Witam serdecznie!

Jako student prawa pozwole sobie od czasu do czasu
na podrzucenie na liste ciekawostek prawnych, tych interesujacych,
jak i takich ktore moga cos zmienic w naszym powszednim dniu.

Mysle ze niektorzy na tej liscie uzywaja systemu MP3 do sluchania
muzyki poprzez sciaganie plikow z internetu.  Osobiscie MP3 nie uzywam.
Moj komputer zaparl sie jak wol i MP3 player nie chce dzialac.
Nie naprawiam bo i tak nie mialbym kiedy sciagac i sluchac tych plikow.

Zmiany maja na celu zmusic producentow sprzetu elektronicznego
do wdrazenia pewnych zmian ktore uniemozliwia np. kopiowania
plikow MP3 na kompakt dyski.  Proponowanych zmian jest o wiele wiecej.
Na koncu tego listu jest odnosnik do strony NYT gdzie mozna
sie ze wszystkimi zmianami zapoznac.

pozdrawiam serdecznie,
Konrad Lepecki

>     The New York Times article, excerpted and linked below, discusses
> industry standards that have been adopted by the recording industry to
> block the use of MP3 to obtain high fidelity free downloads of
>
> Source:  New York Times (NYT)
> Author:  MATT RICHTEL AND SARA ROBINSON
> Title:      Ear Training: A Digital Music Primer
> Source Date:  July 19, 1999
>
>                As recently as two years ago, the recording business
> relied on a stable of technologies that had evolved from Thomas
> Edison's scratchy rolls through cut acetate, pressed vinyl records and
> magnetic tape to the compact disk -- all without serious threats to the
> major labels' bottom lines. Then, on college campuses, students with fast
> Internet connections discovered that a sound compression technology
> called MP3 packed virtually perfect copies of music into a file small
> enough to distribute rapidly online. Suddenly the device that recorded
> the music was also the machine that stored it and the technology that
> distributed it.
>
>           The industry fought back not just with traditional methods --
> lawyers and law enforcement agents -- but, for the first time, with
> technology. Last week, the Recording Industry Association of America's Secure
> Digital Music Initiative, or SDMI, released a new set of standards
> that consumer electronics companies will have to adopt if they want to make
> devices that play commercially recorded music.
>
> Full Story May Be Read At:
> http://www.nytimes.com/library/tech/99/07/biztech/articles/19tune.html

--
"Im bardziej chore panstwo, tym wiecej w nim praw."
Tacyt

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