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Data Storage Media

CDs May be Less Immortal than We Thought 504

Zordak writes "The near-immortality of CDs, sometimes used as an excuse by record companies as an argument for their high cost, may not be as eternal as touted. An article at CNN describes the problem of CD Rot rearing its head to deny you access to your music and data. The article also describes related problems with CD-Rs, CD-RWs and DVDs."
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CDs May be Less Immortal than We Thought

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  • old news (Score:5, Informative)

    by simcop2387 ( 703011 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:30PM (#9078676) Homepage Journal
    cd rot has been known about for years, there's been other /. articles about it
    • Yeah, I think there was one a week or two ago. Let me get out my Slashdot Archive CD and check.

      Doh! Nothing there.
    • Re:old news (Score:5, Insightful)

      by packeteer ( 566398 ) <packeteer@@@subdimension...com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:34PM (#9078733)
      Not only is it known about but there are ways around it. You can buy special archiving cd's that last much longer. Look for "gold" cd's to last longer. The problem is that organic ink just wont last forever but that doesn't mean you hafta use discs that die quickly.
      • Archival CDs (Score:4, Informative)

        by Macgrrl ( 762836 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @10:09PM (#9080188)
        Kodak Gold CDs - which are the discs which quote 100 year life span, use an inert gold refective substrate, and the dye technology used for the write layer is quite similar to the dyes used for their film stocks. Typically these disc will have a slower maximum burn speed as they need slightly more heat/energy to set to dye state to a 1 or 0.

        • Re:Archival CDs (Score:3, Informative)

          by pomakis ( 323200 )
          Unfortunately, Kodak stopped making gold CD-Rs a few years ago. I used to use them exclusively until they did. I guess the market demand wasn't high enough for them. People would rather pay 5 cents less for a disk than have a more reliable medium.

          The only other gold CD-Rs I'm aware of are Mitsumi Gold, and I was shocked to hear that these are no longer made either (as of just a few months ago)! Doh!

          If anybody knows of any other gold CD-Rs on the market, please let me know! In the meantime, I guess

    • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:43PM (#9078816)
      Did you notice the name of the guy on the article with 200 rotted CDs?

      Dan KOSTER.

      is that perhaps with a soft "O", like "Coaster". I'd say so. He should change his middle name to "2000".

    • Re:old news (Score:3, Informative)

      by rocketjam ( 696072 )
      Long thread on this at Macintouch here [macintouch.com] back in 2000.
    • by Daemonic ( 575884 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @05:58AM (#9082305)
      From previous article [rense.com] mentioned on slashdot [slashdot.org]
      Not all optical media is vulnerable. The rewritable variants (RW) use metallic materials that change the phase of the light, rather than light-sensitive dyes.
      And from this article, we have
      Rewriteable CDs and DVDs, as opposed to write-once discs, should not be used for long-term storage because they contain a heat-sensitive layer that decays much faster than the metal layers of other discs.
      So now I'm just totally confused.
  • iTunes doesn't rot (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ObviousGuy ( 578567 ) <ObviousGuy@hotmail.com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:30PM (#9078678) Homepage Journal
    While it might suck having to pay a nickel for music off of iTunes, at least I know that my data can be backed up in a manner of my own choosing.
    • by pr0c ( 604875 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:37PM (#9078771)
      ObviousGuy: While it might suck having to pay a nickel for music off of iTunes, at least I know that my data can be backed up in a manner of my own choosing.

      Not without circumventing the system such as burning those protected files to cd then converting them (ooop still a cd issue). Or illegally ripping the protection from them which is possible but a PITA. Last I checked it was much easier (and yes more expensive) to buy CDs and then to back them up ANY way you saw fit, in that respect a CD beats iTunes hands down not to mention the quality.
      • Illegally ripping protection? Illegal? An example of an illegal act is murder. Violating an EULA is not illegal.

        Sorry, wording like that pisses me off. It's not a crime to rape/murder* YOUR files. (Maybe breach of contract, but if they want to sue me over a $0.99 song, then whatever.)

