T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
782.1 | | PSW::WINALSKI | Paul S. Winalski | Tue Jun 09 1987 20:37 | 3 |
| Will the Marantz unit have copyguard circuitry?
--PSW
|
782.2 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Tue Jun 09 1987 21:18 | 2 |
| Not from what I read (July "Audio").
Steve
|
782.3 | what is copyguard? | TMCUK2::MOD | | Fri Jun 12 1987 08:56 | 8 |
| what will copy guard circuitry do? Will it prevent me copying
pre-recorded DATs or will it stop me recording LP/CD to DAT? If
the latter then I fail to see how anyone could sell DAT with copyguard
circuitry.
Richard Briggs
UK SWAS
|
782.4 | Quick Copyguard Explanation | AQUA::ROST | This space available | Fri Jun 12 1987 09:49 | 17 |
|
The copyguard is *supposed* to prevent copying of CDs with an
"anti-copy" signal on them. It might be possible to so encode LPs
as well???
The controversy is whether or not non-encoded material will trip
the circuit (detractors say yes) and if the sound quality is
compromised (again, detractors say yes).
CBS Labs, who invented the circuit, have been loath to provide full
information so as to prevent pirates from developing cracking schemes.
As far as not being able to sell DAT machines with copyguard, *HEY*
now you're getting the whole idea. The record companies want to
kill DAT to protect their record high profits.
|
782.5 | Guarding ALL Prerecorded Material | USRCV1::THOMPSONP | Paul Thompson | Fri Jun 12 1987 14:46 | 6 |
| I can't site any reference for this information, but I know that
I've either read or heard that the plan is for ALL prerecorded material
to include the 60 db notch at 3.8Khz. This would preclude the DATs
from copying ANY subsequent releases, making it only useful for
recording your own oldies or live music.
|
782.6 | D -> A -> D | JAWS::LEVITT | | Fri Jun 12 1987 17:39 | 7 |
| If I'm not mistaken, I remember a previous note that stated that
the protection would only apply to digital to digital recording.
If I can record the audio output of my CD player into my DAT, the
results will be as good as my ears can detect.
Jeff
|
782.7 | | QUARK::LIONEL | We all live in a yellow subroutine | Fri Jun 12 1987 21:18 | 8 |
| Re: .6
Unfortunately, the CBS proposal is for an "analog" protection scheme
that would hit you no matter how many steps you went through in
the middle. LPs, cassettes and CDs could be mangled in this fashion
and you'd be unable to record the music on your DAT deck, if it
had "the chip".
Steve
|
782.8 | Senate bill S506 | AIAG::BILLMERS | Meyer Billmers, AI Applications | Mon Jun 15 1987 13:09 | 10 |
| Indeed, it is for an "analog" protection scheme. Since this scheme
destroys information on the recording, no system will ever be able to get it
back. Detractors say that losing 3800 Hz to 4000 Hz will muck up a real,
useful part of the sound spectrum, not to mention affecting harmonics of
other audible tones.
And, I understand this proposal is quite serious. A friend called to warn me
that it is before the senate as S506 and if you care about the quality of
your recorded music (analog as well as digital) you will write to your
congressman/senator and complain.
|
782.9 | Oh my god... | WINERY::JAEGER | | Mon Jun 15 1987 14:02 | 15 |
|
Let me see if I understand this:
The DAT recorder will have a -60db notch at 3.8Khz, so ANY incoming
analog signal will have that section of the material attenuated
to inaudibility? And prerecorded DAT's will have 3.8Khz pushed UP
60db?
Does this mean you can't record ANYTHING on a DAT?
Do these fools think that this will have "no audible impact"?
Do they think they can make filters that steep that don't ring or
distort?
YECH!
|
782.10 | CopyGuard | USRCV1::THOMPSONP | Paul Thompson | Mon Jun 15 1987 15:21 | 13 |
| Re .9
The DAT will NOT have a 60 db attenuator on its' input. ALL
prerecorded (I mean ALL LP's, Cassettes, CD's AND DAT's) material
will have a 60 db notch centered approximately at 3.8Khz. Your
DAT deck will be unable to record from any of these Copy Guarded
sources.
