On Mon, 2005-11-21 at 15:25 -0500, Tyler Durden wrote:
Hum. Something just occurred to me. It's probably trivial and known already, so sue me I'm bored.
Creating an mp3 from a known recording is actually not "copying" at all. mp3 is a lossy form of compression..."unnecessary" information is thrown away, but any audiophile can tell the difference between the mp3 and the original.
If creating an MP3 file is not copying, then making an analog cassette dub isn't copying either, because some of the information is lost. I don't think the courts will buy that argument. This reminds me of something else: to a computer, playing is simply a form of copying, the output is simply a video card and/or sound card. Isn't this is, in fact, what makes computers so powerful, that they simply obey instructions without asking questions? Isn't this why every attempt to block "unauthorized" copying has failed in the end, because the reality is that if it can be played, it can be copied, because playing *is* copying from the point of view of the computer programs? -- Shawn K. Quinn <skquinn@speakeasy.net>