        * This is the RIAA's new term for listening to music. Additionally, it refers to stripping the DRM out of a file. (How is playing a file to another file any different than playing it to a speaker?)
  • Immortal? (Score:5, Funny)

    by Neil Blender ( 555885 ) <neilblender@gmail.com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:30PM (#9078681)
    They don't last 10 seconds in the microwave.
  • by st0rmshadow ( 643869 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:31PM (#9078684)
    Most CDs that have come out in the last 5 years have been nothing but rot...
    • Re:Dupe? (Score:3, Funny)

      by WebCowboy ( 196209 )
      It's apparent that the editors only search their CD backups when they check for dupes.

      It's also apparent that they store these CDs next to (or on top of) their (literally) smoking hot, case-modded, overclocked Athlon gaming boxes/workstations.

      (it's a joke...laugh....please don't hurt me Mr. Malda...)
    • Re:Dupe? (Score:3, Funny)

      by Carnildo ( 712617 )
      It looks like this has come up at least four times before. Is this some kind of record?
  • bah... (Score:3, Informative)

    by Drantin ( 569921 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:32PM (#9078699)
    Everyone that collects stuff on CD-Rs knows they don't last long... I've got some from two years ago that don't work, and it's the first time they've been removed from their case since they were burned...
  • WE KNOW. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by thatguywhoiam ( 524290 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:32PM (#9078701)
    We know CDs suck for longevity. This has been discussed on Slashdot more than JonKatz.
  • by jolyonr ( 560227 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:32PM (#9078703) Homepage
    I recently had to restore some data from CD-Rs I wrote a long time ago. One was labelled Sep 23rd 1993. Back when you got a 63minute CD-R for 25 ($40) a piece.

    Everything restored perfectly. Now, I wonder whether todays discs at less than 1/100 of that price will even last remotely as long as those discs did.

    Jolyon
    • by ByteSlicer ( 735276 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:55PM (#9078928)
      My first CD-Rs (over 10 years old) also still work perfectly. Some simple rules I follow are:
      - Buy CD-Rs withouth printed label (the printing process causes material stress)
      - Burn them at low speed (the lowest my current burner allows with my SW is 8x)
      - Verify the data after writing (very important!)
      - Always be careful with the label side (e.g. don't put that side on the table, dirt could cause scratches)
      - Prevent hot temperatures and direct sunlight

      I later found some advisory text that basically said the same thing.
      • by ByteSlicer ( 735276 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:05PM (#9078984)
        I later found some advisory text that basically said the same thing.

        I googled a bit and found that text again (was in /. before) here [nist.gov]
      • by DA-MAN ( 17442 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @08:23PM (#9079487) Homepage
        All those suggestions are good except this one:

        - Burn them at low speed (the lowest my current burner allows with my SW is 8x)

        This is actually false, at least pertaining to newer faster drives. The new drives are less accurate when writing at low speeds, because they are built with the assumption that people will burn at the highest speed available to them. Thus burning at slower speeds actually degrades the accuracy of the burn, which may result in sooner than normal data loss.

        However all the rest are right on the money.
        • - Burn them at low speed (the lowest my current burner allows with my SW is 8x)

          This is actually false, at least pertaining to newer faster drives.

          You're correct to the extent that you use the disc in the same (or an equivalent-spec) drive. However, CDs intended for use in audio players or old (=12x) drives should be burned at no more than 12x; burning at higher speeds is done using CAV (constant angular velocity), which tends to confuse low-speed drives.

      • - Always be careful with the label side (e.g. don't put that side on the table, dirt could cause scratches)

        I don't get this tip. Could you elaborate? One would think the "data" side should be handled with more care...If I have to put a CD on the desk, I usually put it label side down. Is the label side more delicate than the "data" side?
        • by jridley ( 9305 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @09:41PM (#9080000)
          The label side IS where the data is. The "bottom" side is just a piece of plastic. The reflective layer and all the good stuff is on top. On a factory CD, that's covered with silkscreened ink. If the bottom gets scratched up, you can buff out the scratches with no damage. The "CD/DVD DRx" tool that you can buy in the stores is actually just a ring of fine (like, 2000 grit) wet/dry sandpaper, and the tool sands the scratches out of the bottom of the disc.

