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I don't own cd's any more, I donated pretty much all of them to the local library.
No, that would be stealing...
I have over a thousand CDs and yes I have ripped them and stored them on a HD. But I use the lossless digital copies as a backup, and still retain and play the CDs. Usually, I hear an artist on Spotify that I like, and I would buy the CD if I want to hear it with better quality sound. The problem I have is that some CDs are recorded and/or produced well, others are not and sound like a soup sandwich.
That's what is not so clear...from whom, exactly? If you are going to say the artists, then also answer how it is different than just selling the CD and **not** keeping a copy, from the artists' point of view?I understand the music industry would like to sell more new copies, rather than have people buying music used. However, they lost that battle, it's certainly legal to sell a CD or a book.
It's a moot point for me. I wouldn't bother ripping my CDs to a computer. I don't trust them new fangled machines. Personally I like tangible stuff, gold, silver, vinyl, CDs. You don't really own anything when it's on a hard drive or two.Doc
...I own about 2000 CDs. I've ripped all of them and the files are on four different disk drives. With that level of redundancy, I'm not really concerned with losing the material - four drives aren't going to fail at once....
***I understand the music industry would like to sell more new copies, rather than have people buying music used. However, they lost that battle, it's certainly legal to sell a CD or a book.