You will be able to copy prerecorded material produced before the
advent of Copyguard or live material. Nothing else.
|
782.11 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Mon Jun 15 1987 17:33 | 15 |
| > You will be able to copy prerecorded material produced before the
> advent of Copyguard or live material. Nothing else.
You will be able to listen to prerecorded material produced before the
advent of Copyguard or live material. Nothing else.
BTW, this copyguard circuitry is supposedly intended to be required on *all*
recorders, not just DATs. The record industry is supposedly all worried about
those dual-cassette boom-boxes.
On last week's Audiophile Edition on NPR it was reported that the Copyguard
standard was turned over to the National Bureau of Standards; everyone hopes
that it will be turned down there and die.
/john
|
782.12 | DAT - still-born | BIRGP1::BELL | ALL-IN-1, OA of life! | Tue Jun 16 1987 08:26 | 14 |
|
Re: .10
It sure starts making DAT look like a waste of time ... one of its
so-called benefits is that you can copy "copies" without any loss
of information, so when you tape starts to wear thin you just re-
record it on a new tape. If DATs are copy protected against themselves
then why buy them in the first place, there ain't going to be anything
worth recording at high quality.
S'pose they will be putting a copy protect on the record side of
the players next ;-)
mb
|
782.13 | Man the Barricades | AQUA::ROST | This space available | Tue Jun 16 1987 09:43 | 13 |
|
This may sound asinine, but I am about ready to stop buying records,
CDs, etc. if this copyguard crap goes into effect.
As painful as that might be, the industry has consistently overlooked
surveys (some of which they paid for) saying most taping is done
by the people who buy the most records.
I tape like crazy, I also buy over 50 records a year and in my salad
days bought around 300 a year!
If this bull***t goes through Congress, I think a boycott is in
order.
|
782.14 | | MILT::JACKSON | Bill Jackson DOESN'T take American Express | Wed Jun 17 1987 08:37 | 13 |
| I used to tape albums quite a bit to be used in the car when I
couldn't stand the radio. Now that I've found something that I
like, I do it much less than I used to.
What I DO now with taping is make collections of various artists
because I don't really like listening to the same artist for 45
minutes. This copygaurd stuff is really going to piss me off, and
I'll probably stop buying records if it happens. I buy over 100
albums/CD's per year, and see no problem with what I do.
Looks like it's time to write my congressman.
-bill
|
782.15 | CBS' revenge ? | WINERY::JAEGER | | Wed Jun 17 1987 22:48 | 12 |
|
And if I play a copyguarded LP or CD on my current table or
CD player, what will it sound like? Mud?
So even if I don't record, I'll get to have my $K stereo sound
like a K-mart special? Is this the record companies' means of
retaliating against those of us who've been complaining about their
sound for years?
"You think our stuff sounds bad now! Just wait!"
-eric
|
782.16 | I paid a bundle for my last JNDs | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jun 18 1987 01:11 | 7 |
| > And if I play a copyguarded LP or CD on my current table or
> CD player, what will it sound like? Mud?
You misunderstand. There are no modifications planned for listening to
copyguarded LPs or CDs. CBS claims you won't hear the difference.
/john
|
782.17 | | MARVIN::WARWICK | DNA puts life into your network | Thu Jun 18 1987 06:41 | 10 |
|
What does the audio-equipment-manufacturing community have to say about
all this ? As they are trying to sell their gear in terms of how good
it sounds, surely they see copyguarding as a threat to their future
profitability ? I.e., if all hi-fi gear sounds like sh*t because of
copyguarded source material, people aren't going to bother spending as
much on it.
Trev
|
782.18 | CopyGuard Degrades ALL of Our Music | USRCV1::THOMPSONP | Paul Thompson | Thu Jun 18 1987 10:01 | 7 |
| re .16
I think that maybe you misunderstand. If this system is used, all
prerecorded material will be degraded. You can't insert a 60db
notch in the middle of the audio spectrum and have it go completely
unnoticed.
|
782.19 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Jun 18 1987 11:47 | 10 |
| > I think that maybe you misunderstand. If this system is used, all
> prerecorded material will be degraded.
I understand fully. My reply was to someone who, based on his question about
"current players", appeared to think that new players were going to be able
to compensate for the degradation.