          I personally put the round labels on the top; it protects the top from scratches. I know, I've heard people saying labels are bad for the discs, but so far I've been doing the label thing for about 5 years, across about 4000 CDs and DVDs, and no problems so far.
        • On CD-R, the physical structure is that there's about 1 mm of plastic on the bottom (non-label), then a data layer, then the reflective layer, then a thin layer of laquer(?) then the label.

          Since the reflective layer is so close to the label side, writing on the label side with a hard-tip pen will damage/distort/dimple the reflective layer.

          DVD-R is much better, the data/reflective layer is in the middle of the media, roughly 0.6mm of plastic on *both* sides. (The reason that the data layer is at a diffe
  • (yawn) (Score:3, Informative)

    by McDutchie ( 151611 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:32PM (#9078712) Homepage
    CNN is a bit late [slashdot.org] to catch up with this...
  • by User 956 ( 568564 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:33PM (#9078714) Homepage
    So, the RIAA has argued that we merely have a license for one copy of the music when we buy a CD. When the CD corrodes, does this mean we can turn in the rotted disc for a pristine one?
  • I remember when (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Windcatcher ( 566458 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:33PM (#9078724)
    CD's originally included Tellurium in their composition when they first came out, and a lot of people were concerned that it would oxidize. The effect would be that CD's produced in 1981 would become unreadable in ten years or so. I'm given to understand that aluminum is now used, but I wonder what ever became of those early CD's.
    • I have a Blues Brothers CD (movie soundtrack) from 1980 that works perfectly to this day.
      • Re:I remember when (Score:4, Informative)

        by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:43PM (#9078825)
        Considering that the CD standard wasn't established until 1981, and they weren't launched until 1982 -- I think you may be mistaken.

        http://www.medialinenews.com/issues/2002/october /c over1002.shtml
        • Re:I remember when (Score:4, Interesting)

          by Migrant Programmer ( 19727 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:00PM (#9078954) Journal
          Considering that the CD standard wasn't established until 1981, and they weren't launched until 1982 -- I think you may be mistaken.

          What I know is this -- on the CD it says "(P) 1980 Atlantic Recording Corporation." On the liner notes it says "(P) (C) 1980 Atlantic Recording Corporation." There is also a long paragraph about how wonderful CDs are:

          "The Compact Disc Digital Audio System offers the best possible sound reproduction -- on a small, convenient sound-carrier unit. The Compact Disc's remarkable performance is the result of a unique combination of digital playback with laser optics. [care instructions follow] If you follow these suggestions, the Compact Disc will provide a lifetime of pure listening enjoyment."

          The disc has the familar "COMPACT disc DIGITAL AUDIO" logo and is Atlantic CD 16017.

          I also have a Star Trek soundtrack CD from 1985 that works fine too.
  • Is this why (Score:5, Funny)

    by tbjw ( 760188 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:33PM (#9078727)
    the music on the radio sounds worse every year?
  • Other news: (Score:4, Interesting)

    by xintegerx ( 557455 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:33PM (#9078728) Homepage
    The whole music industry may be less immoral than we've ever thought.
  • Duct Tape (Score:4, Funny)

    by Yonkeltron ( 720465 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:34PM (#9078736) Homepage
    It's nothing a little duct tape can't fix!
  • by Sean80 ( 567340 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:35PM (#9078744)
    Forget the CDs, the technology will change before the CDs rot.

    Take my DVD collection, for example. Already the companies are battling to define the next standard. Who wants to bet that, if I take my DVDs down to the Target and ask for the same movie in the new format, I'm gonna get laughed into the ground? People's Betamax tapes are probably rotting too, you know?

    A technology-independent, perpetual, safe storage service for the general public is just a business opportunity waiting to happen. So is the market to sell rights to a movie or song, independent of its format.

    • A technology-independent, perpetual, safe storage service for the general public is just a business opportunity waiting to happen.

      Ha. The Sumarians [bbc.co.uk] came up with a solution 5500 years ago...

