Ingo, I Agree...

Ingo expresses his
frustration
at not being able to listen to his CDs when he's travelling due to
copy protection. I can empathise, having just returned the latest Sting CD because
I can't listen to it from two out of my three CD players (an Xbox and my laptop).

Clearly there's got to be some middle ground between protecting against piracy and
preventing "fair use". Record companies should be allowed to defend themselves against
rampant piracy, but if they alienate customers like Ingo and myself, they're going
to lose their remaining paying customers anyway. (We're not immune from those tradeoffs
at Microsoft either. Product activation has been successful at discouraging casual
copying of our software, but we need to tread very carefully to avoid damaging the
goodwill we're trying to nurture.)

I was interested to read this little snippet from a recent
TechRepublic article
: "Microsoft is now working with music CD distributors on
a project that allows copy-protected CDs to play in normal CD players, but provides
WMA versions of the music files on the CD, which computer users can play on their
PCs or move to portable players that support the WMA DRM standards." According
to Joe Wilcox,
this technology is used on Sinéad
O'Connor's latest album
. Whether this is a viable middle ground or not is up for
debate, but something needs to be done and as an interim step this seems better than
the current approach of producing broken CDs.

(Disclaimer: as ever, these are my own opinions rather than the stated position of
Microsoft Corporation.)