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Universal Music Group's New Music Sharing Service

Reader darnellmc writes with this review: "I have been waiting for a service where I could download and burn popular music for a reasonable price. I know even $9.99 a CD or 99 cents a track is still price gouging given the record industry's cost to allow me to download music, but I can live with that. So I gave UMG's new music downloading service a try and wanted to share my experience, since it may help others." Read on for the rest of darnellmc's description of the UMG system's pros and cons. Hint: if you don't have IE handy, you might not find this service very friendly.

First I had to decide which reseller of UMG music to use and decided on Liquid Audio's On-Line store. One reason I picked this service is because they are the technology backers of this venture, so who better? I'm really glad I picked them, and you will see why after you read about the issues I faced.

Of course, there were plenty of music choices to pick from and it was pretty easy to find artists I was looking for. I first noticed that not every track is 99 cents. Some are higher -- it seems that the less popular stuff cost a little more. Some singles cost $1.49, but I found one free track on this CD.

After finding a CD I wanted, I purchased and downloaded the tracks individually and as one large download, since they provide both options. After downloading the files I could not get any of them to play. For some time this confused me, then I tried clicking on a link provided in an e-mail that was sent to me to confirm my order. Well, they did not tell me this on the website, but clicking that link authenticated me to listen to the tracks. This was a bit frustrating, but survivable. Also, I found you can only go through the process of purchasing and downloading with IE. I use Mozilla by default and was not able to purchase with that browser. You also need to use IE to open the URL in the e-mail that authenticate your tracks.

Once done with that I attempted to burn tracks to a CD. I was using a machine with Windows 2000 SP3 and Windows Media Player 9 (current release candidate for Win2K). Whenever I'd try to burn a track, the Roxio software would die. So I gave up on Media Player 9 and downloaded Liquid Audio's Player (v 6.1). When trying to burn with this player it could not initialize my HP DVD writer (model dvd200i) and for some reason was calling it a 200j instead. I also tried downgrading to Windows Media Player 7.1, but that did not work either. The burning software did not even know my DVD Burner was there. I also tried Real's RealOne player, but it can not burn WMA files.

So I gave up and contacted Liquid Audio's Customer Service. They informed me (via e-mail exchanges) that their software could not recognize my DVD Burner and I would only be able to burn using a CD Burner, not a DVD/CD Burner. I was offered a refund, but I did not want that. I've got a CD Burner, but on another PC. So I thought I'd be able to move the files and burn there. I came to find out find out that I can move files to listen to them on another PC, but they can't be burned on a PC other than the one to which they were first downloaded. So Liquid Audio sent me another link to download tracks with after hearing I had to go to another PC. Then I was able to download and burn tracks with no problem.

You can play the tracks as much as you like on your PC, burn to CD as many tracks as you want, copy the burned CDs, and use the CD to make MP3s. Keep in mind there is supposed to be some form of digital watermarking on the tracks though. So if you give the music to anyone else, they (UMG) are supposed to be able to know it was you who violated their copyright.

So overall it was pretty frustrating making my first CD with this service, but I'll probably be using it again in the future. Like Tuesday, when some new music comes out. I have been boycotting UMG for almost a year, since when I heard they would copy-protect CDs. With this service I have officially ended my boycott.

Pros:

  • Easy to download and burn a CD if you have Windows, IE and a CD Burner (not a DVD Burner).
  • Easy to find tracks from UMG artists that are well known.
  • Good customer service. They really helped as much as they could given the software limitations and offered a refund even though I would have been able to keep playing the tracks on my PC.
  • No need to go to the store in the Winter!

Cons:

  • No player seems to be able to burn using a DVD burner.
  • Tracks are not authenticated till you click a link in an e-mail sent to you.
  • Unable to use the service to purchase tracks using Mozilla.
  • No small intro type tracks available, even when you buy a full CD of tracks.

Slashdot welcomes reader-submitted features and reviews -- thanks to darnellmc for this review.

415 comments

  1. Liquid Audio by SealBeater · · Score: 5, Informative

    From the article, First I had to decide which reseller of UMG music to use and decided on Liquid Audio's On-Line store.

    In other news, Liquid Audio's CEO resigned. Here's the link

    SealBeater

    --
    -- Its survival of the fittest...and we got the fucking guns!!!
    1. Re:Liquid Audio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Is there a mac version? I don't want to use that WiMP trash...

    2. Re:Liquid Audio by eht · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      yeah, windows media player is so bad, compared to mac's oh wait, you use quicktime, anything is better than that, even nothing is better than quicktime, how was the parent "insightful"

    3. Re:Liquid Audio by Guspaz · · Score: 2

      Microsoft has a version of WMP for Mac.

      Get the latest copy for OSX here, or if you don't have OSX, get a copy of WMP 7.1 for Mac OS here

      I know it's still WMP, and it'd be great if you could use some other software, but at least this way you can still listen to the content until another solution is available.

    4. Re:Liquid Audio by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's see: Quicktime plays almost everything and doesn't support DRM. Windows Media Player supports DRM great, and doesn't want you to make high-bitrate MP3s. Do you understand now why he doesn't want to use WMP?

    5. Re:Liquid Audio by Guspaz · · Score: 2

      I'm not sure if the Mac version of WinAmp plays WMA files, but the windows version does, so it's worth a shot. Get it here.

    6. Re:Liquid Audio by eht · · Score: 1

      no, not really, you want your rights as a software professional respected, why shouldn't music artists be accorded the same rights, not the riaa, but music artists, and quicktime is a nigthmare, breaking all of apples own rules about gui design, why would he want to make high bitrate mp3's? mp3 sucks and is proprietary, your argument is pretty much baseless, i want drm, i'll never use it, but i want it

    7. Re:Liquid Audio by Quantuminium · · Score: 1

      The interface on Quicktime is truly awful. Media player isn't great, especially since they started with the skinning, but at least you can easily watch videos full screen. Trying to watch trailers from apple.com in a pokey little window that won't scale is rubbish. Why can't I have a full-screen mode damnit.

    8. Re:Liquid Audio by mallie_mcg · · Score: 1

      The interface on Quicktime is truly awful. Media player isn't great, especially since they started with the skinning, but at least you can easily watch videos full screen. Trying to watch trailers from apple.com in a pokey little window that won't scale is rubbish. Why can't I have a full-screen mode damnit.

      Unless I am very much mistaken (which may be the case), i believe that you can get this with the full registered version of quicktime. Not free, and a pain the the butt, but at least it is an available option. This is about the only reason in my opinion to register quicktime.

      --


      Do the following really mean anything? SCSA MCP CCSA CCNA
      --I'm not actually after an answer!
  2. IUMA by dirvish · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Doesn't sound too bad, but I think I will stick with IUMA. I would rather support independents than coorporate whor....errr, I mean popular artists.

    1. Re:IUMA by binaryDigit · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How about simply supporting those whose music you enjoy?

    2. Re:IUMA by doofusclam · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Damn right! IUMA is a fine service but pretty irrelevant in the great scheme of things - What most people want is major music, downloadable in a form of their choice, cheaply, online. IUMA is not that service. Universals service is nearer to this goal, but not quite - when they offer lossless encoding (monkeys, flac, whatever) cheaply and compatible with any platform then I will *definitely* subscribe to this service.

      *Most* people want a service that is better than p2p. Universal are nearer this than IUMA but they need encouragement, not flaming, to offer us this.

    3. Re:IUMA by Com2Kid · · Score: 3, Insightful
      • How about simply supporting those whose music you enjoy?


      Because sometimes long term objectives are more important then short term pleasures.

      Hell, by your reasoning, why boycott ANY product if the product is enjoyed? Sometimes it is more then just the product, but how the product is made or where the money used to purchase the product goes.
    4. Re:IUMA by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      My long term objective is to listen to what I like. I habitually end up buying about a cd every month or so, due to the fact that if I end up finding a band I really like (Our Lady Peace was one such band), I'll buy their whole set of releases. And then continually listen to it for months on end....

      I will buy anything I damn well please, and you can't stop that. Not even with your politics. If it wasn't selling, it wouldn't be priced that high. So deal, and get a better job to pay for it if that's what you want to buy.

    5. Re:IUMA by msimm · · Score: 1

      Did you mean the artists or the production company?

      --
      Quack, quack.
    6. Re:IUMA by Quantuminium · · Score: 1

      "Sometimes it is more then just the product, but how the product is made or where the money used to purchase the product goes." Last time I looked the record companies weren't funding arms deal to Iraq or manufacturing CDs in third world sweatshops so I can't see any political reason not to buy CDs from corporate whores. You might not like the prices they charge, but I haven't noticed the small time artists and record companies charging any less for their CDs so that pretty much kills that argument too. So buy the music you like and save your protests for something that matters.

    7. Re:IUMA by Peterus7 · · Score: 1

      My entire philosophy is buy music from the artists who are poor/underground and well priced. But the popular stuff, why pay for it? I'd rather download it with WinMX. They make enough money as it is, and plus, if I like the music, I'll buy the cd. But why pay for stuff that you can just get for free? (I know I am seriously going to hell for saying this. I figure the next advertising campaign by the record companies will be "If you download music for free you are going to HELL!" (I could see it happen... That, or them establishing a SS...)

    8. Re:IUMA by Dylbert · · Score: 1

      Yes, for example, a shoe by Nike might be the most comfortable fit of all shoes of that type, but does that justify how the shoe was made (for example, in a sweat shop)?

      --
      I swear, if I see another Slashdot comment with "It will be interesting to see"...
    9. Re:IUMA by That_Dan_Guy · · Score: 1

      My main problem with Music sharing services is that they discourage users from going out and finding good music. There is a ton of it out there, and IUMA was the first to make it widely available. But with software like Napster, and now these pay services, why bother looking for new, inovative and different stuff when you can listen to the same old stuff?

    10. Re:IUMA by Com2Kid · · Score: 1
      • Last time I looked the record companies weren't funding arms deal to Iraq or manufacturing CDs in third world sweatshops so I can't see any political reason not to buy CDs from corporate whores.


      Let me paste a portion of that again. . .

      • I can't see any political reason not to buy CDs from corporate whores.


      oooh ooh ooh *raises hand* I know I know I know!!!

      BECAUSE THEY ARE BLEEMING CORPORATE WHORES WITH HUGE POLITICAL INTERESTS / PAYOFFS.

      Any company that is going to use MY money to pay of legislators to pass laws to take away MY rights can go fuck THEMselves.

      I have better things to do then pay the wages of the fools working against me, thank you so very much.

      You might not like the prices they charge, but I haven't noticed the small time artists and record companies charging any less for their CDs so that pretty much kills that argument too.


      Umm, depends. When MP3.com was independently owned, they where /dirt/ cheap. Often times independent artists are paying far more for their own recording studio and such, not to mention they do not have outside endorsements going on. (when was the last time you say your favorite indie band and Pepsi join together?)

      If you do not like going through a reseller, you can typically buy the CDs directly from the band for a much cheaper price.

      Then again most of the stuff I listen to is Classical/Celtic any ways, so it tends to be dirt cheap. :)
    11. Re:IUMA by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      In this case I was referring to the artist. The original posters comment was:

      I would rather support independents than coorporate whor....errr, I mean popular artists.

  3. Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Insightful

    One thing you don't mention is whether the files are compressed? If they are compressed using lossy encoding, like mp3, that would reduce its appeal to me, since I prefer my 44.1kHz pcm audio. I'd resent paying for inferior quality data, but that's just me. Oh, and since I don't have Windows or a Mac I can't use IE anyway, so it's all academic.

    1. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Kentamanos · · Score: 2, Informative

      I would have to assume it's a lossy compression. It sounds like it was a WMA file.

      Someone correct me if I'm wrong, but I don't think a lossless compression exists that will make the file size small enough for "most" people to download. That is to say make the audio about one tenth the size of the raw audio.

    2. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dude, I have broadband. I am used to downloading CD images (up to 700MB of data) e.g. things like KNOPPIX, Mandrake, Slackware etc. It's all the same stuff, 0s and 1s. It wouldn't take any longer to download 650MB of audio that 650MB of Linux distro. And another thing, you can get lossless audio compressors like FLAC which can give you up to 50% compression without losing a single bit of information. Go back under your bridge.

    3. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Kentamanos · · Score: 1

      Even at 50%, you're still talking about 5MB per minute, which is too big for "mainstream" users. God help them if they wanted to download that 2112 track or something ;).

      Of course I'm in the same boat as you. I downloaded 3 linux distros last week...

    4. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yeah...have fun downloading the uncompress pcm format...idiot

      Gotta love it. For you non-idiots out there, you may want to consider the concept of lossless compression. It does exist, and I use it quite often to trade music. There is SHN and FLAC, along with a few less portable formats.

      Large files still (roughly 50% compressed), but I often d/l SHN files by FTP. What do I care if it takes 8 minutes or 8 hours when I'm asleep?

    5. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There are compressors that don't lose any information. You just might have to uncompress it after downloading it to actually *play* the file.

    6. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Chandon+Seldon · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I fail to see what's idiotic about downloading uncompressed audio. A single song is what, 30 meg?
      On any decent speed DSL line, that will take about 5 minutes, 20 seconds - a perfectly reasonable time to wait for an Actually-CD-Quality audio track.

      --
      -- The act of censorship is always worse than whatever is being censored. Always.
    7. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      It sounds like it was a WMA file

      Yes, since he actually mentioned .wma in the article, Im guessing that's what they are too. I'm uch rather if they were .ogg, .mp3, or .wav, but since there's no linux support anyways... Oh well.

    8. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by sporty · · Score: 5, Insightful

      How much cost in bandwidth, monetary, will that be again?

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    9. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by scalveg · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Liquid's technology is just an envelope that can securely transfer any kind of file. There are even a few non-music files in the system for various specific purposes.

      The audio compression types that I was aware of while I was there were mostly Dolby AAC with a handful of MP3s. They were working on WMA when I left the company, so I wouldn't be surprised if a lot of the current library is in that format.

      Chris Owens
      San Carlos, CA

    10. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      I fail to see what's idiotic about downloading uncompressed audio.

      Yes, but you also fail to see what's idiotic about quoting yourself (with a very, very derivative quote) in your sig line, so I wouldn't much want to follow your advice.

    11. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      "I downloaded 3 linux distros last week..."

      Did the third one finally work?

    12. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by ShavenYak · · Score: 2

      I dunno about the original poster, but:

      My service is $35/month for 1.5Mbps downstream. I can thus download a full 680MB CD in an hour (if the sending end can handle it). There are 720 hours in a month (based on an average month, some restrictions apply, offer not valid in February), thus the bandwidth cost per CD is $0.05. Of course, that's a bit academic since I'm paying the nickel this hour whether I download a CD or not.

      --

      Hey kids, there's only 5 days left 'til Yak Shaving Day!
    13. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by eht · · Score: 1

      why uncompressed, use monkey's audio or a similar lossless codec, there are quite a number out there and do a pretty good job

    14. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Czernobog · · Score: 1

      I seem to remember a version of IE for Unix.
      I can't find the link now, but I am certain I had encountered IE's for Unix page on MS's site..
      Has anyone seen what I'm talking about?

      --
      /. Where the truth
    15. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by tom420.com · · Score: 1
      The concern here is not the amount of time it takes to download the CD, it's the amount of data tranfered. I am not sure if everyone else has unlimited bandwidth, but here in Québec (you know, the French population in North-East America?) we have merely two choices for high speed connections:
      • Vidéotron is a cable provider with a monthly data transfer limit of 6 GB
      • Sympatico is a DSL provider with a monthly data transfer quota of 5 GB
      Given this limit, I don't see myself bying 10 CDs a month, it would cost me much more in extra data transfer than simply go to the store and buy the CD in it's physical format.
    16. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by tom420.com · · Score: 1
      Unless you have a studio-grade sound system, I don't see what's wrong with compressed MP3 files.

      I have a SoundBlaster Live Value sound card and a Cambridge SoundWorks speaker set. MP3s at 44.1KHz and 128 kbps sounds the same than the original 1.4 mpbs CD quality.

    17. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Jhan · · Score: 2

      How much cost in bandwidth, monetary, will that be again?

      Oh... Well... (Scrambles to use calculator)... That would be about $0, since I pay a flat rate for my broadband and have plenty of free download bandwidth.

      However, I guess you want a calculation based on bytes per month and dollars per month. Well, a non-compressed CD is about 10MB per minute. Lets say the song is about three minutes, 30MB.

      I pay about $25 per month for my 2.5Mb=312.5kB ADSL. 3,125e5 bytes per second is 2.7e10 bytes per day, or about 8.1e11 bytes per month (811 GB per month). So that's a grand total of $25*3e7/8.1e11, or... 0.1 cent.

      Oh, JESUS ON-A-POGO-STICK CHRIST!!! I never realized it was that much!!! </sarcasm> I do realize that my providers are overselling bandwidth by a large amount. Suppose the factor is 1000. Then my download actually cost 10 cents. Oh, JESUS FISTING MARY! 10 cents! The sky is falling!

      PS. HIBT?

      --

      I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

    18. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by sporty · · Score: 3

      I mean the prover of the audio. They charge you 9 bux for a cd, 660 or so megs for a full cd, assuming. That's a lot of data for the provider to pump through...

      --

      -
      ping -f 255.255.255.255 # if only

    19. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Grayputer · · Score: 1

      South of the border (NH, USA) I have unlimited data transfer on my cable modem. Of course, that assumes it stays up :-). If fact most broadband connections I know of in the US (Maine, New Hampshire, and Colorado) have unlimited byte counts.

    20. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Eraser_ · · Score: 1

      The other thing that no one mentioned, was is there a Winamp Plug-In? But wow, liquid audio survives? I remember downloading their player when it first came out years and years ago.

    21. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by IWX222 · · Score: 1

      The other side of the pond (UK), i have 517kbps bitrate broadband with unlimited data transfer for £30 (about $40) per month. Well, I say unlimited, when I 'phoned tech support the other week about a logon problem, they were a bit concerned with the fact that I pushed 30Gb a month down my line, buy hey. Dude, you need to move over here - no laws regarding encryption, unlimited bandwidth, fit women..... just out of interest, how do we compare on price?

      --


      .sig me!
    22. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by IWX222 · · Score: 1

      honestly, I don't notice the difference on my SB PCI64...

      --


      .sig me!
    23. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by jazman_777 · · Score: 1
      Unless you have a studio-grade sound system, I don't see what's wrong with compressed MP3 files.

      And in a few years, all those loud concerts will mean 96 Kbps will start sounding pretty good, too.

      --
      Slashdot: Failed Car Analogies. Amateur Lawyering. Anecdote Battles.
    24. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by antiher0 · · Score: 1

      Actually, WM9 contains a mathematically lossless encoding scheme. See notes here.

    25. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...no laws regarding encryption..."

      RIP is law. EUCD (DMCA or worse) is coming in March.

    26. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell, ever heard of zip? that'll take space out of uncompressed audio files loseless even if it's not optimized for the form of data. why would you ever xmit non compressed, non encrypted data? lazy people making the whole world insecure and wasting bandwidth... it doesn't grow on trees you know!

    27. Re:Lossy or Lossless Encoding by ViperDC · · Score: 1

      There are plenty of other DSL providers in Quebec, I myself use SecureNet mainly because they have no download limit. Just pick up a copy of The Computer Paper or Quebec Micro and you'll find tons of ads for xDSL service. If you think there are only two providers, then you're not looking hard enough.

  4. Thanks for the review by mcg1969 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Even if this isn't everything we might want in a downloadable music service, I think that supporting this service will help convince UMG and other companies of the effectiveness of this business model. This is a step in the right direction...

    1. Re:Thanks for the review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I think that supporting this service will encourage the continuing price fixing and gouging for music. The middlemen have made so much money off artists & consumers and I am hoping that the digital revolution will turn this around.

      I don't mind paying for something, but the middlemen in the music biz add very little value, and IMHO screw a lot up!

      I want to listen to lots of music but I can't afford to with a big mortgage and kids. I have several music mad friends who buy 100's of CD's a year - and they'd buy more if they could afford to. Basically we want to pay the creators of the music, and I don't see these services moving towards that so I shan't support them.

      Read this Courtney Love article - she is so right (even if I was a bit dismissive of her before I read this).

      That's what it's all about, not whether I can buy 'n download from the net! That kind of tech is just a way for us (musicians & fans) to cut out the fat cat middlemen, and introduce middlemen who get paid for the value they add... Thanks for listening, Andy. (UK)

    2. Re:Thanks for the review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think I would support this model. They are still using proprietary technology on a limited number of platforms to charge you, arguably, a large sum of money for audio that is tampered with (ie its encoded in a lossy format, watermarked, whatever).

      There are a couple of other places offering a less restrictive service. One that I use is EMusic.com Yes, it's still MP3, but its a flat monthly rate, you have direct access to the files (ie no particular player is required and there is no authentication needed to play the files, only to download them).

      What's that, you say? EMusic doesn't have the latest Britney Spears album? Of course their selection is limited but that's not a reason to not support them. Support companies like EMusic now and show the artists and record labels the kind of freedom you want from these types of services. If everybody sits back and says "Oh I can't download the new N'Sync, I'm not buying there service" they'll never get your N'Sync.

      Until they loosen these silly restrictions they won't be getting my money.

      (Oh, and no, I am not in any way affiliated with EMusic.com, just a customer)

    3. Re:Thanks for the review by DrCode · · Score: 3, Redundant

      Support a service that requires you to use Windows?

    4. Re:Thanks for the review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked Windows media player and IE run on MacOSX

    5. Re:Thanks for the review by Sj0 · · Score: 1

      (Oh, and no, I am not in any way affiliated with EMusic.com, just a customer)

      It would seem that you are neither.

      --
      It's been a long time.
    6. Re:Thanks for the review by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 2

      Just about - there is a Mac client, but only for OS 9. Guys like me who "switched" from Linux/Windows when OS X came out are pretty much left out in the cold. (The OS 9 Liquid Audio client doesn't even run under Classic!)

      Good lord - why can't they just let me download a friggin' MP3 file when I purchase music? How am I suppose to get some good old Tori Amos ear lovin' otherwise? (Well, other than the CD's I bought and turned into MP3, but still - I'd like to save those plastic trees ;) ).

    7. Re:Thanks for the review by symbolic · · Score: 2

      I want to listen to lots of music but I can't afford to with a big mortgage and kids. I have several music mad friends who buy 100's of CD's a year

      Maybe you could suggest a good 12-step program.

      Seriousness aside, this weird, almost pathological dependence on music is exhibited by an alarming number of people, and is, I suspect, the primary reason that the music industry has been able to get away with the price fixing/payola/pure junk for so long. Nothing will change until we change our behavior as consumers.

    8. Re:Thanks for the review by Bob+Ince · · Score: 5, Informative

      "Everything" we might want in a downloadable music service? It's not even beginning to approach nearly being close.

