That's journalism.

    identicon
    Charles Miller, Feb 13th, 2004 @ 5:36pm

    Journalists don't really like drawing conclusions. If they do, they're accused of being biased. So standard practice is to just present both sides of the case, and leave it up to the audience.

    reply to this | link to this | view in thread ]


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