> Brian Gurtler wrote: > > no, it would not leave the entire database as bootleg. it > would make > > the live concert DVD rips bootlegs where the source is the DVD (aka > > DSBD as far as live recording sources are labled outside of MB). > > Please expand on this, because it makes no sense to me how > ripping out > > audio of a concert DVD is anything but a bootleg. > > It doesn't make much sense to me why it would be bootleg. I > buy a CD, put it in my computer, open a ripping program, hit > go, and have a bunch of wav files that I can encode to > whatever. I buy a live DVD, put it in my computer, open a > ripping program, hit go, and have a bunch of wav files that I > can encode to whatever. There's no difference in process > between the two for me other than using EAC for CD ripping > and DVD Decrypter for DVD ripping, so it's hard to see why > when I rip a CD it would be official but when I rip a DVD it > would be bootleg. I suspect other people that rip the audio > from their live DVDs feel the same way.
Exactly. -- Cristov (wolfsong) A pessimist thinks everybody is as nasty as himself, and hates them for it. George Bernard Shaw _______________________________________________ Musicbrainz-style mailing list Musicbrainz-style@lists.musicbrainz.org http://lists.musicbrainz.org/mailman/listinfo/musicbrainz-style