    • by Anonymous Coward on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:04PM (#9078981)
      I think we caught the RIAA/MPAA in a gaffe. If we are buying a single license for a movie or an album (as according to the RIAA and the MPAA), we should be able to go exchange our DVDs for whatever comes out next at no cost. After all, we paid for a license for that movie, notwithstanding the format. But, this will not happen in a million years. It seems they like to play both sides of the coin, as that is the most profitable. When we claim in a a physical product, they claim it is a license and when we claim it is a license, they say it is a physical product.
    • The thing is, I think the technology-independent prepetual storage device isn't particularly important. Really, you just need to preserve for a relatively long span of time the ability to play stuff back. The interesting part about the evolution in optical formats has been the drive to have stuff in the CD-sized disk. So a DVD drive can read CDs as well and can handle a multitude of different application formats. Notice that the WORM and MD drives didn't catch on, but CD-R and CD-RW drives did. All of
  • by Simon Carr ( 1788 ) <slashdot.org@simoncarr.com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:35PM (#9078746) Homepage
    What media lasts LONGEST?

    I mean, other than paper, or stone.

    Ok, ammend. What DIGITAL media lasts longest? My first instinct is to say some type of tape, but tape drives seem to come in and go out of fashion fairly quickly. IDE drives might be another alternative...

    So, for your money, what's the best media to store backups of your digital data? Anyone, anyone?
    • by tentimestwenty ( 693290 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:46PM (#9078849)
      You'll find 60 or 70 year old records that sound and play just fine. There is next to no deterioration of either the sleeve or the record if they're stored and unplayed. I'd imagine the lifespan would easily be hundreds of years. Sure, you get some deterioration in the form of clicks and pops but you'll never get a complete failure like a digital or even magnetic medium. Now that MP3-for-pay is coming of age, finding a stable medium is going to be a top priority for the average person. Heck, most people don't even backup their hard drives and duping CD-Rs is time consuming and wasteful.
    • by Kenja ( 541830 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:52PM (#9078903)
      "What DIGITAL media lasts longest? My first instinct is to say some type of tape, but tape drives seem to come in and go out of fashion fairly quickly. IDE drives might be another alternative..."

      There is a reason people back up to tape even though it costs more per gigabyte then hard disks.

      This is the AIT1 spec from Sony.

      Avg. media uses: greater than 30,000
      Media archival: greater than 30 years
      Average head life: minimum 50,000 recording head contact hours
      Media drum wraps: 100,000 times
      Tape repositioning: 1,000,000 cycles

      • Avg. media uses: greater than 30,000
        Media archival: greater than 30 years
        Average head life: minimum 50,000 recording head contact hours
        Media drum wraps: 100,000 times
        Tape repositioning: 1,000,000 cycles

        Sound of your tape getting mangled in the drive as you try to recover from a hard disk failure: Timeless

    • by .com b4 .storm ( 581701 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:12PM (#9079030)

      What media lasts LONGEST?

      A wife's memory can store your screw-ups for perhaps an indefinite amount of time. :) Does that count?

  • Old news (Score:3, Interesting)

    by linuxtelephony ( 141049 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:35PM (#9078747) Homepage
    This is old news. I remember hearing about this back in 89 or so. The problem is worse if CDs are left out in open air, and in light. If memory serves, for longer lasting CDs, they need to be stored in the dark (not just in its case, but in a dark place like a drawer or safe).

    I also think the newer CDs are more prone to this problem than the older ones. I don't know if the materials are much different, or thinner, in order to increase writing speed, but I have noticed that my newer CDs appear to show these signs fairly quickly, sometimes as early as just a few months -- especially if I don't keep them properly stored.
  • by hellmarch ( 721948 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:35PM (#9078754)
    that the billions of AOL cds in the world will eventually turn into something useful? like dust?
  • by erroneus ( 253617 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:38PM (#9078781) Homepage
    It needs to be heard in more public media to get attention of the public. The geeks get the low-down way before the public does. I'm willing to bet much of it is to suppress public outcry...

