Recently I wrote about a DRM and Anthropology debacle asking for help for a fellow friend whose files are basically in limbo-land, totally stuck, in a format that can’t be converted. I asked for comments but, brilliantly, did not open the comments. So here is one useful one passed along by email:
Here is a small, not completely cheap box which can take the protection code off the digital audio, at least at some situations of usefulness in a digital chain.
http://www.m-audio.com/products/en_us/CO3-main.html
It could help your situation, I think. However, Sony, if you have been following the news recently, hires all sorts of incompetent people to design their DRM things.
So I think there is no way to find out for sure except to have someone pretty capable with digital audio try some things with your locked-out backups, probably just the other digital audio gear you have, and this box.
They may have to think a little to get it to work out, so find one person or more who like to be clever.
Good luck. And thanks for bringing this out…
update
And then I got this from Patrice R today, refering to the fact that many famous anthropologists lost thier data:
M.N. Srinivas “The Remembered Village” , I think the nicest case of lost date got
best book. And if I am not mistaken Fernand Braudel’s “La Mediterranee” is also the
result of lost data (FB in a German POW camp, MNS in an arson at Stanford)
Hi Biella,
I think the person who suggested the M-Audio box misunderstood the situation.
The M-Audio box could remove SCMS coding from the audio while it is still on the minidisc (that is, while it’s being transferred from minidisc over S/PDIF). But it’s too late for that now — the current form of the audio is in ATRAC on a PC and can’t be played at all. If the M-Audio box had been used earlier, while copying from minidisc to something else, then it might have been useful. The M-Audio box won’t be able to reach out into encrypted ATRAC files on a PC and decrypt them, because it doesn’t contain any crypto code.
“Digital audio” is too general a category.
Comment by Seth Schoen — November 18, 2005 @ 7:06 pm