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Microsoft Prepares Alternative To Apple iTunes

bmarklein writes "According to CNET, Microsoft is working on a version of its DRM software that supports expiration of files on portable devices. Combined with a subscription service like Pressplay (soon to become Napster) that allows unlimited "tethered" downloads, you'll be able to fill up your high-capacity player with new music for a flat monthly fee. Of course it will expire once you stop paying the sub fee, but which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want? How much is it worth to you to "own" the bits?"

590 comments

  1. Uh oh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Looks like our little troll has been rummaging through daddy's tapes. (Probably looking for porn)
    Listen kiddo, Slashdot is full of no-older-than-35-year-old geeks. They: 1) Don't know who you're talking about and 2) Have no taste in music anyways.
    Come back when your balls have dropped so you can troll with the big boys.

  2. MOD PARENT DOWN: -1, Blasphemous by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    How dare you

  3. 7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Gruturo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Crap, no! :-)
    I encode Ogg Vorbis files averaging 6 MB/Song, I can easily tell the difference with everything lower than that.

    Jokes apart, this whole matter of "owning" is tricky....
    Will I be able to do whatever I want with the songs, before they expire? Can I use them on my portable player, laptop, office PC and home PC without paying 4 subscriptions?

    Will quality be crippled?

    Will it work on Linux (that would be interesting from Microsoft) ? I have a Linux In-car mp3 player in the works, and my home theater is connected to my Linux Ogg server.

    --

    Vacuum cleaners suck. Kings rule.
    1. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, you don't own it at all.

      I've read articles which say Microsoft is getting Mp3 playing device makers to add "clocks" so that the music will be able to time out if you stop paying.

      Microsoft seems sure that consumers will find renting music more desirable than owning it. Personally, I think they're crazy.

      I'm not sure about quality, but I doubt Microsoft themselves would support Linux.

    2. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Radical+Rad · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Good points. With a tethered subscription service you will have to somehow authenticate from each device you want to play a song from. That means you must have internet access from the device and knowing ms they will make it a pita or completely impossible to play from any machine other than a ms windows pc with ie, wmp, and spylladium installed. And if they do succeed in sucking in a lot of customers, the terms of service will be modified accordingly to feed the beast.

    3. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by neoform · · Score: 4, Interesting

      apple sells it's music in AAC, not mp3 nor ogg.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    4. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Will it work on Linux (that would be interesting from Microsoft) ?

      Nah, you're probably going to have to stick with the generous, loving people of Apple for their superior cross platform music delivery to get music on Linux, unlike those evil people at Microsoft. Oh wait....

    5. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Dylan+Zimmerman · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The point is that the songs you get from Apple should work on Linux once you have them. As long as there is a Linux AAC player, there is no reason that they wouldn't. My guess is that Microsoft is going to rent the files in their own closed format and sue anyone who tries to make their own player for it.

    6. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Jezza · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well for myself I'd want to burn it to CD to I could listen to it in the car. And the clincher is - what happens if the "great experiment" fails?

      With Apple's offering I own the music and can put it onto CD, if Microsoft pulls the plug my music collection evaporates a month after it stops. Let's not forget paying that bill (no pun intended) may not be our decision, they may find that the service isn't cost effective. Come to it, they might hike the price up, so you're held hostage by your music collection. On refection I like Apple's view of music better.

    7. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Of course. It's the Microsoft way. Anything less would be so shocking the world might collapse.

    8. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Klaruz · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Apple files have some drm in them. The files end in .m4p and not .aac. You pretty much have to convert them before you can play them on anything but a mac or an ipod. That's the only reason I havn't bought any tunes from them yet. I like being able to listen to music on my linux machine + mp3 players in addition to the mac.

    9. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by neoform · · Score: 1

      odds are apple's gonna open things up soon.. i mean, right now they're only selling in the US.. but they will be selling to the rest of the world soon, so as things expand, they'll probably make it available on linux too..

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    10. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by alienw · · Score: 0, Troll

      Are you retarded? Apple songs are encrypted. You can't decode them unless someone cracks the DRM. Thus, you can't play them on Linux any more than you can play WMA files (which are, incidentally, quite well supported by mplayer -- unless there's DRM).

    11. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, because Apple's support for Linux has been so stunning up until now. iTunes announced for Linux yet? Any codecs from 1986 or later available for Quicktime Linux?

      Yeah, and Apple might wake up tomorrow and have 25% market share. Keep dreaming, Skippy.

    12. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Reziac · · Score: 4, Interesting

      And if you let your subscription lapse, but later renew it, do you get use back of all the previous downloads, or are those files now no good so you have to start over from scratch?

      Another issue: say they HAD stuff you wanted at first, but later they have only pop crap. You'd still have to maintain your sub to keep use of your existing files, even tho nothing currently offered is of interest and may not be for years to come.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    13. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Funny how wild, incorrect, and easily verifiable negative conjecture about MS always gets modded up, isn't it? Same with any incorrect, and easily verifiable positive statements about Apple (or Linux).

      Hey, maybe microsoft will require a new license every DAY you'd need to obtain over the phone (toll call) for each PC you have every single time you want to boot your PC. They might require some brain implant to look at the screen, too. You never know, they ARE Microsoft. Apple, on the other hand, will begin to incorporate time-release cancer fighting chemicals in the keyboard and mouse with each new mac they sell! Apple INNOVATES!

      Now mod me up, bitches.

    14. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Klaruz · · Score: 3, Interesting

      That's still not going to help the millions and millions of hardware mp3 players people have sunk billions of dollars into. mp3 is a defacto standard, sure it's not the best quality (sorry 'audiophiles'), there's no drm (sorry record labels) and the format isn't really free (sorry slashdot), but it's the standard. People just need to get over that and live with it.

    15. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by krel · · Score: 1

      MPlayer identifies .m4a as .mov format, and can play it without any problems (unless it's encrypted .m4p, in which case MPlayer obviously can't play it).

      --
      karma: ouch!
    16. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "...its music"

      That is all.

    17. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by luwain · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'd rather own the music for $7500 than be held hostage by Microsoft. I want to be able to move my music around, burn CDs, listen to it on my DVD player or stereo... I'm tired of technology developed for the lowest denominator in society, making it difficult to enjoy the primary purpose of having the technology in the first place. I don't mind paying for what I want. This is something that both commercial and "free" software proponents have to learn. Ironically, I was willing to pay for music downloads (from MP3.com, long before iTunes). If schemes like Microsoft's become prevalent, Kazaa and the like will thrive. iTunes proves that people are willing to pay to download music... that everyone who uses P2P software is not a pirate. I'm willing to pay for music to own it. Renting music is a stupid model. And I don't trust Microsoft.

    18. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by jd142 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Microsoft seems sure that consumers will find renting music more desirable than owning it. Personally, I think they're crazy

      Don't think like an audiophile, think like the average person. ;) Seriously, how often do most people listen to albums they bought as little as 5 years ago? Most music is bought by young people and it's flavor of the month. How many people who bought "Baby One More Time" still listen to it?

      That's one of the reasons (poor college students being the other big one) that used cd stores spring up. We buy an album for one song, listen to that one song for 6 months then go on to the next flavor.

      Audiophiles are different. We really want to own the music, but for most people this will be much better.

      A lot of the technical issues that we care about simply don't matter to the average case.

    19. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That's not true. The data in an .m4p file is not encrypted at all. It's just standard, unencrypted AAC inside an MPEG-4 container.

      QuickTime, however, won't play an .m4p file unless a valid key can be found. So if you're using QuickTime, .m4p files are restricted. If you're just trying to open up the file and pull the AAC data out for playback, go right ahead.

    20. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Case+Closed · · Score: 1

      Press play already allows you to make CDs for the car. Of course, the burn price is about $1/song and depends on how many burns you buy at once.

    21. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by bnenning · · Score: 1
      You can't decode them unless someone cracks the DRM.


      Or until you transcode them to MP3 or uncrippled AAC. Yeah, I know about the quality loss, but I can't tell the difference between my original 128k AACs and transcoded 192k MP3s.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    22. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      mplayer was playing AAC before apple even intoduced this service. Please note AAC is not an apple format, it's a standard alternative to ac3 and probably the future for mpeg4 video stream's audio format.

