11-30-2006, 04:43 AM
In most divorce cases, personal items in the possession of the person are not really fought about. I would guess most people would grab their ipod when they went out the door. Although we have beaver law related cases in Vermont, I haven't seen any ipod related cases, yet.
The much more difficult question legally and technically is what to do with DRM restricted music on the ipod. If you get the ipod without the computer, you can't sync it and you lose all those tunes, right? The low tech way is for one party to get a copy burned to cd, but actually splitting the protected audio (or now video) files would give me a headache.
The much more difficult question legally and technically is what to do with DRM restricted music on the ipod. If you get the ipod without the computer, you can't sync it and you lose all those tunes, right? The low tech way is for one party to get a copy burned to cd, but actually splitting the protected audio (or now video) files would give me a headache.