    In the mean time, this opens the doors to perhaps yet another less fallible storage method. As an open-source advocate, I'm hoping some forward-thinking scientists are already cooking something up that doesn't require DRM be an inherent part of the mix.
  • by jayveekay ( 735967 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:38PM (#9078785)
    Oh, wait, the original article said immorTal, sorry, my bad. ;)
  • by Foo2rama ( 755806 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:40PM (#9078801) Homepage Journal
    All of the cd's that I have that have "rotted" or lost the metal layer that holds that data. Have been blank topped cd's ie no printing no nothing on top, just shiny metal. The cd's that I have that are labled or printed on don't seem to have any problem. I live in southern california and leave my cd's in my dark colored truck year round. Commercial Cd's and branded printed cd's seem fine as well as cd's with stickers on them.
  • by dpilot ( 134227 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:42PM (#9078810) Homepage Journal
    The CD or the copyright?

    One of the things that's bugged me is that AFAIK, CSS and the like have NO provisions whatsoever for copyright expiration. I guess the ??AA can use this as a reason for never having any.
  • by iansmith ( 444117 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:44PM (#9078831) Homepage
    When that beard turns white he will make a great Gandolf though.
  • by hhg ( 200613 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:51PM (#9078897)
    NYT discovers IRC, CNN discovers CD-Rot. I'll bet the next thing that happens is that Al Gore discovers the Internet.

    Seriously, though, this explains why the american congress is pushing all the ideas of the MPAA and the RIAA, they really don't know what is about to hit them. And CNN is certainly not going to tell them this time, as it seems.
  • what about CDR color (Score:3, Interesting)

    by ejaw5 ( 570071 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @06:51PM (#9078900)
    Anyone know if the color and opacity of the CDR disk have an effect on durability?

    Its been my observation that the darker blue medium and opaque CDRs work better than ligher colored (more silver) and more transparent ones. I think the Verbatim's from the 1x/2x/4x days are the best: Deep blue medium, yellow/gold/green recorded region, and the top layer was thick and not prone to be scratched off like today's CDRs.

    Using this logic..CDR media gets worse as recording speed of drives are pushed faster. But I haven't found quantative data to back this up.
  • by sbaker ( 47485 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:02PM (#9078966) Homepage
    The phenomenon of CD-Rot has been known for at least 15 years.

    I believe it comes about when there are microscopic pin-holes in the aluminium layer within the CD. Over time, an effect akin to surface-tension in liquids causes these holes to grow - until they get sufficiently large (and numerous) to cause enough data dropout to overwhelm the error correction mechanisms of the player.

    CD's that never had pin-holes don't develop them later - which explains how come some disks are magically immune to the problem where others die in only a few years.

    I once heard that you can actually see these pin-holes once they've grown to a size that's not yet large enough to cause permenant errors. Hold the disk up to a bright light and see if you can see them. This may give you time to back up one that's "on the way out" before you lose it completely.

    I believe the manufacturers developed an alternative material for the reflective layer about 10 years ago - but most pressing plants have not switched over to it. I wonder whether their reluctance to do so is rooted in a desire to have people re-buy the same CD's over and over.
  • by cft_128 ( 650084 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:04PM (#9078978)
    The article is about normal CDs and DVDs, the ones that the RI/MPAA wants us to buy and not make backups of. I know this article is a bit of a dupe but it is not the old CD-R suck so bad they are unreadable before the burn is finished.

    I now have a dream that congress will use this to realize that we need our fair use back. I'm not holding my breath.

  • by Saint Stephen ( 19450 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:06PM (#9078991) Homepage Journal
    A lot of my old CDs are unplayable now, but that's because they've had beer poured on them and have been stacked outside the case in stacks of 50 for months at a time. I think some of my CD-Rs from 97 will still play.

    Anyway, now I'm burning *a lot* of DVD-Rs to fair use archive my favorite TV shows (about 1-2 discs per day, sometimes more). I'm being very careful to keep them in a case all the time, away from dust, not touching them, and I probably won't play them all that much.

    I will probably buy a storage server of super cheap hard drives 2-3 TB in a couple years, plus I will probably copy them to higher density media again in a couple years. I'm spending about $0.70/DVD now, and I expect I'll end up with a couple or three hundred DVDs of TV (we'll have high-def on demand soon enough).

    I just hope these DVDs last at least 2 years with good care, away from dust and light. Is that reasonable?
  • by philovivero ( 321158 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:06PM (#9078996) Homepage Journal
    Never! Remember when DVDs came out?