    23. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by gilroy · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Don't think like an audiophile, think like the average person. ;)

      I think you're underestimating the nostalgia factor. Haven't you ever come across an old album, listened to it for "old times's sake", and then find yourself listening over and over as you rediscover why you bought it in the first place? I don't have hard numbers but most of the people I know admit to having that experience, multiple times. People like their record collections. All of these download services undermine that tactile feel.


      Plus, I don't think the average consumer is as dumb as everyone else thinks. Wait for the first Windows bug to crash the MS music server, causing subscriptions to terminate abruptly. Then watch everyone move to a different model.

    24. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by ldzpn23 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Precisely what I was thinking. Although I am sure many people hear a song they like, buy an album, and then eventually discard of the album because they dont enjoy the rest. There is also the case where you acquire new albums and put aside the old. I am sure there are many different scenarios one can come up with, however you definately can not forget the nostalgia factor. I have over 150 CDs in my personal collection and although I will admit I dont listen to every album every day, there are those times when I come across an album I havent heard in awhile and put it in for "old times sake". Although it entirely depends on the person, people who collect and buy albums love their collections and buy them because their like for the artist, album, and/or music. There are many times I am sure where consumers re-sell their old CDs or discard of them, but I do not know of one case where I have known someone who discards every album they buy eventually. This system may work for some, but from what I know of the average person, there are quite a few people out there who collect CDs and love their collections - they dont enjoy just "renting" music.

    25. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by weave · · Score: 2, Interesting
      if Microsoft pulls the plug my music collection evaporates a month after it stops

      Oh, that will never happen (remembering the flame wars between pro and anti DIVX folks where the DIVX opponents were saying all of those silver DIVX disks would one day be useless and the pro DIVX folks saying they were full of shit).

      I think the final thing when DIVX went under was that those silver DIVX discs would only play for another year or something...

      (Awaiting flames from 13 yo /. readers too young to remember DIVX and not understanding the difference between DIVX and DivX...)

    26. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why the hell does everyone just assume people are gonna fill an ipod with JUST Itunes purchased music? What the hell happened to all the cds everyone owns already? are they just gonna listen to them anymore? what about all the mp3s you already have? just gonna throw them out?

    27. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by bogie · · Score: 1

      "Microsoft seems sure that consumers will find renting music more desirable than owning it. Personally, I think they're crazy"

      "Don't think like an audiophile, think like the average person. ;) Seriously, how often do most people listen to albums they bought as little as 5 years ago? Most music is bought by young people and it's flavor of the month. How many people who bought "Baby One More Time" still listen to it?"

      Honestly I think your the one not thinking like an average person. The "average" person thinks when they pay money for music that they get to own it now and forever. That's not being an audiophile, that's just having common sense. Audiophile's will say screw MS and DRM and average people once they understand that they need to pay monthly forever to actually own a song will pass.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    28. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Any codecs from 1986 or later available for Quicktime Linux?

      Yes, Sorenson. Or don't you read slashdot?

    29. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Surlyboi · · Score: 1

      Hey, maybe microsoft will require a new license every DAY you'd need to obtain over the phone (toll call) for each PC you have every single time you want to boot your PC. They might require some brain implant to look at the screen, too. You never know, they ARE Microsoft. Apple, on the other hand, will begin to incorporate time-release cancer fighting chemicals in the keyboard and mouse with each new mac they sell! Apple INNOVATES!

      No, no, no... you got it wrong. Apple will only
      innovate with the anti-cancer keyboard and mouse
      AFTER Microsoft comes out with the one that gives
      you cancer if you use an unregistered version of
      Longhorn. Everybody knows that... =P

      --
      Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine...
    30. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by bigdavex · · Score: 1

      Don't think like an audiophile, think like the average person. ;) Seriously, how often do most people listen to albums they bought as little as 5 years ago? Most music is bought by young people and it's flavor of the month. How many people who bought "Baby One More Time" still listen to it?

      Then the question becomes, why not just listen to it on the radio? People want to "own" the music to make a statement about their tastes. To identify themselves with the product.

      And furthermore, if people don't listen to their old music, what's the point in making it expire?

      --
      -Dave
    31. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by cscx · · Score: 1

      Umm... okay that's why they're developing that version of WMP for Linux-enabled devices, right...? Hmm, oh yeah! Now it makes sense.

    32. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ok humour me - What was DIVX?

    33. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Click the DIVX link in the parent article putz!

    34. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Overly+Critical+Guy · · Score: 1

      Few things are more annoying than someone who still says "Blockquoth the poster."

      --
      "Sufferin' succotash."
    35. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Absolutely. Microsoft has a bad record here. Anyone ever own a Timex Datalink watch that connected to schedule+? Microsoft dropped it like a hot Rolex not long after it came out and at the time hoebrew software wasn't big, so the expensive PDA watch of the future was suddenly worthless. It couldn't connect to new data managers like Outlook.

    36. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by bnenning · · Score: 2, Interesting
      The data in an .m4p file is not encrypted at all. It's just standard, unencrypted AAC inside an MPEG-4 container.


      My limited research indicates that the data is encrypted. This is based on taking an m4p file that a friend bought, buying the same track myself, and looking at both in a hex editor. What is presumably the audio data (the several megabytes following the "mdat" key) is completely different between the files.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    37. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by dcaulton · · Score: 1

      Speaking with some knowledge of Microsoft's perspective on this, it's not that consumers will find renting preferable over purchase, but rather that it's better to have the choice. Also that it's better for services of both kinds to be tested and hopefully to flourish.

    38. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Someone needs to do a full technical write-up about this. There are some very interesting points about this I'd like to see clarified.

      Assuming it is encrypted, and you each got different encrypted versions: does that mean it's encrypted based on your account password? If so, Apple's fileserving network just got a whole lot more interesting. That's a decent chunk of CPU horsepower to be able to encrypt these things for each user on the fly. And that's WITH a full distribution network!

      If all of the above is true: where does the "3 computer" auth limit come from? Is it "artificial" in the sense that the app does it voluntarily, or is it required -- Apple's servers contain a second (part of the?) key that's required for decoding? If it's voluntary, you technically only need your account password to listen to your files. So what happens when you change your password?

      If it's not encrypted based on your account info, then what accounts for the binary difference in the two files? Perhaps Apple encrypted them with N keys, the distribution network gives you one randomly, and the app sends its fingerprint in to authenticate it? If that's true, why isn't authentication required for each file you try to play?

      And so on...

    39. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I missing something or wouldn't it be possible to burn downloaded AAC's to a CD and then rip them into any format you want?

    40. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by jd142 · · Score: 1

      I didn't say the average user was dumb. In many ways, quite the opposite. I think they'd be smart enough to realize that a lot of the music they buy is ephemeral in nature, so renting it for a few months is probably the better deal for them.

      As far as nostalgia goes, yes, you are right. But I still that experience is more common among people who really, really care about their music than for the majority of people. As you point out, the album was originally purchased for a reason other than to get the big hit song on it.

    41. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by jd142 · · Score: 1

      Then the question becomes, why not just listen to it on the radio? People want to "own" the music to make a statement about their tastes. To identify themselves with the product.

      1) Time shifting. The radio station may not play the song when you want to listen to it.

      2) Having the song on your player will make a statement about your tastes. Take out your player and say "Hey, listen to this," and play the latest thing from Britney. 6 months later, who cares? You're on to either a different singer or a different song. So having the music at your fingertips will have the same cachet as having the album.

      And furthermore, if people don't listen to their old music, what's the point in making it expire?

      Well I never said Microsoft was logical. ;) But seriously, one reason to have it expire is as a hedge against future technology which could break the encryption. What takes 2 months to factor today will take 2 minutes in 5 years. Or something like that.

      The other reason for having it expire is that it locks you in to the Microsoft program. Really like that album? Then you'll be a source of revenue as long as you live.

      It could also be Microsoft tossing a bone to the music industry, essentially saying to them "Come and use our system and we'll protect your rights. Ignore Apple, they let their users listen to your music forever." The expiration feature may not be for the end user, it may be for Microsoft's music partners. And we all know how logical the RIAA is.

