O I better stop then.
No need as that 6am knock on the door won't be coming so you're quite safe.

O I better stop then.
There should be HUGE fines for Sony, for giving us CD and DVD writers for home use.
Has anyone in the UK ever been prosecuted for copying music that they legally obtained onto another format for personal use?
I suspect the answer is no.
O I better stop then.
I'll just risk it and face the music if I get caught.
Possibly not. The fact that the music industry is pushing with this though shows what they really think of the consumer
and talented performers make good money actually performing music rather than managing a popular perception of talent.
Not really it shows that they want to protect their interests and possibly the interests of their members. It's natural for people to do so. Meanwhile in the real-world most people don't use their harddrives solely for music and talented performers make good money actually performing music rather than managing a popular perception of talent.
It's funny how that's changed in the last 30 years, it used to be you sold enough albums to afford to go on to tour, now you go on tour to be able to afford to print your albums![]()
There's literally no sensible--and possibly lawful--way to regulate this. How could anyone know if I'm ripping a DVD to put on my tablet, or copying some mp3s onto my phone?
In August 2000, statements by Sony Pictures Entertainment US senior VP Steve Heckler foreshadowed the events of late 2005. Heckler told attendees at the Americas Conference on Information Systems "The industry will take whatever steps it needs to protect itself and protect its revenue streams... It will not lose that revenue stream, no matter what... Sony is going to take aggressive steps to stop this. We will develop technology that transcends the individual user. We will firewall Napster at source - we will block it at your cable company. We will block it at your phone company. We will block it at your ISP. We will firewall it at your PC... These strategies are being aggressively pursued because there is simply too much at stake."[1]
How was he not brought up on charges? That would be a pre-meditated crime. In the UK at least, accessing someone's computer without their knowledge is illegal.
Sony BMG was fined 10 million dollars after the New York Attorney General's office determined that they had been practicing payola mostly in the form of direct payments to radio stations and bribes to disc jockeys to promote various artists including Franz Ferdinand, Audioslave, and mainly Jessica Simpson.
Epic Records, one of their labels, was specifically cited for using fake contests in order to hide the fact that the gifts were going to disc jockeys rather than listeners.[2]
This seems like a total own goal and will make CD sales dry up even more surely?