Date: Sat, 6 Sep 2003 23:44:05 +0200 From: Andy Hauser <andy-freebsd@splashground.de> To: Bryan Liesner <bleez@comcast.net> Cc: FreeBSD Current <freebsd-current@freebsd.org> Subject: Re: ATAng - copying atapi CD Message-ID: <20030906214405.GA31981@splashground.de> In-Reply-To: <20030904075712.C464@gravy.homeunix.net> References: <20030902124217.L935@gravy.homeunix.net> <1062568112.600.9.camel@klotz.local> <3F56D591.F5CB0133@mindspring.com> <20030904075712.C464@gravy.homeunix.net>
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On Thu, Sep 04, 2003 at 07:59:36AM -0400, Bryan Liesner wrote: > On Wed, 3 Sep 2003, Terry Lambert wrote: > > > Bryan Liesner wrote: > > > On Wed, 3 Sep 2003, Martin wrote: > > > > If you notice that your CD-R label looks strange and if you need > > > > the data, you should backup it fast. > > > > > > No, we're talking about brand new, factory pressed, audio CDs. > > > > Are they copy protected? > > > > The way you can tell is if you try to do what you are trying to > > do, and it fails the way that it's failing, then they are likely > > copy protected. > > > > Possible, but if they are protected, wouldn't I be prevented from > copying any track, or do they pick a random track or two just to piss > me off? The last tracks are sometimes data tracks. The tools that use the scsi emulation seem to handle those better. aha
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