      The DRM in this system takes away all the flexibility and reliability we expect of digital music. Look at the insane amount of hoop-jumping darnellmc had to go through to get a usable track! This is not something I could recommend to anyone.

      And it's not even anything new - the likes of PressPlay and listen.com have been doing the same for ages (PP even uses the same crappy broken Roxio software). So it doesn't count as a step in the right direction either.

      For a music service that really *is* a step in the right direction, try emusic.com. It's far from perfect, but it does offer proper non-DRM-crippled files that you can use, in any way you like. (Or, for people whose machiens don't match the spec that Universal's service deigns to work with, it gives you files you can use at all...)

      --
      Andrew Clover
      mailto:and@doxdesk.com
      http://www.doxdesk .com/

    9. Re:Thanks for the review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why has everyone forgotten that in a capitalist society the consumer is empowered to drive the market with demand? I am disinterested in services that provide top 40 only or indie only content with inane restrictions on usage.

      Napster was great not because it was free, but because it had everything I ever searched for. I could do whatever I wanted with that content and never had to call customer service to have them e-mail me a key to use it on another computer.

      Don't bother with poor business models like Liquid, MusicMatch or PressPlay, wait until you have the same selection you get from a large music store (like amazon) in a variety of formats and qualites and can use the content you've paid for any way you choose. Then and only then should we pay, and by paying we can decide what services should survive.

    10. Re:Thanks for the review by medscaper · · Score: 3, Insightful
      rant

      I'm sure I'll sound like a troll - don't waste mod points on me. I already know it.

      I think that supporting this service will encourage the continuing price fixing and gouging for music. The middlemen have made so much money off artists & consumers and I am hoping that the digital revolution will turn this around.

      So, when will you be happy? When either of these is true? :

      1. Artists write, record, mix, produce, package, market and ship all their own music...or

      2. Middlemen get paid nothing - these include song writers, sound technicians, recording techs, supporting musicians, producers, production assistans, secretaries, marketing advisors, managers, stock boys, warehouse managers, trucking companies, gas station attendants...I could go on for hours!

      I'm sorry, it just realy sounds like people here are getting in the habit of forgetting that there's ANYONE involved in music production other than "the artist".

      Price fixing and price gouging SUCK! I hate them as much as the next guy, but this IS a step in the right direction, and when you complain about this, too, you sound a lot like the psychos who think we never landed on the moon (add +5 funny to the "we landed on the moon!!?" comments) when you try to give them proof of it. Even if you showed the lunar lander to them, they'd still say, "It was planted."

      You sound like even if the ultimate scheme was devised and adhered to by the hundreds of thousands of workers involved in music production, where the artists make planty of money and Hilary Rosen is eating out of a dumpster somewhere, you'd say, "I don't mind paying for something, but the middlemen in the music biz add very little value, and IMHO screw a lot up!" and never support with your pocketbook!!

      /rant

      --
      Any sufficiently well-organized Government is indistinguishable from bullshit.
    11. Re:Thanks for the review by GunFodder · · Score: 2

      Yes, these Earthlings are highly irrational. They will be no match for our emotionless clone warriors, who have not been exposed to useless frivolities like music and relationships.

    12. Re:Thanks for the review by msimm · · Score: 1

      Why not use a service that offers something you actually want? Like www.emusic.com. I'm starting to feel like a whore promoting them, but they seem to be consistantly overlooked and they offer exactly what most of the slashdot comments seem to want (except maybe ogg).

      1) inexpensive downloads: $9.99 per month for unlimited downloads!
      2) Linux/Windows support: works with Zinf (was Freeamp)
      3) Works with all standards compliant browsers (well, I haven't tried IE..;)
      4) Downloads are not copy protected (you want to support something I think this is the one!).
      5) Non proprietary: just good old fashioned mp3's

      Now remind me why should we be getting excited about the new UMG service? Sounds like extra work at a higher price to me, but its your nickle... ;-)

      --
      Quack, quack.
    13. Re:Thanks for the review by krogoth · · Score: 2

      It isn't an effective business model... yet. They might as well sell /dev/random output for what it's worth to me.

      --

      They that quote Benjamin Franklin on liberty and safety deserve neither.
    14. Re:Thanks for the review by mcg1969 · · Score: 2

      Actually, I was an EMusic subscriber too until I basically downloaded just about everything I cared to get from them. Their service isn't the best in the world for just "browsing around," I found---but perhaps that would be the problem with any decent-sized catalog. I recommend it heartily.

      Why I find the UMG service a step in the right direction is that the catalog is more up-to-date. If I hear a song on the radio that I like a lot, I don't want to have to buy the whole damn album to get it. A buck a song is, to me, a reasonable price.

      And while I sympathize with those on other OS platforms, I am certain that a Mac OS/Linux client will be forthcoming if 1) enough people demand it and 2) the Windows service brings in revenue.

      As for the DRM, at least I have the option of burning it to CD, and at that point I'm free to copy it or transcode to MP3 if I'm willing to put up with the loss in sound quality. Heck hard drives are big so lossless compression is fine. But that's just me. We'll see if the market agrees with me.

    15. Re:Thanks for the review by msimm · · Score: 1

      For me the DRM just isn't an option and I'm hoping its the same with the rest.

      As for emusic the thing I think whats really cool is that after you download everything you like (of course they are uploading new stuff daily) you can start downloading things you might like, like Indian music or Blues. To be honest thats been the best part.

      --
      Quack, quack.
    16. Re:Thanks for the review by cappadocius · · Score: 1
      I think that supporting this service will encourage the continuing price fixing and gouging for music.

      The albums on the site average about half the price of the physical versions ($10 compared to $20), even with the loss of value corresponding to the DRM and sampling rate, that is a healthy lowering of price.

      I don't mind paying for something, but the middlemen in the music biz add very little value

      I don't know about you, but I like to have one stop shopping, and that is a pretty large value to me that middle men provide. Granted, with this we don't have true one stop shopping because it is only one of the record companies, but it is the step toward what many want -- the same convenience of a good p2p except legal.

      I think they have a way to go before they truly are competitve. But now there is hope.

      The middle men will not go away. Artists will still need huge advertising budgets, expensive studios and the like. The best you can hope for is that the middle men will be kept honest by a more healthy market.

      --

      omnia tua castra sunt nobis

    17. Re:Thanks for the review by cryms0n · · Score: 1

      Can you give an ETA on the clone warriors?

    18. Re:Thanks for the review by epyT-R · · Score: 1

      Until they offer the music in some sort of open standard that can be implemented on ANY computer WITHOUT ROYALTIES, I will not buy from nor support them. Why should I have to have windows (or whatever) to play music I legally purchased? Its like having to read a book with a special light because its printed in special ink that's otherwise invisible, and the text is of poor quality and resolution. WMA is a poor choice both technically (it sounds terrible compared with other current formats) and politically since it is tied to one vendor.
      Also, I want the choice of being able to purchase music stored in a non-lossy system. Those who think MP3/Ogg/WMA/MPEGx sounds/looks as good as the original recording are those who've killed their ears listening to their 5kW car stereos or only listen through crap 'multimedia' speakers. Anyone taken a good look at digital cable (not HDTV though it has issues too) on a decent TV lately? Even on a 7 year old sony XBR^2 TV, the picture has all kinds of noticable dithering and banding compared to an analog picture and the sound is mp3 quality at best. Unfortunately, most people can't tell the difference and/or don't care, so I'm sure the day will come when access to the uncompressed media is gone forever in the name of cost, 'convenience' and 'security'. After all, the not really secure as it will be hacked, yet it is klunky enough to piss off average consumers.

      I don't see why I should spend tons of $$ on a good stereo system if I can only get this compressed crap that sounds like it was recorded with a $99 boom box. 128kb/sec != cd quality people! These formats are ok for a trial listening or two, or for a portable walkman, but not for an audiophile setup. Yes, I know audiophiles are only a tiny fraction of the market. However, the difference between the formats is that one (CD) was good enough for almost every conceivable system, while these 'lossy' formats are certainly NOT. Its a downgrade as far as I'm concerned. Think of it this way: Would you want a shitty jpg inkjet printout of a mona lisa or a hand painted copy of the real thing hanging on the wall?

      Ok...rant --off

    19. Re:Thanks for the review by Ionizor · · Score: 1

      Too bad emusic was bought out by Universal. I had an unlimited account there and liked the service but I refuse to give Vivendi my money.

      --

      --
      Todd's Law: All things being equal, you lose!
    20. Re:Thanks for the review by tilden · · Score: 1

      I pay emusic.com US$9.99/month for unlimited MP3 downloads. Their catalog is enormous, the 128K MP3 quality is sufficient for my needs, & if I want better quality I go buy a retail copy of the CD if it's available (they also have special content that's only available on their site). When I run out of space on my harddrive, I'll delete old tunes, knowing I can download them again later if I wish. Also, I don't need to stream audio from radioK.org when I'm in the office, saving corporate bandwidth . . .

      --
      The ability to quote is a serviceable substitute for wit. -- W. Somerset Maugham
    21. Re:Thanks for the review by mcg1969 · · Score: 2

      I won't debate the honest differneces of opinion here, they have been expressed in other places.

      But I should point out that all of the songs are offered in Liquid Audio format, which uses the AAC codec. I believe this codec, or one very similar to it, is in the new MPEG-4 standard. It's quite good, actually, although like any lossy format it depends on the quality of the encoder itself and the bitrate.

    22. Re:Thanks for the review by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm so glad people start realizing that:
      a) Music has value that is worth paying for,
      b) The Artists are not getting what they deserve,
      c) The consumers are being "ripped off" by the price of a CD.

      On the foundation of a win-win proposal, where quality music is offered at an affordable price, while providing generous royalties to content providers, we have created an on-line distribution portal that answers all of your wishfull thinking.

      Please go to www.emme.biz (right now we only have some "teaser" movies), and watch for us going live in January.

  5. A few posts down... by YaleL · · Score: 1, Funny

    BBC says "Avoid Explorer" Posted by CmdrTaco on Tuesday November 26, @07:41AM from the no-disagreement-here dept. twitter writes "Citing security flaws that lead to ads and spys on Microsoft infested computers the BBC in this article recomends avoiding Internet Explorer." Ain't it the truth? Mostly its about adware & spyware and other wretched bits of software that make the internet suck a little more each day. Hehe :)

    1. Re:A few posts down... by InverseParadox · · Score: 1

      Now, now, this isn't offtopic.

      I had the same thought (or what I presume is the same thought) myself; upon reading the "this only works in IE" bits of the article, the first thing that popped to mind was that article, also on the front page of Slashdot at the time, on how the BBC (? The sentence is a little ungrammatical) says people should avoid using IE.

      --
      -- The Wanderer
  6. well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by Em+Emalb · · Score: 1

    otherwise, this all seems like a giant waste of time to me.

    A step forward for legitimate music burners, but most probably wouldn't use this technology yet, since it's easier to use free p2p.

    --
    Sent from your iPad.
    1. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by binaryDigit · · Score: 3, Insightful

      since it's easier to use free p2p

      Uh, but isn't the whole point that this is a _legal_ way of attaining the music. So first the excuse was that the music was too expensive, now it's that it isn't quite convenient enough?

    2. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      But it's still too expensive! 99c per track is still $9.90 for a 10 track "album".

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
    3. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      Then don't purchase it. I think Ferrari's are too expensive, but I don't break into them and go for joyrides and call it "protesting my rights".

    4. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by Zemran · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I read the article and could not help but wonder "What was he so happy about?". I would like to be able to download music but I accept that this service is not for me. I have a DVD/CD burner and want to be able to use it as well... it just seemed like reason after reason to go elsewhere.

      --
      I love stacking my barbecues in the shed at the end of summer - you can't beat a bit of grill on grill action.
    5. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by Rader · · Score: 2

      I think he was just happy that he was finally able to finish the complete transaction so that he could write his review for /.

      I'm sure any sane person would have taken the refund. Or not started at all.

      Really, every word sounded like the only goal was to get from start to finish, just to write about it.

    6. Re:well, atleast the customer service seemed nice by BlackHawk-666 · · Score: 1

      Neither do I. Nor was I advocating people pirating music...I was simply stating that the price is still too high. If they want this to fly then there needs to be a compelling reason to go to the trouble of downloading and potentially burning to disc (at your cost) the lower quality compressed tracks.

      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain.
  7. Why? by BluGuy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Why go through all that BS to pay the same amount for a CD that you can go to your local RecordStore and pick up. Is it worth it to say "I made all by myself?" Next question: Will it work on *nix/Mac?

    1. Re:Why? by binaryDigit · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Two words, Instant gratification. The author mentions that it is easier to do this than to venture out in the middle of winter (after living in Canada, I can relate to this) to purchase a cd. So the real question is, is this truely better than going over to Amazon, purchasing the cd and waiting the week or so for it to show up?

      As to will it work on *nix/Mac, didn't the original announcement of the service say that it was pc only initially? Plus with the problems the author had using a pc, hard to imagine they have it working on anything else yet.

    2. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      wow, do you RTFA _at all_ before posting??

      d/ling an album while watching tv and drinking a beer is a lot easier than hauling your ass to the record store, or as the author points out, going out during winter especially blows

      also, it requires IE so it doesn't work on *nix
      gj

    3. Re:Why? by dabuk · · Score: 1
      There are a lot of people out there who want specific tracks. They might not want the rest of the album or whatever else was put on the B-side.

      This way you could download your favourite 10-20 songs and make your very own CD. No more "Now That's What I Call Music 76" crap.... which can only be a good thing.

    4. Re:Why? by Idaho · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Why go through all that BS to pay the same amount for a CD that you can go to your local RecordStore and pick up.

      Why go through all that BS by going all the way to your local RecordStore where you'll pay a stupendously large amount of money for something as simple&cheap as a CD when it's so much easier to just download it from the Net for free?

      OK I know....you're screwing the artists too...they should have public bank account numbers so people could donate some money to them...Their share is at most $2 per CD anyway (the standard CD price in Europe being more like $22)

      --
      Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
    5. Re:Why? by nolife · · Score: 3, Funny

      Okay.
      I decided to try that method, here's my experience.
      First I could not find my keys. Eventually I found them under the couch. It's cold outside so I had to let the car run for about 5 minutes to get the ice off the windows. About half way to the mall I got stcuk behind a garbage truck that was leaking stuff out the back, it would not have been so bad but he was going like 15 MPH under the speed limit. Luckily though I noticed I was on E, I stopped at the Circle-K and waited in line for gas. Back on the road I eventually made it to the mall. We must be apporaching the holiday season because the mall was packed, I could only find a decent spot near Sears, which is no where near the epicenter of the mall where the record store is. Finally in the record store I could not find the CD I wanted. They had some selections but I did not want to pay $17.99 for one song that I liked out of 10 on the cd, too bad they did not have a method of picking and choosing songs I wanted. I paid my dues and set sail in my Chrysler for home. Traffic was a little worse heading in that direction but I had a cd player in my car, boy was I surprized when my new cd would not play in my car. The label said something about PC only and I could not find the official phillips cd logo. Oh well, maybe I can rip it to MP3 and play it my portable when I get home, I wonder what that the PC only means??

      Yeah, your experience may not have been as bad but I think the author of the articles was not typical either. For the record, I like high quality recorded music, you will NOT get that in a compressed d/l, more so when it is converted from WMA to MP3. My kids are a different breed, my daughter would be more then happy to select and create her own 'CD' online for the same price if she could select the songs herself, she really likes the "Now xx" type of mix cd's and quality is not really an issue for her.

      --
      Bad boys rape our young girls but Violet gives willingly.
    6. Re:Why? by MO! · · Score: 2
      If you want the purchase music online rather than venturing out in winter, order from cdnow or amazon or some-other-online-store. I purchase what little music I buy from online stores, opting for used CDs whenever possible. I can have them shipped ground in a weeks time, or if really important to me next-day air.

      --
      I AM, therefore I THINK!
    7. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's $9.99 per CD. Does your local record store have the newest Beck CD for $9.99?

    8. Re:Why? by RAMMS+EIN · · Score: 3, Insightful

      To add another argument, it's not paying the same price. It's paying $9.99 for the songs that are on an album, but in Liquid Audio format rather than on CD. This means the uses are restricted and the quality likely degraded. The price may be higher or lower than that of the CD, depending on what the CD costs (in the Netherlands, for example, CDs typically cost twice as much as this service).

      This is the kind of service I have been wanting for a number of months now. There is now way that I'm going to install Windows, M$IE, and a Liquid Audio player just so that I can pay for music in a restricted and proprietary format. Why are they making things so complicated? They can offer their files for download over HTTP and it will work with any well-behaved web browser. Since the article mentioned that it is possible to burn the music on CD, what's the use of using a #$@#$@$# format like Liquid Audio? This is so much locking people into specific hardware and software that I can't view it as anything other than a plot by the Evil Forces to lure people with nice goodies and then squeeze the money and life out of them.

      Just give me music that I can _play_ and I will pay for it, ok? It's really not that hard. No Crippled Discs, no weird-ass proprietary formats.

      --
      Please correct me if I got my facts wrong.
    9. Re:Why? by agentk · · Score: 1

      Obviously, YMMV. I also tried this method recently, with significantly different results.

      First, I walked a block to the bus stop. I waited 5 minutes for the next bus, and paid 75 cents to board. A bit less than ten minutes later, I arrived downtown and walked at a leisurely pace to my favorite record store, enjoying the brisk yet invigorating weather. I browsed around a bit in the worm and comfortable store, and asked the clerk what record was playing. We chatted a bit about music, and he recommended some artists whose work I could later download free and evaluate before deciding to by. I listened to a couple of records and decided on two, which I bought for about $14.00. I stopped in the coffee shop, and read the newspaper. ($2.00). I picked up a flyer for a cool live show happening on Friday. Then I went home ($0.75) and listened to my new records, looked at the artwork and read the liner notes. The listening process was easy: I placed the record on my turntable, turned on my stereo and positioned the arm at the beginning of the record. The music commenced playing immediately. No "authorization" was necessary. The process for listening to standard-conforming compact discs is comparable, but requires slightly more expensive equipment.

      Overall, it was a pleasant and enjoyable way to spend an hour and a half on a Sunday afternoon.

      --

      VOS/Interreality project: www.interreality.org

    10. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used to experience the same thing, it only stopped when I eventually had to get a job..

    11. Re:Why? by orthogonal · · Score: 2

      [snip: a tale lacking only Birkenstocks and an eco-friendly coffee mug, and yes, he chats with the proletariat and uses public transportation, too!]
      Overall, it was a pleasant and enjoyable way to spend an hour and a half on a Sunday afternoon.


      Where's the option for "-1 pretentious pseudo-intellectual self-aggrandizement"

    12. Re:Why? by Doug+Neal · · Score: 1

      Luckily though I noticed I was on E

      Yeah, that seems like the only way to make buying records bearable in your part of the world ;)

  8. How could they know if you share the music? by elliotj · · Score: 5, Interesting

    You can play the tracks as much as you like on your PC, burn to CD as many tracks as you want, copy the burned CDs, and use the CD to make MP3s. Keep in mind there is supposed to be some form of digital watermarking on the tracks though. So if you give the music to anyone else, they (UMG) are supposed to be able to know it was you who violated their copyright.

    I'd be interested to know how anybody could tell if you've shared the music and what this 'digital watermarking' is all about. If you made MP3s from the CD you make, how would UMG know you violated the copyright? Is my iTunes gonna email them when I play the pirated MP3?

    This sounds dubious but will no doubt be tested by tons of people to see if it's true.

    It also begs the question of what consititutes illegal sharing and fair use. Shouldn't I be able to listen to this stuff on my iPod? Would UMG know?

    1. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by barnaclebarnes · · Score: 5, Informative

      Digital watermarking essentially puts a mark in the music that can be read by special software. It is meant to be non audable to the human ear but that is debatable.

      Watermarking is probably the lesser of evils as it does not stop you copying the music (AFAIK). What it will do however is provide an audit trail of where the music came from. Say a street vendor was busted for selling pirated CD's. They could test the CD's and see that it came from UserX on the UMG service. They could then go to userX and asked him/her how the music ended up on thousands of pirated CD's.

      It seems they are trying to create a balance between fully restrictive downloading and playing and free for all mp3/ogg files. Personally I think it is the wrong way to go but time will tell. /b

      --
      [Please type your sig here.]
    2. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      The point is if they find a watermarked mp3 that you created is being illegally distributed (using a bot on a p2p network or some other means), they can trace it back to you.

      They may partner with companies that make mp3 players, but I seriously doubt that any would conform to notifying UMG, unless they were legally bound to include such functionality.

      Fair use is entact in this case. You can listen to it on your iPod without risk. You can even share it with your friends, but you are liable if they in turn (or someone else in the chain) mass distributes the mp3.

    3. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by TheDawgLives · · Score: 1
      I'd be interested to know how anybody could tell if you've shared the music and what this 'digital watermarking' is all about.

      I'm fairly certain that he isreferring to sharing mp3s on the Internet. If UMG finds their songs on the Internet, then they just have to look at the watermark (unique white noise that is inserted in the file) to see who they need to arrest/sue.

      --
      -TheDawgLives suckitdown
    4. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by MindStalker · · Score: 1

      The point is, that if UMG found a song being traded on gnutella, and examined it, they could theoretically (if they applied the watermarks well enough) find out who leaked it. So of course you can put it on your ipod, you can even load mp3s of it to your friends, but you'd have to trust your friends not to share them. Of course UMG is likly not going to bust most, but they definatly will bust someone who is a mass trader.

    5. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by msheppard · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Back in the 90's, Phish made some copies of some studio work that they didn't want people distributing, so they digitally watermarked every copy they gave out. I think it was like 20 copies, so they could tell if someone allowed it to be copied. Funny part is: It worked! I have yet to see copies of that stuff distributed. Seems those who got the copies were afraid it'd be tracked back to them and they would loose the trust of the band or something.

      I can envision people discovering the waremarking technology though. You and a friend register and download the same track, then run a binary diff on the files. Should be pretty easy to determine where the watermark is and change it though.

      M@

      --
      Krispy Cream is people
    6. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Cap'n+Canuck · · Score: 1

      I really doubt that digital watermarking will work as a tool for catching copyright infractions.

      First of all, I doubt it will take long for a hacker to remove/alter the watermark. Come on people - the music is zeros and ones!

      Secondly, there won't be any convictions upon tracing back.
      1) If you're downloading by the internet, then there's a good chance that your name is not real.
      2) US Laws don't apply to all countries.
      3) Here's a good defense - "Well, I downloaded the music onto my computer, but it just happened to be the folder that Kazaa uses for uploads. How was I to know?"

    7. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by cwmendel · · Score: 1

      Once you burn it to cd couldn't you just rip it and re-encode it again? If the watermark is embedded within the audio itself then there would have to be a "magical" bitrate where encoding would distort it enough to render it useless. Since we can't percieve the watermarking anyways that bitrate should be fairly high leaving plenty of quality left for unwatermarked audio listening goodness. This seems like an easy solution to me, but perhaps they made their watermark resilient enough to withstand re-encoding.

