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Wait, if you sell your CDs you no longer have rights to the digital copies you made of them, what? I'd like to know the answer to this too... How is buying a CD, ripping it and selling it (potentially for a profit in the case of limited edition scores) different than downloading a pirated copy of the score? The same net result could be obtained by lending your CD to a friend who makes a copy on his / her machine. Chris. All illegal. "Home Taping Is Killing Music."
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Technically speaking, if you sell the original CD then the ripped copy is no longer "fair use". Remember, there was a whole hoo-ha about whether ripping CDs to iTunes was legal or not even if you owned the original CD and I *think* the outcome was as long as you own a legitimate copy, a rip or backup copy for your own use was fair. That said, I don't see the cops showing up and demanding you delete stuff. Cheers
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Wait, if you sell your CDs you no longer have rights to the digital copies you made of them, what? Doesn't matter. Like no one ever recorded music off of the radio or television? Made a copy for a friend? Never let someone borrow an LP, cd, a movie? Never made a copy of anything for someone else or for themselves? Yet, a second hand store can sell used books, CD's and movies without compensating the copyright holder. It's a "holier than thou" argument. I know nothing about how this works, but wouldn't that fall under the Right Of First Sale? You buy it, you can sell it, and because they bought it from you, they can also sell it, too? I don't know, where's SchiffyM to tell us what's what?
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