That is not the case. Nothing can reinsert information which has been removed.
/john
|
782.20 | Time for those cards and letters, folks. | ISTG::YERAZUNIS | VAXstation Repo Man | Thu Jun 18 1987 18:00 | 6 |
| My reading of S506 indicates that not only will it be difficult
to re-insert the missing material- it will be illegal to do so,
and illegal to build/buy/posess/sell a box that reinserts it.
What a crock. I'm writing Kerry. Time for a nastygram.
|
782.21 | Is the UK safe? | BIRGP1::BELL | ALL-IN-1, OA of life! | Fri Jun 19 1987 09:27 | 12 |
| ... all these discussions are about the left-hand side of the Atlantic,
does anyone know what us over in 240v land (UK) can expect???
US law doesn't apply over here (except for DEC export licensing!!),
so will we be free of copyguard, and if so what is to stop everyone
buying all their CDs etc over here, thus totally destroying the
US music market???
Perhaps an addendum to the law will appear, making it illegal to
listen to non-distorted music!!
mb
|
782.22 | can we do a rewind for a moment? | REGENT::POWERS | | Fri Jun 19 1987 10:17 | 16 |
| Pardon me, but I'm losing track of all this.
Can I have a review of the matter?
Copyguard puts at 60dB notch at 3.840KHz....
Where? In all normal source material?
What are the backwards and forwards compatibility issues?
(Old media on new machines and new media on old machines.)
The information at 3.840KHz goes away....
someplace, but there must be a plan to restore it independent
of the recording process....
The copyguard circuitry is in DAT machines....
which are just like analog devices from the outside, capable of recording
line or mic signals. Is there any digital to digital path?
A recap, please....
- tom]
|
782.23 | | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jun 19 1987 10:21 | 17 |
| > ... all these discussions are about the left-hand side of the Atlantic,
> does anyone know what us over in 240v land (UK) can expect???
Check out what's going on in the EC Parliament. At least one proposal
has been discussed: go to a two-tier pricing system, with a lower price
for non-copyguarded and a higher price for copy-guarded material.
If it happens here, it will probably happen there.
> if so what is to stop everyone buying all their CDs etc over here,
> thus totally destroying the US music market???
Not everyone can afford to fly over there to buy individual items. U.S. law
already prohibits the commercial importation of any intellectual property
licensed to U.S. companies.
/john
|
782.24 | It's not a continuous notch, it's intermittent! | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jun 19 1987 10:29 | 34 |
| >Copyguard puts at 60dB notch at 3.840KHz....
Right.
> Where? In all normal source material?
Yes. Or at all source material from record companies who feel like screwing us.
> What are the backwards and forwards compatibility issues?
> (Old media on new machines and new media on old machines.)
This only changes the media. Players are not changing.
>The information at 3.840KHz goes away.... someplace, but there must be a plan
>to restore it independent of the recording process....
Wrong. It's gone. For good. What's gone can't be restored.
>The copyguard circuitry is in DAT machines.... which are just like analog
>devices from the outside, capable of recording line or mic signals. Is there
>any digital to digital path?
This will depend on the machine, just as with CD players (some of which already
have digital outputs). If there is a rate difference, then the digital output
of a CD would have to go through a rate converter (a big hairy fast fourier
transform) before it could be put into the digital input of a DAT recorder.
Copyguard would be in the *digital* portion of the DAT recorder, so that it
would not be bypassed when making digital copies, either as above or of pre-
recorded material released on DAT.
** Write to your senator, if you are a U.S. voter. See note 783.21 **
/john
|
782.25 | Bet it will never happen... | FACT01::LAWRENCE | Jim/Hartford A.C.T.,DTN 383-4523 | Fri Jun 19 1987 10:34 | 22 |
| I really think that we are all worrying about nothing. Stop and
think of the ramifications of ALL pre-recorded music having a copyguard
process encoded on it.
Most of the taping done in homes (most of the market) is taping
prerecorded music. Not much live taping is done in homes, probably
only 1 percent or less... If this went through, you would kill the
entire home recorder business. Who is going to spend $500 or more
on a home recorder if you can't tape any records, FM or CDs???