      I think if i have to pay almost full price for an album that i have to make myself then i damn well better be able to do what i want with it without trying to sidestep the built in copy protection. In the mean time i think i'll take my p2p.

    8. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by kevcol · · Score: 1

      They could then go to userX and asked him/her how the music ended up on thousands of pirated CD's.

      Your honor, someone stole my entire collection of burned music outta my car!

    9. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by 'Lose',+Not+'Loose' · · Score: 1
      Seems those who got the copies were afraid it'd be tracked back to them and they would loose the trust of the band or something.

      Hi. It's 'lose', not 'loose'.

      Thanks. Bye,
      'Lose', Not 'Loose' Guy

      --
      --thanks for the recent upmods! i'll be able to post again soon
    10. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by CaseyB · · Score: 2
      1) If you're downloading by the internet, then there's a good chance that your name is not real.

      There's a good chance that the name on the credit card you have to use to purchase the music is real.

      3) Here's a good defense - "Well, I downloaded the music onto my computer, but it just happened to be the folder that Kazaa uses for uploads. How was I to know?"

      Ignorance is no defence. "My speedometer isn't working. How was I to know I was going twice the speed limit?"

    11. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Zordak · · Score: 4, Interesting

      In my opinion, this is the way it should be. Let them use existing laws and the technology available to them to enforce the protection of their copyrights. This means that they can make the cost of illegally sharing music higher without trampling on legitimate fair-use rights like portability, and without passing technology-crippling legislation that promises to squash any kind of independent invention. If they find somebody who is passing stuff around illegally, and they feel they have received enough financial damage that it is worth pursuing him/her in the courts, then let them do it.

      --

      Today's Sesame Street was brought to you by the number e.
    12. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by kevcol · · Score: 1

      Note to self: Self, check the closing italic tag before submitting.

    13. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by DAldredge · · Score: 1

      Who is liable if a virus/trojan causes the file to shared?

    14. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Ageless · · Score: 2

      The way watermarking usually works is by making minor modifications to the whole of the data. It's not just a string in the middle of the file. So what happens is you get a diff that is nearly every byte of the file and you have to listen to each one and adjust it till it sounds right.

      Might as well just write the music and perform it yourself :)

    15. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by cortana · · Score: 1

      Interesting...

      * cortana dons devil's advocate hat

      You are. It is your responsibility to ensure the security of the data entrusted to you, be it your company login/password, or the music you download from an online service. If this means you have to spend fifteen minutes gaining a Clue about basic computer securiy then frankly, all the better.

      Maybe after a few people are busted for copyright violation after their files were spread around by a trojan, John Smith would actually end up learning how to use his computer!

      Wishful thinking, perhaps. ;)

    16. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by malachid69 · · Score: 1

      >> Watermarking is probably the lesser of evils as
      >> it does not stop you copying the music (AFAIK).
      >> What it will do however is provide an audit
      >> trail of where the music came from.

      So, what you are saying then is that most likely there will be a few fake users that use the service once or twice (like with hacker/cracker and porn sites), give the music out on ftp, and then not be traceable because they weren't real people?

      Or are they going to require users to prove who they are over email?

      If the radio/MTV plays a song I like, it really sucks to pay $20 for the CD to find out it was the ONLY good song... but, personally, I am not going to use a service that requires IE and doesn't support my hardware.... Last thing I need to do is support the DMCA/RIAA/MPAA/M$

      Malachi

      --
      http://www.google.com/profiles/malachid
    17. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Watermarking doesn't work:
      Make a diff, then randomly change every byte and apply the patch...

      The watermark doesn't introduce noise, since the CD audio is encoded with an error correction code. So, by doing the above, you replace 'their' noise with 'your' noise, which is then corrected by the error coding.

    18. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Wow, do just hang around looking for people who misuse "lose" and "loose"? That's quite a hobby.

    19. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They could test the CD's and see that it came from UserX on the UMG service. They could then go to userX and asked him/her how the music ended up on thousands of pirated CD's

      Awesome! So all we need to do is assign the digital signature of userX = CEO of UMG. Kick back and watch the fun.

    20. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There's a good chance that the name on the credit card you have to use to purchase the music is real.

      But who is to say that the name on the credit card is that of the person using it?
    21. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Wumpus · · Score: 2

      Nice try. Almost completely wrong.

      Your assertion that the watermark doesn't introduce noise because of the error correction codes is obviously false - a digital watermark is designed to survive MP3 encoding, for example. The error correction code is lost once the data is read off of the CD. The error correction code is there to hellp the decoder reproduce the original data - noise and all.

      Changing every byte randomly, as you suggest, will merely introduce a low level noise into the recording. You seem to be confusing watermarking with some steganography schemes, which change the least significant bit of a digital sample (audio or video), which indeed can be defeated in the manner you describe. Since lossy audio compression always uses vector quantization (that's the "lossy" part), the least significant bits are always lost anyway.

      The only thing you're right about is that watermarking doesn't work. But it doesn't work for reasons you don't seem to understand.

    22. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by cpeikert · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I can envision people discovering the waremarking technology though. You and a friend register and download the same track, then run a binary diff on the files. Should be pretty easy to determine where the watermark is and change it though.

      Yep, this is called collusion in the literature, and it's been considered (even for the case of several users comparing their files). Lots of work has been put into developing codes that are immune to collusion in various ways. Examples include "identifiable parent property (IPP) codes," "traceability (TA) codes," and "collusion-secure codes."

      The upshot is that it is provably impossible to construct collusion-secure codes unless they have very large "alphabets" or require lots of bits to be embedded in the media. Both situations are bad for the distributors, because watermarking technology is pretty inefficient in terms of how much raw data it needs to robustly embed marks.

      I have a paper with some of these results on my webpage, if you're interested.

    23. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Wumpus · · Score: 2

      See here for an interesting discussion of the SDMI challenge, for example.

    24. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by JordoCrouse · · Score: 1

      I think if i have to pay almost full price for an album that i have to make myself then i damn well better be able to do what i want with it without trying to sidestep the built in copy protection.

      There is *no* copy protection. None, nada zilch. Your fair use is completely entact. But if you somehow start distributing the music (like P2P or burning CDs and selling them on the street), the watermark will lead back to you. Which, in my opinion is just fine because when you distribute the music you are breaking the law!

      So, just to repeat - its not copy protection, its copyright protection. Personally, I could care less, because I'm not stealing music.

      --
      Do you have Linux and a DotPal? Click here now!
    25. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by banzai51 · · Score: 1
      Whatever. I'm the guy in the lane just to the left. Passing you. (reverse it for the non-USers).

      News flash: Nietzsche was neither moral nor right.

    26. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by quintessent · · Score: 2

      Who's going to make money selling burned CDs of lossy-compressed music? Now that kind of genius deserves to be making money.

    27. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      heh.. defeat watermarking - find a couple friends that also have the same 'service' each get a copy of the same track, then mix them together and resample, and make a new MP3.. watermark unrecognizable..

    28. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by xo0m · · Score: 1

      "Who's going to make money selling burned CDs of lossy-compressed music?"

      the street vendors who sell their CDs without letting the consumer hear a sample in the first place...god knows i bought a couple pirated CDs off the street without absolutely knowing if the CD were audible or not. for five bucks, you can't beat that!!!

    29. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Digital watermarking is bogus.

      It's exploiting the fact that information can be added to a sound (image,etc) that, although inaudible, makes a footprint. You know what though? You can also add inaudible noise to a sound/image to kill watermarking.

      In otherwords, even if "sound" becomes "sound + watermark", "sound + watermark + noise" looks like "sound + noise".

    30. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by cwmendel · · Score: 1

      So, just to repeat - its not copy protection, its copyright protection. Personally, I could care less, because I'm not stealing music.

      Lord knows I am...

    31. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by mapinguari · · Score: 1

      Oh, you mean like this?

    32. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by TheDawgLives · · Score: 1
      Once you burn it to cd couldn't you just rip it and re-encode it again? If the watermark is embedded within the audio itself then there would have to be a "magical" bitrate where encoding would distort it enough to render it useless. Since we can't percieve the watermarking anyways that bitrate should be fairly high leaving plenty of quality left for unwatermarked audio listening goodness. This seems like an easy solution to me, but perhaps they made their watermark resilient enough to withstand re-encoding.

      I'm assuming that they are using an mp3 type encoding, but not mp3 itself. I'm also assuming that they are using a relitively low bitrate as compaired to CD Audio, since you have to download the music. This means that when you burn to a CD, you keep the watermark in tact. In fact, in order to degrade the watermark, you'll have to degrade your music. Most people won't download an mp3 unless it's at least 128Kbps, so if they encode the files at that rate, they figure they won't have to worry about too many people sharing them. The watermark would survive multiple encodings, as long as the encoding never went below the rate at which the original file was encoded. You could possibly get around this by using a variable bit rate codec like ogg, but I think the main purpose of the watermark is to ensure that your don't re-encode the file at the same or greater bitrate and share it using a p2p program. I would consider it very basic protection.

      Of course this is all congecture.

      --
      -TheDawgLives suckitdown
    33. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by adamsc · · Score: 2

      Please give the court a copy of the police report

    34. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by chez69 · · Score: 0

      especially considering that a large identity theft ring was broken up not too long ago.

      --
      PHP is the solution of choice for relaying mysql errors to web users.
    35. Re:How could they know if you share the music? by CreateWindowEx · · Score: 1
      We had to do watermarking when we were passing out press copies of our game disk to keep them from appearing on the internet the next day. Luckily executable code, unlike audio, has a lot of places to hide watermarking bits, so we were able to pull a "diff-proof" solution out of our asses. Of course we only needed to make fifty copies or so, which is a very easy problem domain.

      It'd be interesting, though, to check out the literature and see how the "real" solutions compare to the cheesy method we employed.

  9. Emusic by seizer · · Score: 5, Interesting

    It's been said before, and it should be said again. If you wantw true value for money, emusic are a better deal. Pure MP3s, no corrupt watermarks, and no DRM. And cheaper, too - one monthly fee equals full unlimited downloads.

    If I was going to go for any of these services (I'm not, yet) that would be my choice.

    1. Re:Emusic by buckminster · · Score: 1

      I believe UMG now owns emusic. Also, this past summer quite a bit of UMG's back catalog began turning up on emusic. I wonder how long this will last?

    2. Re:Emusic by fuzzbrain · · Score: 1

      Emusic are quite good and they are set up to work with Zinf, but I got pissed off with them and stopped my subscription beacause many alot of their music (esp all my favourites on the Matador label) is only downloadable from within North America. I was paying the same price as a North American but only getting half the service.

    3. Re:Emusic by drdanny_orig · · Score: 2, Informative

      all the samples I've downloaded from emusic's site are a cheezy-sounding 128kbs MP3. That's hardly hi-fi in my book. Are the ones you buy any better?

      --
      .nosig
    4. Re:Emusic by javatips · · Score: 1

      While they say that they do not use DRM, there is no word (that I could find) about watermarking. They may or may not do it. You have to trust them.

    5. Re:Emusic by kurokaze · · Score: 1

      Personally the only difference that I can hear
      between 128kbps and 192kbps is that the latter
      is louder.

      So for me, I probably wouldn't care. Then again,
      I'm perfectly content using the onboard sound
      chip on my machine. Others probably wouldn't
      be. All depends on the how much of an audiophile
      you are I suppose.

    6. Re:Emusic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heya Folks.. Dont you know who OWNS EMusic? Yep thats Right.. good ol Vivendi Universal..

    7. Re:Emusic by big_groo · · Score: 2

      Yes, but sadly, they have no Metallica available for download. *sarcasm*

      I'll pass thanks.

    8. Re:Emusic by Sawbones · · Score: 1

      I'm a subscriber. The tracks you download are 128k, but for whatever reason sound a heck of alot better than the "hi-fi" sample tracks. Don't ask me why, perhaps it's just psychological. But if you're one of the people who can't stand listening to anything less than 192k I'd avoid the service. I've got weak ears so it's all good for me :)

      --

      Ad in classifieds: Pandora's Box (no box) $5
    9. Re:Emusic by Ricdude · · Score: 2

      No, the quality is not any better, nor would I consider the quality "hi-fi". However, if I'm listening to music on my computer, or in my car, the difference between 128kbps and 192kbps encoded mp3s is undetectable [1]. The difference between 128kbps and the actual CD is only detectable (on such equipment) for audio segments that are troublesome to mp3 compression anyway (cymbals, certain effects, etc.).

      I can go so far as to burn audio CDs for my wife to listen to, and she can't tell the difference at all. I suspect the overwhelming majority of their customer base falls into this category of listener. As a bonus, the few that I've burned into audio CDs get detected by freedb/cddb as the original disc it was ripped from. =)

      It's a price vs. value consideration for me. For the low, low, price of $10/month, I can download all the mp3s I want out of their collection. I've managed to fill in a few gaping holes in my music collection in this process (Ennio Morricone, The Residents, Sun Ra, Dozens of Jazz Masters, etc.). Consider that I download about twenty full length albums every month, and calculate the savings. Is the slight degradation in quality worth it? It is to me.

      More importantly, it's worth it to me to support a reasonably priced, unencumbered mp3 distribution model. *That* alone is well worth my $10/month entry fee.

      [1] I am a musician, and my ears are precise enough to detect mp3 artifacts if I'm listening to the music on "real" equipment. My car stereo does not qualify.

      --
      How's my programming? Call 1-800-DEV-NULL
    10. Re:Emusic by The+Limp+Devil · · Score: 1

      I agree with you that we get less of a service than American subscribers, but I stay with EMusic because it is still a fantastically good deal. And it's not just good economically, but also because they have such a great selection of jazz which my local record stores don't carry at all. EMusic gives me hard to get music at a great price, so I decided to live with their discrimination of foreign subscribers. It still annoys me, though.

    11. Re:Emusic by pr0nbot · · Score: 1

      Salient info from their FAQs:

      How much does downloading a song from EMusic cost? One low monthly fee gives you unlimited access to explore and download any of EMusic's 200,000+ songs and 17,000+ albums from 10,000+ artists.

      # Sign up for a minimum of 3 months -- we'll bill you $14.99 each month
      # Sign up for a minimum of 12 months -- we'll bill you $9.99 each month

      How does EMusic protect against piracy? Very simple -- we trust our customers. We believe that if downloadable music is presented in an inexpensive and flexible way, most consumers will do the right thing.

      EMusic does not include any type of Digital Rights Management or complex security rules in our music files -- just pure, open MP3. In addition, we provide our customers with extremely flexible rights for the music they purchase and download, allowing them to easily transfer their music files to portable MP3 players and burn them on to compact discs using CD-R.

      Do musicians and labels get paid for the MP3s I download? Yes. EMusic splits all of the profits from membership fees 50/50 with the label or artist. EMusic is a legitimate downloadable music service that compensates artists and labels for their work, without sacrificing convenience or low-cost.

      What is a bitrate? At what bitrate are EMusic's MP3s encoded at? Bitrate is the number of bits per second used in the encoding process. A higher encoding rate usually means a larger size file, but higher quality sound. EMusic currently encodes its MP3s at 128 Kbps.

    12. Re:Emusic by Angst+Badger · · Score: 4, Insightful

      However, if I'm listening to music on my computer, or in my car, the difference between 128kbps and 192kbps encoded mp3s is undetectable [1].

      I'm not a musician (at least, I wouldn't call what I can squeeze out of a guitar music at this point), and I'm not a high-end audio geek. I do most of my music listening at my computer or on the bus with an MP3 CD player, or in my car. In those environments, there isn't much difference between 128kbps and 256kbps.

      That said, when I do play MP3s through my stereo -- a ten-year-old mid-range Kenwood rack system -- 128kbps sounds pretty poor, 192kbps sounds fine if I'm not actively listening for MP3 artifacts, and 256kbps sounds as good as an uncompressed CD except in a few odd cases. I know people who claim to be able to detect the difference, but fortunately for me, my ears aren't that good, and frankly, CD-quality audio is overkill for the Sex Pistols anyway.

      For $9.95 a month, and in my normal listening environments, eMusic is a fabulous deal, and I hope they do well. I also hope they offer higher bitrates in the future, and I'd be willing to pay for it. In the meantime, being able to legally download a few dozen albums every night or two is really nice.

      --
      Proud member of the Weirdo-American community.
    13. Re:Emusic by befletch · · Score: 2, Informative

      Ok, here's a mini-review:

      I've just started using Emusic, and I really like it so far. It works great on OS X downloading with Chimera [mozilla based], but I find on my Windows box at work that it works better with IE than Mozilla. The thing with Emusic is that you will want to use a download manager to pull down several mp3's at a time, and Mozilla doesn't seem to integrate as well with Emusic's Windows download manager as IE does. Maybe its my configuration, but as I say, I've just started using Emusic.

      I expect that it would work fine on other UNIX OS's, at least if you have Mozilla available.

      You have to accept that 128kbps mp3 is your only download option, and you aren't getting much (if any) recent major label content. No Britney.

      I tried Napster & Gnutella, but I don't like the ethics involved.

      I used to use mp3.com, but I gave up on it because it felt like I was wading through too much junk trying to find the occasional bits of good stuff. I don't have the time or intestinal fortitude for that. I'm theorizing that the fact that Emusic bands are all signed to labels may be some kind of minimal quality filter. Maybe mp3.com has changed since 2000 or thereabout, so YMMV. At any rate, so far, so good on the Emusic band quality front.

      Emusic has a surprisingly large collection of older stuff as well, (i.e. Judy Garland, Louis Armstrong, Ella Fitzgerald, Benny Goodman) if you are into it. And lots of classical music, although 128kbps mp3 starts to show through more here than anywhere else, in my opinion.

      Emusic isn't the Heavenly Jukebox people were hoping for in the early days of the mp3 revolution. But its compromises are small enough and user friendly enough that I'm happy to spend US$10/month on their service. I get all the decent quality mp3's I can listen too, and I can feel good about doing it.

      --
      If you say, "now I'll be modded down because of X", I'll happily oblige.
    14. Re:Emusic by Unkle · · Score: 1
      Yes, but sadly, they have no Metallica available for download.

      I beg to differ. Check out

      http://www.emusic.com/cd/10600/10600642.html

      Hit the lights is in this collection. I actually like Emusic. It has a lot of stuff I wouldn't even dream of getting in the stores, lots of comedy and blues and such. Also, it has underground stuff that I have never heard before, and it doesn't cost me anything (more than my normal fee) to get it. Hey, without it, I would have never found Big Star (they wrote the song that the theme for "That 70's Show" is a small snip of).

      --
      Against stupidity, the gods themselves contend in vain.
    15. Re:Emusic by shansen · · Score: 1

      You should try changing your address...

  10. I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by Desult · · Score: 2

    And it took me all of 10 minutes in store, no hassle, I'm listening to em right now.

    I can copy, rip, whatever I please. I'm willing to pay an extra 10 bucks per disc for a) good music and b) missing out on the hassle that you went through.

    My time is certainly valuable. The only benefit of online downloading was saving me the 15 minute drive to the store. The downside is no cover art, no reliable copy, and no fun unwrapping process.

    For those interested:

    The Roots - Phrenology (w/ DVD)
    Thievery Corporation - The Richest Man in Babylon
    The Lenny White Collection

    -Greg

    --
    -Greg
    1. Re:I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by freeefalln · · Score: 0

      ohhh nice selection of music there... check out J-Live's latest. its great.

    2. Re:I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by spookymonster · · Score: 1

      Yeah, but I can use Gnutella to listen to every track on those albums, decide which ones I want to buy, and then download the 10 songs I really want, saving me ~$40.

      Or,I could buy all 3 albums @ $9.99 a pop, saving me only $20.

      --
      - Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
    3. Re:I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by jred · · Score: 2

      Wow, what a rip-off. I just spent ~$30 and got 4 new CDs. And I didn't have to go anywhere. Heck, the receptionist even brought them to my office so I didn't have to go to the front desk. Of course, a couple of them were indy artists, but still.

      I got a couple of Shonen Knife CDs, for $6 & $9, a High School Hellcats CD for $9, and a Die Cheerleader Die CD for $5.

      Shonen Knife I got from half.com. A quick email to DCD & HSH and both setup paypal accounts so I wouldn't be forced to find envelopes & stamps.

      Now that I think about it, I also recently purchased a new CD at Best Buy, so that *almost* brings me up to $50 (it was the new Johnny Cash CD, that old man rox u).

      --

      jred
      I'm not a mechanic but I play one in my garage...
    4. Re:I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I'm willing to pay an extra 10 bucks per disc

      Good! Morons like you will subsidize cheaper alternatives for the rest of us.

      Now, how about you start paying an extra $20 for each DVD, so that the rest of us can have digital video-on-demand.

    5. Re:I just spent 50 bucks on new releases by fuzzywig · · Score: 1

      We already are, we're called Brits. £12 a CD and £19 a DVD is pretty typical over here, outside of special offers. (about $18 and $30 repectively).

  11. Yeah but... by Pedrito · · Score: 1, Troll

    This sounds like a lot of trouble to go through to buy music. All these problems can be solved simply by purchasing your music through Gnutella. Not to mention, it's much cheaper.

    1. Re:Yeah but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      why not just pay for certain tunes on their web site and then download the mp3s with your favorite file sharing client? wouldn't that be legal? no watermarks that way.

  12. Windows and IE? by muyuubyou · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anything involving windows, IE and Media Player is too suspicious for me giving it a try.

    You also need to use IE to open the URL in the e-mail that authenticate your tracks

    The price is not the problem. The problem is what they allow you to do and what they don't. Next.

    1. Re:Windows and IE? by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      95% of the world is already using IE and Windows. I'd wager closer to 100% of the target users of this system have IE and Windows.

      Why is it such a constant shock that website developers don't go out of their way to make stuff compatible with mozilla?

      Can noone just understand it's not worth the extra development time for such a miniscule audience?

      And dont talk to me about standards. Standards on paper with a rubber stamp from W3C are fine and good, but, in the real world, though, 'standard' means 'what everyone else does', and thats just a fact of life.

      If the mozilla team would quit with the philosophy crap, just make themselves compatible, then they could be the system the majority uses, and then they can dictate what's 'standard', and what isnt.

      Until then, its a 'standard', yet incompatible browser.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Windows and IE? by runderwo · · Score: 4, Insightful
      And dont talk to me about standards. Standards on paper with a rubber stamp from W3C are fine and good, but, in the real world, though, 'standard' means 'what everyone else does', and thats just a fact of life.
      This is unbelievably silly.

      Everyone has their own standards. Nobody is arguing that we should take away the right to choose which standards to support. The argument is that if we do not embrace open standards, and instead either through apathy or indignance embrace proprietary ones just because they are the most prevalent, we will find ourselves locked into serving the whims of whoever developed that particular proprietary standard.

