A program called "Power2Go" can be easily used to burn password protected cd's. It is an all in one media recorder. You will never need another program for burning cd/dvd.
Purchase it and follow the instructions to burn a secured data disc.
Burn a Secured Data DiscThe Secured Data Disc option allows you to burn password-protected data files to a CD-R/RW, DVD-R/RW, DVD+R/RW, DVD-RAM, Blu-ray, or HD DVD disc. You can also burn secured data disc with file name encryption. Users will not be able to see the encrypted file names without the password. Data files can include images and any other document files.Note: You cannot burn a secured data disc in Power2Go Express Mode.
Note: Bootable data discs are not available for secured data burning.
Burn a Data Disc in Power2Go ModeTo burn a data disc in Power2Go mode, do this:
Note: LabelPrint is an optional feature for Power2Go. In your version of Power2Go, this feature may be limited or unavailable.
Disc burned with Power2Go's secured data burning technology comes with a CyberLink Security Browser so that users can view the content of the disc.
Note: After you have inserted a secured data disc into the disc drive, the Security Browser will be automatically launched and prompts you for the password.If the Security Browser does not automatically launch when you insert a secured data disc into the disc drive, please navigate to your disc drive and double-click SecurityBrowser.exe to launch the Security Browser manually.
Firstly, 'copyright' is the ownership of intellectual property. It has nothing to do with physical copy protection. Your DVDs or CDs are copyrighted to you inherently, the moment you create them, and when you created the content too. No software is needed to copyright anything.
Secondly, there is indeed software that can burn DVDs or CDs in such a way that creating an unauthorised copy will be more difficult - typically, they don't 'prevent' a copy being made, they just use certain tricks to make sure that the copy is unusable. But to be honest, it's only really making it difficult for yourself.
Is the DVD/CD made to be played in a DVD or CD player? If your version uses specific software tricks, it may actually cause playback problems when played on those devices. Or on the other hand, those tricks mentioned above might stop the copy working on a PC, but less sophisticated devices like a DVD player might play it anyway.
The most secure way is to have the DVD/CD install a rootkit onto the PC, as a form of digital rights management. Sony tried this in 2005, and suffered a lot of negative publicity and legal action because of it. Malware producers were able to distribute malware that used the rootkit's own protection, to protect itself and make it almost impossible to remove. Sony was told by the courts that it did not own the customer's systems and should not have secretly made them vulnerable in that way.
With all that considered, there's also people who no matter what you do, will still find a way around it, and for all those reasons above, it is rare to find CDs or DVDs that have any solid copy protection anymore.
CD's are not write 'protected', it is simply the nature of how they work. The data is either stamped into an internal layer (CD-ROM) or burned into a dye later (CD-R) and there's no way to undo this and return it to its original state.
Press the undo button on the side of your computer
i just can tell if it was album or a burnable CD
Yes, if it is not write protected and has the required amount of space.
Most CDs are "write-protected" when data has been written to them and are not rewritable, or are factory pressed. You cannot write over these as it is physically impossible. no, but you can get a pen and write "format" on the disk and THEN it will be physically possible to write on it :P
its impossible once rote , rote 4ever Is the CD a CD-R or CD+R? If so, you cannot reformat it. Once the disk is finalized, it becomes "read only" and there is no way to reformat because it is a "write once" disk. Is the CD a CD-RW or CD+RW? If so, you can reformat it.
The CD must be pressed from a negative rather than "burned" by laser.
Simply burn a CD of the files and then reimport them to your computer as an Mp3 or other supported file.
No, CD Drives and CD Burners are two different types of optical drives on personal computers that perform different functions regarding compact disk media. CD Burners are optical drives can write data on a burnable disk. CDs are comprised of thin layers of dots computers use to burn information on. CD Burners are equipped with a special laser that burns binary code onto the CD's surface. CD Burners can both read and write CD disks. CD Drives are not equipped with that special burning device, and have only a laser that can read the information stored on a disk. They can only read CD disks.
Yes it is
also How do you know if a CD is protected or not?
It depends on the compression used. Usually normal 1,5 or 2 hour movies are compressed to 700Mb to fit on a burnable CD.
what CD that allows you to read and write