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Police charge man was selling counterfeit CDs outside Mattapan hot-dog stand

Allegedly counterfeit CDs

Boston Police report seizing $40,000 in counterfeit CDs and music-bearing thumb drives from a man they say had set up a mobile store outside SImco's on Blue Hill Avenue Monday night - complete with a speaker playing samples of his wares.

Police say they'd been eyeing Derrick Albert's operations for awhile - in fact, they say he's been selling counterfeit music for some 14 years - and went up to 48-year-old Dorchester man around 11:50 p.m. to ask if he had a Boston peddler's license, a permit to set up shop on a public sidewalk and proof from the RIAA that he had permission to sell its artists' wares.

Albert could not produce any of the required paperwork. The detectives informed Albert of the city ordinances and MA laws regarding the sale of pirated CDs and the city ordinance regarding the playing of amplified sound on a public way after 11:00 PM. The detectives seized the pirated CDs, which were estimated at a value of approximately $40,000. Albert was summoned to court for charges related to the unauthorized reproduction and sale of sound recordings, as well as issued a City of Boston Ordinance Violation for Failure to Produce Hawkers/Peddlers License and Occupying a Public Sidewalk w/o a Permit.

Innocent, etc.

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Comments

People still buy CDs?

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If the price is right? Get a hotdog, buy a CD to blast for $1 on the way home? People send a $1 on dumber things after eating a hotdog.

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CDs were the biggest scam ever perpetrated upon the music buying public. (When there WAS a music buying public). During a severe music industry slump in the 80s the powers-that-be found a way to have Boomers re-buy music they already owned, and at the same time getting a rather apathetic Gen X (the youngsters of the day) to get excited about buying music the way the boomers had previously been. All kinds of lies were perpetrated about the "indestructibility" of CDs (what a laugh), and about how they had better sound than albums. What they had was cleaner sound than albums (no clicks and pops), but cleaner should not be confused with better.

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CDs would not have succeeded if not for walkmans. Those were the major justification for everyone buying CDs, when I bought CDs. Portability.

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I don't think I've ever come across someone who's both a Vinyl True Believer and a record industry-specific Tinfoil Hatter before.

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What a time to be alive.

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Is that you?

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All the time.

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thumb drive isn't working.

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...if you care

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That is reserved for Vinyl. Better sound quality.

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The better sound quality of CDs is an objective fact. You may prefer the sound of vinyl but CDs more accurately reproduce the sound contained therein. If you're talking about obnoxious mastering techniques, it's not the technology's fault, blame the people who put it out.

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CDs only approximate the sound that was laid down to tape (in the days of tape) by the musicians. There is a lot of missing information like subtle shades and nuances. It's like a photocopy of a masterful painting. Analog vinyl LPs reproduce the true sound.

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Dragging a needle across vinyl that was pressed from a plated lathed lacquer cannot produce a more accurate representation of what was put to tape than CD. Not to mention the fact that it's been decades since any major company preserved a fully analog chain from recording to pressing, there is always ADC somewhere in the creation of vinyl.

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What is this, 1990?

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Hopefully after all of this is resolved Mr. Albert will change his tune and go legit.

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But he's 2 Legit 2 Quit

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CD's uh can't speak much about.. except mine were ripped and put into binders years ago and long put into my basement.

but you've never been to my house, have you? :-)

(I hate wifi and have ethernet pulled thru my entire home)

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For security reasons or what?

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Even the best Wifi networks don't hold a candle to normal ethernet. Everything which doesn't move gets a cable. So much more dependable and easier to troubleshoot.

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What BostonDog said.

I still have wifi, but it's just horrible in my home. Thanks to horse hair plaster, and far too many wireless networks within range fighting for channels. (And yes even the 5ghz band is just over saturated now)

I just use Ethernet because its just more reliable and generally a constant speed.

Some day I will convince my condo association to put in a business Comcast connection and I'll put 3 Access Points on each floor, mesh them all together, and have one big building-wide wifi (which would be included with our condo fees). This would solve many of the wifi connection problems I have since it would be everywhere in our building, the same network, and probably out-blast anyone nearby. (plus I'd use business-grade AP's that have "Air Traffic" controllers built in)

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Ethernet is certainly still important, especially for servers that need a fixed IP address. But thanks to advances in WiFi, it's no longer the necessity it used to be.

Years ago, there was a push to install lots of Ethernet, especially in public buildings. Today, much of it is abandoned.

The four unused Ethernet jacks and pair of analog telephone jacks seemed to fit right in with the table of CDs, as examples of technology whose time has passed.

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Kinda. I wouldn't exactly call it "abandoned' or "time has passed". Un-used is a better term. Just because you aren't clamoring to use it in your home anymore or used in public spaces for the general public to plug into (i.e. cafe's, libraries, etc) doesn't mean its time has passed. It's still very much used in offices and business applications still.

You obviously never built out an office nor understand network topology. I've done several in recent years. I'm going to assume this picture was done at a PD station, so the building is several years old, which would explain some of it. But generally you put in as many Ethernet drops in as possible when doing new construction in offices, yes even in today's office construction, even if you have no immediate plans on using them. Its always best practice to have more than you need than to add more later, and do to do as many as your budget allows you to to do.

