I was hoping someone on here would know the answer to this:
If I own a store bought copy of an album, but it's on a cassette tape, would it then be legal to download the songs from it so I can have a digital copy of the songs, since I can't really put a cassette tape on my computer?
Thanks for any help.
Question on Legal Downloading of Music
- BurningDoom
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 5953
- Joined: Thu Jan 13, 2011 12:14 am
Question on Legal Downloading of Music
Game Trade/Want List:
http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=28206
Consoles Owned: Atari 2600, NES, SNES, Super GB, N64, Gamecube, GB Player, Wii, Sega Power Base Converter, Genesis, Saturn, Dreamcast, TurboGrafx-16, PlayStation, PS2 Slim, XBox, XBox 360, Game Boy, GBC, GBA-SP, DS, Game Gear, GG Master Converter
http://www.racketboy.com/forum/viewtopi ... 22&t=28206
Consoles Owned: Atari 2600, NES, SNES, Super GB, N64, Gamecube, GB Player, Wii, Sega Power Base Converter, Genesis, Saturn, Dreamcast, TurboGrafx-16, PlayStation, PS2 Slim, XBox, XBox 360, Game Boy, GBC, GBA-SP, DS, Game Gear, GG Master Converter
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
I think the answer is legally no, someone can not do that in most countries that have copyright laws. If you had the technical gear and skill to do it, you could pass from your own cassette to some other format.BurningDoom wrote:I was hoping someone on here would know the answer to this:
If I own a store bought copy of an album, but it's on a cassette tape, would it then be legal to download the songs from it so I can have a digital copy of the songs, since I can't really put a cassette tape on my computer?
Thanks for any help.
If you had a CD instead, I think legally you could only rip it yourself and it would still (I think) be illegal to download copies of someone else's rip.
Ethically:
I would not mind someone doing that;
some of the musicians would not mind someone doing that;
most of the companies would have a problem with someone doing that.
Ivo.
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
If you were to rip them for personal use I don't think there would be a problem. Its when you start selling pirates illegally is when the company's get cranky.
Retro Game On's YouTube Channel << Featuring reviews, features and repair videos.
- Erik_Twice
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 6251
- Joined: Fri Mar 27, 2009 10:22 am
- Location: Madrid, Spain
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
I think not as the digital recording and the analog recording are different, made by different sound engineers and with a different work put into it.
It's not the biggest "evil" around tough.
It's not the biggest "evil" around tough.
Looking for a cool game? Find it in my blog!
Latest post: Often, games must be difficult
http://eriktwice.com/
Latest post: Often, games must be difficult
http://eriktwice.com/
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
No, this is not legal.
Systems: TI-99/4a, Commodore Vic-20, Atari 2600, NES, SMS, GB, Neo Geo MVS (Big Red 4-slot), Genesis, SNES, 3DO, PS1, N64, DC, PS2, GBA, GCN, NDSi, Wii
- ZeroAX
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 7469
- Joined: Sun Aug 03, 2008 9:20 am
- Location: Current: Amsterdam. From Greece
- Contact:
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
Is it legal? No.
Chance of you getting caught? 0%.
Even if they find you (which is a looooooooooooooooong shot) and even if the company cared to sue you (which is also a loooong shot, but as you see with much fewer o's) if you claim that you made those back ups by yourself, they can't do much to disprove your claim.
Chance of you getting caught? 0%.
Even if they find you (which is a looooooooooooooooong shot) and even if the company cared to sue you (which is also a loooong shot, but as you see with much fewer o's) if you claim that you made those back ups by yourself, they can't do much to disprove your claim.
BoneSnapDeez wrote:The success of a console is determined by how much I enjoy it.
-
gtmtnbiker
- Next-Gen
- Posts: 4320
- Joined: Fri Jan 09, 2009 1:14 pm
- Location: Massachusetts
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
If the original source was a cassette, I think it would be trivial to prove that you didn't create the rip yourself. I would agree with your statement for a CD though.ZeroAX wrote: Even if they find you (which is a looooooooooooooooong shot) and even if the company cared to sue you (which is also a loooong shot, but as you see with much fewer o's) if you claim that you made those back ups by yourself, they can't do much to disprove your claim.
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
If you have a Walkman and a 1/8" male-male cable, or any cassette deck with a headphones jack, it would be easy enough to rip the tape yourself. I see Walkmans in drug stores still, less than 10 bucks lol. If you're that concerned about downloading the album, just rip it yourself. It's not hard.
Re: Question on Legal Downloading of Music
When he said it would be trivial to prove it wasn't "ripped" from the cassette, I believe he was referring to the quality of the files ripped. It would be pretty easy to show it didn't come from the cassette.Ziggy587 wrote:If you have a Walkman and a 1/8" male-male cable, or any cassette deck with a headphones jack, it would be easy enough to rip the tape yourself. I see Walkmans in drug stores still, less than 10 bucks lol. If you're that concerned about downloading the album, just rip it yourself. It's not hard.
Even if the quality was downgraded, there will be very likely differences between the two recordings.
Although this is all pretty moot as the chances of anyone being caught and prosecuted doing this are so extremely, extremely low. Effectively impossible (even though there are other events that are also effectively impossible with even lower probabilities by orders of magnitudes).
Ivo.