Not me or anyone I know! And it will hurt sales of classical music
as the purists will say they can here the difference (although it
will probably be slight, you probably would be able to hear subtle
differences in strings, solo voices and such).
Probably half of Congress has a home tape recorder. You think they
want to obsolete all their fun too?
I just don't think killing an industry to add a 10% profit to another
is ever going to play in Congress, let alone Peoria....
Jim
|
782.26 | I'm Worried About It | AQUA::ROST | Four strings are better than six | Fri Jun 19 1987 11:11 | 29 |
|
I think that we *do* have something to worry about it. It has been
reported that since people in the audio industry have heard the
copyguard circuit and dislike it, that there is less momentum for
it in Congress.
Obviously, audio equipment manufacturers are miffed and well they
should be. Seems like there is a lack of cooperation between the
record industry and the audio industry, much of it centered around
taping.
Recall that as recently as ten years ago, most home stereos had
no tape facilities. Now almost any home stereo system has at least
one tape deck and many have more. A lot of this has to do with
the fact that cassettes are much easier to deal with than open-reel
or eight-tracks were and the evolution of portable cassette players
which basically began in the early seventies when Sony began selling
the first boom boxes, to be followed by the Walkman.
However, to get back on track, there *is* a bill which is being
considered to force the use of copyguard circuits in tape recorders,
and if we do not voice our opposition it *might* get passed.
Apathy now could be very expensive later.
As far as killing one industry to protect another, how about auto
import quotas or the Chrysler bailout, etc. etc.
|
782.27 | Copyguard is precursor to recording tax | DOODLE::GREEN | | Fri Jun 19 1987 14:11 | 15 |
|
Remember the "royalty" tax/fee that was proposed for blank tape
a while back? I have a feeling this whole copyguard thing is just
a way to bring that back into being. I believe that what will happen
is that record companies will offer two versions of every album/CD.
One with the copyguard code embedded preventing recording. The
second will be absent the copyguard code but with an extra "recording
fee/license" on the price. This extra fee will then give you legal
permission to make recordings.
I don't really think the record companies want to prevent us from
making recordings. They just want us to pay them for it. And this is
how they're going to get the tax/fee imposed.
|
782.28 | Buy them and return them | HPSCAD::FENNELL | Tim Fennell | Fri Jun 19 1987 16:52 | 5 |
| How about returning copyguarded CDs to the store where they were bought for
"a new one". If enough people did this the store would be returning
hundreds of "defects" to the manufacturer.
Tim
|
782.29 | If I owned a record company.... | STAR::JACOBI | Paul Jacobi - VAX/VMS Development | Fri Jun 19 1987 19:17 | 12 |
| RE :.27
Do you really believe record companies will produce TWO versions of
EVERY recording - one with, and one without copyguard? One of the
biggest cost for recording companies is producing the master. This
scheme would require two master, two sets of labling, packaging etc.
That amounts to a EXTREAMLY HIGH cost! Record companies would never
accept this plan.
-Paul
|
782.30 | Write!!! See note 783.21 for names & addresses! | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Fri Jun 19 1987 19:42 | 6 |
| > Do you really believe record companies will produce TWO versions of
> EVERY recording - one with, and one without copyguard?
This is precisely the European Community proposal!
/john
|
782.31 | Power to the People | FRSBEE::ROLLA | | Tue Jun 30 1987 12:54 | 11 |
|
The best way to fight the stuff.......
Don't buy it !!!!!!
Can you imagine if everyone boycotted this stuff, didn't buy one
thing with this copy guard stuff.
SUPPLY AND DEMAND very powerfull stuff.
Too bad everybody can't join together on something like this eh.
|
782.32 | From the 800 number... | FDCV01::ARVIDSON | Leggo my ego! | Wed Jul 01 1987 14:34 | 85 |
| I called the 800 number, too. Here is the letter they include in
the mailing. It seems a little weak to me, yet clear and to the point.
Anyway, if each person that reads this can afford $0.66 and three envelopes
it could just be worth it.
They also recommend that you write your newspaper. They say:
"A letter to the Editor of your local newspaper can be a very effective way
of making your voice heard on home taping legislation. Not only does a
published letter state your opposition, it also alerts your neighbors to
an issue that will affect them. Your elected representatives often monitor
local papers to learn which issues concern their constituents -- Your letter
tells them you consider this topic an important one.
