• Lka1988
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    520 days ago

    What if I decide to digitize my entire movie catalog? I would have to rip those DVDs and blurays…

      • TonyOstrich
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        520 days ago

        But it is legal in the country he lives in as well as the country YouTube is headquartered in.

        • @[email protected]
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          220 days ago

          Is it? I’m not totally sure, as I’m not from the US but I think the DMCA is the nasty player in this game.

          • TonyOstrich
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            320 days ago

            Technically I’m half right and half wrong (I think). It’s not illegal to backup media that one owns, but it is illegal to break DRM/copy protection which is required to rip most physical media these days.

            Suffice to say the legality of it is a cluster fuck, but the morality, in my opinion, is pretty clear. Fuck the corpos.

            • @[email protected]
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              119 days ago

              Yeah fuck them.

              Nearly all digital media is locked so in order to back up something you own you’ll have to break the lock. Fuck. Them. (And the people who voted for these laws)

              • TonyOstrich
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                119 days ago

                You are allowed to record content like a broadcast though, which makes me wonder if that means that ripping is illegal, but piping it through a capture card isn’t?

      • @[email protected]
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        420 days ago

        A lot of people don’t realise that the application of the VCR was technically copyright infringement, especially so when you lent tapes to your friends.