      If you don't buy it, well, nobody's stopping you from embracing MSHTML. Just don't claim that supporting it is for the best of the whole community, and especially don't whine when MS locks you out with some proprietary upgrade or license change.

    3. Re:Windows and IE? by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 1

      That they only offer two stupid formats seems to be their main problem. I don't know anyone using those format for storing their music. They should have choosen mp3 or Ogg, (perhaps even flac) and if they really wanted this to work, offer all these formats.

      Instead of the email thing, they should just store purchase in a database and then allow you to download the file as may times as you want. That would save them alot of trouble with the authentication.

      Of cause that it's IE only just shows once more that the music indutry doesn't care about standards, but we all knew that.

    4. Re:Windows and IE? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The price is not the problem. The problem is what they allow you to do and what they don't. Next.

      For some reason I suspect that any service short of "free music" will always elicit the same response from you.

  13. Let me get this straight... by Mr_Person · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I pay the same or more for the download service as for the CD, download the tracks slowly, install their software several times until it works, burn it on a CD, rip it, encode it, then listen to it? And the music companies wonder why their online services aren't insanely popular...

    1. Re:Let me get this straight... by sulli · · Score: 2

      Sounds like a big pain in the ass to me. I'll stick with buying and ripping CDs, or buying MP3s from artists who actually sell the real thing, thanks.

      --

      sulli
      RTFJ.
    2. Re:Let me get this straight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's $9.99 per album and the service worked fine for me.

    3. Re:Let me get this straight... by NetFu · · Score: 2

      Let's get real here, people, and at least UTFS (Use The Fucking Site):

      I looked up 6+ albums, and they were all cheaper to download/burn than to buy the CD from Amazon or Borders. Not CHEAP, but cheapER.

      One example was $14 to download an album with 12-13 songs, $1.99/song individually, and $17-$19 to buy the CD itself from Amazon or Borders. Quite a few other songs I looked up were $0.99/song individually. All of them were cheaper on a per-song basis to download/buy entire albums than individually.

      Also, 90+% of the albums I saw had 30 second previews, so it should be easy to avoid the typical dilemma of buying a whole CD just because you like 1-2 songs.

      That is my primary problem with buying CD's because I effectively end up paying $6-$8/song. I don't think I'm the only one out there who uses Kazaa because of that.

      Now that I've seen this service, I'll start using it. I can't guarantee I won't sometimes use Kazaa when I can't find music on Liquid.com or a service like this, but I found two very off-the-wall artists on Liquid.com, so I doubt it'll happen often. One of those artists I had to buy their CD from Amazon.de (Germany) and pay the overseas shipping to get the CD with some songs I couldn't even find on Kazaa, so this service offers BIG advantages to people like me.

      The bottom line is this IS a big move in the right direction because at least it offers an alternative to MOST people (obviously not everyone). If I have to choose between paying a buck for a good-quality song I want right away with little searching, versus paying nothing to search forever in Kazaa for songs I want and downloading them 5 times each to ensure I get a good complete copy, I'll choose paying a buck...

  14. Digital watermarking? by Alizarin+Erythrosin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    So... how long until somebody figures out how to remove the digital watermarking? Maybe it wouldn't be the easiest process in the world, but it probably would scare the pants off of them as a proof-of-concept.

    And probably get their lawyers all excited with the possibility of DMCA-related charges.

    --
    There are only 10 kinds of people in this world... those who understand binary and those who don't
    1. Re:Digital watermarking? by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Sample and re-encode it.

      Whoopty-doo.

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    2. Re:Digital watermarking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll bet (although I could be wrong) that a D/A -> A/D conversion would do it.

      mplayer might also remove it if you stream it to a file...

      I'd be willing to do it, even if it would violate the DMCA.

    3. Re:Digital watermarking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On an alresdy lossy compressed song this would lower further its audio quality.
      A much better solution would be to buy the same group of songs several times from different accounts, then figure out the watermarking scheme by analyzing the differences between them and finally find a way to eliminate it (or make it useless).

    4. Re:Digital watermarking? by SlightlyMadman · · Score: 1

      So... how long until somebody figures out how to remove the digital watermarking? Maybe it wouldn't be the easiest process in the world, but it probably would scare the pants off of them as a proof-of-concept.

      And probably get their lawyers all excited with the possibility of DMCA-related charges.


      That would be a really bad idea, right now. Think of what Adobe was able to do for Sklyarov and Elcomsoft, considering that they basically just mentioned it, and backed down on most of their actions fairly quickly. Now, imagine if it were the RIAA, instead.

      Anybody who's working on this should be taking serious steps to preserve their anonymity. Even the people posting here about lossy compression's effects are probably in violation of the DMCA, already.

      --

      Money I owe, money-iy-ay
    5. Re:Digital watermarking? by racerx509 · · Score: 2

      *cough* *cough* Ed Felten *cough*

      --
      13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
    6. Re:Digital watermarking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, it won't reduce the quality. You probably do not understand DSP very well.

    7. Re:Digital watermarking? by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      Quality shmality.

      Unless you have a 100,000$ Klipch speaker/amp setup to play it back on, you wont hear shit-all difference in quality.

      And, if you do, I doubt you're in the market for 'cheap' cds.

      For the average guy, playing it in his car stereo, where it's already got the background noise of the engine, air whistling past the windows, etc, etc, you can't even hear the differnce between a cassette tape and a CD (until the CD skips).

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    8. Re:Digital watermarking? by spitzak · · Score: 2
      It is extremely difficult without a test to see if the watermark is there. If the only way to test it is to run a program that they keep on a machine locked in a vault you will be unable to tell if you have removed the watermark.

      Watermarks would work great for this. However those idiots keep trying to make them be used to stop copied music from being played. The problem with this is it gives the hacker a trivial test to see if it is removed, and it also gives them a huge incentive to remove it. This is how all the Ed Felton watermarks were removed.

      They also have to send unencumbered MP3. This will reduce the amount of transcoding done so the watermark is even better preserved.

    9. Re:Digital watermarking? by Alsee · · Score: 2

      Sample and re-encode it. Whoopty-doo.

      No.

      Watermaking survives sampling and re-encoding. You can trash the audio pretty horribly and the watermark will survive. You actually have to target the watermark with special signal processing software. It isn't very hard, but you do need to know what your doing. Or you need targeted software written by someone who knows what they're doing.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  15. Missing Con's by Christopher+Bibbs · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Must remember to surf with IE rather than a browser you prefer.

    Must remember to download tracks only while sitting on a machine with a CD-R or CD-RW

    Must remember to never let your machine die or be replaced. If you do, you'll never be able to reburn the audio.

    Thanks, I'll stick with Slamjamz

    1. Re:Missing Con's by MKalus · · Score: 1

      You forget:

      Must use Windows (okay, that was sort of included in the IE remark).

      --
      If you want to e-mail me, use my PGP Key.
    2. Re:Missing Con's by 3am · · Score: 2
      That was childish, but will probably get modded way up for being so righteously indignant...

      Right there, in the review, he says:
      • No player seems to be able to burn using a DVD burner.
      • Unable to use the service to purchase tracks using Mozilla.

      And as for the 3rd: "Must remember to never let your machine die or be replaced. If you do, you'll never be able to reburn the audio." ... Considering how they allowed him to download the songs again for free (with his machine still in perfect working order) when he found out he couldn't used a dvd/cd burner, my guess is they would do the same for a person whose computer died.
      --

      A: None. The Universe spins the bulb, and the Zen master merely stays out of the way.
    3. Re:Missing Con's by whovian · · Score: 2

      o Must remember to download tracks only while sitting on a machine with a CD-R or CD-RW

      IIRC, Window XP allows only a limited number of hardware swaps. Given that, then the user had better get a supported hardware config sooner rather than later. Hopefully these guys will be able and permitted to expand their range of support hardware and software.

      --
      To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
    4. Re:Missing Con's by gorilla · · Score: 2
      my guess is they would do the same for a person whose computer died.

      Unless it's in the contract that you can, forever, sooner or later you won't.

    5. Re:Missing Con's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unless it's in the contract that you can, forever, sooner or later you won't.

      That can apply to everything.

      They're doing it the right way now, so why not give them credit? I don't think you can assume they will go to the shitter any more than you can assume that Slashdot will start selling our email addresses to spammers.

    6. Re:Missing Con's by sholden · · Score: 1

      * Must remember to never let your machine die or be replaced. If you do, you'll never be able to reburn the audio.

      Surely the first thing you'd do after burning the CD is to rip the CD and store those wav files away somewhere safe...

    7. Re:Missing Con's by startled · · Score: 1

      * Must continue giving money to RIAA labels, who are leading an assault against civil liberties.

  16. Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by lorcha · · Score: 4, Insightful
    I've always thought that the end of Napsteresque p2p sharing would be when the record industry released a reasonably-priced alternative. I mean, how much would you pay for a professionally ripped track from a high-bandwidth server found using a simple and fast search engine?

    The pricepoint is a little higher than what I'd like to see, but this is definitely a step in the right direction for the music industry. Kudos to them for actually trying to solve the p2p "problem" by giving consumers (almost) what they want instead of trying to lock down every electronic device. It may be a clumsy interface, but it seems like a good first stab at a compromise between consumers' fair use rights and copyright holder interests.

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
    1. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by mcwop · · Score: 5, Insightful
      I agree on many points, but not as a p2p killer. Baby steps - a move in the right direction - but still very flawed:

      • Useless to a mac user
      • Songs are not already in mp3 format
      • email verification sounds annoying
      • song library is lame (for my taste at least)
      • Definately needs to be cheaper by the song with discounts for volume purchase
      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    2. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by LiquidAsphalt · · Score: 2
      I honestly think the end all of mass p2p sharing would be if the record industry purchased a familiar interface (Napster), spruced it up a bit, and make simple searching, and downloading of high quality mp3s then p2p would end. That plus the added benefit of no spy ware, and a cheap cost, like $5/month, and I honestly think people would pay that and the music industry would make a ton of money.

      What the RIAA wants to hold on to is the mega $$$ they are making by selling CDs without any added benefits (DVDs including music videos, extra tracks, etc. etc.) and keeping the same profits. Sorry guys, times change, even kodak realized traditional film and camera are no longer the money maker and they adapted. For a big successful business, these guys really have no clue.

    3. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by SlightlyMadman · · Score: 1

      I honestly think the end all of mass p2p sharing would be if the record industry purchased a familiar interface (Napster), spruced it up a bit, and make simple searching, and downloading of high quality mp3s then p2p would end. That plus the added benefit of no spy ware, and a cheap cost, like $5/month, and I honestly think people would pay that and the music industry would make a ton of money.

      Have you checked out emusic before? It's been around for years, $10/month unlimited downloads of their entire library. Sure, it's mostly indy labels & jazz, but it's a great service if that's mostly what you're into, anyways.

      Straight-up mp3 downloads, too. No watermarking, spyware, DRM, or special required software (they do have an optional custom download agent, but it runs on linux). Now, if only they'd offer ogg downloads ...

      --

      Money I owe, money-iy-ay
    4. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no e-mail verification.

    5. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by mcwop · · Score: 2
      According to the article they do:

      "For some time this confused me, then I tried clicking on a link provided in an e-mail that was sent to me to confirm my order. Well, they did not tell me this on the website, but clicking that link authenticated me to listen to the tracks"

      --

      "I don't think it's selfish, to eat defenseless shellfish." -NOFX

    6. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by LiquidAsphalt · · Score: 1
      Have you checked out emusic [emusic.com] before? It's been around for years, $10/month unlimited downloads of their entire library. Sure, it's mostly indy labels & jazz, but it's a great service if that's mostly what you're into, anyways.

      Thats the thing, mostly Indy. The only time I use P2P is when I hear something on the radio or MTV and I'd like to have it to play at my next party or make a mix CD with some of the latest music. When I want to listen to some beatles or something, I buy the CD, most p2p don't offer the "hard to find" singles. If the RIAA focused on making a napster service with current hits for say $5 a month, and having like a country subscription or rap for extra money, like $2 or $3 above the base subscription, people would adapt to it and be willing to pay.

      I can easily download divx movies, but I choose to rent/buy DVDs, the same would go for music. Only if I had some money, I'd make my own label and take all these other fools out of business.

    7. Re:Begining of the end for mass p2p sharing? by msimm · · Score: 1

      I'm feeling a bit like a broken record..but the p2p killer for me came out a while ago: www.emusic.com.

      1) Not copy protected.
      2) OS independant: just mp3's.
      3) Inexpensive: $9.99 per month unlimited dl.
      4) Fast and reliable.

      At the price of a single Liquid/UMG download you get all the music you want for a month, in a format you can use and without copy protection. Thats what I'd been waiting for.

      --
      Quack, quack.
  17. Ogg Vorbis by gjt · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Wouldn't ripping the tracks from the CD into Ogg Vorbis defeat the track watermarking. I'm guessing that their watermarking technique is based on the properties of the MP3 algorithm, which would be diffrent in Ogg.

    1. Re:Ogg Vorbis by MImeKillEr · · Score: 1

      More importantly, is the watermarking removed when the tracks are converted to .WAV and then back to .MP3?

      --
      Cruising the internet on my TI-99/4A @ a whopping 300 baud!
    2. Re:Ogg Vorbis by Idaho · · Score: 3, Insightful
      Wouldn't ripping the tracks from the CD into Ogg Vorbis defeat the track watermarking

      So, let me get this straight...you are proposing to convert WMA->WAV->OGG to get rid of a watermark that supposedly *cough* doesn't have any influence on the music itself....and think you'll get a result that even resembles digital quality audio?

      Not likely....

      Btw. the first problem is that you got to have IE ofcourse...I have finally (after several years) deleted Windows entirely (after not using the partition for months and finally needing the space :), so I can't use IE, not to mention WMA files.

      --
      Every expression is true, for a given value of 'true'
    3. Re:Ogg Vorbis by stratjakt · · Score: 1

      >> so I can't use IE, not to mention WMA files

      and you cant play PS2 games on it, either.

      So what?

      --
      I don't need no instructions to know how to rock!!!!
    4. Re:Ogg Vorbis by ahaning · · Score: 2, Insightful

      It's more likely based on encoding things into the audio that you can't hear. Sort of like "encrypting" data into an image; steganography You could reduce the quality such that the watermark is no longer detectable, but what use is that? You'd get a crappy music file that you could trade freely with your friends, but they wouldn't want it. (Calling Dr. Felton! ;-) )

      Also, as the reviewer chose the Liquid Audio site, I thought that would mean that they would provide the tracks in LiquidAudio format, but it's WMA? When I try to listen to or buy a track on their site, it seems to suggest that the tracks are in LiquidAudio format.

      For general downloading or purchasing music online, I personally would avoid Liquid altogether. WMA/Real are acceptable as a last resort. MP3s are better than either WMA, Liquid, or Real. OGG would be the best of the lossy formats. However, couldn't they at least provide SHN or FLAC files? The SHN files I've downloaded from Archive.org[Etree] and recompressed into FLACs generally get about 2:1 compression. That's not bad considering they are lossless, "CD-quality." Please note that my mini-review of the formats is NOT based on quality. I've checked out the OGG listening test at vorbis.com and could hear no difference in the files. My preferences are mostly based on ease-of-use. MP3, OGG, FLAC and SHN are easier to use from my current computer to any other computers I may have in the future.

      Maybe the general populace doesn't care enough about the quality of music on their PCs. So far, they've been able to get it all for free. However, when they start to be able to pay a bit for a downloadable song, they will (hopefully) demand more of their online music store. (e.g. They'll demand that it be like their brick and mortar music store, but online).

      And, where are the liner notes? Lossy music, crappy software, no artwork?! Uhh.. Some of my parents' old vinyl records have really neat artwork on them. It's as though, as production costs have decreased, so has the product quality.

      Not that I think the music that these companies churn out is always that great, but there are certainly lots of intelligent people working behind the scenes that know how to market a product well. Where are they?

      Here's what I mean WRT the marketing: I know people here love to make fun of Microsoft (what would a Slashdot story be, without Microsoft?) but, honestly, if you can find it, watch the "Ray of Light" commercial for WinXP where people jump and jump and eventually take off and are flying around. It's horribly hokey and easy to make fun of, but they really make you WANT Windows XP. Not that I think: "Ohh, if I had Windows XP, I'd fly!" but they make you think that it's actually going to give you the freedom that you always thought it would. Please read the word "think" with emphasis ;-).

      --
      Withdrawal before climax is very ineffective and those who try this are usually called "parents."
    5. Re:Ogg Vorbis by gl4ss · · Score: 2

      he can't use the service, that's what.

      i don't think you need ps2 to buy those songs, you need ie though.

      --
      world was created 5 seconds before this post as it is.
    6. Re:Ogg Vorbis by geomon · · Score: 2

      I use IE on Linux with Codeweavers Wine (actually, Codeweavers Office).

      It worked just fine.

      --
      "Rocky Rococo, at your cervix!"
    7. Re:Ogg Vorbis by Target+Drone · · Score: 2
      Wouldn't ripping the tracks from the CD into Ogg Vorbis defeat the track watermarking

      I think you could also defeat it by buying 10 copies of the same song then digitally comparing them for any differences caused by watermarking. That way you wouldn't loose anything by going to a lossy compresion like Ogg and you would also remove the noise created by the watermarking process.

      The downside is you have to buy a number of copies of the same song but I suspect you'll see some groups shell out the $10, then post a "clean" version of the song on a P2P network.

      An even easier alternative is to just buy the song with a fake name and address. The watermarking isn't removed but they have no idea who bought the original copy in the first place.

    8. Re:Ogg Vorbis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you use a fake name and address, your credit card info won't be validated.

    9. Re:Ogg Vorbis by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      SENATOR Ashcroft's stance [state.gov] sure was different...
      That was before he saw those dancing Jesuses websites. And you know how our John feels about dancing...

      (Oh, and, er, Jesus come to think of it)

    10. Re:Ogg Vorbis by banzai51 · · Score: 1
      Again, So What?

      That's the price you pay for being alternative. He can't go into Best Buy and buy Quicken either.

    11. Re:Ogg Vorbis by isdnip · · Score: 2

      I don't know how these are watermarked.

      But if you read the Felten papers about the SDMI crack, then it's understandable how they have a "strong" watermark that survives MP3 or other encoding. It's not lossless -- the watermark is in the audio, just not so prominent as to be psychoacoustically noticeable.

      The basic idea, IIRC, was that it took narrow frequency bands in the high treble, and then raised and lowered adjacent bands (think: play with a graphic equalizer) rapidly in a pattern. A dB here, a dB there, and the detector can notice the changes in the relative levels. Your ears probably won't.

  18. What's the problem with going to a story on winter by $0.02 · · Score: 1

    A CD is still $9.99 (too expensive) and you even have to download it. The argumet is that one does not have to go to a store on winter. What's the problme to go to amazon.com, wal-mart.com, or similar stores on winter?

    --
    If enithin kan gow rong it whil. (Murfey)
  19. Watermarking? by Patik · · Score: 5, Insightful
    You can ... burn to CD ... copy the burned CDs, and use the CD to make MP3s. Keep in mind there is supposed to be some form of digital watermarking on the tracks though.
    How are their watermarks supposed to stay intact once you use lossy MP3 compression?
    1. Re:Watermarking? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How are their watermarks supposed to stay intact once you use lossy MP3 compression?

      In order to retain value, you'd have to encode at a high bitrate. Don't you suppose that any competent watermarking scheme would survive at a high bitrate?

    2. Re:Watermarking? by Patik · · Score: 2

      What if someone only cares about putting songs onto their 64MB mp3 player? I've seen people with songs encoded at 32 and 64kb/s and through the stock earbud headphones the artifacts aren't too apparent. If watermarking can survive that much compression, it must have quite an impact on the source copy.

    3. Re:Watermarking? by Alsee · · Score: 2

      32 and 64kb/s... If watermarking can survive that much compression

      It can. The watermark could probably survive 4kb/s compression. The music would be barely recognizeable, but the watermark would be readable.

      it must have quite an impact on the source copy.

      It doesn't, unless you are specificly looking for it with digital signal processing software in which case it is clearly visible.

      The suits pushing DRM are morons who refuse to accept that what they want is impossible, but they *do* hire expert geeks. The geeks can't do the impossible, but whatever *is* possible they do expertly, and they know how to bury a survivable signal in audio.

      It's not hard to remove the watermark, but you need a program designed specificly for that purpose.

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  20. Wow, this is great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Good article, man. This little summary is a perfect microcosm of everything that makes DMA difficult to the consumer.

    This article should be spread all over the place.. it would be great if as many non-computer-ultra-saavy people as possible could read this, and get the message "hey, lookit all the annoyance and trouble that this computer-saavy person had to go through just to get this corporate, DRM-tainted music to work. do you think you'd be able to handle that at all? and look at what they had to do because they couldn't exercise the fair use rights the law normally gives them-- the DVD-R player on their computer didn't work, but they couldn't transfer the music to their other computer to burn, so they had to re-download EVERYTHING. Once DRM becomes widespread, EVERYTHING is going to be this nasty and difficult. don't you think it would be good if you encouraged companies you buy from not to use DRM..?"

    -- super ugly ultraman

    1. Re:Wow, this is great by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lookit all the annoyance and trouble that this computer-saavy person had to go through just to get this corporate, DRM-tainted music to work. do you think you'd be able to handle that at all?

      You've left out what the most important problem with DRM is: vendor lock-in. Because everything is based on secrecy and encryption, and not open standards, a given DRM file will work only with those programs blessed by the producer of the DRM file.

      Ordinarily if you want to burn a CD, but the CD burner program doesn't work with your computer-- or is just too difficult for your grandmother to use, or something-- you can just get a different cd burner program, because all you need is a program that does the same thing. With DRM, you can't use "a program that does the same thing", you need the DRM producer's program or someone who licensed from them. (And licensing is unlikely to become too widespread with too many of the DRM "standards", because half the point of DRM is so that the producers of DRM-enabled-playback software can eventually gouge on their player software becuase they're the only ones who can produce it. (Witness the DVD consortum.. what, you think CSS is there to protect the movies? It's there to ensure no one makes a DVD player without paying the DVD consortum's licensing..)) It would be good if more people understood this.

  21. Why only IE by Kentamanos · · Score: 0

    I'm curious why it only works on IE.

    Did they install any ActiveX controls on the page?

    Or did they use encrypted javascript?

    As far as I know, that would be the only REAL reasons they'd be that strict...

  22. This is not illegal by lorcha · · Score: 1, Redundant

    Downloading music is not stealing if you have permission of the copyright holder. In this case, you pay the copyright holder for permission, so you have permission to download. Nothing illegal about that.

    --
    "Avoid employing unlucky people - throw half of the pile of CVs in the bin without reading them." -- David Brent
  23. 99 cents a track? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That adds up to be about the price of a new CD. What a ripoff.