You might want to include some of the following points in your letter:
- DATs will not make perfect clones of the original recordings
- Consumers will not want to buy DAT recorders disabled by anti-taping
micro chips
- The anti-taping technology will affect the quality of the sound of
prerecorded music
- The many different ways blank tape and recorders are used
- What royalty tax will actually cost consumers
- Why you think a royalty tax would be unfair"
If I find the correct note in the Audio notesfile I'll post this there, too.
Dan
The addresses for MA are:
The Honorable Joseph Early
U.S. House of Representatives
Washington, D.C. 20515
The Honorable Joseph Early
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
The Honorable Edward Kennedy
U.S. Senate
Washington, D.C. 20510
For those in other states check in your telephone directory blue pages or
put a reply in here with the state and I'll put in you Reps or Senators.
Dear Representative Joseph Early,
{Dear Senator John Kerry,}
{Dear Senator Edward Kennedy,}
I am writing to let you know that I am against any legislation
that would tax or disable audio or video recorders. Taping at home for
personal use has been legal for years, and there is no reason why Congress
should change this.
A royalty tax would unfairly penalize my interest in, and support of,
popular music. When I buy an album and preserve it on tape, or make copies
to play in my car or on lmy Walkman, I am not taking sales away from the record
companies. In fact, I believe that just the opposite is true: I usually end up
buying more records, tapes and CDs.
An anti-taping chip would unfairly restrict my use of my audio or
video recorder. I don't think that the recording industry should tell me
what I can or can't tape at home for my own personal use and enjoyment.
Home taping is largely responsible for the record profits that the
recording industry has enjoyed in recent years. Please vote against any
legislation that would interfere with my right to tape at home for my own
personal use.
Sincerely,
|
782.33 | From Columbia House, on copyguarding | EXIT26::STRATTON | These are the good old daze. | Sat Nov 14 1987 11:45 | 38 |
| I recently cancelled my membership in the CBS record club (see 67.64).
I wrote them a letter, listing among the reasons CBS' involvement
in "copyguarding". Here was the club's response to this, from
"Douglas Mitchell, membership director".
"We regret your decision to cancel your membership, but want to
take this time to express our position in this matter.
"The master quality duplication of copyrighted recordings by persons
using the Digital Audio Tape (DAT) recorders adversely affects the
income and threatens the rights, careers and incentives of artists,
music publishers, composers, and record producers. CBS Records Technology
has developed a system called 'Copy Code' to protect these rights.
"This system has been exhaustively tested and endorsed by a special
engineering committee of the Recording Industry Association of America
(RIAA). In addition, the International Federation of Phonographic
Industries (the European equivalent of the RIAA) has endorsed Copy
Code. Copy Code encoding does not degrade the sound of recorded
product, and the notch cannot be heard by listening to the
recording.
"A further judgement about the efficacy of the Copy Code system
will be made by the National Bureau of Standards, which has
been instructed by Congress to provide an impartial test of
the full system. A number of major recording companies have announced
that they will not encode their product until the Congress enacts
legislation requiring inclusion of a Copy Code decoder in all
digital audio tape recordes imported into and/or sold in the United
States.
"The compact discs currently sold by Columbia House are not encoded.
It has always been, and will continue to be, the policy of Columbia
House to provide our members with the musical performances of
outstanding artists manufactured according to standards that assure the
best playback of these performances that technology permits."
Jim Stratton
|
782.34 | Huh? | GENRAL::SEAGLE | Going nowhere, but making good time | Mon Nov 16 1987 16:55 | 17 |
| re: .33
Did I miss something or does this statement...
> "The compact discs currently sold by Columbia House are not encoded.
> It has always been, and will continue to be, the policy of Columbia
> House to provide our members with the musical performances of
> outstanding artists manufactured according to standards that assure the
> best playback of these performances that technology permits."
...pretty much _admit_ (albeit tacitly) that Copyguard goofs-up
the sound quality of the disc? It would be nice if CBS could make
up their minds on this issue: is Copyguard audible (and thus "bad")
or not? Scheeezzeess!
