No way. Completely impossible. That would be ridiculous. If you want a real CD buy it at the store.
What did you burn on it? Music that someone else holds the copyright on? In that case, no, it is not legal. You are distributing the works of an artist without their permission. And you are making money with it. Printed works and pictures, same thing.
i burned the CD
The most obvious reason is because you burned the CD incorrectly.
Yes, as CD-R's can just be burned once, while CD-RW's can be burned multiple times. They are he same thing.
We Are Selling This CD for Gas Money was created in 2005.
A burned CD into a blank disc by erasing it using a CD-RW drive and the appropriate software. This only applies to rewritable CDs.
Compact Discs which have been made in a CD burner have the information stored on them differently than a standard CD, and many disc players cannot read the format of burned CD's.
A CD has a certain amount of memory and is blank until something is loaded or burned on it. When a program or file is burned on the CD, the CD no longer acts as a memory space but as a readable file. Every time that disc gets put in another computer, it will be read for the file that was burned on it.
I really don't think it is. Maybe if you're only givingit away, and not selling it. Like if you burn a few of your friends fave songs on a CD, and give it to her for her birthday. I'm pretty sure it's legal.
Assuming it's a CD-RW, you should just be able to open it and delete the files. If it's a CD-R or a CD-ROM, data burned on these can't be deleted.
It depends on the CD's format, how it was burned, and whether the session is still open or not. If it is a CD-RW(Read/Write) you can erase these and re-write data on them. If you are trying to erase a store bought CD or a CD-R or CD+R you are out of luck, once these are burned they are done.
i burned a CD using windows media player, but can't play it on another player