  24. End of P2P by jvmatthe · · Score: 5, Funny
    To quote the author:
    After downloading the files I could not get any of them to play. ... For some time this confused me, then I tried clicking on a link provided in an e-mail that was sent to me to confirm my order. Well, they did not tell me this on the website, but clicking that link authenticated me to listen to the tracks. ... Whenever I'd try to burn a track, the Roxio software would die. ... So if you give the music to anyone else, they (UMG) are supposed to be able to know it was you who violated their copyright. ... So overall it was pretty frustrating making my first CD with this service

    Holy cow!!! That's way too easy! At this rate, it sounds like they're going to have Kazaa and all the other P2P file sharing programs on the run in just a couple of months.

    I guess that when we threw down the gauntlet and said "Ok, Music Companies, let's see some real innovation and get an easy to use, cheap, my-mom-could-use-it service for music" they went and did their homework. I bet my mom's already signed up, downloaded lots of tracks (on 56k), failed to burn copies, downloaded all the different players (again 56k), tried burning her music with them and failed, called support, copied the tracks to her other computer, failed to burn again, contacted support again, redownloaded the tracks again (56k, remember), and finally got them to burn so she could listen to them in her car.

    It's that easy. Wow.
    1. Re:End of P2P by Sri+Lumpa · · Score: 2

      "redownloaded the tracks again (56k, remember), and finally got them to burn so she could listen to them in her car."

      Yeah, but that's only because the second time she downloaded the tracks using P2P that she was able to burn them ;)

      --
      "The obvious mathematical breakthrough would be development of an easy way to factor large prime numbers." Bill Gates,
  25. $9.99 is NOT price gouging by freeefalln · · Score: 0

    Come on! How is 9.99 expensive?! I think CDs are more than worth 9.99. Has anyone else noticed the recent onslaught of cds being released as 6.99 - 9.99? best buy especially. i think its great. I am more than happy to pay 10 bucks for a CD. im not sure if labels are realizing that price does matter.

    and by the way. Downloading songs per track sucks ass. This is a big problem i have with the current state of music, they only release songs. What i mean is, singles are pushed instead of the album as a whole. yea i understand the inability to puhs an entire album and the point is for you to buy it for the single. but some of the greatest albums i know of, are great because all of the songs as a whole, make up the record. like Jimmy Eat World's Clarity. that album from start to finish, flows. you dont have that when you listen to songs randomly.

  26. Does the BBC know? by front · · Score: 2, Funny

    "Hint: if you don't have IE handy, you might not find this service very friendly. "

    Does the BBC know?

    cheers

    front

  27. Great for windows users ... but by joelwest · · Score: 2

    Sounds great for windows users...

    I use Linux on all my boxen. No MAC user will be able to use this either as it requires DRM stuff.

    Of course as they say.. if you are not part of the solution you are part of the problem.

    1. Re:Great for windows users ... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The term "Mac" is not an acronym, Not to be typed in all caps. It is short for Macintosh. Please take this into consideration when posting, guys. Typing "MAC" makes you seem uninteligent. You don't call Linux "LINUX" do you?

    2. Re:Great for windows users ... but by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I CALL IT LINUX. BECAUSE I'M COOL. lameness filter = 0 not caps, blah blah blah

  28. Suicide by fobbman · · Score: 2

    I know of no other industry who makes people work so hard to use their product. If only the quality of the product was enough of a carrot to justify the effort.

    1. Re:Suicide by banzai51 · · Score: 1

      Ever setup Citrix?

  29. Re:Sounds like a great service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You people are pretty hard headed. HEY MORON!!! READ THE F&^KING TITLE!!! Universal Music Group.... Hmm... Seems to me that they own the music they're distributing.

  30. Technology Preview? by codeonezero · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Sounds to me like they still need to work out issues before making it a service that the average Joe and Jane can use.

    What kills it for me (but then again I'm probably not in the majority they are targetting) is the requirement of Windows 2k/XP and Windows media player...

    Well its not like I'm downloading MP3s left and right anyways. Most of my music is bought at a store or via one of them music clubs...(Where you can get like 11 CD for 1 cent, so long as you buy 4 more at regular price in 2 years time...which if you play smart you can gets tons of CDs cheap, assuming you dont need the latest release)

    Maybe by the time I get a broadband connection, these services will use a more open standard format, and the service will be a lot more flexible.

    A price reduction would be nice, would encourage people to buy the songs the like from a website instead of leeching off gnutella or [insert favorite file sharing client/server here].

    50 cents a song sounds good to me :) Maybe for a certain quality, and raise the price up from there for better quality encoding and/or more flexibility. (i.e. pay 99 cents and you can choose your format of choice to download...etc, pay $1.49 and get dvd quality audio...you get the picture :)

    Maybe they can come up with better pricing though.

    Hey I can get 4x6 photo prints of my digital photos for 50 cents from Kodak online services!
    (Well yeah shipping is like $2.99 though hehe)

    --

    ....
    int main (void) { ... }

  31. UMG Artists and Emusic by slutdot · · Score: 5, Informative

    If you're looking for some UMG artists, try emusic. Emusic is owned by UMG and contains quite an extensive UMG listing. For $10/month, you get some UMG artists as well as really good indie labels. If you're into industrial a couple of the labels like Metropolis and Cleopatra are there.

    1. Re:UMG Artists and Emusic by msimm · · Score: 1

      Ehem! And Invisible records home of Pigface, My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult, Psychic TV, Damage Manual, Scorn, Swans, Test Department and^^^^^. Well, you know..artists.

      --
      Quack, quack.
    2. Re:UMG Artists and Emusic by slutdot · · Score: 2

      My apologies to Mr. Atkins and co. for this oversight.

    3. Re:UMG Artists and Emusic by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Those "artists" all suck.

    4. Re:UMG Artists and Emusic by msimm · · Score: 1

      Is that you Mr. Wiggly?

      --
      Quack, quack.
  32. Perfect for Apple by binaryDigit · · Score: 3, Insightful

    This authors experience bodes well for Apple if they can get the licensing straight. If they can interface with these music sites and make them as easy to use as say the iPod, then they'd have a killer combo. Imagine being able to add tracks to your inbox, pay for them, click a button and have it download AND burn for you automatically. Or download/convert to mp3/shove it over to you iPod automatically. This could be another area where the Mac shines, again, if they can get the necessary buy in.

    1. Re:Perfect for Apple by TomHandy · · Score: 1
      Great idea. Of course, this would be something that would actually be useful, enjoyable and pleasant to use, and something people would be willing to pay for, so it seems pretty clear the music industry isn't likely to want to go down this road.

      -Tom

    2. Re:Perfect for Apple by Qwerpafw · · Score: 2

      try audible.com

      not used much, and only does audio books. But it is windows and mac fuctional, and supports a variety of MP3 players.

  33. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by Ehsan · · Score: 1

    Actually $9.99 is much better than being billed $16 for every album you ever downloaded from KaZaA!

  34. Except for Windows and IE ... by burgburgburg · · Score: 4, Funny

    This seems like just the solution I've been looking for. Oh, and the DRM and the problems with the DVD burner. Except for those four little things, this is it.

  35. Must use IE? by ToadSprocket · · Score: 1

    (insert typical "why the hell can't anyone write a decent cross browser page/app?" rant here)
    I never understand why companies don't do things right the first time, or at least make an attempt to get it right the first time. First off, it sounds like they did next to no testing on this thing since the hardware support is so crappy. Second, why shouldn't I be able to take this music that I paid for with my money and play it anywhere I want to? Maybe that would be on my friends computer for shits sake. When I buy a CD from the store, I don't have to worry about that sort of BS, why should this be any different? What, because it came to me digitally (yeah yeah, maybe you can argue getting a CD at the record store gets to you digitally as well since the clerk uses his fingers to hand it to you, but get your digits out of your stank hole and stay with me here!) it is treated different? Good Hell, when are these companies going to get a friggin' clue about the world we live in today?

    Damnit, I think I just gave myself shingles.

    --


    If this article confuses you, don't worry. It was posted yesterday in a much clearer fashion.
    1. Re:Must use IE? by Kentamanos · · Score: 1

      I would guess it's not a cross browser type thing as much it's a they want to use ActiveX or encrypted javascript type thing.

  36. I'll mark you as a freind by Jonny+Ringo · · Score: 2

    So if I mark darnellmc as a friend, then he should be able to (with out any moral problems) share his music with me right? I'm mean how the the record industry get me because I share with my freinds :-)

    Thanks /.!

  37. Why not just buy the cd? by draed · · Score: 4, Interesting
    i've found that with a little searching i can find the CDs i want, brand new, online for around $9-$12 shipping included.

    some good sites to find cheap prices :
    • mysimon
    • is a good search engine that typically finds the cheapest prices for cds(and most everything else)
    • deepdiscountcd
    • has very cheap new CDs
    1. Re:Why not just buy the cd? by doofusclam · · Score: 1

      True. For users in the UK at least, www.cdwow.com charges ukp8.99 for a cd, including postage. They buy the cds from wherever is cheapest, hence why an order of 2xcds will be posted individually from Iraq and Nigeria, but they're pretty fast and the service is great.

      But I would trade cdwow for a cheaper, downloadable and *lossless* alternative straightaway.

      seany

    2. Re:Why not just buy the cd? by ottffssent · · Score: 2

      Or, buy used CDs. The damn things are virtually indestructable; if they're really bad you can get them buffed out. A good CD drive will read through anything short of a knife cut in the media layer, and then it's straight to .

      Going out to buy CDs has some pretty nasty latency, but the bandwidth is pretty good. A $50 CPU and $100 CDROM should be able to run through at about 5Mbit ripping, normalizing, and encoding at high quality.

  38. I'm even more elitist than you by IvyMike · · Score: 5, Funny

    If they are compressed using lossy encoding, like mp3, that would reduce its appeal to me, since I prefer my 44.1kHz pcm audio. I'd resent paying for inferior quality data, but that's just me. Oh, and since I don't have Windows or a Mac I can't use IE anyway, so it's all academic.

    Hrmph. 44.1kHz just doesn't cut it for me; I prefer my audio at 196kHz, 48 bits per sample, 6.1 channels, and I resent paying for anything less. But then again my computer is a Thinking Machine CM5, which doesn't even come with a sound card, so I guess it's all academic for me, too.

    1. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was just trying to make the point that if it is lossy, they're trying to make us pay for something inferior to what we already have (CDs), which we've had for 20+ years. It's a regression, if anything. Some people may be OK with that, but my personal preference is for at least CD quality sound.

    2. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by david.given · · Score: 5, Funny
      Hrmph. 44.1kHz just doesn't cut it for me; I prefer my audio at 196kHz, 48 bits per sample, 6.1 channels, and I resent paying for anything less. But then again my computer is a Thinking Machine CM5, which doesn't even come with a sound card, so I guess it's all academic for me, too.

      Oh, come on. If you've got a CM5, you don't need a sound card. It's fast enough so you can exploit the race conditions between the universal cellular calculation states to hack reality and cause the audio to spontaneously manifest via Brownian motion in your room.

      (You can also use the same effect to revitalise flat cola. It's well worth looking into, although you do need to download a kernel patch.)

    3. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      LOL, that means you can actually make a Pepsi worth drinking then :)

    4. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by josh+crawley · · Score: 0

      Hey, I've got a commie 64 and I listen to floppy drive head muzak. doess that count?

    5. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by aminorex · · Score: 2

      Let's see now, one cabinet of a CM-5 has 128
      Cypress SPARC v7 chips in it, along with 4 VEUs
      per SPARC, at ca. 64MFLOPS per VU peak (assuming
      all mult-add-accumulate operations with no pipeline
      stalls). That's roughly equivalent to 8 AMD 2800+
      chips with 3D-now+ SIMD running a similarly optimal
      instruction stream. I think you can buy one of those
      for about $60,000 in a 4U enclosure, and use Gig-E
      NICs for I/O that will knock the socks off of the
      antique HiPPI channel hardware that the CM-5
      backplane would support.

      --
      -I like my women like I like my tea: green-
    6. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by GunFodder · · Score: 2

      Only one CM5? I've got two, one for each channel since I like to listen to music in stereo.

    7. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by k-0s · · Score: 1

      Quality isn't what always matters for the average consumer, it's ease of use/consumption & price. If quality was always the case We'd all drive American cars, have Betamax video players and everyone would use Linux as opposed to Windows.

    8. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by Sxooter · · Score: 1

      I've been thinking of upgrading from my tape drive to the disk drive. It's either that or spring for a 16k ram cart...

      --

      --- It is not the things we do which we regret the most, but the things which we don't do.
    9. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by mallfouf · · Score: 1

      I use a sony cd player. :)

    10. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      Quality? Drive American cars? *snigger*

    11. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by Quantuminium · · Score: 1

      Yeah, those crappy Ferrari's are rubbish ;)

    12. Re:I'm even more elitist than you by rodgerd · · Score: 2

      I think you'll find Ferrari are owned by Fiat, which is (for now) an Italian company.

      And for a goodly chunk of their history, Ferraris have been notorious for their high maintenance requirements when compared to other high performance cars, anyway.

  39. More info on UMG's service by no_opinion · · Score: 5, Informative

    I tried this service too. It worked pretty well for me, though I had to click the download link twice to get the file. Some comments:

    1) they're selling the files in 2 formats, the Liquid format and Microsoft's WMA format. I tried both and the Liquid format only works in the Liquid player, while the WMA files will play in Winamp, MusicMatch, WindowsMedia Player, and others. WMA seems to be the default except in a few cases, so check your format before you buy (and you probably want WMA).

    2) surprisingly, there are no burn count limits! When you download, the site tells you what the content usage rules are, and you get unlimited burns!!! Sure enough, I made a few burns of the stuff I downloaded and when I checked the properties, there is no burn counter (you can check the license properties on XP in the WMP).

    3) portable device support is limited, but they've covered the major players. Again, this varies by format, but for WMA files you can use your Rio X00 or Creative Labs Nomad. I've got a Rio800 and it worked fine. Another surprise - no transfer limits!

    4) I was worried about the audio quality, but the files sound great vs your typical kazaa download.

    5) I found the different track prices confusing, but eventually I realized that not all of the content in the liquid store is UMG's.

    So I found the whole thing to be remakably easy to use (I didn't have any of the download or burn problems mentioned in the original post) and I was pleasantly surprised at the lack of burn or transfer counts. The files do use DRM, but they've got relatively loose rules. My primary complaint is that the selection is still not fantastic. A bunch of things I searched for were not up. Anyway, it's a good start and I hope that the other music companies follow UMG's lead.

    1. Re:More info on UMG's service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      wma's are boosted by a few db's, so, without wanting to sound picky, do they really "sound great" or are they just louder?

    2. Re:More info on UMG's service by Johnny+Mnemonic · · Score: 2


      3) portable device support is limited, but they've covered the major players...

      Uh, wrong. Apple's iPod by any reckoning is a "major player" and this service is clearly incompatible with it. The question remains: will people stop purchasing iPods, or will they demand that the service change to accommodate them? I'm guessing the latter, simply because more people are aware of the iPod than they are of this service.

      --

      --
      $tar -xvf .sig.tar
  40. Music Royalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I always hear about music lovers wanting to pay for music without all the hustles. They will continue to use P2P until purchasing music is hastleless (and reasonably priced). In fact...I bet some people would even pay for music which has already been downloaded by P2P to make amends. Why do these music industries try so hard to put DRM into everything? Let people pay for the music and do with it as they wish. Listeners are not stupid, they know they need to support the artists which they enjoy. Does there have to be so many restrictions? Is the music industry afraid that the music industry would die and we would have no more music? I doubt that would happen!

    1. Re:Music Royalties by suicidebomb · · Score: 1

      I disagree, I think Listeners don't care about the artists, and in fact, most listeners will always download from p2p.. I mean seriously, who wants to pay for something? If you could steal gasoline easily without ever getting caught, would you ever take the time to go out and buy it, ever again?

    2. Re:Music Royalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      P2P is a great thing for file sharing, but of course the RIAA disagrees. This is a good step in the right direction, but at what cost? The effect of P2P has shut down many .edu networks to being restricted to heavy firewalling. Let also not forget the military cadets who are being court marshalled for having "illegal" music downloads. I like the idea of legal music downloads, but I will never do it because I despise everything these big companies stand for. It's a give and take, These companies are punishing individuals and not the medium of distribution. Next thing you know you'll be in jail for downloading a new album on Kazaa...where can there be a happy medium?

    3. Re:Music Royalties by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gasoline is a necessity. There is a park near my house which puts on free Shakespear plays every summer for everyone to enjoy. They ask people to donate $1 (or more if you want) and then the next year you can enjoy more plays if you wish. Oh...and I sometimes video tape it and watch it at my leasure. :-)

  41. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  42. Re:Thanks for the review (but...) by gosand · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Even if this isn't everything we might want in a downloadable music service, I think that supporting this service will help convince UMG and other companies of the effectiveness of this business model. This is a step in the right direction...

    Or, you could email them and complain about how they implemented the business model, requiring IE in order to use their service. I would not pay for a service that requires IE. I hope their customer service lines are flooded. It sounds like it is a total hassle to set up and download music, even if you do have IE. It is amazing that we are this far along in e-business, and companies still don't get it.

    But thanks for the review, it was definitely worthwhile. I won't be using liquid.com any time soon.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  43. MOD PARENT UP by kurokaze · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    The above post has a good comment.

  44. IE runs under Wine by martinde · · Score: 2

    (So does MS Office and Quicken.)

    FWIW, you could run IE in Linux if that was really the only issue you had. If you want it to be really, really easy and support Wine development, purchase Crossover Office from Codeweavers for a measly $55. (Try getting a Windows license for that!)

    I'm simply a happy customer of theirs, no affiliation.

    1. Re:IE runs under Wine by loply · · Score: 2
      Funny you should mention it, $55 is the EXACT price I pay for a copy of Windows XP Home.

      But, im an OEM.

      CodeWeavers is good for the ability to run Windows apps in Linux - Thats where its value is.

      Its not a Windows replacement because (obviouslly) it runs only a miniscule fraction of the stuff that runs on Windows. Its intended to let you mix one or two Windows things with Linux.

    2. Re:IE runs under Wine by Simon+Lyngshede · · Score: 1

      No you can not run IE using Wine... Well you properly could, but you're not allowed to do so. The IE EULA states that IE may only be used on the platform for which it was designed. This also means that you may not run the Windows version on a Mac, even if you could.

  45. Stolen CDs... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The only way for a watermarking system to be effective would be if people were accountable for their copies.

    Having been robbed, I can see this would be a problem on liabilty if your music gets into the wild.

    At one time, there were homeless who were selling cassettes in 30th Street Station in Philly that were clearly mixes made by individuals. It seems that they were stolen.

  46. This is news for who? by NullProg · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'm sorry, not trying to start a flame war or anything. But who is this story for? Windows users?

    This service needs IE, WMA, and a Windows Box? It won't work under my MacIntosh, Linux, or Home Entertainment system(s)? The songs won't work in my car, walkman or the kids boom-box?

    Well maybe this is news I can use. I know I won't be using my disposable income on this service.

    Enjoy,

    --
    It's just the normal noises in here.
    1. Re:This is news for who? by keyne9 · · Score: 1

      It may help if you understood what being able to burn a CD meant. It generally implies that the CD is burned using a method which allows said CD to be played back in (nearly all) CD players, such as, but not limited to Home Entertainment Devices, Car Stereos, Walkman CD players, etc.

      Last I checked, using a CD that is playable, one could (re-)rip the audio into the format of his/her choice. Granted, it has some loss at that point, but I think that solves some compatability problems.

      If I can find difficult to locate tracks, I'll look into this service. I'm not above paying for my music.

    2. Re:This is news for who? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Macintosh is Macintosh, not MacIntosh or McIntosh! http://www.apple.com/legal/appletmlist.html

    3. Re:This is news for who? by NineNine · · Score: 1

      Since when was it a geek requirement to not use Windows? If some law was passed about this, then somebody obviously didn't tell me.

      There *are* geeks that don't spend their lives obsessing over OS's, you know. I'm one of 'em.

    4. Re:This is news for who? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2
      I'm sorry, not trying to start a flame war or anything. But who is this story for? Windows users?

      Yes, all those 95% of people who use the only platform that has decent DRM in it.

      This service needs IE, WMA, and a Windows Box?

      Unfortunately yes, as I expect using WMA is the only adequate way to keep some semblance of control. No other platform really has any equivalent (good/bad, up to you).

      The songs won't work in my car, walkman or the kids boom-box?

      No, you can burn them to CD and use them there.

    5. Re:This is news for who? by Alsee · · Score: 2

      decent DRM

      Chuckle. Sort of like a decent broken leg :)

      WMA is the only adequate way to keep some semblance of control

      And why should someone else have control over my computer? Do you give Ballantine Books control when you buy the novel Jurassic Park?

      -

      --
      - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  47. Cost? Quality?? by Theaetetus · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Two quick points - one, you don't mention what the quality of the tracks were... were they non-watermarked AIFF or WAVs (44.1k, 16bit), or were they some compressed and altered format, with its attendant artifacts?
    You do say there is watermarking... which listening tests have shown is subtle, but still audible, so you're already at a loss of quality here.

    Also, for cost - popular tracks as high as $1.50, regulars for a dollar... Let's just pick a currently popular, common CD, like The Eminem Show...

    20 tracks (though, 5 of those are skits, which you said you're not able to get...) - really 15 audio tracks... At a dollar each, that's 15 dollars. At a dollar each for most, plus $1.50 for the current singles (White America, Cleaning Out My Closet, Soldier, Without Me, Hailie's Song, What You Say) is 18 dollars.

    Now, my local Newbury Comics is selling this same album for $14.99 (and with a coupon from the Sunday paper, I can knock 3 dollars off of that).

    So, I can either tie up my cable modem and 'puter and download a watermarked, questionable quality version for 15-18 dollars, or I can pay 12 for the original, plus the non-music tracks.

    I'm sorry, but I really don't see what the point is...

    Of course, say I don't want all of those songs, but five from this album, and five from the previous, and five from the one before that... Then, there is a savings, but it's so miniscule - I'd be getting the popular singles off each album, so at 15 tracks * $1.50, I'd be paying $22.50... and if I bought the albums, either on sale or used, I'd be paying no more than $25-30... and get a bunch of tracks I'd never have heard otherwise that I might like. Plus, 3 separate booklets, liner notes, etc.

    There's no way they're going to attract people from P2P sharing if their chosen method is slower, more expensive, and of questionable quality.

    -T

    1. Re:Cost? Quality?? by no_opinion · · Score: 1

      The UMG albums are $9.99, including the Eminem Show. You can go to the store to see for yourself (scroll down the page). I know because I bought one.

      And like most people care about compressed formats. Kazaa and gnutella usage stomp all over that argument.

    2. Re:Cost? Quality?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Albums, including the Eminem album you mentioned, are $9.99.

