> From: Jon Gabriel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >From: "The Fool" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > >Subject: Re: 'copy protected Cd`s' destroy firmware > >Date: Tue, 14 May 2002 11:24:17 -0500 > > > > > From: Jon Gabriel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > > >From: "The Fool" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > > > > >They are (as of today) already cracked. > > > > > > > >http://www.chip.de/praxis_wissen/praxis_wissen_8725919.html > > > >http://www.theregister.co.uk/content/54/25274.ht > > > > > Does anyone know if they will play properly on an MP3/CD/CD-R player? > >I'm > > > just curious. I routinely burn MP3 discs and listen to them on a CD > >player > > > designed to play 'em. > > > >AFAIK with the new method, for CD's protected by that company (there are > >several differnt approaches), this allows you to rip etc. > > > >There really aren't any big releases yet, unless the next Star Wars > >soundtrack is damaged this way. > > That's not what I meant, sorry -- I should have been clearer. Does the > copy-protection scheme render the store-bought discs unreadable on an MP3/CD > player? > > This is a discman that reads both ISO9600 CD's and Audio CD's. > > The Star Wars soundtrack has been available on the alt.binaries.sounds.mp3s > newsgroup for at least a month. Somehow I doubt any copy-protection schemes > the companies can come up with will prevent a truly determined person from > ripping them.
Depends on the way the CD player reads the disc. Car CD players use the same methods as computers, and cannot play the discs.
