A new kind of copy-protected music CD will likely hit U.S. shelves early next year, as record label SonyBMG experiments with a technology created by British developer First 4 Internet, according to sources familiar with the companies.
Several major music labels have already used a version of the British company's technology on prerelease compact discs distributed for review and other early-listening purposes, including on recent albums from Eminem and U2.
The releases for the retail market, expected early in 2005, will be the first time the Sony music label issues copy-protected CDs in the U.S. market, although the company's other divisions have done so in other regions. BMG, Sony's new corporate sibling, has been more aggressive, with a handful of protected CDs released last year.
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http://www.zdnet.com.au/news/communications/0,2000061791,39174531,00.htm
Fight against this BS!
In Europe all CDs are "protected", result:
-the audio quality is not nearly as good,
-they won't play in many DVD players and car stereos and
-they are far more sensitive, as the "protection" tricks the error correction systems.
Also they are more expensive: the "protection" company wants to get paid too.
Personally I don't get it: the "protection" only screws the honest costumers; pirates won't be bothered by it. Also it is proven to hurt CD sales, the only thing it does, is stopping people from copying the songs to their Ipods.