The Wikipedia link that glynor posted suggests this is a lousy piece of work by lousy people- but how will it affect my music collection or will the system restore do the trick?
I should note, I don't know for sure that this is your problem.
Sony pulled all of their CDs with the various incarnations of their terrible DRM (finally) in 2007. Retail stores (which responded to the recall) should have returned unsold inventory. So, if you bought it recently, and it wasn't a left-over from 2007, that's probably not the issue. Sony did also finally (not until late 2008, though) publish a list of all the affected discs. I'd read through the EFFs FAQ on the eventual legal settlement over the issue:
http://w2.eff.org/IP/DRM/Sony-BMG/settlement_faq.phpThere's also this, though this is older and from before Sony had "given up":
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2005/11/are-you-infected-sony-bmgs-rootkitThere are other possibilities. The CD could have been just bad. It is rare, but does happen. Or, your drive could be busted or bad. And, it also could have something to do with this:
Featuring Sonys DSD System
DSD isn't standard RedBook audio CD. That's a special kind of audio data:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Stream_DigitalTo read DSD, you need a SACD player, not a standard CD player. There aren't any of these available for PCs (and few enough set-top styles anymore, as the format was largely a failure), but I think there's a way to use a PlayStation or something to rip them to a PC. I don't know the details, but other people here do. Try searching for DSD on the forum.
The disc should be labeled a SACD if that is the case, though. The reference to DSD could just be some marketing about the mastering process.
So, I'm not sure. There are multiple possibilities.