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To me, watermarking a recording using frequency shaping in the audio domain reminds me of dog piss-marking its territory. To hell with it.
Using a digital code, or "watermark," has been proposed for SACD and DVD-Audio recordings to help control what consumers can and cannot do with the new discs. The downside is that some engineers feel that the watermark, though subtle, might be audible at times. Does this bother you?
If the music industry has to resort to such despicable mean to hang on to their profiteering all these years, may I suggest that they get out of the industry and do something that they can continue to suck the consumers of their hard earned money.
Any scheme that can be made up can be hackedhow long will it be before "sound-improving" watermark strippers appear? It's a futile excersise that only affects the music lover, not the major pirate who uses a pressing plant; or the computer MP3 pirate, whose next version of the ripping software will remove the watermark anyway. Whoever sold the record companies this idea was either one hell of a salesperson, or the companies are very, very stupid or very, very scaredprobably both!!!!
Hate because watermarking could be heard according recently tests (DVD-Audio). It seems that we are going down the road in sound reproduction techniques (Vinyl, CD, Minidisc, MP3, DVD-Audio with noises, etc). Do they remember what hi-fi means? No, I think they only remember the sound of money in their pockets.
It's bad enough that the "industry" wants to charge for individual digital downloads that sound terrible. Now the good stuff that people are willing to pay for will cost more and sound less than acceptable. For comparison, the picture quality of most televisions has improved dramatically, but the watermark that most every station uses during their broadcasts (except commercials) is still annoying. The industry standard for "perfect sound" is the sound of a sucker being born.
The type of watermarking that is planned cannot help but be audible. Therefore, it is a very bad thing and should be avoided at all cost. Watermaking of this type kills the very benefits we hoped to gain from a new high end format.
I detest the idea of watermarking. With a little time, hackers, crackers, and academics will reverse-engineer it. It's war, gentlemen, and while it's never a pretty thing, we have all been here before. The spoils go to the side with the sharpest minds!
Watermarks exist as copyright tags in every medium every created, DVD and SACD are no different. You might be able to hear something that you think might be a watermark, but I doubt it. Most likely the distortion you'll hear is created by electronics that are never perfect no matter how much money you spend. I think the HiFi world will spend a lot of time chasing the watermark ghost.
I will absolutely refuse to buy any watermarked product. Why bother paying premium prices for what one might consider the highest fi (SACD) when it is compromisedno, bastardizedby such a process. Damn these paranoid and money-grubbing record-industry people.
I don't see widespread piracy of CDs among those who would otherwise buy those same CDs, and thus do not believe that copying by the general public has hurt music sales. I do know that digital copy protection would prevent you from making "fair use" of music you've purchased (i.e., you will not be able to make digital compilation discs), and would possibly degrade the sound quality you thought you were paying for. I see this whole watermarking affair as a way of maintaining control over the distribution of music, and thus a way to maintain high prices, rather than as a way to control piracy. I, for one, do not plan to help them with this agenda.
Why bother? As long as computers keep getting faster and the digital players can be taken apart someone will always be able to crack a watermark and keep it from doing it's job. It's my opinion that digital technology will eventually kill the record companies. Greedy bastards deserve it too!
What do I think of watermarking? The same thing I think of having my vital organs stolen. Digital watermarks won't stop the pirates. It will only hinder the enjoyment of the consumer. Worse yet, all of the noise that's being made about this is just going to scare off most consumers anyway.
A horrendous plan? Record company moguls seem to be so obsessed with making money, and making it NOW, that they have completely lost touch with reality! They have forgotten the basic principal that in order to make money they must first offer the public what they actually want - not what they want them to have. The only reason anybody is going to invest in DVD-A or SACD is if it represents a substantial improvement over CD. To develop a superior system and then compromise it by watermarking is - well - pointless is the kindest word I can think of to describe it. Here is one customer who will not be investing if watermarking becomes an industry norm.