    42. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by Alphtoo · · Score: 1

      I love the old music, old Rock 'n Roll, Blues, Country, Jazz, Swing, Classical, etc. Most of the newer stuff is garbage (not all, but so much that I don't even listen to the radio anymore). And as for Microsoft, if you're in the shower with them, don't drop the soap. Everyone who will trust MS to do the right thing, raise your paw...

    43. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by JoeBorn · · Score: 1

      Don't worry about the codec or MS. This could be done a variety of ways, with a variety of technologies. The real question is the labels and licensing and the central premise of renting. All the major services today offer burning "permanent downloads" for 1$/ea. The question is, if IN ADDITION to that you could have thousands of songs on your PC and device, for $10/mo would that be of interest. So yes, when you stop paying you stop listening, but in the meantime you have thousands of songs immediately. They could be pushed or pulled, but it's still a lot of music to listen to. Compare it to XM radio. We've been pitched by the major services and we're seriously looking at implementing this on our device. Look, I personally puked over the idea myself originally, but if the rest of the service is in order (codec quality, complete catalog, etc.) I think this could be pretty interesting. Remember it's not an either or proposition, you can have both.

      --
      If you're going through hell, keep going -Winston Churchill
    44. Re:7500 songs in 30 GB = 4MB/Song?? by bnenning · · Score: 1
      That's a decent chunk of CPU horsepower to be able to encrypt these things for each user on the fly.


      Another possibility is that iTunes itself is doing the encryption. Since iTunes uses SSL, this isn't easy to determine.


      where does the "3 computer" auth limit come from? Is it "artificial" in the sense that the app does it voluntarily, or is it required -- Apple's servers contain a second (part of the?) key that's required for decoding?


      The latter. You receive the key when you authorize another machine for an account. After the initial authorization, all files associated with that account can be decoded without contacting Apple again.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
  4. I like owning my music by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1, Insightful

    but that is just me.

    --



    I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    1. Re:I like owning my music by athlon02 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      i agree.

      besides i only have 1.43GB of 44.1khz 16-bit 128kbps vbr oggs (692 files) and about 110 of those were individual songs I selected from listen.com when they had their $0.49 per song deal. i can't imagine possibly filling up more than about 5GB let alone 30GB with songs I actually WANT to hear. So Apple's deal sounds like a better deal to me personally.

    2. Re:I like owning my music by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Funny

      CD: $10.
      Song from iTunes: $0.99
      Not paying a cent to Microsoft: Priceless

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:I like owning my music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      yep, that is just you! See the problem?

    4. Re:I like owning my music by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      if you like 'owning' 'your' music that much, then get off your lazy ass and create some!
      Then, and only then does it become "yours".

  5. $10 for every song ever created! by ChaoticChaos · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Isn't the question really, "Wouldn't it be great to own every song ever created for $10?"

    How is this possible?

    1) Sign up for one month.
    2) Download every song in the database.
    3) Use the new /. utility to bust the DRM protection.
    4) Discontinue the service. ;-) I give it about 4 days after the service starts until someone figures this out. ;-)

    1. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by bmarklein · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The service already exists (Pressplay) and no one has done it yet. An old version of MS DRM was cracked, but the current version has been around for a couple of years and has not been compromised yet.

    2. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by fliplap · · Score: 4, Insightful

      sure it has. Optical out -> optical in -> record. Boom, perfect copy.

      We've gone over this waaaay too many times now :-)

    3. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by KrispyKringle · · Score: 1

      And how is this easier than the current reigning champs, Kazaa and Gnutella?

    4. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Hypocritical+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Isn't the question really, "Wouldn't it be great to own every song ever created for $10?"
      How is this possible?
      1) Sign up for one month.
      2) Download every song in the database.
      3) Use the new /. utility to bust the DRM protection.
      4) Discontinue the service. ;-) I give it about 4 days after the service starts until someone figures this out. ;-)


      Exactly why the music industry is very reluctant to provide these kinds of services.

      --
      If you liked licking my balls, add me to your foes list!
    5. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by watzinaneihm · · Score: 1

      It should be assumed that they have a cap on how many songs you can have on your playlist. So you can download 10 songs per day or something like that. Even if the downloads are unlimited, what you would be then doing is no better than what you could do by downloading using Napster-like tools, (and more trouble to run the crack on every song.)And then to top it MS would have your computer ID so they can track you.

      --
      .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
    6. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Jeremy+Erwin · · Score: 3, Insightful

      SPDIF still has those pesky SCMS bits to deal with. That's assumming that digital output is available-- as Microsoft's Secure Audio Path scheme can disable digital outputs. Yes, yes, I hear a cry of "so write your own driver" from the peanut gallery.

      But, as we all know, SAP uses signed, certified drivers.

    7. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      Optical out -> optical in -> record. Boom, perfect copy.

      I'll assume two things: first, the music on Microsoft's service is compressed with WMA, and second, the format into which you intend to encode is MP3 or OGG, since this is Slashdot. Unless you encode to the exact format of WMA that you're playing or a lossless format, you will lose quality. This is because each format has it's own sonic priorities for encoding which differ from other formats. So, you either end up with a copy the same quality as the WMA (which is not perfect compared to a CD) or worse.

    8. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Encoding to the same format wont help either as you always loose bits while encoding with lossy formats , encoding to FLAC which is a lossless format won't make any quality difference

    9. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      SCMS is easily stripped by any semi-serious amateur musician. Most professional level equipment allows you to set the bits on the copy to whatever you'd like, regardless of the original SCMS bits.

    10. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The service already exists (Pressplay) and no one has done it yet. An old version of MS DRM was cracked, but the current version has been around for a couple of years and has not been compromised yet.

      Is this MS DRM information about the old version or the new? Maybe other people would find this interesting?

      http://wwwiuk.informatik.uni-rostock.de/forschun g/ ms-digital-rights/Technical.html

    11. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or I think you can host Windows in VMware and use that instead.

    12. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      Encoding to the same format wont help either as you always loose bits while encoding with lossy formats

      Lossy formats save space by throwing out bits that don't meet the requirements of the format. If you use the same format at the same bitrate, those requirements don't change. If I open a box with multicolored balls and only remove the blue ones, and then make a second pass, again looing for blue ones, I won't remove anything the second time. Music compression doen't remove arbitrary bits each time; it's standards stay the same.

    13. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by tchdab1 · · Score: 1

      Bet that if this does come to pass, "every song ever created" won't be available.

      Why should I pay anything for tethered music? I now "subcribe" to a service that has, not nearly every song ever created but does have a great wide selection, no DRM, and costs much much less. The major (only?) cost in it, and a major cost for any service, is the amount of time I dedicate to finding songs, downloading, and maintaining them on playback devices, including maintaining backups and planning that backup strategy. I've already lost everything once and don't want to experience that again.

      I'd rather (1) buy/rip my own CDs and (2) use the "services" that are already out there to explore new music.

    14. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by alienw · · Score: 1

      Nobody compromised it yet because nobody is crazy enough to subscribe to it. Besides, what would you get as the final result, low-fi compressed crap? I would say that the ends do not justify the means. Remember: if their software can decode the file, you can decrypt the file. It would just take a lot of work to get through the obstacles, and nobody wants to do it yet.

    15. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

      won't remove anything the second time. Music compression doen't remove arbitrary bits each time; it's standards stay the same.

      No, I don't think you can't generalize "music compression" like that. An audio codec is free to be asymmetrical in its coding/decoding. It also free to be nondeterministic. For example, using any kind of psuedorandom seed in the compressor for statistical reasons (and perceptual encoding relies on statistics heavily) can result in different output for subsequent runs on the same input.

      Either of these properties -could- violate your blue balls example. Only after looking at a specific implementation (at the code if necessary) can you make a statement about its "arbitrariness".

      I'll give you a quick pseudo-code example:
      -Start with F bits
      -Goal is to reduce this to C bits
      -Find bits we don't "need" (according to psychoacoustic principles), ranked according to significance.
      -Remove the first (F-C) bits.
      -Done.