      I'll assume your local income tax is 7%. $14.99 plus 7% = $16.03. You just saved six bucks on this album by buying it digitally.

      Argument #1 - Out the window.

      The downloads for these albums are very fast. I bought Beck's latest album, and it pegged my DSL at 1.5 Mbit. Plus, you get all the tracks in one place at one time.

      The P2Ps are so slow that it's ridiculous. Trying to find 12 decent tracks is a giant freaking waste of time. Then you've got to re-tag them, etc.

      Argument #2 - Out the window.

      You could argue quality, but to me, the quality close enough to CD to not have the hassle of P2P, feel good about paying for the music, and not getting ripped for $16 at the record store.

  48. DRM *AND* Watermarking? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2
    This is stupid, insulting, and unnecessary. Provide me the data in some high-quality format (I frankly don't care if it's WMA, OGG, MP3, AC3, or something you just made up) with a watermark so you can track where it goes. I think watermarking is the only thing that makes sense, and it makes the most sense during digital distribution. Think about it, even on my athlon tbird 1.4 GHz I can encode as fast as I can rip (Formerly I did both at once using audiocatalyst on a plextor drive... yay plextor.) So it makes sense to store the uncompressed music, and develop your own encoder which will insert the watermarking as you go and deliver the resulting file.

    The DRM thing is stupid, though, considering that once I jump through your hoops I can record it to Red Book/CDDA. Just sell it to me through an SSL-encrypted connection and shove the files at me.

    --
    "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  49. This service is bullshit by EvilNTUser · · Score: 1

    Not to disparage the original submitter, but the whole idea of burning a CD to make MP3s is retarded.

    Wow, dual lossy compression and a chance to pollute the environment. Who can say no?

    Seriously, when are these companies going to get out of the whole CD-mindset? Here we have a record company backed download service, and it's tailor made for burning CDs. This isn't a download service, folks, it's a speedy form of mail order.

    I am not paying for the disc!! I do not want to burn the tracks onto polluting removable media just to listen to the music wherever I want to!

    (oh and I do realize it said you can move the files to another computer, but come on... using their software, only on approved devices. Yuck.)

    --
    My Sig: SEGV
  50. Now All We Need... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


    is to take them to court for patent infringement for downloading media over the internet.

    now that would be funny!

  51. What about the artists? by bytesmythe · · Score: 5, Insightful

    NOTE:
    This isn't intended to be a troll or flamebait post.

    One of the issues that surrounds the music industry is the way that large record labels treat the artists who have signed with them.

    Now a record company has suddenly made it (more or less) convenient to download songs legally, and as soon as it gets easy, the ol' consumer mentality will kick back in and the artists will end up forgotten.

    The artists won't be thought of, just like most people don't really think about the sweatshop laborers in foreign countries who make clothing, or code cheap software, assemble appliances, etc. Give us what we want, and give it to us cheap. To hell with the people who have to work to produce the lifestyle we get to take advantage of.

    *sigh*

    The music industry isn't really upset that you're copying copyrighted material. They're upset that you're no longer a consumer. They want you to consume their services, and if they re-work their existing services in a manner so the production costs are cheaper than current costs, but still charge you the same and still screw over the recording artists, then they see it as a major win.

    Maybe I'll get lucky and someone will reply and tell me why UMG isn't as bad as the others.

    --
    bytesmythe
    Hypocrisy is the resin that holds the plywood of society together.
    -- Scott Meyer
  52. only a windows user could like this by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    I'm really glad I picked them, and you will see why after you read about the issues I faced

    only a true windows user could run into so many problems and yet still be satisfied with a service. Not having IE is an issue? what about not having Windows?

    I'll stick with the Independant artists over at mp3.com. MP3.com actually supports Linux.

  53. pros and cons about my little store around ... by imr · · Score: 4, Insightful

    PROS
    Service:
    there's a real nice looking girl and she knows a great deal about music.
    Prices:
    It's much cheaper than your service as I can find whole CDs between 1 and 3 euros. Yes, they are used, but it's because the shop re-buy from its customers. They are as perfect as new ones. You can buy new CDs at regular price also. People are not doing it to rip them since the shop existed before cd writers.
    CDs:
    I'm not limited to one company, as a matter of facts I'm not limited at all since they sell all kind of music from all kind of compagnies from all countries.
    Choice:
    There's another shop just the same 30 meters away. Only there isnt a nice looking girl there.
    CONS:
    half an hour of subway.

  54. As long as you don't want a doggie bag? by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2

    According to this which reproduces what is apparently a recent letter from Emusic, there are limits. The letter uses the "all you can eat buffet" as a point of comparison. I'm not judging Emusic here, since they appear to provide a very good service and to be only going after abusers, but the term "unlimited" seems somewhat misleading (a.k.a. marketing speak).

    --
    Sigs are bad for your health.
  55. Still not going to sound as good as CD by DrRobert · · Score: 1

    The sound quality of a downloadable file is worse than CD so they are charging you almost the price of a CD for an inferior product. I hope this doesn't catch on. CDs sound bad enough as it is. We need more SACD, DVD-A, and vinyl.

  56. Step in the wrong direction by Bob9113 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is a step in the right direction.

    I don't have a Windows computer. This is not a step in the right direction. Before this service I had nothing. With this service I still have nothing, and there is one more pillar under the Microsoft monopoly.

    1. Re:Step in the wrong direction by Schnapple · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't have a Windows computer. This is not a step in the right direction.
      Think about it - if the "right direction" is a service that could some day make any person be able to download and burn a song regardless of platform or browser, then this is a step in the right direction. It's not there yet.

      But still, they went for the operating system that a vast majority of the people use and the browser that a vast majority of the people use on that operating system. Simply put, they went for the majority on this one.

      And trust me, the RIAA doesn't want to help Microsoft any more than you do. Still, this is where IE as a browser has the advantage - everyone using Windows has it, and you don't have to send them off to download and use something else.

    2. Re:Step in the wrong direction by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And trust me, the RIAA doesn't want to help Microsoft any more than you do. They may not want to, but they will. The movie and music businesses are massing huge political warchests to force their anti-piracy will. Microsoft will attempt to head off catastrophic legislation by introducing their own technologies to allow copywrite holders to distribute electronically to consumers securely, while they make money off both parties. They have given plenty of indication they are working on this, and we are already starting to see signs of cozying-up between these interests. We need an open source technology that allows for easy electronic distribution while protecting copywrite owners. In the absense of this, MS surely wins.

  57. Simple by Salden · · Score: 1

    Because you can buy 10 tracks from 10 different cds and pay the same price as buying 1 cd from the store that only has 1 good track on it. Did you totally miss the point?

  58. Maybe a LITTLE better once kinks are worked out... by sterno · · Score: 5, Insightful

    If they can get this to be cross platform (will they ever support Linux? I doubt it), and get the bugs worked out, it would be better than buying a CD from a store. But would it be better than using Kazaa?

    This is the problem that these media companies need to contend with. What people want is huge repositories of music for a fixed price that's easy to use, and without stupid DRM restrictions. The advantage that this has over Kazaa is that it's easy to find exactly what you are looking for, but being charged a $1+ per track and having to go through the DRM rigamarole, why would you bother?

    Most everybody I know would be willing to pay anywhere between $10-40/month to get access to a huge music repository that they could use without burdensome restrictions. I currently subscribe to emusic for this reason, it's only drawback is that they tend not to have the newest albums. Maybe do a tiered pricing system where you get the back catalog for some more modest price and then you can sign up for a premium membership that will give you the newer music.

    --
    This sig has been temporarily disconnected or is no longer in service
  59. Too expensive? by jovetoo · · Score: 1
    Everyone complains about music being too expensive and I haven't read of any music industry representatives that actually denied this (I must admit: I haven't searched.) nor have I seen any (reality based) comments on what a track of music should cost.

    Does anyone actually know what it costs to make a track of music? I am not talking about how much the artist gets paid, but more to general production costs like studio time, studio hardware, personnel costs, graphics artists (CD booklets) and so on. What are the (average) costs per track? And as long as this is unclear, how do you know what a good price is?

    1. Re:Too expensive? by Stonehand · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The traditional answer would be "whatever the market can bear". If, for instance, somebody digs up sheet music for a hithertoo unknown symphony by Beethoven, and it's judged to be authentic, then it wouldn't be surprising if the first recordings commanded a markup.

      Unfortunately,

      (1) The RIAA isn't fully allowing a free market, because of price fixing, and

      (2) Consumers may decide that the only price they can bear is "free" -- in other words, that they'll be happy downloading music so long as it's somebody else that already paid for it. If very few people are willing to pay, then the marketing machines can no longer survive. This might be good for artists that are already famous and don't need much publicity, but otherwise... *shrug*

      --
      Only the dead have seen the end of war.
  60. At least they're nice about it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I was expecting less when I first heard about the service, and have been pleasently suprised one several counts, first and foremost the customer support: when contacted and asked, they didn't give any run-around, telling him the problem and offering a refund.

    Also, the ability to easily burn them to CDs, despite the lack of DVD support, is a nice feature. I can even forgive the digital watermarking: it's my music to listen to (as I bought a license), but the content still belongs to the company, and giving it out in a easy-to-steal format is against their best interests. I'm all for free music, but this doesn't seem unreasonable.

    The only fear I have is in the verification: what is the music file doing to check authentication, and is that exposing my computer or I to unique identification by some third party company or group? Or does the link just add something to my registry and check locally? All in all, this isn't reason enough to avoid at least giving it a try, as driving to a record store costs half as much as a cd itself.

    Mozilla support would be nice, too.

  61. Biggest Problem With These Services by kalidasa · · Score: 2

    versus Napster: they only sell the stuff the labels want to sell. On Napster, I could get live stuff, tracks that were on out-of-print soundtracks, b-sides, all sorts of stuff I couldn't buy from the record stores, Amazon, or CDNOW no matter how much money I was willing to spend. That's pretty much all I used Napster for anyway (I know, the typical Napster user just wanted to get the latest Eminem CD for free). I see nothing here that suggests that the record companies "get" this.

  62. Friendly.. by trumpetplayer · · Score: 1

    "Hint: if you don't have IE handy, you might not find this service very friendly."

    If I need to have IE handy, I might not find this service very friendly.

  63. Based on my experience ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    over the last several years, if it is WMA, it would be lousy as well as lossy. I have never heard a WMA file (and I have listened to many) that sounded as good as a well-encoded mp3 at comparable bit-rates. The trouble is, there are a lot of poor mp3 encoders/decoders out there that give mp3's a bad name quality-wise, so some people think that WMA sounds just as good. Not in my book.

    --
    Sigs are bad for your health.
    1. Re:Based on my experience ... by moonbender · · Score: 2

      That's probably just you. Most people aren't able to reliably decide on any single favorite among the popular psycho-acoustic models at mid to high bitrates (ie, 192 to 256 kbit and above). Some formats (esp Vorbis) seem to be better suited for the low and medium bitrates between 64 and 192 kbit than others, though. (reference, in German, though)

      --
      Switch back to Slashdot's D1 system.
    2. Re:Based on my experience ... by eht · · Score: 1

      and there are alot of bad wma encoders out there too, the poeple i mean, a well done wma done in the current codec sounds as good as an mp3 with half the bit rate

    3. Re:Based on my experience ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      no one reads your book

    4. Re:Based on my experience ... by msimm · · Score: 1

      How about bad *.mp3 *decoders*? Try listening to your favorite mp3's using Winam^^xmms then try splay (Linux only) and tell me what you think. I wish someone would make this a xmms plugin...hint, hint. ;-)

      --
      Quack, quack.
    5. Re:Based on my experience ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2
      Yeah, I agree. But I think that I covered that when I said:

      there are a lot of poor mp3 encoders/decoders out there

      Thanks for the tip, though, I always on the lookout for something better.

      --
      Sigs are bad for your health.
    6. Re:Based on my experience ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2

      Then please point me to some good wma's (just to be clear, I'm talking about a minimum of 128k for bit rate - to me anything lower just for 'preview'). I'm not saying that it's not possible (although I do find the half the bit rate part very hard to buy), but I've never heard any that don't have some really annoying encoding errors. I pipe my sound card through a pretty decent amplifier and set of speakers. Typically, wma's have a very annoying phasing or envelope type distortion in the higher frequencies and it really puts me off. Some badly encoded mp3's do too, but a well-encoded (and decoded) mp3 can sound pretty darned good, even at 128 kbits.

      --
      Sigs are bad for your health.
    7. Re:Based on my experience ... by msimm · · Score: 1

      My apologies. Good place for a plug for splay though.

      --
      Quack, quack.
    8. Re:Based on my experience ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2

      Maybe I should have qualified my comment a little more. I was only talking about the (IMO) inferiority of wma vs mp3 in my experience. I find is that wma sounds universally poor and mp3 can (when well encoded) sound much better at similar bit rates.

      I think that Vorbis does an excellent job. I also agree that at higher bit rates, things start to level off between several encoders (Blade, Lame, Fraunhofer, etc), and technologies.

      I also find that some mp3's (at 128 kbit fixed rate) sound a hell of a lot better than the average ones (at 128 kbit fixed rate), even when the encoding is otherwise free of gross distortion. When I look at a spectrum analysis of the better mp3's, they haven't got the steep cutoff at around 15-16 kHz - they go out to 20kHz or so. I did a little research a while ago that lead me to believe that the later Fraunhofer encoders accomplish this. Later I found a suggestion that it was Lame. Whoever it is, it puzzles me - it seems to me that they would have to reduce the resolution of other samples to do this. And since it sounds so much better, I wonder why many other mp3 encoders don't do this. Anybody know the answer?

      --
      Sigs are bad for your health.
    9. Re:Based on my experience ... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2

      No apology necessary :-). Thanks again for the tip - I will look at splay. I do like Winamp (2.x), though.

      By the way, Winamp went through a bad spell decoder-wise. I'll probably get the history wrong here, but it was something like:

      1) Winamp uses Fraunhofer, but it was a CPU hog (for the time)
      2) Winamp develops and switches to Nitrane decoder - less CPU utilization
      3) People discover Nitrane has big-time error with reproduction ~ 100 Hz
      4) Winamp pulls Nitrane and licenses someone else's decoder (Fraunhofer again?)
      5) Winamp fixes Nitrane and goes back to it

      IIRC, there was also some potential patent infringement noise made at Winamp by Fraunhofer along the way, but I might be wrong.

      I kept the old Fraunhofer decoder dll and used it with later 2.x versions of Winamp. It worked fine up to and including 2.70. I'm not sure about Winamp 3. I tried it right after release, but found it too slow loading and buggy at that time.

      --
      Sigs are bad for your health.
    10. Re:Based on my experience ... by flygeek · · Score: 1

      Having recently done quite a bit of research on various audio compression schemes for a work project, I noticed this phenomenon as well; certain .mp3 (and .mp2) files had a steep cutoff at about 16Khz, as observed in the Winamp equalizer and also on an external spectrum analyzer. I think what's happening here is that at lower bitrates (ie. more compression), the encoder runs a low-pass cutoff filter on the data before encoding it, which gets rid of a lot of high-frequency elements and makes compression easier to do (and a lot faster, too). At higher bitrates, the encoder doesn't run the cutoff filter first, since it will be more obvious to the listener, and since not as much compression is going on anyway, so performance isn't quite as much of an issue.

  64. Re:Missing Con's (OT) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "IIRC, Window XP allows only a limited number of hardware swaps"

    wrong. RTFLA (Read The Fucking License Agreement) you can swap as much as you want, you just have to re-activate by phone.

  65. So much for iPod support.... by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Their Liquid Audio player for Mac does not run under OS X, nor does it even run under Classic!

    Now, I know that Apple is obviously the Big Evil One to Hollywood because they allow *gasp* MP3's by default with iTunes, but come on, people.

    I want to see a song I like.
    I want to pay $1 or $2 for said song.
    I want to either put song on a music CD (they can mail me the CD, I don't mind), or put the song right on my iPod.

    This should not be difficult. But it is - because the music company is so concerned with *their* wants rather than *my* wants.

    And I'm even willing to pay for it. Go figure.

  66. Bad Religion... by redragon · · Score: 1

    If BR's in there, I'm in!

    Thanks.

    --
    - Sighuh?
    1. Re:Bad Religion... by Strudleman · · Score: 1

      Actually, Bad Religion is in there, and was the reason joined up. Wanting to rebuild my BR collection, I joined up with a mere $10, and downloaded over $100 worth of Bad Religion in an afternoon! With 7 full-length albums and 10 compilations, Bad Religion is one of the most frequently downloaded bands.

      I must say that Emusic specializes in the Punk Rock genre, and was an excellent purchase.

      --
      Do it doug.
  67. Bad comparison by default+luser · · Score: 1

    You don't understand. This is not a Ferrari. This a case of "same chassis, same engine, different body" syndrome.

    This is just another case of "Same stuff, new package". HEY, LETS CHARGE MORE! Hey, it worked when they ORIGINALLY moved us to CDs from tapes, so why not do it again?

    Honestly, this is more lke a Lexus ES300 You might see a good car, but all I see is a souped-up Toyota Camry --- and a big pit with 10k buried in it.

    --

    Man is the animal that laughs.
    And occasionally whores for Karma.

    1. Re:Bad comparison by binaryDigit · · Score: 2

      Honestly, this is more lke a Lexus ES300 You might see a good car, but all I see is a souped-up Toyota Camry --- and a big pit with 10k buried in it.

      That is irrelevant. The point is not are they charging a "reasonable" price for what they are selling, the point is using that as a justification for engaging in illegal acts. The fact that the ES300 is nothing but a relabeled Camry doesn't give you the right to "steal" an ES300. Market forces will dictate how good of a "deal" this is. After all, to my wife, a Ferrari is nothing but a pretty car that goes fast, nothing remotely worth the premium you pay over a Toyota. I on the other hand don't see the point for a piece of squashed carbon selling for 5 figures that's about the size of a pea. I can't affort the Ferrari and I choose not to "waste" money on the rock, my choice.

      Plus, how do you "value" the content anyway? Should all cd's cost the same assuming a single cd? After all, bit's is bit's right? Once the glass master is made the quantity on the disc doesn't matter. If an artist spent 5 years of their lives to create the content, shouldn't they be allowed to charge more than some bubblegum group whose song writers boiler plated the songs in two weeks? Or should it be based on the people who may purchase it?

    2. Re:Bad comparison by IWX222 · · Score: 1

      The price that Lexus charge for the ES300 is determined entirely by market forces - it is a luxury good, so it has a >0 YED. It is also valued by the public at large based on its image, but there isnt an ecnomic model for that yet. Anyway, it all comes down to the demand curve shifting to the right as the price rises, and so the extra money makes the car sell more

      --


      .sig me!
  68. Audio isn't a Ferarri by mmol_6453 · · Score: 3, Interesting

    All it takes to produce good music is talent. And both of those are actually optional.

    It costs a lot of money to build a Ferrari, and only a couple cents to press a CD. With this service, that cost actually goes up. (Contrary to popular opinion, large chunks of bandwidth ain't cheap.)

    The biggest cost should be paying the salaries of the music company (Which only needs to be a few executives and a good team of technicians, not the bloated beuracracy you normally saw in the 90s and, to some extent, today.), and then maybe fifteen or twenty cents (per track) for the artist.

    Even if the artist only sells a mere 1,00,000 tracks, (more likely, considering unwanted tracks will no longer be a deterrant from buying an album), that's still $150,000. For more popular artists, or artists who'd rather release better stuff, but less often, you could raise that by ten cents and they'd have $250,000 to hold them over while they produce their next batch.

    At this point, even niche artists make a good living, while consumers pay only a fraction of the cost they pay now.

    --
    What's this Submit thingy do?
    1. Re:Audio isn't a Ferarri by Deadplant · · Score: 1

      bandwidth? bandwidth is not that expensive.

      bandwidth costs about 0.12 cents US per megabyte when bought in blocks of 50gigs or more.
      So that's about half a cent for a typical MP3... (160kbit for 4 minutes).

      So even an album that used an entire CD (74 minutes) and was compressed to 192Kbit/s would cost about 13 cents US to send over the Internet.
      Of course that doesn't include the cost for the end user to dl... that's just from the server side... end users have been known to pay as much as 0.5-1.5 cents per megabyte...

  69. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by derch · · Score: 2

    Would you please explain why $10.00 is too much for an artistic work? While you're at it, name five other mass produced serious artistic works that are sold for under $10.00.

    Letsee...

    Movie tickets in my area are $7.5, but I can't take the movie home and watch it whenever I want.

    Books, if I wait for a paperback, then it might be under $10.00 depending on author, age, and genre.

    Umm... That's all I can come up with.

    Even Dischord, a well respected independent label, sells their CDs for $10. Kill Rock Stars, another indie, sells 'em for $11 - $13.

  70. Re:Emusic-slightly OT by dr_dank · · Score: 1

    Zinf, for me, has ceased to function when E-music moved away from the RMP format and needed Zinf 2.2.1. You used to be able to d/l single tracks via the browser, and now even thats dependent on zinf/Emusic Download Manager. How long ago did you end your subscription?

    --
    Where does the school board find them and why do they keep sending them to ME?
  71. Too much effort by Blackknight · · Score: 0

    Wow, you mean I get to spend all my time downloading inferior quality audio tracks, burning the cd MYSELF, and I can't even transfer them to a different computer?

    Thanks but no thanks. A burned cd from a cd-r drive is nothing compared to the quality of a professionally pressed cd. Plus I get a case and liner notes.

  72. This service is a good step, but not one i can do by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have a Mac, running Mac OS X. I don't have classic installed because OS 9 is a dead OS. Yet they don't even have a Carbon version of Liquid. I am sick of this DRM crap. Why buy something if I get it at my choice of bitrate or filetype with no strings attached for free! I would LIKE to be legal. But if I have to jump through hoops to get what I need, it isn't happening. I would pay if they had MP3's with no strings or DRM crap attached. As high a bitrate as I want, and 100% uncensored please.

  73. My experience w/Liquid by matthewd · · Score: 4, Interesting

    There are plenty of caveats with the Liquid Audio system. The one great thing about it though is "CDs" never have to go out of print again.

    For some time I was looking for an obscure CD called "The Great Game" by Brother Sun Sister Moon (now called Luminous for their second release). Impossible to find on CD, and impossible to find on peer to peer networks (except one track as noted below, which helped get me hooked) I looked on. But it was on Liquid Audio, and despite my reservations about a proprietary file format, I plunked down the $10 for the entire digital album.

    Download: There were problems downloading. As in the Liquid player crashed during download didn't recognize that the album had been partially downloaded (files were not there), and didn't let me re-download the missing files. Cleared up by customer service.

    Audio quality: decent. I think I've read that the Liquid Audio is really mp3 @ 192kbps inside their "secure" wrapper.

    Compatiblity: Bad. I use WinAmp, and hardly ever listened to the Liquid tracks because I couldn't listen to them in WinAmp.