The reasoning is.. first off, it's expensive to to do post-closeup of the walls or as a "one off" later on. But more because offices change functions. Small conference rooms become someone's office, offices become storage rooms, you double up on offices (2 or more computers per office), OR you add/remove walls, and just move outlets somewhere else (which happens more than you think)... so you overbuild for the future. And if you use Cat 6 wiring, you've future proof'd yourself for the next 10-15 or so years (if not longer). All you have to do is replace the hardware on one end (the Ethernet switches) and you can upgrade your network to Gig speeds and beyond. Having more Ethernet outlets than you need just insures you'll have an outlet on the other end when you need it.

And then of course topology reasons. You want to have as many "home run" ports back to your wiring closet (or server room) as many as possible? Why? You want to avoid .. what I call.. "the switch menagerie" which is switches hanging off switches hanging off switches.. all daisy chained together. It's generally not good network topology. You *always* want your ethernet ports to run back to a home location to a core switch. It's just better design, and makes for easier management. So you often put in more ports than you need, even if you never use them, so you can avoid the "switch menagerie".

And then there's a security aspect of this. Typically wireless networks are considered "dirty" and "insecure". Sure you can secure them up with 802.x and encryption as much as possible, but generally you put wireless networks on their own LAN and limit what they can access, since they are your biggest security threat on your network. Ethernet, not so much. Its easy to turn ports on and off on the core switch to limit who has access. (or simply unplug the patch cable on the other end).

As far as telephone wires. You'd be surprised how many offices still use POTS lines or have "digital" phone systems, and haven't migrated to VoIP phone systems yet. Especially older, larger companies, that build out new offices. They still want to add their new offices to their old phone systems.

BUT I'm seeing running actual dedicated cat 3 less and less (such as in this picture) less and less. Last 2 build outs we didn't run any at all. Most now just use Cat 5e (or Cat 6) wiring and just change out the faceplate plugs from RJ45 to RJ11. Or even better, you just plug a R11 into a R45. The pin-outs will match, as long as its a R11 on both sides. It just won't look pretty.

Its not "time has passed" by any means. And don't forget, all those handy dandy wireless access points you connect to, have to connect to something to work. They connect to ethernet!

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14 years in business and the police finally step in at 11:45 pm, wow what great work. I wish I was that lucky, my operations would be shut in 3 days, I don't bad luck I guess.

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I would take you a little more seriously, if you knew how to read and write.

If you're going to insult the police, proofread.

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The police are getting ready to crack down on that counterfeit laserdisc guy.

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Hey it's better than armed robbery or worse. He could've been more coy with his "hustle" but I'll take that over what's been going on and not reported! Let's focus our resources on real crime bpd. Thanks in advance

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Now that they have charged this gentleman after 14 years of service to the late night hot dog community will they take on Big City FM the pirate radio station that operates across from Franklin Park on Blue Hill Ave.

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That's the FCC's job.

Why do you want the radio station shut down? If it's not causing problems for any other stations or users of the radio spectrum, I think it's fine to let local people broadcast to anyone who wants to listen.

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After 14 years of watching this man making a living off selling cd's y'all finally decide to arrest him. Let the man live he could've been selling crack for 14 years instead.

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I don't think this is the best use of limited police resources....

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I buy CDs all the time. 30-50 a year. A rip them and listen to them on my computer. Over 1100 albums, ripped, carefully cataloged, and stored in boxes in my closets.

I don't want Spotify. I don't want the radio. I want my collection of music.

The CDs I buy: used. I try to pay $1/each, but if I'm buying them online will pay up to $4-$5 with shipping. Right now I'm looking to increase my collection of:
* 60s & 70s rock, especially protest rock
* 80s & 90s hip hop
* new jack swing
* third wave ska
* zydeco
* blues, especially Chicago and delta
* 60s, 70s, even 80s R&B
* modern folk and not-quite-country
* female singers who play rock/country/bluesy sounds

Are you a regular on uhub and live in Cambridge, Brookline, or western parts of Boston? Me too, despite my anonymous handle! Got some of these you'd like to sell? Let me know... I'm happy to buy 10s of CDs at a time to make it worth your while and to get them out of your house! Note: must include jewel case and album art and CD must be original, not a rip.

Adam: think of this as community building, not a classified ad. Please?

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Anybody got a stack of used CDs for sale that match any of the above categories?

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Your post is a great example of why this is a victimless crime and this person should have been told to turn down and let alone. People are no longer willing to pay tens of dollars to own a compact disc. You will pay a dollar plus shipping for a complete original CD, which might be one tenth or one twentieth of the original price. Columbia House prices, but you are out on your own.

The fact that this guy still has kept his business at all is kind of incredible. Anybody else in brick and mortar selling a lot of CDs these days? Who knows what he was carrying? What is 40 grand in CDs these days anyhow? Shame to shut it down.

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Pinching the 'hood bootlegger instead of solving the countless unsolved murders in the city ....Smh, priorities

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Seems like that would be more than enough to have both a specialized homicide unit and officers who respond to "quality of life" (in this case, blaring a loudspeaker at 11:50 p.m. on a weeknight) issues.

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The piracy complaint should be strictly a civil court issue between the record companies (or other rights holders) and this vendor. There is no reason for police to spend any resources on this, as it does not affect public safety. The only valid claim is that he's violating the noise ordinance after 11 pm.

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You're saying it's legal to set up shop with counterfeit goods on the sidewalks of our city? Or you're encouraging police to use selective enforcement in these cases where time and budgets constrain them?

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Plus, copyright infringement should be a matter for civil courts, not for the police.

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If I wait until you go out and then break in and take your belongings, there's no public safety issue so you won't call the cops, right?

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