i'm not quite sure how it is done, but some companies write bad tracks to
cd's and uses those bad tracks to determine if the cd is the original.
from what i have read burners arent capable of duplicating this. i dont
know too much abou tthis, primarly because i dont have a need to copy that
kind of stuff. someone had me try to copy diablo 2 for them. it seemed
that the disk required for playing had this feature.readcd chokes on it a
bit and then gives up. 

its kind of a waste of time thought. there are normally cracks out for
these games befor the e software even hits the market.

john

On Wed, 2 Aug 2000, Steffen Grunewald wrote:

> On Wed 2000-08-02 (08:55), [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> > track:   2 lba:    339531 (  1358124) 75:29:06 adr: 1 control: 0 mode: -1
> > does this mean that track 2 starts at 75+ min? could this be out of the
> > range of your cdrom drive?
> 
> No. Did the same thing at different drives. And my audio player
> is capable of playing 80 min CDs.
> 
> Could that be a new copy-protection trick ???
> 
> Steffen
> 
> 
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