    Portability: Disappointing. Only playable on the machine you download them to without a MS Passport, or something like that.

    Burnability: Good, once I got a CD-R drive in the computer I downloaded them to.

    Security: Puzzling. What good is distributing music in "secure" files when the Liquid Audio software lets you burn them to an unprotected CD format? I ripped then of course into mp3 format (using a very high bitrate to avoid as much as possible problems with recompressing already compressed audio) and the results are not bad. Now I can listen to them in WinAmp! (nearly every day)

    (btw, in case anyone out there is an Information Society fanatic, Paul Robb is one half of BSSM/Luminous. Definately worth checking out. The one song that I found on p2p was Bangkok, off some movie soundtrack if you want to have a listen first.)

    1. Re:My experience w/Liquid by flowerp · · Score: 1

      > Audio quality: decent. I think I've read that the
      > Liquid Audio is really mp3 @ 192kbps inside their
      > "secure" wrapper.

      Not true. It's Advanced Audio Coding (AAC). I assume a bitrate of 96 kbit/s or 128 kbit/s. More does not make sense in bandwidth for the content provider.

      > Compatiblity: Bad. I use WinAmp, and hardly ever
      > listened to the Liquid tracks because I couldn't
      > listen to them in WinAmp.

      Try Real One Player. It has Liquid Audio support that works. You can also turn off all the ad banners and popups, as well as the system tray utility. I prefer Real One Player of Windows Media Player 9 because I like the music library management functions a lot.

      --
      --- Eat my sig.
  74. This will FAIL unless... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Commercial downloading will continue to fail until the industry offers:

    1) Breadth and depth of available music - some progress here
    2) Cheap tracks ($0.10 US to $2.99 US is a reasonable range) - almost there
    3) The purchase of a track entitles the customer to:
    A. Unlimited downloads on ANY machine by authenticating the customer (customer ID/password perhaps)
    B. A wide variety of track file formats, including: MP3 at several different bit rates, WMA, OGG Vorbis, and a lossless format (FLAC, Monkey's Audio, and/or Shorten)
    C. If the customer chooses MP3 VBR, the customer can later download the FLAC version (see A)
    4) If two separate customers buy track X, download track X and both download it in format Y, then do a bit-for-bit comparison of the files, they should be identical. This should apply for any separate users.

    By offering standard file formats, there isn't the lame "digital rights management" issue where DRM interferes with the customer's legitimate use (i.e. the author's attempts to burn using a DVD burner, and the author's being forced to redownload to burn on a separate computer).

    What will stop people from sharing usernames/passwords or downloading then sharing the music?

    Nothing. But because the service is CONVENIENT, EASY TO USE, and DOESN'T INTERFERE with what the user tries to do, the vast majority of people will not need to bother pirating the music.

    And here's a clue for the clueless in the industry: your music is already available online for free right now, today, so all the DRM and/or watermarking (which means ruining the music by adding noise) you add accomplishes NOTHING. Sorry, that's not true. It accomplishes this: it encourages otherwise honest users to avoid your service and seek their music elsewhere because your DRM interferes with fair use.

    So...

    When you offer all these features, I'll sign up in a heartbeat. Until then, my CD collection is sufficiently large to keep me happy. I don't need to add to it until the music industry offers me something that meets my needs.

  75. ATTBI capping? by asdfx · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Having recently seen this on /., I wonder if it is going to result in a conflict of interests. Are you still going to want to download all those CD's if you're worried Comcast may charge you for using too much bandwidth? Not to stray off topic, but it seems like the point of broadband is so you have quick access to media (among other things). The end result could stifle this potential industry.

    Of course, I, personally, would rather spend more on the internet than on gas (pollution, etc.), but I wonder how Joe Public will act in the future.

    However, if these cap doesn't go into effect, I suppose this means nothing :-)

  76. Watermarking sounds easily defeated.. by defile · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You can play the tracks as much as you like on your PC, burn to CD as many tracks as you want, copy the burned CDs, and use the CD to make MP3s. Keep in mind there is supposed to be some form of digital watermarking on the tracks though. So if you give the music to anyone else, they (UMG) are supposed to be able to know it was you who violated their copyright.

    From my understanding, a "watermarked" audio stream is one where identifying information is included in an imperceivable portion of the audio stream.

    Given that lossy encoders (MP3, OGG) use psychoacoustic-models to reduce data in the audio stream that it considers outside of the human audible range, wouldn't encoding to MP3 or OGG damage or destroy the watermarking?

  77. whatever happened to the ideal of free music? by themusicgod1 · · Score: 1

    this service, we should all boycott. the people who would profit from this, at any lenght, are not going to be anyone who we want to profit, but rather those who will continue to use our funds against us - dont kid yourself, these people will stab you as soon as look at you for a dime, and this is only the first step - once everyone is paying for downloading music, should it ever occur, they will find a way to bankrupt or otherwise disarm gnutella, and then exploit the unknowing consumers again! it is insane that you even post this to slashdot, a place i usually hope to see 'useful' news...in opposition to advertising of new services that are built to harm us geeks!
    i smell riaa influence here, and anything the riaa touches, looks at, pokes, should be burned, and then urinated on. let them spend their money putting together online music service after online music service - the less influence they have for other things the better! but dont support them!!!

    --
    GENERATION 26: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation.
  78. $.99 is too much? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back when I worked in consumer electronics most of us at the store agreed that $1 per track is more than fair. What's not fair is companies charging $16 for a new cd with copy protection that only has 9 tracks. At least if you download the audio from these websites you can burn to a cd that works on almost all cd players, and then rip that cd back to your pc (usually takes me about 2 1/2 min to rip/encode a cd). I know everyone's gotten used to theft, but these sites do seem like a fair option.

  79. IE for solaris by Flamesplash · · Score: 2

    Actually MS did make a version of IE 5 sp1 for solaris, if you happen to be running that. While their official page says they don't distribute it anymore, it is still there

    --
    "Not knowing when the dawn will come, I open every door." - Emily Dickinson
    1. Re:IE for solaris by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I used IE for Solaris at work for a while, and IMO it sucked BAD! Besides, we shouldn't encourage poor web design by jumping thru browser hoops. Make them do it up in standards-compliant style.

  80. Would watermarking survive lossy compression? by tjwhaynes · · Score: 2

    I'd be interested to know how anybody could tell if you've shared the music and what this 'digital watermarking' is all about. If you made MP3s from the CD you make, how would UMG know you violated the copyright? Is my iTunes gonna email them when I play the pirated MP3?

    I'd be interested in knowing about a watermarking scheme that survives being encoded into an OGG or MP3 format. After all, there is little point in watermarking audio if you can hear the watermarking distorting the original sound. As most compression techniques take the most important components of the sound (fourier transforms, wavelet transforms, whatever) I suspect that the watermarks are at least damaged by using lossy compressions and may be untraceable. If the watermark is only present in the highest frequencies of the recording, then a simple low pass filter will remove it. If it is present in the least significant bit of each sample, then it will span all frequencies with equal amplitude, but will almost certainly be lost when encoded to OGG/MP3.

    Cheers,

    Toby Haynes

    --
    Anything I post is strictly my own thoughts and doesn't necessarily have anything to do with the opinions of IBM.
    1. Re:Would watermarking survive lossy compression? by ThrasherTT · · Score: 2

      I can't believe it took this long for someone to make this comment. There is very little chance that watermarking would survive lossy compression, and almost no chance that watermarking could be "traceable" after going through lossy compression. MP3 encoders are not created equal, their handling of the watermark will be different... and given the number of options in the lame encoder, you could end up with countless variations of MP3 output from a single PCM track. On top of that, if you were to burn a CD of this music, and then use that to rip PCM you'd probably end up with slightly different PCM, because many (all?) CD players rip audio tracks inconsistently. Then the question becomes, can watermark comparisons be admitted as evidence for copyright violations even when there isn't a 100% match? If not, watermarking is completely pointless except for punishing the unwitting masses, not the mass-production pirates.

      --

      All Your Memory Are Belong To Java
    2. Re:Would watermarking survive lossy compression? by vrmlguy · · Score: 2
      Short answer: yes, otherwise what's the point?

      Long answer: It depends upon the watermarking algorithm. For example, they could encode a serial number by tweaking the volume of the recording at various places. Would you notice if your favorite song was a single dB louder or quieter during various passages?

      --
      Nothing for 6-digit uids?
  81. Re:Emusic-slightly OT by fuzzbrain · · Score: 1

    It was about 9 months ago in the days when Zinf was still Freeamp so I didn't get to encounter these problems.

  82. besonic by oliverthered · · Score: 2

    amost Everything you want in a downloadable music service.

    --
    thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  83. Not uncompressed by dachshund · · Score: 1
    Two quick points - one, you don't mention what the quality of the tracks were... were they non-watermarked AIFF or WAVs (44.1k, 16bit), or were they some compressed and altered format, with its attendant artifacts?

    Nobody's going to be shipping around uncompressed tracks for a long time yet. They're just way too big, even for your average broadband user.

  84. Re:pros and cons about my little store around ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't believe you.

    Please post the name, address, and telephone number of the store and a link to a picture of the real nice looking girl. Please also include her name, address, and telephone number for verification purposes.

    Otherwise I must assume you are making it all up, and that you are a PR stooge for the RIAA and/or Microsoft.

  85. Mod this up! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Geez, come on moderators, why on Earth did you score the simplistic parent comment so high? Is there some recent addition to the moderating options like (+5, Good Sound Bite Material) ?

  86. An Alternative View on this Service by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    An alternative view:

    First off:
    ALBUMS ARE $9.99
    ALBUMS ARE $9.99
    ALBUMS ARE $9.99
    ALBUMS ARE $9.99

    Three quarters of the arguments here are about how expensive this is. It's not! I bought the newest Beck album through this service for $9.99. This was the best price I could get outside Best Buy, which is $11.99 and about 20 miles away.

    I downloaded the album in Liquid Audio format, because I didn't want Microsoft to get the commission on .WMA files. The download topped out my DSL at 1.5 Mbit. I immediately burned the tracks to CD, which was one of the only disappointments in the process. The standard (free) Liquid Audio software only burns at 1X. The other problem is that the Liquid Audio format does not include a track number, so I had to arrange the tracks manually.

    Immediately after burning the CD, I ripped it to MP3, (which is what I would have done if I bought a physical CD). These tracks aren't going to P2P or anywhere else. I just want the MP3s for my own personal use, and I paid for them.

    THE TRACKS SOUND FINE. I do not have a $50,000 audio system, nor do I have $50,000 ears.

    Not caring for my Liquid Audio experience, and wanting the new Nirvana track, I paid for and downloaded that one in .WMA format. The download took something like 30-45 seconds. I don't need a whole CD for one song, so I burned it to CD-RW in Media Player (quickly, this time) and ripped it to MP3. It cost me $.99, instead of the the $15-$18 for the whole "new" Nirvana album of music I already own.

    In summary:

    1. I paid $9.99 - no tax - no shipping, for the new Beck album. I downloaded it immediately and quickly. No re-tagging, no broken downloads, no bad rips. I burned it on to CD (slowly, this time).
    2. I paid $.99 for the new Nirvana track. I wasn't buying an album of music I already own to get one track I don't. And I didn't have to.

    I have always said that if 'they' offered this stuff for a reasonable price and so that I could do what I wanted with it, I would buy into it. I'm practicing what I preached.

    1. I download in a protected format, but I can burn to CD, which is what I would do if I were downloading MP3s,
    2. Once it's an audio CD, I rip it to MP3, which is what I would do if I bought the CD itself.
    3. I pay for music instead of getting it free, which I always said I would do. It feels good to practice what I preach, instead of constantly bitching and then changing my tune (haha) solely to allow myself more bitching.
    4. The albums are $9.99, which is MUCH less than I would pay for anything new.

    This is a good thing. Pity that most of you can't see that, even though this is very close to what many of you asked for all along.

    1. Re:An Alternative View on this Service by Kjella · · Score: 3, Insightful

      So you download (need Windows/IE), burn (slow), rip & reencode in order to get a more lossy version of what they could have put up for download in the first place.

      Tell them to get back to me when I can download using Windows/Opera in mp3/ogg and burn with Nero. This one is not about price, but about convienience. They've got a bit to go there, spending an hour or more to get mp3s out of it is not my idea of fun.

      Kjella

      --
      Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
    2. Re:An Alternative View on this Service by Pyrosophy · · Score: 1

      While it is true that your experience would be quite different if you happened to be a Linux user, you have some good points here. As does the initial review, which must be said is one of the most unbiased pieces Slashdot has ever posted.

      The thing missing of course, is the convenience of something like napster with unrestricted MP3s. Actually, it becomes a philosophical question. Do we have a right to more convenience, or, given that the more convenience one has, the less legal something becomes (in the copyright arena), is the level of convenience we used to enjoy with Napster simply unacceptable from a social policy level?

      My position, even though I am a reluctant Windows user, is that browser-choice and OS-choice are necessary conveniences but file-formats and watermarking might be something we just have to live with in order to have digital music.

      We all started with Napster/IRC of course, so perhaps our view of what makes for a good music service is full of things that jeopardize that service's legality. We need to decide, as a community, what specific conveniences are necessary. If those imply automatic illegality, we have some tough questions to answer.

  87. Watermarking -- get CLR by axis-techno-geek · · Score: 2

    CLR Instantly disolves Watermarking! How long before some teenager figures out how to remove these?

    --
    This is not the sig line you are looking for... -- Old Jedi Sig Line Trick
    1. Re:Watermarking -- get CLR by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool Edit Pro, Noise Reduction.

      Load Copy 1 with watermark A. Get selection from Profile.

      Load Copy 2 with watermark B. Select Keep Only Noise and process.

  88. Why not MP3? 'Cos Frogs need a cold pan by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

    This is why they didn't use MP3...MP3 doesn't support DRM.

    They are on a boil the frog slowly strategy, You can't boil the frog slowly if it won't get in the pan. So the pan starts cold.

    In this case cold means DRM doesn't impose any limits.

    They need to you buy stuff that plays DRM'd files. So they provide it in a DRM'd formats, even though the copy limit is set high and you can freely burn as many copies as you like.

    Once the pan starts the heat up you'll find your WMA music has copy limits.

    MP3 is the format everything plays, they should have provided it in MP3 format.

  89. "Simply..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How about simply supporting those whose music you enjoy?

    Oh, oh, oh, if only it were that "simple."

    Unfortunately, in the case of most popular artists, the distribution rights to music are controlled by a single publisher who is probably backing up the recording industry's ongoing campaign to retain tight monopoly control even if it means sacrificing fair use.

    So, supporting 'those whose music I enjoy' would effectively mean supporting those who are working hard to bend both government and private industry to serve their own anticompetitive business model.

    I'd rather not. In all honesty, I have no real interest in any "compromise" that the record industry could offer no matter how "generous" it might seem. I want to see them put out of business. The modern recording industry is a bloated, obsolete parasite which is largely just increasing the cost of music without having anything useful to offer. No, I'm not suggesting that music distribution can or should suddenly go entirely online. But neither is there a need for anything approaching the size of the current entrenched record industry now that distribution channels, and even means for producing CDs, are widely available to individuals.

    I'd love to simply support those whose music I enjoy. And, if the overpaid middlemen who currently prevent that will just get out of the way, I will.
    1. Re:"Simply..." by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      you _CAN_ support artists you enjoy here:

      www.garageradio.com

      then again, you don't _HAVE_ to. But that wouldn't be to bright would it?!

  90. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Isn't that substantially less than you pay for new CDs in the stores you mentioned? How is that too expensive? IT'S LESS THAN YOU'RE PAYING NOW.

  91. Umm.... by bizitch · · Score: 1

    why not just steal the music?

    --
    ---- "Logoff! That cookie shit makes me nervous!" - A. Soprano
  92. "Unlimited" MP34 ripping... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...if you spend $20 for their proprietary player.

  93. Officer My PC was Hacked by nurb432 · · Score: 3, Funny

    Thats how the music got out of my hands.. And must be how all that other copyrighted software got on it, as *I* would never do such a thing..

    Now, prove im lying.

    In all seriousness this DID happen to me once... but all was done was they setup an IRC server.. but the point is still valid..

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
    1. Re:Officer My PC was Hacked by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      erm. uh. that IRC server was probably to allow them to control a DDOS, I'm hoping you got that taken care of.

  94. Show me the money (trail) by Andy+Dodd · · Score: 2

    I want to see an exact accounting of what portions of the price of my purchase go where. Last I checked, for CD:

    Cost of pressing CD: Pennies. (Let's assume $1 at worst)
    Amount of money that gets to artist: Pennies
    Let's assume that distributor and retailer are getting 50% of the retail price of the CD (I don't find this unreasonable, say 25% each)

    So for a $15 CD, where's the other $7 going?

    I want to see proof that the artist is getting at least 20% of what I'm paying for the content before I start buying music again.

    I think this is one reason why people don't rant as much about the movie industry.
    a) Movies cost a LOT more to produce
    b) Movies cost on average only 10-30% more than their soundtracks, despite containing a LOT more content. (4 gigs of data vs. 650M, which was probably harder and more expensive to create byte for byte)
    c) We can see plenty of proof that the actors aren't getting shafted, since their pay for a given movie is often public knowledge.

    --
    retrorocket.o not found, launch anyway?
  95. Tired of *NIX bellyaching by cardshark2001 · · Score: 1

    Yes, near any flavor of UNIX is better than Winblows (though I find 2000 to be pretty stable). Yes, it is a legitimate choice for you to make. Yes, I know how to use it. Yes, it's more secure.

    The fact is, though, about 95% of the desktops are running Windows with IE, and about 4% are running Macintosh, and about 1% or less are running *NIX.

    It's not UMG's job to make UNIX popular. The fact is that it's not. Should they spend twice as much money to support 1% or less of their target market? It's called the law of diminishing returns, and the numbers just aren't there yet.

    Mod away.

    --
    WWJD? JWRTFA!
    1. Re:Tired of *NIX bellyaching by Vhalkyrie · · Score: 1

      I tried LiquidAudio a long time ago. I wasn't too impressed. They seem to have come a long way. However, limiting their software also alienates potential customers.

      I don't know what the current estimate of the number of *nix users out there, but even if only 4% of people on Macs, that's still about 10 million potential customers. They aren't making money off the software; they're making money selling the music. To sell more music, they need more customers. It's highly unlikely that people who are looking for a new computer are going to factor in which internet music distribution supports which platform. It doesn't help nor hinder Dell or Apple's sales - only their own.

  96. I don't think so. by Civil_Disobedient · · Score: 1

    I doubt this story very much, for the simple reason that digital watermarking only works on near-perfect copies of the music. Ripping a CD that's been watermarked won't work. But if you do a line-audio copy, then MP3 it for distribution on, say, the 'net, there is NO WAY the watermarking is preserved. And you know how Phans are. They're rabid. They've got DAT's and MD's and CDR's at concerts, with microphones that are better than the CIA's stuff.

    Hell, you could just connect a couple of Shure microphones up to a DAT and play the CD's in a big room. You'd get a pretty good copy that's watermark free.

    1. Re:I don't think so. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like so many others, you do not understand how watermarking is suppossed to work. A well-designed watermark system will easily survive any number of digital->analog->digital transformations of reasonably fidelity. Who knows if Phish even had a well-designed watermark system, but they certainly could have.

  97. Did we read the same article?!?! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Two words, Instant gratification.

    Did we read the same article? Here's what I read:

    After downloading the files I could not get any of them to play.

    you can only go through the process of purchasing and downloading with IE. I use Mozilla by default and was not able to purchase with that browser

    Whenever I'd try to burn a track, the Roxio software would die

    When trying to burn with this player it could not initialize my HP DVD writer

    I also tried downgrading to Windows Media Player 7.1, but that did not work either.

    I also tried Real's RealOne player, but it can not burn WMA files.

    I gave up and contacted Liquid Audio's Customer Service

    I can move files to listen to them on another PC, but they can't be burned on a PC other than the one to which they were first downloaded

    Liquid Audio sent me another link to download tracks


    Geeze, you call that instant?!?!?

    I'm suppose you're impressed with the service from the post office, too?

  98. 4 years late, millions of dollars and... by Phoenix666 · · Score: 1

    several constitutional rights short.

    I don't use p2p to get music anymore because it's free or easy, which it is, but because I fervently want the music industry to die and rot in an unholy grave. For me, at least, infringing on the Bill of Rights is the Third Rail of Politics--they touched them, now they can die.

    Even if tomorrow they came out with, let's see, Napster, and then apologized up and down, dropped all contact with Clear Channel, stopped corrupting our legal/political system, and gave me a free car to use their service, I wouldn't. Why? Because it's not just about cost and convenience, but about freedom.

    As far as I am concerned, they are the most vile threat to freedom in this country since McCarthy and they will never see another penny from me, no matter how many backflips they perform.

    Am I alone here?

    --
    Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.
  99. ok by racerx509 · · Score: 2

    Seems like a reasonably good start. I would think that watermarking the file would be good enough without hobbling them with encryption, because they could easily track pirated files if they ever escaped onto a P2P network. Oh well

    --
    13 year old white supremacists are shitty web designers.
  100. 1,1,2,3,5,8,13,21 by cdf12345 · · Score: 2

    3.14!!

    nice sig, might I suggest Requiem For a Dream if you have not already seen it.

    --
    Chicago2600.net more than a lifestyle, its a survival trait.
  101. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by $0.02 · · Score: 1

    Yes, I would. I've bought (in Sam's Club) a collection of 10 CDs of the greatest composers of classis music(Mozart, Bethowen, J.S. Bach, at al) for $20. (Yes $2/CD). And that is a serious artwork. One can argue that is's because that's public domain music. However, I doubt that modern composers get $8 per sold CD. Where is the difference? You may buy CD with thousands of fonts, images, clip arts, etc for a few bucks. It's not fair to compare with the prices of movies. It takes millions or even hundreds of millions of dollars to make a movie. It's not fair to compare with books. Would you ever buy a poetry book that contains only 10 poems for $10. It's not fair to compare with software. How much more resources spent MS, or Corel to make a wordprocessor, than NSync to make their album? Beside that, software is a durable good. Once you buy a worprocessor you will use it for at least a couple of years. Once you buy a NSync album you just wait for the new one. No,thanks. I will not spend $10 for 10 songs. I'll keep listening to Mozart.

    --
    If enithin kan gow rong it whil. (Murfey)
  102. Not long.... by Kjella · · Score: 2

    Digital watermarks work great for one-to-one relationships, say like putting your name/copyright on an image or in a song. Quite difficult to remove, as they're all that way.

    Removing any unique ID on the other hand is fairly trivial by comparison. Basicly it means getting two (or more) versions of the song, and find the difference (as you're burning directly to CD, it should be a digital copy and identical each time, no D/A or A/D distortion).

