They would actually have to force us all to have coclier implants in the
inner ear that could shut down our hearing if perhaps a subaudible signal
that would "unlock" the music is missing. So, pirate mp3s and they'll pull
a switch to take away your hearing for the rest of your life.
On 2 Jul 2003, Taybin wrote:
On Wed, 2003-07-02 at 17:06, Jan Depner wrote:
Just had to put my 2 cents in here. So, I go
and buy the CD - it won't
rip or play on my computer - I slap it in my decent CD player (with
analog outs to my DSP2000) - I record it at 16/44.1 - I encode it in ogg
- I post that on the web somewhere. Now, question for the student, how
much worse is my ogg copy than a ripped and encoded ogg copy? If you're
willing to settle for mp3 then this is just as acceptable and it can't
be stopped. From what I gather from most of my reading up on sound
cards, most of them go from digital to analog and then back when you rip
anyway. Is the connection from your cd player to your sound card
digital? It is on my system but I don't think it is on most of the
cheaper ones.
This is what the RIAA refers to as the "analog hole". They're looking
for ways to stop you from doing just that. It's not technically
possible since it has to be converted to analog at some point so we can
actually hear it. Thus all the legislation we've been having thrown
around.
Taybin