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 Posted by Walter Traprock on 03/02/06 02:08 
"Goro" <evilninjax@yahoo.com> wrote: 
 
> > Indeed, if your copy was destroyed, it would be legal for you to make 
> > a copy from a rental, friend, etc. because you still own the 
> > intellectual property. 
 
I doubt that.  You also are buying the form the IP is recorded on, and  
if you don't protect your physical copy, you lose both the copy and the  
license to use the Intellectual Property.   
 
> RIAA says this is not true for CDs.  Infact, making a backup copy is 
> not legal b/c "Even if CDs do become damaged, replacements are readily 
> available at affordable prices" 
 
A BIG LIE by the RIAA; do you have any idea how many CD issues have gone  
out of print and are never reissued?  I don't know, but I wouldn't doubt  
that right now there are over 100,000 different out of print titles  
exclusive to CD and now unavailable in any form. 
 
It's less of an issue with DVD, so far, tho thousands of DVD-only titles  
are unavailable, through being withdrawn from the market entirely. 
 
The implication that LEGAL copies will always be "readily available at  
affordable prices" is particularly misleading when talking about  
recorded music in general.  I would guess there are over a million  
non-CD titles alone that are currently unavailable in any form, many  
priceless musical gems that can never become popular again without first  
braking the law. 
 
[Crossposted to  
alt.video.dvd,rec.music.classical.recordings,rec.music.beatles,alt.movies 
..silent which are all currently or recently flooded with RIAA/MPAA  
politically oriented anti-consumer bullshit.] 
 
Anyone gettin tired of industry idiots trying to make you feel guilty  
for buying CD/DVDs?
 
  
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