    Also, it's a lot easier to distort a watermark than it is to replace it. So unless you need a valid watermark for some purpose, you don't even have to know perfectly how the watermark works to remove the ID.

    Kjella

    --
    Live today, because you never know what tomorrow brings
  103. Honeypot? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Anyone consider that this smells like a big honeypot?

  104. This really ought to be simple. by foxtrot · · Score: 5, Insightful

    So imagine you're a record company. You see a problem: People are downloading .mp3 files that they can then do what they want with of your intellectual property off the internet. You know from seeing it happen that people like .mp3 files that they can do what they want with. You think, "Gee. I'd like a piece of that action."

    So this thing comes out. You can download music off the internet now, and it's legal! It's not ridiculously priced, but there are problems-- it's not .mp3 files that people can do whatever they want with.

    The question becomes, then: Were people interested in digital music that they didn't have to go to a CD store to get? Or were they interested in .mp3 files they can do what they want with?

    I suspect that, particularly since the .mp3 files are free, people for the most part want .mp3 files that they can do what they want with.

    So, if you're a record company, how should you go after a piece of that action?

    Well, let's look at p2p programs. Say you want the latest track from Foo, called Bar. You ask for bar on the p2p client. You get back 142 responses. Now, of these 142 responses, 100 were bogus entries trying to get you to download their porno virus spam. 30 are busy and won't talk to you now, 5 have something completely bogus, 5 are people on the wrong end of a 14.4 modem, and two actually have what you want and open slots to download it, but one of those has it at 96 kilobits.

    Now, if I haven't made it sufficient of a hint, perhaps the proper way to sell digital music online is to

    a) Sell people .mp3s they can do what they want with, and,
    b) Make a reliable service to get them in good quality so you don't have to sort through 142 options to find the one that actually has what you want and will disconnect you halfway through the download anyhow.

    How do you make money selling something that's free? Make it convenient. You can offer people both of those things and still get as much money for them.

    -JDF

    1. Re:This really ought to be simple. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem with p2p is that the Joe Schlub who can run the right software has control of the media. The recordings downloaded by the Schlub is also vulnerable to whatever stupid things done by said Schlub. I gave up using KaZaA because all of the latest South Park recordings (and some old episodes) are mislabled.

      If I was a big-ass record company trying for a p2p approach to sell legitimate recordings, I would make sure the Schlub can't mess with the legitimate published recordings.

      During a trip to the shower, I had one of them "talking to myself" brainstorming session regarding this problem. I know nothing about software design or running a music company's technology division, but this was the result:

      1. Host music-distribution servers to carry media directly to broadband-using members. Those members will distribute said media to members with slower Internet access (dial-up, slower DSL/cable tiers, etc). I guess that means people joining this "service" with broadband will be rewarded with discounts for buying recordings, or at most have some of the broadband bill paid for.

      2. The media has to be encrypted and authenticated. The member software will download the music encrypted through the network. Broadband users will download big-ass chunks of media with the same treatment, and they should not be able to alter the content.

      3. A member "buys" the recording, downloads it from a distributing member and the software decrypts it. In its native format, it should be a "big black cube o' media." The user never has to see this, but they can say "descramble as wav/mp3/ogg/mpeg/avi/whatever." Ta-da.

      4. One thing's for sure, the encryption and authentication methods should be open. GnuPG, MD5, anything else needed so that even the Mac and Linux users can download, compile/install and enjoy. I worry more about making sure I don't have to spend too much effort creating and adapting the technology, and making sure the client/server software are safe from attacks.

      5. There. I've vented. I would like to see things like tracking the distribution capabilities of individual members, their uptime and the variety of members the distributing computers have served. But I think smarter heads will prevail.

    2. Re:This really ought to be simple. by adavidw · · Score: 1

      Wow. Sounds a lot like you just invented emusic.com.

      -Aaron

  105. Re:pros and cons about my little store around ... by imr · · Score: 1

    ;)
    ok
    post your name address and telephone number and I will send them to you.
    I'd like to know how I could be a pr stooge from riaa or redmond by forging such a story?
    It's not in the usa, by the way. I wish there is such shops over there though.

  106. Sound Quality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If these things arn't at least 256kbps VBR OGGs (320kbps VBR MP3), I don't want them. The only reason I pay for CDs is to have a good, permanent, HIGH-QUALITY version of songs.

  107. Too complicated by salesgeek · · Score: 2

    I don't know when they are going to get it, but all this drm this and watermark that is way complicated for music. Try this: I put in the plastic and I get my tracks in mp3 format. And charge less than a buck for three minutes of entertainment.

    --
    -- $G
  108. Upgrade by bobibleyboo · · Score: 0

    What happens when you upgrade your computer and you can no longer burn cd's because the DRM Software thinks that you have trasferred it to a different computer?

  109. Kazaa files sound fine to me by g_bit · · Score: 1

    .

    I don't know, maybe my ears aren't big enough...

    The other problem is that there is no one service that has all of the record companies' artists. That's why I like Kazaa.

  110. $20 for a CD?!? by schepers · · Score: 1

    Where are you shopping? Do you specifically fly to another country to buy imported CDs from the US? Oh, wait, maybe you mean $20 Canadian...

    In the music stores I frequent, CDs are, on the average, around $12-13. (Granted, I usually go to locally-owned shops, rather than chains, both for the low prices and to support the locals.)

    That's only around 16-23% savings, and then only if the CD has fewer than 10 tracks. Rather a feeble discount, considering all the hassles involved. And I'll have that CD 10 years from now, having listened to it wherever I want, which is most likely about 5 times how long you'll have your lossy copy.

    Unless, of course, I sell it... another thing you can't do.

    I'll pass, and keep shopping at CD Alley.

  111. Quick Test of the Selection by mikerackhabit · · Score: 1

    So, I've just spent less than five minutes putting in names of bands that I like and this service has a REALLY limited selection. They have NOTHING from any of the following bands:

    afro celt sound system
    amon tobin
    us3
    DJ Smash
    bullfrog
    dead milkmen
    slackers
    goldfinger
    dashboard confessional
    joe strummer
    catch 22

    I'll grant that some of those bands are a bit obscure but that's what's great about p2p networks is that I can find those less popular tracks. Until I find a service that can match the selection of soulseek et al. they won't be getting any money from me.

  112. No emulation == no Transmeta users by yerricde · · Score: 1

    Background: This music sharing service appears to require Microsoft IE for Windows.

    This also means that you may not run the Windows version on a Mac, even if you could.

    If EULAs presented after the sale are binding, then Microsoft's IE EULA states that you can't run IE for Windows inside WINE inside BSD or Linux inside Bochs or Connectix Virtual PC. I don't think it would prohibit you from running IE inside Windows inside Bochs or VPC, because the x86 platform and Windows operating system are present, just not on an Intel or AMD brand part. Think about it: If the EULA forbids emulation, then it also forbids running the software on a Transmeta processor, which runs x86 software in a sort of emulation.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  113. UK has a DMCA by yerricde · · Score: 2

    Dude, you need to move over here - no laws regarding encryption

    There may be no crypto export controls in the UK (I haven't checked that department), but the UK surely has its own DMCA: section 296 of the copyright law.

    (Incidentally, section 301 provides for a statutory perpetual copyright on a particular set of works, something that can never happen under the current constitution of the United States.)

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  114. How big is your cap? by yerricde · · Score: 1

    I pay a flat rate for my broadband and have plenty of free download bandwidth ... 811 GB per month

    How much is "plenty"? In other words, how big is your download quota? Assume a CD contains 300 MB of audio after lossless FLAC coding. With a 6 GB/month cap, it costs at least $1.25 to transfer that much audio.

    If you have no cap, how can I become as lucky as you to reside in a geographical area where high-speed access with a large download quota is available at consumer prices?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
    1. Re:How big is your cap? by Chemical · · Score: 1

      Get DSL? It's the cable companies who cap. DSL providers all seem to be capless (albeit slower than cable). I would like to know where he gets 2.5mbps for $25/mo. I pay $50 for 768kbps or whatever.

    2. Re:How big is your cap? by Jhan · · Score: 2

      Yo, Chemical! No-one else will probably see this, but: I got my DSL from BoStream (~HomeStream) in the lovely country of Sweden. They've upped their charges since then very considerably, the current prices are approx. like this:
      0.5 MB xDSL: $30/month (no static IP)
      2.5 MB xDSL: $50/month
      8.0 MB xDSL: $70/month

      Execept for the budget version (0,5), you will get a static IP! There's nothing in the contract that says you cannot run severs! I have my own domain, own mail, own web, own everyting! Yeah! Go BoStream!

      I'm still bound by the old contract, until April... Even so, I will gladly pay $50 a month for my STATIC IP TRUE SERVER status

      --

      I choose to remain celibate, like my father and his father before him.

  115. Eh? by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 2

    That's probably because I never wrote one. Thanks for the input though.

    --
    Sigs are bad for your health.
  116. Songwriter gets paid as well by yerricde · · Score: 2

    and then maybe fifteen or twenty cents (per track) for the artist.

    In the United States, the songwriter gets eight cents per track as well.

    If a recording artist wants to learn to write his own songs, how can he make sure that he did not unconsciously copy an existing copyrighted song?

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  117. alternitive to the B.S. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I found a really cool alternative to all the B.S. out there! I hope it really needs more people to support it, both bands and listeners, and labels.
    it is at

    http://www.garageradio.com

    you should check it out, support the people that don't rip people off.

  118. Waste of time by nurb432 · · Score: 2

    It was long ago, and taken care of the *same* day he got in ( i DO watch for things.. ). It was just a 486 serving as a NAT box... so nothing lost on my part but 20 mins work.

    Also contacted the 2 people on each side of me he used in the process, so they could clean up their systems..

    Plus it was dialup.. so really the guy wasted his time.. And was sloppy to boot. :)

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  119. Univeral Affiliate Stores by davemarmaros · · Score: 1
    Universal issued their press release on this last wednesday.

    Many sites that sell Universal Content, if you'd rather avoid the Liquid Audio store, try:
    • Music Rebellion [my favorite] ( www.musicrebellion.com )
    • AudioCandy ( www.audiocandy.com )
    • Best Buy ( www.bestbuy.com )
    • BET ( www.bet.com )
    • Cats ( www.catsmusic.com )
    • Circuit City ( www.circuitycity.com )
    • College Concerts ( www.collegeconcerts.com )
    • Compact Disc World ( www.clubcd.com )
    • Corner CD ( www.cornercd.com )
    • Dimples ( www.dimple.com )
    • EarWax ( www.earwaxrecords.com )
    • Electric Fetus ( www.electricfetus.com )
    • Face The Music ( www.facethemusic.com )
    • TransWorld ( www.fye.com )
    • Gallery Of Sound ( www.galleryofsound.com )
    • Independent Record ( www.beindependent.com )
    • Latin Noise ( www.latinnoise.com )
    • Mainstreet ( www.mainstreetmusic.com )
    • Millennium Music ( www.millenniummusic.com )
    • MIRA Coalition ( www.miramag.com )
    • Music Millennium ( www.musicmillennium.com )
    • New World Record ( www.newworldrecord.com )
    • MP3.com ( www.mp3.com )
    • Quonset Hut ( www.qhut.com )
    • Rasputin ( www.rasputinmusic.com )
    • Record & Tape Trader (www.recordandtapetraders.com )
    • Rolling Stone ( www.rollingstone.com )
    • Tower ( www.tower.com )
    • Windows Media ( www.windowsmedia.com )
  120. Try eMusic.com by tallywho · · Score: 1

    eMusic.com rocks...here's the info.

    $10/mo unlimited downloads w/ a year agreement
    128 kbps quality
    fast servers
    950 labels
    no proprietary bs authentication...just straight up mp3s playable from any device by anyone

    i don't work for them, just a very satisfied customer

    try it for free

    1. Re:Try eMusic.com by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      it is not exactly free, you MUST have a credit card. Or you CANT DO ANYTHING FREE

  121. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by foniksonik · · Score: 2

    "Movie tickets in my area are $7.5, but I can't take the movie home and watch it whenever I want."

    I'd easily pay $7.5 to go listen to 1.5 hours of stadium or concert quality music from my favorite artist -- once or twice a month.

    What i won't do is pay $10 for crappy audio that's a pain in the butt to listen to.

    I also won't pay $15 - $20 for an audio only CD.

    I only pay $12 - $18 for a DVD with audio/video/special effects/behind the scenes documentary/more. Now that's a good deal.

    BTW how much of that $10 do you think goes to the artist?

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  122. Any Browser & any OS , not interested. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Don't do linux ?
    I don't do you.
    eos

  123. Need to buy 70 CDs to make it worthwhile by yerricde · · Score: 2

    I looked up 6+ albums, and they were all cheaper to download/burn than to buy the CD from Amazon or Borders.

    Cheaper? Did you forget the $350 Wintel tax? If your current computer is a Macintosh, or a Sun, or anything other than an x86 computer[1] running a recent version of Microsoft Windows, you're looking into paying $200 for a Microtel PC and $150 for an OEM Windows license just to get started. Even if UMG's new service does save $5 per CD vs. buying it at CDNOW, you need to buy 70 CDs this way in order to pay for the Wintel terminal that the service requires.

    [1] I assume here that Connectix Virtual PC for Mac does not support recording CDs from within emulated Windows.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  124. Trying to go legit--Kicking file "sharing" habit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I've been a longtime user of several file sharing networks. Sadly, I felt guilty about this and decided recently to go legit. I tried to sign up for several online music download sites.

    There was only one problem. Not one service would let me become a member. Why? It's because I happen to live overseas (South Korea).

    When I was a university student, I learned that companies try to do everything possible to maximize revenue. However, apparently my money isn't good enough. I want to give these people my money but they won't take it. Freaks.

    So, I'm back to Shareaza.

  125. Re:pros and cons about my little store around ... by Alsee · · Score: 2

    PROS
    Service:
    there's a real nice looking girl and she knows a great deal about music.


    SOLD!

    Prices...
    CDs...
    Choice...

    Huh? Oh, there was more?

    -

    --
    - - You can't take something off the Internet! That's like trying to take pee out of a swimming pool.
  126. Logical Fallacy by repetty · · Score: 1


    Funny part is: It worked! I have yet to see copies of that stuff distributed.

    You're basing your conclusion (that the watermarking process was a deterrent to illicit reproduction) on an ABSENCE of data. By chance, are you employed in the movie industry?

  127. Money trail for CDs by yerricde · · Score: 2

    So for a $15 CD, where's the other $7 going?

    • To the songwriter, at a federally mandated US$0.08 per track.
    • To the lawyers who verified that the songwriter didn't unconsciously rip off somebody else's song.
    • To the producer and recording studio, for the licensed audio engineers who mixed and mastered the album and the makers of the production equipment that they used to produce the album.
    • To the artists who did the CD's manual.
    • To the music video studio (if they didn't use somebody cheap like Cicierega or the guys who did "White America" for Eminem).

    For more information, ask Courtney Love, who did the math.

    Movies cost on average only 10-30% more than their soundtracks

    A movie soundtrack containing popular music (that is, not the movie's score or some other music composed specifically for the movie) typically contains music from several artists on several labels, and it costs big $$$ to negotiate with those labels for those tracks.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  128. Broadband pricing? by yerricde · · Score: 2

    The P2Ps are so slow that it's ridiculous.

    The P2Ps peg my dial-up at 4 kilobytes per second. I don't download enough music to make paying for broadband ($20/mo over what I currently pay for internet access; see my comments in Xbox Live discussions) and downloading albums less expensive than CDNOW. Besides, I just want the singles so I can do my own continuous mixes.

    --
    Will I retire or break 10K?
  129. Re:Missing Con's (OT) by whovian · · Score: 1

    Thanks for the correction (seriously). It so happens I {w|d}on't do Windows anyhow.

    --
    To-do List: Receive telemarketing call during a tornado warning. Check.
  130. Hmmm....Twilight Zone by SomeOtherGuy · · Score: 2

    Sounded like a semi-fair deal to me. I broke out my credit card a cruised to their site. 15 searches for bands/artists that have been on my mind lately...Results = 1 album from 1 band. That is not very good coverage. If I wanted "hit and miss" availability for my tastes -- I could hang out at the cut-out bins or used CD isle. I think this is a step in the right direction -- but what they need to keep in mind is what made the P2P services so popular (other than the price) was the shear volume of music for EVERY taste.

    --
    (+1 Funny) only if I laugh out loud.
    1. Re:Hmmm....Twilight Zone by Vhalkyrie · · Score: 1

      Not to mention ANY computer type - Wintel, *NIX, Mac. I like www.musicrebellion.com for indies in MP3s, which I can play on my Wintel, Mac and iPod. However, the commercial stuff is in LiquidAudio or WMA. They're going to have to allow me the same flexibility as the indies before I'll fork over some cash on commercial download services.

      If they don't want to do that...well...then I guess P2P is better.

  131. but is it fair? by Kashif+Shaikh · · Score: 2

    Sure emusic will let you have "unfettered" access to MP3s and what not, but if you're an artist read further:

    EMusic has digital distribution contracts with over 650 independent labels. Because we focus on labels, we are very busy. We do not offer deals with unsigned artists.

    So why isn't RIAA hounding emusic? Why aren't they flaming emusic down 'cause they don't have no DRM'ed tech? Could it possibly be that emusic business model protects their "interests"?

  132. what if by schematix · · Score: 1
    You can play the tracks as much as you like on your PC, burn to CD as many tracks as you want, copy the burned CDs, and use the CD to make MP3s. Keep in mind there is supposed to be some form of digital watermarking on the tracks though. So if you give the music to anyone else, they (UMG) are supposed to be able to know it was you who violated their copyright.

    What if someone steals the music from you? They can't hold you responsible for spreading the music unless they can prove you did it intentionally. Just more record company BS.

    --
    Scott
  133. Where's that URL? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Full albums for only 10 bucks. Crazy! Where is that URL. Oh wait I found it.

    http://www.fatwreck.com/records.php3

    Now if only you could listen to some of the bands first. Oh golly look at this!

    http://www.fatwreck.com/audio.php3

    Now, given that Fat Wreck can pull this off. What's the rest of the record labels excuses? Why can't I just go to a record labels website and order a CD for ten bucks?

  134. Damn right! by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Tomorrow I will have a shark fin soup eaten with my ivory cuttlery. Following that the main course will be fish and chips (I will insist on it being cod from the North Sea).

    And I would love to have a panda fur coat for the approaching winter. Or artic fox fur. Or cute baby seal fur, all so soft.

    And I can't describe how much I enjoy many other things. Principles? Morals? What is that? I think I got rid of them some time ago. Quite pleasurable to be honest, to pretend nothing out there matters makes life so much enjoyable.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  135. Laziness eventaully hits you. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    There is absolutely no technical merit in doing a Web based solution that caters to IE only.

    There are plenty of businesses out there than handle far more sensitive information (banks) that happily support any browser because they adhere to standards.

    AOL will release a browser based on gecko, many big corporate names are evaluating Linux in the desktop (i.e. Mozilla, Galeon, Navigator or Konqueror as browser). Companies like this one that decide to bet the future in one basket may find that their MS eggs brake sooner than they think.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  136. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by derch · · Score: 2

    Oh, I see now. Someone with a Sam's club card can buy a collection of royalty free music in a niche market that may have been recorded decades ago for about $2 a disc so all music discs should be under $10. I'm blinded by the clarity of your logic.

    No, really, why is $10 for 10 songs... Better yet, let's take a real example. I paid $18 for a 12 songs by Flogging Molly. That's $1.50 per song. Why is that ripping me off? "Because it's a fraction of what it cost to produce" isn't a valid answer. Price is determined by what the market will bear. $1.50 is less than a hamburger, almost the price of a large bottle of coke. It's *cheap* for what you're getting.

    By you're reasoning, the entire disc should cost as much as a Coke. I'm so glad you value your Mozart as much as a Coke. If artists truly aren't compensated for their work, then I definitely see how lowering the price of CDs help get them paid.

    And you're argument about software being a durable good is crap. I use my CDs for years. I have CDs I bought 15 years ago which I still occasionally listen to, many from 10 years ago I listen to on a regular basis. I don't have a single program from five years ago.

    Would I buy a book of ten poems for $10 bucks? Hell yah if I liked the poems. A buck a poem. Fuck, I spend more on a large cup of coffee every morning and it's through my body in two hours and down the drain. A good poem will stick with me for Life. I'll recite it at my wedding, to my children, whisper as my wife goes to sleep, give the book to my grandchild.

    Same thing with a song. I'll play it to my children explaining it was the song that hooked there mom or it was song my dad played to me, etc...

    For $1.50, that song is a steal.

  137. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by derch · · Score: 2

    Considering the economics of producing an album work, I don't expect much gets back to them. But then, the artist does get an advancement, and the record company pays for promotion and studio time. And if the album bombs, the artist isn't liable for the expenses.

    In the case of Dischord and Kill Rock Stars, I expect it to be different because they work more closely with the artist and are there for the music not to make a fortune.

    I still don't see how a $10 CD helps get the artist more money. Logically, if you want the artist to get more money per CD, shouldn' t you be in favor of raising prices? No one's going to give up what they're already making, so you much increase the money coming in if you're going to give more out.

    For the artist, an album is a gamble. If it makes it big, then they'll be millionaires. If not, they have to make money by touring.

    Again, why is $10 - $20 unreasonable for an artistic work? When you work out the cost per song it comes out to about the price of a large cup of good coffee.

  138. But it's $10 a month! by kumokasumi · · Score: 1

    A $10 service charge per month is a bit hefty, though, especially for someone like me (broke high school student) who has /some/ money but not $10-a-month-money. I'd be perfectly willing to pay, say, $5 a month for a "light usage" version of the same thing. But $10? Eh.

  139. Yeah... by Rysc · · Score: 1

    But what happens if I want to download the MP3s in Konqueror from Linux and then burn them with xcdroast? I'm screwed? Back to opennap for me, then.

    --
    I want my Cowboyneal
  140. Dedicated piracy, why bother? by phorm · · Score: 2

    But then you must question yourself, is it really worth it to do so. And then you go beyond the point of somebody who is simply "trading music" to being somebody who is making a conscious effort to rip the company off (after they supply - to some extent - what many have been asking for, no less!).

  141. Re:What's the problem with going to a story on win by $0.02 · · Score: 1

    You may call that nonexpensive classic music CDs - royality free. The music may have been compused by people who lived and died centuries ago. However, the music is perform by living performance artists. Do you now how much musical education, training, and talent it takes before one is able to play Chopin well? The price is what the market can bear. However, that applies to the free market only. Not in the market where RIAA can tell retailer not to go beyond certain price. I never used Napster. I don't use Kazaa but I will not pay $10 for a CD. I'll rather sutck with Chopin. And yeah, once you show your grandkids your $18 CD they will most likely say - Oh, grandpa, again that borning music from the beginning of the century.

    --
    If enithin kan gow rong it whil. (Murfey)