New Laws Create Second-hand Woes for CD Retailers


This has to be a bad joke:

http://www.reuters.com/article/technologyNews/idUSN0448721120070505

NEW YORK (Billboard) - Independent merchants selling and buying used CDs across the United States say they are alarmed by stepped-up pawn-broker-related laws recently enacted in Florida and Utah and pending in Rhode Island and Wisconsin.

In Florida, the new legislation requires all stores buying second-hand merchandise for resale to apply for a permit and file security in the form of a $10,000 bond with the Department of Agriculture and Consumer Services. In addition, stores would be required to thumb-print customers selling used CDs, and acquire a copy of state-issued identity documents such as a driver's license. Furthermore, stores could issue only store credit -- not cash -- in exchange for traded CDs, and would be required to hold discs for 30 days before reselling them.
bday0000

Showing 1 response by chadnliz

Part of me understands this movement, while many honest folks dump un-wanted music it is crackheads and the like who are stealing music from cars and homes or dealers taking disc's in trade for drugs and selling them for quick cash.....just another sign of the times.