Originally posted by hafod
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CD-R vs. commercial CD: That's an entirely different story: commercial CDs are pressed, not "burned", i.e., the bits are engraved into the layer of aluminum — the worst that can normally happen there is that you scratch it (and even such scratches can often be repaired); I have seen occasional bad CDs — but those were bad right from production (like: one CD had an incomplete aluminum layer) — if kept well, they will take *much* longer to go bad. With CD-Rs you are not burning holes into the aluminum layer, but a laser beam is heating a tiny volume in the data layer, causing it to change its optical properties (and in the case of CD-RW or DVD-RAM that process is even reversible) — that process itself is much more fragile, and so is the stored information.
Correction: with CDs (as with CD-R etc.) the engraving is in the (transparent) polycarbonate layer, not in the reflective aluminum — but it is still pressed, not "burned", so I believe the rest of my statement above is still largely correct (ignoring the bronzing issue).
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