      So lets say we start with 100 bits. And we want to reduce this to 75 bits. (A real world example might be starting with a 44 kHz stereo @ 16 bits/sample stream and reducing this to a 192 kbps stream.) Anyways, we make the list of bits that we can remove. Let's say the very first psychoacoustic rule determines that of those 100 bits, there are actually 40 that are equally unimportant. That's a result of the resolution of the codec and its principles of acoustics. So we only need to remove 25 of those first 40 bits to achieve our goal. (The user wants 75 bits, not 60.) According to our codec's principles, we can "arbitrarily" remove any 25 of those 40 bits to achieve the desired result with equivalent quality. But which 25 to remove? Removing the "first" 25 as they are found would make the algorithm deterministic. However, consider that this 100-to-75 bit reduction may need to be repeated on each frame of the stream. So randomly picking the 25 bits from their 40 bit bucket -may- make for less artifacts if this step needs to be repeated many times. At any rate, this is a decision of the implementation. It's free to do it that way. See the problem?

    16. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by g4dget · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      Unless you encode to the exact format of WMA that you're playing or a lossless format, you will lose quality

      So high-fidelity nuts pay Microsoft's subscription fee. That's the same kind of people who get suckered out of thousands of dollars for special amplifiers, extra-thick copper wiring, or odd speakers.

      This is because each format has it's own sonic priorities

      Oh, goodie, sonic the hedgehog does signal processing.

      Even if the loss of quality from re-encoding mattered, the effect can be reduced by re-encoding at a somewhat higher quality.

      So, you either end up with a copy the same quality as the WMA (which is not perfect compared to a CD) or worse.

      Yeah, or worse: you might end up with an mp3 of a teenage boy band or Britney Spears or Celine Dion. And that's something you can't fix with a quality setting, unfortunately. No, I take that back: encoding that at 32 kbps might, in fact, improve it.

    17. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Slime-dogg · · Score: 1

      Even better: Dual male plug RCA jack from the speaker/headphone output to the microphone input. They can't have completely secure audio path, the sound has to go somewhere.

      I'm sure it's possible to capture stereo that way.

      --
      You need to restart your computer. Hold down the Power button for several seconds or press the Restart button.
    18. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by darc · · Score: 1

      That's an interesting proposal, but if you've used the VMware sound modules, you'd probably know that they aren't perfect. They tend to crackle, and things like that. Too many levels of abstraction, the quality won't be as good as simply recording from speaker out.

      However, one could conceivably write a wave mapper driver that records to disk.. kind of like a digital out? (Windows side. Not sure about how drivers work on Mac OS )The issue is that pesky signed driver thing, but for now, Microsoft doesn't mandate it, nor Apple.

      --
      Tired of legitimate data sources? Try UNCYCLOPEDIA
    19. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by evilviper · · Score: 1
      Optical out -> optical in -> record. Boom, perfect copy.

      To point a fact, it really wouldn't be a perfect copy at all. First off, you would be forced to re-encode it (from WMA to Ogg/MP3) which looses plenty of audio information.

      Secondly, digital sample-rate conversion is probably necessary... Soundcards are almost allways 48000k. So, if the source is 44100k (most common), or if your audio recorder program records at anything other than 48000k (44100k is common) you loose some quality. Most people might not notice the quality loss, but there is a quality loss, and doing the in -> out a few generations will make the quality loss obvious.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    20. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by evilviper · · Score: 1
      SAP uses signed, certified drivers.

      Would this really be a problem? Man soundcards have openly documented specs (eg. AC97), which would allow anyone with the resources to build a card that will work with a specific signed driver.

      You would only have to make some small changes... Maybe just have the card ignore the instructions to shut off the SPDIF, or otherwise (to seem less like a circumvention too) provide some simple interface to the raw digital data that the card recieved from the OS.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    21. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hmmmm, handcuffs on -> ass out in jail after that

    22. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      So high-fidelity nuts pay Microsoft's subscription fee.

      High-fidelity nuts buy CDs, hardly the same as paying thousands for special amplifiers. I do believe CDs should be cheaper, however.

      The effect can be reduced by re-encoding at a somewhat higher quality.

      True, but not a negation of what I said.

    23. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      1) Sign up for one month.
      2) Download every song in the database.


      Don't get out much, do we?

      It's amazing how far people will go to get something for nothing.

    24. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      $10 for all the songs.

      $14,000 for the equipment necessary to bypass month two's pissant, chicken-shit-money subscription fee.

      Yeah! We beat the man!

    25. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Dual male plug... sounds like some sort of homosexual activity...

    26. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by bogie · · Score: 1

      "So high-fidelity nuts pay Microsoft's subscription fee. That's the same kind of people who get suckered out of thousands of dollars for special amplifiers, extra-thick copper wiring, or odd speakers."

      Hey screw you buddy, my $5,000 per foot pure silver cable has much greater depth and accuracy then you crappy regular 14 gauge cable. ;)

      If your not familiar with the nuts in the "high" end audio scene feel free to fire up any newsreader and subscribe to some of the audio groups. It can be quite amusing.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    27. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      "High-fidelity nuts buy CDs, hardly the same as paying thousands for special amplifiers. I do believe CDs should be cheaper, however."

      Real high-fidelity nuts buy vinyl.

    28. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by hendridm · · Score: 1

      > Exactly why the music industry is very reluctant to provide these kinds of services.

      I'm not sure why they would be any more reluctant. It's not like the current model isn't resulting in mass piracy. At least with this model, it might encourage average people (not Slashdotters) who would normally pirate because they 1) like variety and 2) like their music online/on computer/on portable device to actually subscribe because it's "easier" than trying to get it off of Kazaa.

      A stolen song is a stolen song, regardless of where it comes from. At least they're getting subscription money out of this distribution method. Do you think the average consumer would be satisfied with downloading every song they've ever wanted and then cancelling their subscription? It seems to me the average aficionada likes to keep his/her collection fresh.

      I think paying the "music" bill will eventually become one of those things people consider as part of their cost of living just like the phone bill or the cable bill (at least for people who could benefit from such a service).

    29. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by batobin · · Score: 1

      Just one problem: every song created takes longer to play/record than a month. I have a lot of mp3s. How many? Right now iTunes says 8529 songs, totaling 39.29 GB. If I were to play this collection non-stop, 24x7, it would take 24 days, 3 hours, 8 minutes, and 14 seconds.

      As much as I'd like to believe the contrary, I don't have nearly as much music as the iTMS or Pressplay. But my collection proves the "$10 dollars for every song created" idea flawed. Discounting download time, it would take much too long to play/record this much music. Additionally, the bitrate of my music is, on average, higher than that of Pressplay. Therefore, I'm guessing for a user to get 40 gigs of music they're going to be playing/recording for 2 full months. Plus, don't forget, download time!

      All in all, you're going to be signed up with Pressplay (or theoretically Microsoft) for several months before you can successfully elude the membership-requiring DRM.

      Plus, as Steve Jobs would say, "Don't mess with mother-f*#king karma".

    30. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Moofie · · Score: 1

      Every morning, I wake up and thank GOD that I have a tin ear.

      I can tune a guitar.
      I have an excellent sense of pitch.
      I can read music and sing it on key.

      But I can't tell the difference between a $300 stereo and a $3000 stereo.

      Thank goodness.

      Any time I want music to sound better than on my (decent, but not too pricey) stereo rig, I'll perform it myself.

      With the audiophiles, sometimes I want to scream "It is a FUCKING WIRE. Want less resistance? DOUBLE THE THICKNESS."

      Pure silver cables....HAH! Reminds me of the gold connector I saw on an OPTICAL CABLE. That cracked me up for days.

      --
      Why yes, I AM a rocket scientist!
    31. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by ibbey · · Score: 1

      It already exists, and it's DRM free. Emusic already has over well over 250,000 songs available from over 950 different labels (Such as Matador, SpinART, Beggars Banquet/4AD, Epitaph...). All tracks are cd-quality VBR mp3s (well, -almost- all, a few are still only 128bit). You can download individual tracks, or entire albums with a single click. It's $10 a month, but requires a 1 year contract. Not bad since I've easily downloaded $120 worth of CD's in the three weeks or so since I've joined.

