Legal & Ethical Questions in the PC Audio Age


I haven't ripped my entire CD collection yet, but I probably will in the near future. And I'll continue to buy CDs until I can download them in Redbook or better quality. I'm wondering about the legal and ethical implications of disposing of physical CDs once I've ripped them.

(I appreciate the value of keeping them around for archival purposes, but let's suppose that I'll want to get rid of some of them.)
Ag insider logo xs@2xdrubin
Why not donate them to the Salvation Army or a similar organisation who will sell them to finance charity programs?
Legally you cannot sell your CDs once you rip them if you retain the copies you made.

-RW-
Legally, in the extremely unlikely event a record company came after you, you'd want to be able to prove you 'owned' the cd.

The downside risk here is negligible, but FWIW, having the cd is good proof you own it. Sales receipts and the like *might* also work.

Morally, the one thing you shouldn't do is make a perfect copy of your cd and then sell it or give it away.

I think it's generally held that you're buying a license to use the music contained on a given cd. If you pass that cd onto somebody else, you're passing on the license.

I'm very much on the side of fair use - and opposed to the draconian record company policies that produced DRM, prosecution of customers, etc. - but selling a cd you're keeping as a digital copy is a classic case of having your cake and keeping it too.'

Scott Atkinson
Watertown NY
You could just send them to me Dan......I won't tell anyone...honest.

Cheers,
John