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Posted by DadofBrook on 01/26/07 01:22
Hi, guys, thank you so much! I read the document from the website of
NoteBurner and the author of the program indicates that Burning
purchased music to CD-R/RW or Virtual CD-R is legal. NoteBurner bypass
the law issue. I tried the program and it converts my purchased iTunes
songs to MP3 or WAV ( I can select the output formats.) very quickily.
Since I am allowed by Apple to burn less than 7 times to my CD-R for
the same playlist. I assue that I can also burn my music collection to
the Virtual CD-R where I can easily get unprotected music in MP3 or WAV
formats. I am not familiar with anything about LAW. But I think I do
not break the LAW. What I need to do is to use my purchased music on my
MP3 player installed on my car. BTW, I purchased NoteBurner and I
recommend you guys have a look of the website of NoteBurner
(www.noteburner.com). Cheers.
On 1月23日, 上午5时19分, Joel <j...@usa.net> wrote:
> "Technobarbarian" <Technobarbarian-ztopz...@gmail.com> wrote:
> >http://thomas.loc.gov/cgi-bin/query/F?c105:6:./temp/~c105c3BGT4:e11962:Not to mention, jerk-off, that the OP appears to be outside the U.S.
>
> NNTP-Posting-Host: 58.177.209.141
>
> inetnum: 58.176.0.0 - 58.177.255.255
> netname: CTIHK
> descr: City Telecom (H.K.) Ltd.
> descr: Internet Service Provider in Hong Kong
> country: HK
>
> Now, it could even be that my comments wouldn't apply in HK, who knows
> (I don't see why they wouldn't, though, since I was not talking about
> sharing the files with others). But the U.S. DMCA sure as hell
> doesn't.
>
> --
> Joel Crump
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