    32. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by Joey7F · · Score: 1

      What about using an MP3 recorder that utilizes "what you hear" as the istream?

      --Joey

    33. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      Real high-fidelity nuts buy vinyl.

      No, even audiophiles use CDs. CDs exceed human aural resolution in range and sample rate.

    34. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by rspress · · Score: 1

      This maybe the application that Microsoft gets to work correctly and the music might not be copyable....well it could happen Also if you purchase 100 songs a year then go off the service with Apple you still have 100 songs and only spent 99 bucks. With pressplay you have spent 120 and have no songs. As someone else has stated, this is around right now and MS is not coming up with anything new. Since the iPod is doing well with Windows users I think iTunes will too!

    35. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by zrm8y5m02 · · Score: 1

      Tell that to SACD engineers.
      CD (or more precisely PCM) is far from perfect.
      SACD FAQ(the original site seems to be dead now, so this is a google cache).

    36. Re:$10 for every song ever created! by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      Tell that to SACD engineers.

      I read the linked page. It never says that SACD exceeds human bandwidth in ways a CD doesn't. I, personally, will never buy a SACD because I think it's only two things: a way to get audiophiles to pay more and a better form of copy protection because the players output no digital signal and the disks cannot be read in normal CD/DVD drives.

  6. iTunes * by axehat · · Score: 0

    Sorry, but if I don't own the music I am paying for, merely renting it, that sucks to me. I would rather pay for my music and own it thanks.

  7. Just crack the DRM by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It'll be done a week before release.
    Problem solved.

    1. Re:Just crack the DRM by sleeper0 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I guess. Of course everything can be cracked somehow.

      If you look at current MS drm tech though, it's not maybe as sinmpleton as you would think. A service run by microsoft would likely have a lot of tools at it's disposal. While nothing will stop you from attacking a single file and being successful, even current public ms drm tech has the ability to use a seperate key for every asset, or indeed have a bunch of keys for the same asset so that every consumer doesnt even get the same encrypted version of the same song. And of course these files will be tethered or close to tethered, compromised keys can be expired, compromised players can be expired, and since it's a monthly type service they can enforce needing the newest software to continue to participate.

      Keep in mind that ms has been planning extensions of the drm system into the rendering chain including the OS and drivers for some time now. I would be surprised if their efforts weren't ultimately related.

      Once you put all of these hurdles in the way, the practical approaches to wide scale piracy of the system dwindle. The most likely compromise of a system like this is in the rendering path, either near the driver or actually plugged into the sound out of a computer. Once you've made it so that piracy can only happen at 1x as the song is playing, needs to be re-encoded, possible quality loss, etc. You make piracy really not that appealing.

      I worked on a system that was similar in some ways in that it offered a large variety of music on a subscription basis. The trouble with this approach so far has ultimately been liscensing, it is difficult to acquire liscenses to music in this way that allow for everyone to be paid as they believe they should and still provide something affordable to the consumer.

      BUT, if you do manage it, the niceness of a service like this is something you truly have to experience to appreciate. Having access to a wide catalog of music was a transformatice experience for me. I have a much broader musical background now and I believe i appreciate music much more as well. If i had simply logged on and pirated my favorite 5,000 songs for $10 and logged off i never would have gotten the best experience out of the system. Indeed much of what i listened to with it i wouldnt have even wanted to pirate. But it was great to be able to play a song you remembered once or twice or explore new music that you might enjoy listening to once (if not again).

      Case in point: Out of the experience I ended up with man thousands of albums, all professionally encoded, that i keep on a home server. While storage obviously keeps going down, needing to have a 600gb raid array at home just for piracy is out of the league of most folks. Even then this amount of music only represents about 5% of the US in-print catalog (to say nothing of the international and out of print works). With all of this music at my disposal, i'd still gladly shell out several times the usual expected fee for this kind of service (normally priced at like $5-$15/mo, i would easily pay $50/mo but then i am probably not the typical user) if i could get access to the other 95% of the US music catalog.

      Said another way, if the service is designed well and compelling piracy may be a non-factor as you could get much more out of the system using it as it was intended.

  8. What about recording? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Whats to keep someone from downloading all the music they want, recording it via the headphone jack to MP3 or ogg, swapping in new music and starting all over? Oh, thats right.. Paladin. I honestly can't say I'm looking forward to the next 7 or 8 years of M$ dominated computing. :(

    1. Re:What about recording? by spirality · · Score: 1

      Buy a Mac.

      -Craig.

    2. Re:What about recording? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who modded this crap up? What the fuck is Paladin? Microsoft already dominates computing, what the fuck are you talking about?

    3. Re:What about recording? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or even easier, whats to stop someone from just downloading them anyway?

  9. How much is it worth? by Stigmata669 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The difference between renting and owning is huge... what happens if pressplay fails like Divx did? Am I stuck with 7,500 songs that do not play?

    A small point: Apple's service sells albums for $10 so 15 or 20 songs can cost $10. I have spent a total of $11 on the Apple Music Store, and I can say that the user experiance is very good, and with the "1-Click" feature I could easily spend $100 without even noticing.

    --
    Yawn.
    1. Re:How much is it worth? by ChaoticChaos · · Score: 1

      +3 Insightful.

      Yeah, this is a great deal **as long as the company stays in business**. If they go out of business, you've got a hard drive full of files that do nothing.

    2. Re:How much is it worth? by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      Yes you would be, but you're only out the money for the months that you used the service (and had use of the music). Switch to another service and you're back in business.

    3. Re:How much is it worth? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1, Interesting

      what? you dolt...if apple went out of business you have a bunch of files that still work!!! why? because you OWN the files dumbass...the music store on iTunes is not a rental service retard.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    4. Re:How much is it worth? by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      you dolt...if apple went out of business you have a bunch of files that still work!!! why? because you OWN the files dumbass

      Well...until you want to transfer playing rights to another computer. You know...the part where it asks for your Apple account info and verifies it using Apple servers. What happens then if Apple is gone?

    5. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You idiot. S/he was referring to m$'s service when
      commenting about the possible failure and someone
      ending up with songs that can't be played. The divx
      reference should have given you a clue, or else the
      post the person was responding to.

    6. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      then you rip the digital output, and got a drm-free copy?

    7. Re:How much is it worth? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      you don't need apple to do that...it is all built into itunes...all itunes does it keep track of the certificats on the network.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    8. Re:How much is it worth? by MattCohn.com · · Score: 1

      But you are forgetting something.

      You have a harddrive full of useless music... just like you would have if you stopped paying the bill. Microsoft's stratigy is you pay $10 for a month of music. I think it's a wonderfull idea, and I'll be subscribing as soon as it's availible. If they go out of business, you simply stop paying for months of music. You arn't OUT of anything, except the option to continue paying for months of music.

    9. Re:How much is it worth? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      yeah well you are an idiot because IF that is what the person was refering to then they did a crappy job of it since the parent included 2 diffrent comments.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    10. Re:How much is it worth? by Blondie-Wan · · Score: 2, Insightful
      You can still play on the original three computers, at the very least (I don't yet know whether you have to electronically notify Apple of your authorizations, or whether you can do it on your own closed network); you can also put the files on unlimited iPods (and presumably other portable players once they support AAC), and of course you can burn them all to CD (and then you can do all kinds of things with the CDs once you have them, too). Even if Apple went out of business tomorrow*, you'd still have the files, and lots of ways to use them.

      *And let's see... judging from the pundits, it's been going out of business for, what, 10 years now? 15? Hell, I can't keep track - but at any rate it's healthier now than it was in '96, and has $4 billion in the bank, and brand loyalty other companies would kill for. I don't think they're going anywhere just yet.

    11. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      the user experience is very good, and with the "1-Click" feature I could easily spend $100 without even noticing

      Personally I see this as a bug, not a feature...

    12. Re:How much is it worth? by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 2, Informative

      But at least with Apple you can burn it to CD, and then either listen to it from there, or recode it at 320 Bits (so you theoritically don't lose any quality).

      So even if Apple should totally bite the dust, there's still an option.

      Or, you could actually buy the CD/music DVD itself if you ever get that freaky. The main thing I use the Apple store for is that 1 song on an entire CD I want - if I want the entire CD, I'll probably just go out and buy it so I have a "hard copy".

