An update to UK copyright law means that from June 1, 2014 it will no longer be illegal to make copies of CDs—or e-books or any other media—that you have bought for personal use.
According to current law, it is actually illegal to copy a CD for backup or to play the music on an MP3 player or mobile. It’s also illegal to format shift an e-book you’ve bought from one device to another. Under new exceptions to copyright law, first initiated by the 2011 Hargreaves Review, people will be no longer be committing a crime by format shifting copies of CDs, e-books, or films they have bought.
It will remain, however, illegal to make copies at home for friends and family. (So no passing on those ripped CDs, people!) If you want to give the CD to a loved one, you should make sure you delete any personal copies you have made from it, explains the Intellectual Property Office (IPO).
Intriguingly, the IPO says that if anti-copying technology (DRM) is too restrictive, consumers can raise a complaint with the Secretary of State. This has been part of the law for more than 25 years (in Section 296ZE of the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act 1988), but with the new exceptions, there may be more cause for complaint. If a user complains that they cannot benefit from the exception due to a “technological measure” (DRM), the Secretary of State is empowered to “give directions to copyright owners to enable the complainant to benefit from it”. That is to say, a movie studio may be forced to make it easier for individuals to copy their DVDs for personal use.
The IPO stresses that before the Secretary of State would take such action, it would first “seek to establish whether the parties have reached any voluntary agreements permitting the complainant to rely on the exception”. However, if alternative formats were already available on “reasonable commercial terms,” it would influence the Secretary of State’s decision.

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