ChatterBank0 min ago
Free MP3 Downloads?
Answers
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.With services like iTunes being as popular as they are (iTunes recently reached it's 500,000,000th legal music sale) there's lots of competition in the digital music download arena, and single tracks on iTunes are a mere 79p. Of course, you can turn all your CD albums into MP3s and similar formats using your PCs CD-ROM drive too.
As for how the MP3 player works, well it differs from model to model. I suggest looking in the instruction manual; that's always a good place to start.
stevie, the difference being that mobius is referring to cd's already owned being converted to mp3.im not so sure this is illegal as i thought you were allowed to make 'back-ups' of products you already own.also,even if it is illegal,you would never be prosecuted as an enormous can of worms would be opened up as millions of people worldwide also do this and then you would have to move on to people recording progs off the telly etc etc etc
by transferring your own cd's to mp3 you havent cost the artist or the label any money.
http://www.out-law.com/page-3956-theme=print
"Under Britain's existing legislation," explains Robertson, "it infringes copyright to convert a song from a CD into MP3 format..."
It is my understanding that stevie is speaking from an informed position, ripping CD to MP3 is unauthorised duplication, whatever way you look at it. Practically speaking, with Peer to Peer (excuse my language) programs being designed to sniff for MP3s on your PC and then make them available to the world, you may find yourself in some hot water by doing so.
www.amazon.com Complete, free, full quality, MP3s from major artists. Thousands of them.
However, I think the morality of what I said is still perfectly justified, if you know what I mean. Intentionally searching the net or using P2P programs to download music that you do not already own and have no intention of paying for might be just as illegal as converting music from a CD you own into an MP3, but I think one of them certainly takes the moral high ground over the other.
In one case it's something that I already own, whereas in the other it isn't. Seems pretty clear-cut to me.
Like here