    DVDs have so much storage space, that every movie will have three soundtracks of your choice, seventeen language selections, and every key scene will be shot at six angles and you can choose which angle you want to watch it in!

    Meanwhile, back in the Real World, DVDs still come with a single soundtrack, two or three languages (if you're lucky -- my Mandarin Chinese-speaking wife must get DVDs from Taiwan, *NOT* from Wal-Mart down the street), and sometimes a deleted scene or two, but *NEVER* alternate-angle scenes or anything like it.

    Now we find out they don't last very long, and you gotta keep buying the same movies, CDs, etc every decade because they only last for a few years?

    Surprise! You've been had. Again.

    But don't worry. You can believe them when they say DRM won't lock you out of your media. And they won't change the terms of service on their DRM after you've already purchased the media, like Apple did.

    Trust them.
  • A thought (Score:3, Interesting)

    by tekiegreg ( 674773 ) * <tekieg1-slashdot@yahoo.com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:08PM (#9079008) Homepage Journal
    the article mentions what happens if the CD were left in hotter conditions persistently. However could leaving CD's in colder conditions (such as refrigerating or freezing) the CD do anything to preserve it? Just a thought...
  • Ask NIST (Score:5, Interesting)

    by bezuwork's friend ( 589226 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:11PM (#9079026)
    As I posted on another discussion a long time ago, I attended a DVD Conference some two years ago. One of the tours featured was of NIST. They have carried out extensive testing of CDs (and related versions of that medium) to determine reliability. The weird thing is, for some reason, they wouldn't publish the result. I asked why, but I forget what it was.

    When they are using taxpayer money to do the tests, I don't see why the results (1) can't be disclosed and (2) shouldn't be disclosed (we paid for it!).

  • One idea (Score:3, Interesting)

    by anonicon ( 215837 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:14PM (#9079041)
    Having thought about this problem, I think I came up with a decent solution to cover my ass. I normally rip my CDs to wav and mp3 files as soon as I open the CD. The mp3s go to my portable player for playing, the wavs to a 2nd hard drive for home use, and the CDs back into their cases.

    While neither CDs, DVDs nor hard drives last forever, having the .wavs in a hard-drive backup means the only way I will ever lose any music (outside of crime or catastrophe) is if the CDs and hard drive all die together before I can replace them. It could happen, but the odds are against it.

    This is off-topic, but I'm also looking forward to the day when portable players have advanced to the 400gb-1 terabyte storage level so that encoding in lossy formats like AAC, MP3, or WMA aren't necessary. Plain old wavs with their higher fidelity, boo-yah! One can dream, :-)

    Peace.
  • by mabu ( 178417 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:16PM (#9079046)
    but Old [slashdot.org] Slashdot Stories [slashdot.org] seem to never decay.
  • The real problem. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by MacFury ( 659201 ) <me@nOsPAM.johnkramlich.com> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:16PM (#9079049) Homepage
    I have no issue with CD longevity. CDs are extremely cheap now. Here's the big problem...data that comes on "anti-piracy" CDs; those pesky PC games that refuse to copy or the CD that can't be ripped.

    Sure, there are hacks and work arounds...but they aren't always readily available.

    For instance...I bought Battlefield 1942 and couldn't make a backup. My little sister destroyed the 2nd disc. Now I can't reinstall it. I couldn't make a backup because the original disc contained bit errors. When I contacted EA, they told me to go screw myself.

    • Wow! To save the price of sending you a second CD that is useless by itself (i.e. you couldn't sell it or anything), they refused to send you one, causing you to tell all of Slashdot how they screw their customers. Great marketing, EA!
  • Not the whole story (Score:3, Informative)

    by Black Art ( 3335 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @07:32PM (#9079140)
    Most of the problems of cd rot can be traced to the stickers used for labels, not the cds themselves.

    I have seen post-it-notes pull the foil off older cheap cd-rs.

    I saw one study a while back that showed that the biggest problem was the labels that people were putting on burned cdrs. They cause damage to the adhesive holding the foil to the media. It would not surprise me if it did.

    Commercial cds (including data cds) are a different story. I have some incredibly old cds going back to the 80s. They all work fine.

