Reader Mail: Is it Legal to Copy CDs and DVDs?

Tue Jan 29, 2008 4:09PM EST

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Reader phil439 writes: Long-time reader, first-time writer. Question for you about making copies of music CDs and movie DVDs. I'm not a pirate or anything, I just want to use the music and movies that I already paid for on my iPod. Am I breaking any laws by ripping CDs and DVDs, so long as I'm not distributing them?

Hey Phil—thanks for writing. Most digital-rights activists (such as the Electronic Frontier Foundation), citing the "fair use" exceptions to U.S. copyright law, argue that you should be able to rip copyrighted CDs and DVDs (ones you own, mind you) for your own personal use. Of course, whether you have the actual legal right to do so is another—and somewhat murky—issue, particularly when it comes to video.

In the case of music, the RIAA (the trade group that represents the music industry) isn't exactly thrilled by the idea of people ripping CDs for their own use, but it isn't going after them, either. Indeed, the issue cropped up when a major newspaper incorrectly reported that the RIAA was suing a listener for merely ripping music tracks off a CD; the RIAA made it clear that it was going after the defendant for putting those tracks in a P2P file-sharing folder, not for the ripping itself. The RIAA stopped short of saying it actually approves of CD ripping for personal use, but for now, the group seems content to let it go.

Ripping DVD movies is a different issue, however. Thanks to the Digital Millennium Copyright Act of 1998, it is illegal to crack digital rights management schemes (a.k.a., our old friend DRM) regardless of how you plan on using the protected content. While music CDs don't come with copy protection (although there were a few misguided attempts to do so), just about any copyrighted DVD in your local video store is encrypted by a DRM scheme called CSS (Content Scramble System). If you crack CSS encryption to copy a DVD to your hard drive or iPod (and most DVD-ripping utilities out there do just that), strictly speaking, you're in violation of the DMCA. Now, as my fellow blogger Chris Null has pointed out, the DMCA would seem to conflict with the "fair use" provisions of standard copyright law, but how (and whether) fair use applies to ripping "backup" copies of DVDs remains unclear, and there have been no definitive legal rulings to point the way. (One potential test case—a lawsuit filed against the makers of a digital movie jukebox by the movie industry—has turned into a twisty, back-and-forth battle, with no clear winners or losers.)

So, to summarize: copying CDs for your personal use is fine. Ripping DVDs? You probably won't get hauled into court for putting a movie onto your iPod, but if you really want to know...yeah, you're wading into murky legal waters.

Related:
Ripping DVDs the Easy Way [Yahoo! Tech]

Comments on Reader Mail: Is it Legal to Copy CDs and DVDs?

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  • 1 Posted by johnnykit1@verizon.net on Wed Jan 30, 2008 3:41AM EST Report Abuse

    Once you have purchased any digital media, according to the patent office, you have the right to make one backup (not for current use) just incase your original is destroyed. From what I have been taught ripping music CDs or DVDs for current and/or seperate use and/or altering digital media (changing format to mp3 for your ipod) is copyright infringement. Backups for the porpose of backups is ok wheather it be CD or DVD (only 1 per).

  • 2 Posted by djchrysys on Wed Jan 30, 2008 3:43AM EST Report Abuse

    as long as you dont sell it or ciculate it it should be yours to what you will with it. as a DJ and AV producer I use media in a lot of creative ways that helps the industrybut I do one thing a lot of people dont if I dont own rights I do not make it available to download on rare cases I may add to a promo disc but it is not sold and what they do with is out of my control but I do credit all original companies and say that all rights a reserved by the original producer. In todays mass media trying to stop all use of material is insane and the people are are just havin fun or cuttin their teeth by using material in creative ways are a friend tio the industry cuz some one may go and buy the real one cuz they saw it like that and some are seing that so I hope they put their priorties right and go after real crime and not people who are being responsible.

  • 3 Posted by nappless on Wed Jan 30, 2008 3:49AM EST Report Abuse

    In either case, cds or dvds, preserving something that is HIGHLY susceptible to degradation, even through normal usage, allows the purchaser to make copies in order that the life is extended well beyond it's expected life-span.

  • 4 Posted by revincent46012@sbcglobal.net on Wed Jan 30, 2008 3:52AM EST Report Abuse

    If you own the copy of the CD in the first place, making another copy may be legal. However what about going to the library and copying what's on the CD shelves there. Most libraries are tax supported and if you pay taxes, does that mean you own a very very, small portion of everything there? So are you in fact copying something that you already own? Would it make a difference if you're homeless and don't pay taxes?

  • 5 Posted by strdogie on Wed Jan 30, 2008 4:32AM EST Report Abuse

    I really miss VHS and casette tapes. remember those stereo systems with 2 casette decks and hooking up two VCR's together. those were the good old days. it exen shows you how to hook them up in the owners manual.

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