Hey -- I don't really care. What I wonder about, though, is why you think it was important to note that you'd purchased all those CDs. I mean, it's not like all the music available on the P2P networks magically appeared out of nowhere. Someone purchased the CDs there, too. (Okay, I suppose it's possible that some had been stolen, but that's beside the point.) Is the difference that you were making only two copies instead of hundreds? Or maybe that it was first-generation, if you will.

I think that there are provisions in the law that allow you to share your music with friends, and that's where Napster found its hole in the law. Since it included a chat program, who's to say that you weren't friends, in that the law didn't define what a friend was. (Or maybe it did -- I could be talking out of my ass.) Of course, that was for analog media. When digital media became available, they made different provisions for it. (Part of which is in the higher price for For-Audio branded blank media.)
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Bitt Faulk