    DVDs tend to have a layer of plastic between the foil and the outside. (Probably just for this problem.) Of couse, that may just be the good brands...

    Much of this story is standard media scare/hype. ("If you don't listen to us YOUR DATA COULD DIE!") It is based on a real problem though.
    • DVDs tend to have a layer of plastic between the foil and the outside. (Probably just for this problem.)

      No, sorry: DVDs have a plastic layer between the foil and the outside because the DVD standard allows for double-sided disks: the foil (reflective) layer has to be in the same place on ALL disks, though, so your single-sided DVDs will have that extra layer of plastic to "fill out" the disk to the proper thickness.

  • Did anyone really think CDs were good for more than 5-10 years?

    Gotta love how CNN assumes that everyone is as dumb as their editors. Somehow I doubt anyone in the slashdot crowd hasn't known about the longevity problems in CDs for at least 5 years now. And yet this is suddenly "news"?

    • The problem is that we were led to believe so by the industry... Also who recalls the first ads where people scratched the CD's really bad with scissors(!) and how it would be still readable? (one of the tricks to diss vynil) CD's were the future, virtually undestructable, and that meme stuck. Very good advertising.

      result: *a lot* of people are still backing up important data on cd's, thinking it is safe, even musea. I'm doing a masters in Conservation/restoration of visual media, and try to specialise in
  • by Ferguson ( 598858 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @08:44PM (#9079645)
    ARRRGH!!! I cannot answer this (What CDR brand) in easy to understand layman language!!!

    Like most things, I too am an expert in this field (CD media)

    RiTEK or Taiyo Yuden or Mitsui are "semi acceptable"

    CDRs use frail ORAGANIC dye prone to steady erasure and destruction from heat, light, water, etc.

    All media sucks for long term archival except perhaps STAMPED glass platter cds using gold sputterred reflection. They are called "Century Discs" and you have never seen one, though they are special fabbed. They are inorganic. No plastic to "droop" no aluminum to oxidize slowly into powder over the decades. (Aluminum oxidizes in 2 millionths of one second when exposed to air but creates a semi-safe blanket of aluminum oxide a couple atoms thick and remains mostly reflective.) All cdrs are slowly rotting, but if kept cold could last a while and be readable in a "flat bed static CD scanner" in 2020 and later.

    Start of Side topic #1 ; inorganic home recordable +100 year archival media:

    I own "mostly inorganic" glass platter PDO media for archiving with a four and a half thousand dollar device I bought once. It's a Maxtor (Maxoptix) Tahiti-II and each blank cost over 100 dollars. But the data will last centuries under ANY HEAT and ANY atmosphere and ANY Radiation and ANY magnetism because it uses PLASMA STATE recording. A rare earth element is heated past liquid, past gas state, into PLASMA STATE by a ridiculously espensive high powered laser, and while in this state, a strong magnetic field orientates the crystals of the cooling rare earth metal into north-or south orientation. A simple low power read-only laser can use a polarizing filter to readily discern this data. It can do so centuries from now. The Library of Congress uses these 4 thousand dollar recorders, and the US military... and also myself for pleasure. Yup I stored porn on these Tahiti-II glass platter inorganic discs! Too bad the timing-tracking marks embedded in these crystal media 125 dollar platters was imprinted using a plastic marking substance instead of the official "acid etching using H2SO3F+" Magic acid.

    Only magic acid can eat a beaker or mark the inside timing marks of these special multi-century media... and Phillips Dupont CHEATED ME and fucking used PLASTIC which will rot away slowly over the next 75 years depriving our future generations of my porn collection. You can buy magic acid in special containers, or manufacture your own by mixing antimony pentafluoride (SbF55) and fluorosulphonic acid (HSO3F). It has an unbelievable pka of 20 and is powerful enough to protonate saturated alkanes forming carbonium ions... and etch glass without spending a lot of effort trying to use hyperboloid 5Kw lasers on clear glass.

    UI am definitely going off on a tangent and I was still talking about CD reflectivity, so I will continue...

    End of Side topic #1 ; inorganic home recordable +100 year archival media:

    I have visited pressing plants, sputtering plants, and even polycarb manufacturers for DVD and CDR, and taken a few 1,200 dollar a day seminars on laser head movement and design.