    13. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      could someone please explain to me the origin of the 'in soviet russia...' jokes?

    14. Re:How much is it worth? by abirdman · · Score: 1

      >>with the "1-Click" feature I could easily spend $100 without even noticing

      Doesn't Jeff Bezos own the patent on that? And doesn't that mean you're paying Amazon for that feature, maybe "without even noticing"?

      Just wondering...

      --
      Everything I've ever learned the hard way was based on a statistically invalid sample.
    15. Re:How much is it worth? by evilviper · · Score: 2, Funny

      SARCASM:

      I have spent a total of $0 on Gnutella, and I can say that the user experiance is very good, and with the "Download Queue" feature I could easily download $100 worth of songs, without even noticing. ;-)

      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
    16. Re:How much is it worth? by Timmeh · · Score: 1
    17. Re:How much is it worth? by Smurf · · Score: 1
      the user experience is very good, and with the "1-Click" feature I could easily spend $100 without even noticing

      Personally I see this as a bug, not a feature...

      Ohhhh... another addict. ;-) Fortunately, you can turn off 1-Click purchasing and use a traditional "shopping cart". It's much safer for those who tend to buy by impulse, since it gives them an opportunity to reconsider the purchase.

      The bad thing is that 1-Click is the default and some people may not realize that they have an option.

    18. Re:How much is it worth? by Genom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You have a harddrive full of useless music... just like you would have if you stopped paying the bill. Microsoft's stratigy is you pay $10 for a month of music. I think it's a wonderfull idea, and I'll be subscribing as soon as it's availible. If they go out of business, you simply stop paying for months of music. You arn't OUT of anything, except the option to continue paying for months of music.


      Not quite.

      Let's assume two people - one on the Apple system, and another on the MS system. Both decide to spend $20 (and only $20) on their service. The Apple user downloads 20 songs. The MS user pays for 2 months of service, and downloads some arbitrary number of songs.

      Now, a month passes. The Apple user still has his/her 20 songs. The MS user is still happily downloading new songs. Both are happy (although admittedly, the MS user may have *access* to more songs at this point.)

      Another month passes. The Apple user still has his /her 20 songs. The MS user, having been downloading happily for 2 months now, tries to play one of his/her downloaded songs, and gets an error: "Sorry, your subscription to MS Music Service has expired. Your license to play this song has therefore been revoked. If you would like to play this song, please renew your subscription to MS Music Service."

      So, after 2 months, and $20 from both users pockets, what does each have to show for that $20?

      The Apple user has 20 songs he/she can play at will.

      The MS user has a hard disk full of useless music files, that refuse to play unless he/she coughs up more money. Arguably, since the music files are un-usable, it could be said that the MS user has absolutely nothing to show for his/her $20.

      In the short term, the MS "solution" may seem the better deal (Only $10, download all you want, vs. $1 a song), but in the long run, Apple's "solution" actually gives the user something to show for his/her money - and doesn't keep asking for more money (although after getting a few songs, you'd probably be tempted to get a few more...;P ).

    19. Re:How much is it worth? by MarkLR · · Score: 1

      As you note the Apple customer has 20 songs. During the two months they were a customer the person using the MS service could have downloaded a thousand songs.

      Drop MS from the equation. Which is better buying a DVD a month or having unlimited movies on demand?

    20. Re:How much is it worth? by xigxag · · Score: 1
      I think people are slightly missing the point of how a "timed" subscription service would work in practice. Nobody would get stuck with 7,500 useless songs because the purpose of these services is to not build up a collection. You download a few songs, maybe transfer them to a portable if you want, listen to them until you get tired of them, then delete the lot of them and download some brand new songs. There's no need to keep a "collection" of songs because you would have broadband access to the music provider's servers, and you could always re-download an old favorite if you felt like it. The download would probably stream so you could get instant gratification.


      For someone who might currently subscribe to streaming radio (as opposed to people who are automatically dead set against a rental scheme), this would function as an upgrade to what's available now in the guise of services like Launch.com, Musicmatch MX, Live365, and Real Radio. Basically, you'd get to listen to any song you want, in any order you want for a flat free with no commercials. And if you want to "share" with a friend who has the same service, you just send them a pointer to the song on the server, no need to email them the file itself. And you'd get to put your current playlist on your portable too. For current streaming subscribers, this is a proposition with no downside.


      Now, is this going to appeal to everybody? No, but it doesn't have to. But I think it would appeal to the type of people who don't see the point in buying DVD's instead of just renting them, or in buying books instead of going to the library. The sort of people who don't like to clutter their lives with excessive "ownership." And I think it's fair to say, judging by the success of libraries, and Netflix, and Blockbuster, and PPV, that there are plenty of people who fit into that category.

      I should add that I'm not one of those people. I still have books from 30 years ago, old issues of .info magazine in the closet, and LP vinyl records I haven't touched in 20 years or more. I'm a packrat. But I've got friends who will read a novel and then throw it out immediately afterwords (gasp!), who reuse the same, crufty, dollar VHS tape over and over again for that one TV show they record every week, and who probably think their "collection" of 15 compact discs takes up too much space.

      --
      There are two kinds of people: 1) those who start arrays with one and 1) those who start them with zero.
    21. Re:How much is it worth? by Genom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Drop MS from the equation. Which is better buying a DVD a month or having unlimited movies on demand?

      I'd argue the former, given that we're only dropping MS from the picture, and not the money or concept of "subscription".

      With the former, I get a smaller selection that grows over time - but never goes away if I'm unable to pay for more. If after a month I decide to stop spending money on this, I still always have the product I paid for.

      With the latter, I get a much larger selection, but if I'm ever unable to pay, I lose everything. If after a month I decide to stop spending money on this, I have no product - no proof of the money I spent - only memory.

      I'm sure some people would disagree, and choose the latter, based on the short-term benefit. It's really a decision that's up to the individual to make. I choose to make the choice that gets me something permanent, rather than something larger, but temporary.

    22. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Just shut the fuck up already. You've proven to be a complete juvenile asshole.

    23. Re:How much is it worth? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      umm..yeah...have you looked at your comments?

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    24. Re:How much is it worth? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And don't forget that as long as iTMS is in business and you haven't uninstall your iTunes software you can always preview any songs you like on your 3rd, 4th, 5th... months without paying a penny more. That's Apple mode of temporary... and I like it!

  10. I think... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...I'd go with Apple. Give money to a company that innovates, rather than copies.

    --
    Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
    1. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      haha, thats cute

    2. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, they're the "innovator" because they copied Xerox first for the OS, they copied Napster/PressPlay/etc. first for the music service....

      They're always on the cutting edge of "me too," while Microsoft is always lagging behind. Always. Like with protected memory, multitasking....

    3. Re:I think... by MattCohn.com · · Score: 1

      Funny. Did you know that Amazon.com sells music? Did Apple copy that?

      Feeding the troll aside, I'm looking very much at the Microsoft model. I would love to have a large selection of good-quality music that I didn't need to pay a per-song price for.

      Think of it as a phone card VS. local calling service. With the phone card, you pay for how long you are talking. Fine if you only make a few calls... but I plan to be on the phone a ton. That's where a monthly flat rate makes sense for me.

      If you didn't get the analogy, I plan to be constantly downloading lots of music, and lots MORE music as it comes out.

    4. Re:I think... by theflea · · Score: 1

      I'd probably go with apple before even looking at the specifics of each model (although that's probably not advisable). Because apple innovates, and apple's plan is probably better on the whole.

      That's why microsoft has a "trustworthy computing" initiative. It's code for "nobody trusts microsoft as far as they could throw it". As soon as soon as I read that microsoft was coming out with a music service, I thought "what's the catch?"

    5. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ill go with a local record store whos not part of a huge multinational monopoly..

      theyre hard to find, but they do exist

    6. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Since when did Apple innovate downloadable music?

      Even disregarding the (illegal) download of songs via Napster and Napsteresque applications, MP3.com has existed for years, pressplay, Amazon, etc.

      I don't see how Microsoft is copying Apple here, they're just gonna buy (or buy into) Pressplay that has existed before Apple released iTunes.

