Quote Originally Posted by Dreadbelly View Post
Actually, in iTunes defense, that is only on the Windows side, and it is because of M$ and the agreements made to port iTunes to Windows.

On the Mac, iTunes does none of this sort of behaviour. It remains non intrusive.

Quicktime can be had in several flavours, but I don't think there is anything you can do about iTunes. M$ is in bed with the RIAA, and part of porting iTunes over to Windows was to make it fully compliant with RIAA standards. Mac side, there is still the whole "rip, mix, and burn" thing going on.

So to be fair, this is yet another issue to blame M$ for.

And to point the finger at Apple, I am not pleased with the shift away from mp3s over to acc files and other DRM compliant methods. Easy to beat those though. Record the raw sound files to a CD, rip the CD in to mp3s, and tag the files your self. A pain, yeah. Not something I do personally though. But if you buy something from the iTunes store I believe that you own that file and it should be yours to do with whatever you please, including making multiple copies of it.
I use mine with a Mac so I am unaware of itunes with windows issues. I certainly agree about owning the music we buy from itunes but all this copy or not bull is mostly from the RIAA and the only thing that is worse is the DVD industry. Fair use says you can copy your DVD for personal use but it is breaking the law to decode the disk to make the copy.

I have alway wondered just how many pirating operations have failed because of these efforts