    Refectivity in a CD or CD-ROM is irrelevant. The laser usually uses a "Quarter wave" plate and the frequency of the laser is specially selected and this rotated light has a 90 degree polarity difference (differential phase) that makes reading possible at high speeds. This is less relevant in CDR but very important in stamped media. I discuss this at length for you below a second discussion in my Side topic #2 on : CD Reflectivity Layers (not needing any metal or even being transparently covered)

    Amusing Side NOTE : I am not just Mr Medical boy, Mr microbiology Man, Mr Lawyer, Mr Musician, Mr Trivia Buff, Etc... i am also Mr Computer expert and CD device consultant, and paid a couple times in my life to consult on CDR mechanism design.

    The best CDRs use a special dye invented by Mitsui Toatsu Corporation (MTC), but no longer true after 2000 unless you have old stockpil

  • Previous /. Stories (Score:3, Informative)

    by PetoskeyGuy ( 648788 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @09:47PM (#9080047)
    http://slashdot.org/articles/03/08/24/1253248.shtm l?tid=126&tid=137&tid=198

    http://slashdot.org/articles/04/04/22/1658251.sh tm l?tid=137&tid=198

    It's good to know these things eventually filter down to CNN.
  • by shark72 ( 702619 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @09:50PM (#9080073)

    "The near-immortality of CDs, sometimes used as an excuse by record companies as an argument for their high cost"

    I've never heard a record company state that a CD's near-immortality is a reason for its cost. Has anybody else? Can somebody provide a citation?

  • by j.leidner ( 642936 ) <leidner@[ ].org ['acm' in gap]> on Thursday May 06, 2004 @10:29PM (#9080306) Homepage Journal
    In 1995, I discussed CD rot with a university librarian, who complained to me about his library's data loss caused by CDs exhibiting oxidation of the aluminium layer. He mentioned the discs concerned were barely 15 years old.

    If you think about it, paper is relatively high tech in comparison: read/write, random access to pages, zero energy consumption, and it last at least 750 years (if it carries the little infinity symbol -- see International Standard [www.iso.ch] ISO/IEC 9706 (1994) Information and Documentation-Paper for Documents-Requirements for Permanence).

  • by crashnbur ( 127738 ) on Thursday May 06, 2004 @10:34PM (#9080336)
    Okay, so their lifespan isn't as interminable as the RIAA and MPAA would like us to believe. This isn't a new development. It's been known about for years, but (for obvious reasons) the mass-producers of these things aren't in a hurry to let us know that they'll only last a little bit longer than the average cassette, and only if you take extraordinarily good care of it every time you handle it for the rest of your (un?)natural life.

    A new development, in terms of spacetime and the existence of all things, are these copy-protecte discs that don't even allow us to secure our purchased goods with backup copies.

    Oh, and try this one on: last May my car was broken into, and several of my CDs were stolen. Lucky me, I backup most of my CDs. But I was recently approached by someone who was "concerned" about the fact that I have a 50-CD spindle of audio CDR's in my car -- naturally, the person is thinking piracy. And naturally, at least a few of the CDs are pirated copies -- but suppose none of them were: someone could quite plausibly be found guilty of music piracy to the tune of a couple thousand dollars just because their CDs are stolen. After all, if you don't own it, how can you prove that your copies are legit?

    I no longer remember the purpose of this, so I'll end on that note. Just food for thought.
  • Old CDs (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Nonillion ( 266505 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @12:13AM (#9080944)
    I have a Yes 90125 CD I bought in 1985 and it plays just fine. The only CD I have that has visible "pin holes" is Pink Floyd Ummagumma, but it also plays and rips fine. Way before I bought a computer I used to record my CDs onto video tape using my Sony HiFi VTR. I still have tapes I recorded 15 years ago that still play just fine and are so close to "CD quality" that you would have to know what artifacts to listen for to tell the difference.
  • by Mxyzptlk ( 138505 ) on Friday May 07, 2004 @05:40AM (#9082258) Homepage
    Check out CDs, DVDs Eyed For Long-Term Archival Use [slashdot.org], because a lot of this has already been covered...

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