      Apple has different terms to their service but there are still license limitations.

      Regarding the "trustworthy computing" initiative... it seems to me that while trusting Microsoft is not a good idea, too many people seemingly *blindly* trust Apple. It's almost like religious fanatacism.

      I'm all for anything that's better, but I dislike when people stop being even mildly skeptical of a company's intentions... Remember, Apple, just like any other company, intends (first and foremost) to make profit (otherwise, they'd be a non-profit organization and sell their goods at zero profit)... and someday, it's entirely possible they consistently will!

    7. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, Apple didn't innovate here - the other services did like Pressplay and Rhapsody. All apple did was throw some cash at the labels and some key artists to join the apple team.

      I hardly call that innovation.

    8. Re:I think... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

      Their plan sounds a whole lot like the RealOne scheme. Collection of music, can pick and choose and swap all for a monthly fee. But something sounds fishy about a monthly fee for something already on your computer. I guess that's why I never play everquest.

      --
      Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
    9. Re:I think... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

      Of course, of course, you think this is the only way Apple innovates. They may be taking up the path others have traveled, but they've done something that has kept the RIAA from suing them over.

      The innovation referred to was in relation to the fact that if you buy something from Apple, money goes to their R&D where they find something that kicks ass.

      Buy something from Microsoft and the money goes to a bank account labeled "Ballmer" and their R&D department goes out to CompUSA to see what Apple's cooking up.

      --
      Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
    10. Re:I think... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

      Right, they're the "innovator" because they copied Xerox first for the OS

      Do you even know what Xerox thought of the "Mouse"? They thought it was childplay garbage and they were prepared to treat it as such and toss it out until Jobs BOUGHT the right to look at the Alto with a deal that basically made Xerox rich as fuck. They had private shares at dirt-cheap prices that split several times over and IPO'd at around $45 a share. As for "copying", the Alto (I'm assuming you've never seen that Alto) looks and feels NOTHING like the MacOS (for one thing, it had a multi-button mouse, and the GUI was as vanilla as Breyers Ice Cream. They simply looked and tinkered with the cool buttons.

      Jobs' R&D team saw a CONCEPT, took it and made a original product. There's a difference. Gates had access to the hard functional parts of the MacOS, prototypes and said "I want Mac on the PC".

      FYI: One thing also "copied" from XEROX PARC- Ethernet.

      --
      Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
    11. Re:I think... by theflea · · Score: 1

      I agree with you. Another innovation was finding a middle ground between what consumers want, are willing to pay actual money for, and what record labels will tolerate.

    12. Re:I think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I do have a healthy respect for Apple, I'm not aware of any real "innovations" they've made. Apple's R&D seems to have been focused on evolutionary, rather than revolutionary, changes. Kinda like the Japanese*.

      They saw a graphical GUI -> make it better.
      See LANs -> make it easier.
      See public backlash against Microsoft -> Market self as "rebel" company.
      make computer case look pretty.
      See MP3 players -> make Ipod.
      See online music stores -> make profitable.

      *racial disclaimer: I'm Japanese

    13. Re:I think... by C0LDFusion · · Score: 1

      They saw a graphical GUI -> make it better.
      See LANs -> make it easier.
      See public backlash against Microsoft -> Market self as "rebel" company.
      make computer case look pretty.
      See MP3 players -> make Ipod.
      See online music stores -> make profitable.

      They saw a graphical GUI that was un-friendly towards user and clumsy -> They made a GUI that was user friendly and simple to navigate. (The difference between the Horse-drawn carriage and the Model T)

      See LANs -> fumbled the ball on Macintosh Office (AKA "Macintosh Oriface" -Jean Louis Gassee, former Apple CEO). Made up for it by adopting Ethernet.

      The "public backlash against Microsoft" is backwards, my friend. You see, Apple from the BEGINNING was marketed as the "little guy", but not against Microsoft. Indeed, the original target was IBM (AKA: "Big Blue"), because it really didn't deal with individuals until Apple II became popular. When Macintosh came out, Microsoft was a piddly company in Washington that had made a killing licensing BASIC and DOS (Purchased for butt-cheap from tiny developers). They signed on with the Mac for a while, saw what they liked, and Gates SPECIFICALLY ordered his lead Mac Programmer to copy the OS ("I want Mac on the PC" are the EXACT words). The passing of the torch from IBM to Microsoft occurs primarily because of the size Microsoft now has, and the fact that Apple works with IBM now.

      Yeah, they do make the case look pretty, but that's more due to focus on computer design than anything else.

      Those last two are totally correct, actually. However, the iPod works so well with Macs that is it fairly fricken amazing if you see it in action, compared to many MP3 players I've see. And the online music stores thing is more of the fact that Apple saw a market that noone succeeded in and made success possible. That's actually a big step forward.

      Their BIGGEST innovation, however is to have put the first computer that could be marketed to the average Joe, rather than a corporate entity, or a nerd-savant hobbyist.

      --
      Only in slashdot are posts of solidarity modded at -1 Redundant, while posts of antagonism are modded as -1 Flamebait.
  11. Own? by Remik · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Watch the verbage. As far as the RIAA is concerned, you never 'own' a song. Unless the consumer has the right to rip, mix, and burn, you can't say they 'own' anything but the right to listen to it, and even then only if they pay a recurring charge. From the looks of this system the best you could call it is renting, and that's a stretch.

    -R

    1. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      license would be the verb of choice

    2. Re:Own? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      to bad the RIAA does not recognise copyright law then.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    3. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      I wouldn't dispute this. But, if current trends continue, I'd say they'll be writing copyright law before they'll be obeying it.

    4. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you apply your standards consistently, you never "own" anything unless you created it yourself or lawfully purchased the rights to the intellectual property. I mean, if I buy a car, does that give me the right to set up a factory and begin producing copies of it? Of course not. If the music industry granted you the rights that you wanted, they'd go out of business. Period. But as business competing in the free market they can sell their product under any terms they like.

    5. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >> If you apply your standards consistently, you never "own" anything unless you created it yourself or lawfully purchased the rights to the intellectual property. I mean, if I buy a car, does that give me the right to set up a factory and begin producing copies of it?

      No, but you DO have the right to make modifications to the car, given that it remains street-legal.

    6. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 3, Insightful

      By saying I want to rip, mix, and burn, all I'm asking for is the right to phase shift media which I've paid for. It's the companies problem if that right, which has been mine with every other media thus far, puts them in a pinch as to how to make a profit. I'm not asking to be able to sell copies of the music; I'm asking to be able to exercise my right of fair-use.

      To use your car example, buying a car gives me the right to break it down to parts and sell (or reassemble in a different form) the pieces, it also gives me the right to resell the car itself as a whole. Those are all examples of rights that RIAA are trying to technologically and bureaucratically take from us.

      -kd

    7. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      With Apple iTunes you OWN the song. You have the right to burn it into a CD, copy it into ANY ipod number and copy it into 3 different Mac.

      Boought song into playlist can be burned into 10 CDs in a row, after that the only requirement is to change the playlist even by one song to get the right to burn 10 more identical CDs.

      So you have the right to rip, mix, burn.

      Do you need more ownership than that?

    8. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      That's still rife with arbitrary restriction on what very possibly could be a fair-use right. I'm not saying that there are a lot of circumstances where it would be a violation, but it's apparant that it could be. In short, you don't own it. Apple is much more liberal with their licensing scheme, but it's not yours to do with as you please.

      If I have to jump through hoops (mixing up playlist order, getting permission to switch between computers) to exercise these benefits, then it's not a right, it's a privelege, and it can be revoked by Apple at any time.

      -kd

    9. Re:Own? by Pendersempai · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Unless the consumer has the right to rip, mix, and burn, you can't say they 'own' anything but the right to listen to it, and even then only if they pay a recurring charge.

      Faulty logic. First of all, he was talking about Apple's scheme, in which you actually do have the right and ability to mix and burn the song without a recurring charge. But even if you got the facts right, you still own the song; you just don't have copying rights (i.e. copyright) to it. Don't misrepresent the facts.

