What were the ripping/burning questions? Hopefully they're not treading down the path that some insane music execs believe in that if I bought a CD, I'm not allowed to rip it to MP3 and put it on my own player? If that's the case, then they've probably got a problem with our several thousand CDs in the house, all of which have been ripped.
There was no context, just "have you or someone in your household ever..." I don't know what the lawyers are or were thinking. After following recordingindusvspeop for some time, I've concluded that the lawyers involved are of questionable sanity and far less computer literate than I am. (And I consider myself a fairly knowledgeable user, but not an expert by any measure.)
As for "Hopefully they're not treading down the path that some insane music execs...," yes, that does seem to be exactly the case.
I wonder if they are thinking along the lines of ripping a music CD to a computer, then copying it onto CDR to give to a friend so the friend doesn't have to buy the original in a store?
I wonder that too. I worry that completely legal activities are seen as suspect by the courts and/or the RIAA. I also fear that these people are somehow so different than the rest of society (or the more techno-savvy subset that makes up my friends and family) that they have no actual experience with sharing files, dealing with computer viruses, or the various things that are legitimately available over the net. With questions like "have you ever downloaded a movie to a computer," I wonder if the think people who use hulu or the blockbuster/netflix computer download thing are both rare and doing something illegal.
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As for "Hopefully they're not treading down the path that some insane music execs...," yes, that does seem to be exactly the case.
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