<sigh>,
David.
|
782.35 | T'ank Gawd! | LESLIE::LESLIE | Andy, WG5 Leader, CSSE OSI Program | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:43 | 1 |
| Well, SONY bought CBS Records today. Copyguard is DEAD, DEAD, DEAD!
|
782.36 | | AKOV11::BOYAJIAN | The Dread Pirate Roberts | Thu Nov 19 1987 12:48 | 9 |
| Ah, the Second Law of Big Business:
If you can't beat 'em, buy 'em!
(What's the First Law, you ask?)
It's immoral to allow a sucker to keep his money.
--- jerry
|
782.37 | Let's NOT notch! | FROST::EDSOND | | Thu Nov 19 1987 13:37 | 8 |
| re:.35
Is Sony really going to shelf Copyguard? Has Sony stated this
anywhere in print? I'm all for shelving it, I just hope Sony
also is!
And if this is true, where does that leave Congress on doing their
testing and law making?
|
782.38 | Only time will tell | COVERT::COVERT | John R. Covert | Thu Nov 19 1987 14:34 | 6 |
| Don't jump so quickly -- there are two very distinct parts of Sony:
the music publishers
the equipment producers
They were at odds over this issue before this; they may still be.
|
782.39 | | COMET::STEWART | Beep if you Bop | Thu Nov 19 1987 15:52 | 40 |
| From the Rocky Mountain News business section:
CBS Inc. announced yesterday it will sell its worldwide record
division to Sony Corp. of Japan for about 2 billion dollars.
The deal is expected to close in early 1988 pending the necessary
governmental approvals, CBS said in a statement.
....
CBS president and chief executive Laurence A. Tisch said Sony
presented "a very attractive offer in terms of value to the
shareholders, while it also provides an important source of capital
and allows us to focus all of our energies and resources on our
core business of broadcasting."
Under Tisch, CBS has undergone a major restructuring since last
fall, selling its magazine, book and music publishing units for
about 1.2 billion dollars. He was reported to favor selling the
records group if the price were right because of the inherent
volatility of the records business.
....
The records group has been increasingly profitable in recent
years, helped by hits from entertainers such as Michael Jackson,
Bruce Springsteen, Ricky Skaggs and Cyndi Lauper.
....
CBS chairman William S. Paley said that CBS records "has contributed
so importantly to the history of music in our times. I am pleased
to note that Sony has earned a global reputation for excellence
and is a company with which CBS has had a long and productive relationship."
From New York (AP) -- reprinted without permission.
=ken
|
782.40 | Another CBS dropout (pun intended) | RUTLND::MCKINLEY | | Fri Nov 20 1987 11:23 | 14 |
| RE .33
I also quit CBS/Columbia House recently. I cited lack of material,
high price, annoyance of sending back cards each month, sales tax (they
seem to be charging more than Mass. 5%), and CBS's stand on
copyguarding.
I got back one letter acknowledging my cancellation and offering the
"positive option" (only send back the card if you want something). I
then received the same form letter as .33 about copyguard. Maybe the
message will get through if enough people hit them in the pocketbook.
Let's hope Sony kills copyguard.
---Phil
|
782.41 | Where are you DAT | COEVAX::LEVITT | | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:35 | 2 |
|
The last reply in this note is from Nov. 87. Is DAT dead?
|
782.42 | Pro Audio Outlets Have 'Em | AQUA::ROST | Canned ham, that's for me | Fri Oct 14 1988 15:50 | 11 |
|
DAT is alive and well in the pro audio sector. Sony, Technics and
others are marketing machines through pro audio dealers, prices
starting around $1500. Blank tapes from Maxell and others starts
at about $10 a tape.
The manufacturers appear to be holding off on the consumer market
until the legal questions get cleared up. Until then, the prices
will be high and the availability limited.
|
782.43 | you can get 'em - for a price... | STAR::BIGELOW | Bruce Bigelow, DECnet-VAX | Sat Oct 15 1988 01:11 | 8 |
| Tower Records in Boston has a few ( *very* few ) items available
on DAT. The price is about $32 per DAT tape. I can't think of
any music I want that badly, but I'm sure the price will come down
eventually. I'm certainly not planning to stop buying CDs in the
forseeable future.
B
|