Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive
hi,
i have problem while copying my data,image from my cd to Segate 160 gb sata hard disk drive,it gives an message that it is copyright protected.anyone know how to Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive.Any help will be extremely appreciated.
Re: Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive
Make an image of the cd with clonecd, copy the image to the hard drive of your laptop and mount it on a daemon tools stealth drive.
Re: Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive
Game Copier is designed for copying your CDs including game CD, VCD, Audio CD, data CD, music CD, video CD, Super Video CD, and so on. It can copy CD to CD on-the-fly, or rip your CD to an ISO image file saving to your harddisk for future burning. And it can burn an ISO image file to an empty CD disc. If you are looking for a program to backup your CDs, no matter game CD / video CD / audio CD / data CD, you are getting to the right place.
- Clone your Game CD
- Clone your Video CD or Super Video CD (VCD/SVCD)
- Clone your Audio CD or Music CD (CDA disc, MP3 CD, WMA CD, etc.)
- Clone your Data CD (General purpose CD of ISO or UDF format)
- Rip CD to CUE/BIN images
- Burn CUE/BIN images to CD-R or CD-RW
- Game Copier supports most CD Writer drivers, CD-R and CD-RW devices.
Re: Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive
SAFEAUDIO is a later, more advanced (and more controversial) method of copy protection. It works by deliberately corrupting the audio data on the CD, such that a player will have to use C2 (software error hiding) to play the CD properly. C2 is normally used when the CD is too badly scratched for C1 error correction to be able to read perfect data off the CD. CD players (including CD-ROM drives asked to 'play' the CD) carry out C2 automatically, while CD-ROM drives 'ripping' the CD will extract a bit-perfect copy of the damaged data, which will contain the deliberately introduced errors. This method has met with widespread criticism, amidst fears that it may lead to lesser audio quality, and earlier failure of the disk. Macrovision bought MusicGuard from TTR to create SAFEAUDIO.
Re: Copy data from a copyright protected cd to hard drive
hi,
It could be a damaged disk. Some kind of scratch or something. Playing a CD properly without hassels is altogether different than copying a CD. Players ignore the slight error. But while copying - bit by bit - the OS will stop the moment it encounters error.