I pit copy protected CDs that lack incompatibility warnings

I don’t think your links acurately reflect “the mentality of these people”. Here are two more articles about dismissing the lawsuit:
First
second

My impression from these articles is that the CEO saw his company’s stock drop 10 million dollars, emotionaly lashed out at the catalyst, and then upon reflection, decided that was the wrong thing to do.

I have no love for the music business, but I have no beef with technology companies that license their products to the music business. Frankly, I thought that Jacobs’ comments were amazingly candid for a CEO.

As to the OP, I agree that a warning label: “this CD won’t work with an iPod” is a reasonable expectation given the market share that iPod has.

Well, if you’ve got another CD player, ripping the disk to the hard drive is a piece of cake.

Hang on, you’re in New York! If you feel like swinging by my place some afternoon, I’ll do it for you-- and give you a properly formatted audio CD.

AnyDVD can unlock protected Audio CDs and DVDs on the fly.