Since there are a number of researchers here as well as folks who are of
course inerested in DRM, thought I would pass along this story from an
anthropologist who lost all his data, thanks to DRM.

If anyone has any good ideas as to what he can do, please let me know
and I will pass it along or you can email Nitzan: Nitzan Shoshan
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> But do let us know!

Biella

***
The story is basically as follows. I've been using a Sony Minidisc to
record interviews and various other events for the past year, for my
dissertation fieldwork. After recording anything, I would come home,
transfer the files from the Minidisc onto my laptop, back them up on a
CD, and just for safety also on a secure server. I would then delete
them from the minidisc. About two weeks ago my HD crashed, looks like a
mechanical problem. It would just go dead or restart a few moments after
being turned on. A couple of times it lasted just long enough in windows
to let me see that the files were all still there, and even open a
couple. At a computer lab here they first formatted it, because I told
them I had all my important data backed-up, which I thought I did. They
realized then it was beyond redemption, and installed a new HD instead.
I still have the old one, but it's now both a mechanical problem and the
discs being formatted. After re-installing everything on my new HD and
recovering all my backups, I imported the audio files into SonicStage
3.2, which recognized them and added them to it's library, but wouldn't
let me play them or do anything with them. The files are in Sony ATRAC3
and ATRAC3-Plus formats, with .oma and .omg endings. SonicStage either
tells me the there is invalid rights management information in the
OpenMG content (for .omg files), or first asks me whether I would like
to connent to the internet to download the license for the content, and
then gives me the message about invalid rights information (for .oma
files). Another program, HiMDRenderer, which can convert ATRAC3 files
into wav, also doesn't let me convert the files or access them in any
way. Audio I've recorded with the minidisc and imported into my computer
after installing the new hard-drive works fine - I can listen to it in
SonicStage or convert it to wav. I also tried installing the atrac codec
and use sndrec32 to play it, but this won't work either. In internet
forums I've seen other postings of people who had similar problems, it
seems like the Digital Rights Management system only allows certain
files to be played on the original computer, and renders them unreadable
elsewhere.

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