      Your logic applied to other consumer goods:

      • "You don't own a twenty dollar bill unless you have the right to photocopy it"
      • "You don't own your basement unless you have the right to make bombs in it"
      • "You don't own a gun unless you have the right to rob a bank with it"
      • "You don't own that beer or that car unless you have the right to drive drunk"

      Restrictions of property usage are a part of our life, and they do not signify a lack of ownership. Bandying about with terms like this is exactly what leads the RIAA to erroneously equate copyright infringement with theft. Don't sink to their level, please.

    10. Re:Own? by earthforce_1 · · Score: 1


      Fine - to paraprase Sonny Bono, I do not own the music, I shall rent it forever less a day. (Or at least until alpha decay and stray radiation renders the bits on my hard drive unreadable)

      --
      My rights don't need management.
    11. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 0

      You never own a $20 bill, that's why it's illegal to destroy it.

      You have the right to make bombs in your basement. Not all bombs are illegal.

      The remainder of your suppositions are false derivatives of my claim.

      There are exceptions to copyright, and they're called fair-use provisions. Unless they are allowed by any DRM, then you don't have the same rights over the song you download than you would over the cd you buy. Apples DRM mangles fair use rights on multiple fronts. If you think you own a song you download from Apple, you are sadly mistaken.

      -R

    12. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's still rife with arbitrary restriction on what very possibly could be a fair-use right.

      First of all: there's no such thing as "fair use rights." Read the statute. There's never a reference to any "fair use rights."

      There's a reason for this. You are not prohibited from doing certain things. That doesn't mean you have a RIGHT to do those things. If the seller of a product or service offers you a deal in which you accept certain limitations in return for certain advantages, that's just fine and dandy.

      When you say "Apple restricts fair use rights," you're couching the conversation in legal terms, a context in which it doesn't belong. There's no legal implication here at all. It's purely a practical thing. If you want to buy music from iTunes, an arrangement that brings with it certain advantages, then you're going to have to accept some practical restrictions.

      Now, in real-world terms, these practical restrictions aren't restrictions at all. I've bought music from iTunes, and put it on my iPod, and burned it to CD. Now the CD is sitting on my shelf. I can go back and rip that CD to AAC if I want to. It's just like any other CD that I've bought.

      If I have to jump through hoops (mixing up playlist order, getting permission to switch between computers) to exercise these benefits, then it's not a right, it's a privelege

      It's not a right. It's an ability that is neither protected nor prohibited by law.

    13. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      Go read the decision in Eldred v. Ashcroft where Ginsburg explicitly states, in a legally binding decision, exactly how and what fair-use is. It hasn't been codified, but that's only a matter of time.

    14. Re:Own? by MacGod · · Score: 1
      From the looks of this system the best you could call it is renting, and that's a stretch.

      That was the point of this story. They're comparing Microsoft's new and wonderful approach (which, as you say, is renting at best), to Apple's, wherein you do in fact own the music (you can copy it to an iPod, burn it at will, and listen to it on several computers.

      What this slashdot article was asking is whether it's worth the cost associated with the iTunes music store to own the songs, or whether you're better renting them from Microsoft, albeit at a lower initial cost.

      --
      "Reality is merely an illusion, albeit a very persistent one " -Albert Einstein
    15. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      And my point, as you'll see from the conversations below, is that you can't call either 'owning'. There are things that you cannot do with an apple recording, without jumping through hoops and sometimes not at all, that are perfectly legal things to do. You have to forfeit these rights inorder to get content from apple.

      -R

    16. Re:Own? by gilroy · · Score: 1
      OK, I'll bite. How about "You don't own a painting unless you have the right to make (sell, etc.) copies of it"?


      The entire issue of "ownership" of intellectual output is much murkier than anyone -- especially the RIAA and MPAA -- wants to admit.

    17. Re:Own? by cying · · Score: 1

      Good point. Maybe that also means that you could say that any music or media advertising encouraging the buyer to "own a copy today!" constitutes fraud, since you really aren't going to "own" it anyway.

    18. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      Check out the artwork of Sherrie Levine. She is famous for making reproductions of famous artwork. Her photographs of famous photographs hang in a art galleries.

      I'll agree that there are problems with ownership of IP...I just think that we should err on the side of the consumer, until such time as the law is more clear.

      -kd

    19. Re:Own? by dissy · · Score: 1

      > And my point, as you'll see from the conversations below, is that you can't call
      > either 'owning'.

      Actually thats not quite acurate either.

      You (usually) do own a copy of the music (read as data for geeks, no matter what media its on)
      You have it, thus you own it.

      Now, the fun comes in with copyright.

      You do own the music, but copyright limits what you can legally do with it, at the copyright owners whim.

      You do own the data. You do NOT own the copyright to that data.

      Before disney paid our government to fuck over the public, copyright would expire after 7 years (or 14 with an extention), at which point there is no copyright on the data, and then you literally do own that data AND the right to do anything you want with it.

      You need to keep in mind, copyright was an offer FROM THE PUBLIC to artists.
      It was a deal. The public said "hey, if you make things, we will make you a deal. we will allow you a 7 year period of control, but in return we want that thing to be owned by the public after that time."

      We (the public) cant really help the fact the government is speaking for us incorrectly and changing that deal to "Hey, we are still gunna give you that deal, but you dont have to pay for that anymore. You get to keep your stuff forever and its all free!"

      Personally if i aggree to a deal, and someone else comes up and claims the deal is different and i didnt OK it, i dont view the changes as valid.
      I personally view any work older than 7 years to be mine (well, everyones, as its public domain, but im a part of of the pubic so 'mine' works)

      The artists and government is trying to say the deal the public made is different now. I say fuck it, i will not honour any deal where the other side can change things however they want and i dont need to aggree, yet im still forced into keeping the deal with they are not forced to.

      But the point of this post, the data itself, and the copyrights to that data, are two seperate things. The data you do own if its in your posession just as much as a piece of paper or a bag of popcorn or a light bulb you paid for is yours.
      Only the copyright is not owned by you.

      Yes, copyright is only there for the creator of a work to say what you can and can not do with your own property.
      It may seem like a shitty deal, but if you knew what the origonal deal was, it wasnt at all bad. Its only bad now that the other side changed it without our permission and they arnt being forced into keeping the old deal in the same way we are forced into accepting the new one.

      And please, no comments about how the government represents us and thus can give permisson for us. I can garentee if this issue was up for vote to the general public, copyright would NEVER have been changed to what it is now.
      I never recal this being an issue to vote on, so as far as im concered, the govt that speaks for me is doing a piss poor job of figuring out what we want.
      (If this issue was ever in the voting booths and i just happened to miss it, feel free to provide proof and I'll take back all my words above.)

    20. Re:Own? by withinavoid · · Score: 1

      Actually, with Apple's Music Store you pretty much do own the music. You can Rip-Mix-Burn or as they say now for the music industry folks: Acquire-Manage-Listen. But I found the most interesting announcement was that you have been given permission to use the music in ANY iApp that you have, such as background music for home movies and picture slideshows, etc. That to me says I OWN it, even more that if I bought it on a CD.

      Here's the MPEG4 video of the announcement in San Fransisco.

    21. Re:Own? by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      Unless the consumer has the right to rip, mix, and burn, you can't...

      Are you allowed to type 'rip, mix, and burn' on a public forum like this without adding a notice that 'rip, mix, and burn' is an Apple Registered Trademark??

    22. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Go read the decision in Eldred v. Ashcroft where Ginsburg explicitly states, in a legally binding decision, exactly how and what fair-use is.

      Sure. But it's not a right.

      It hasn't been codified, but that's only a matter of time.

      Never will be, either. The idea of giving somebody else automatic rights over their work will have every artist, musician, and author in the country up in arms in a heartbeat.

    23. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      Right
      n.
      1. That which is just, morally good, legal, proper, or fitting.


      The second an author distributes a novel, the law protects me from retribution if I choose to lampoon him, or quote a passage from it for numerous purposes, such as review. (The key is that someone who copys a work without permission has the benefit of showing an affirmative defense, and be exempt from any violation of copyright if they can show that they did so for purely educational, satirical, or critical reasons.)

      If that's not a right, I don't know what is.

    24. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The second an author distributes a novel, the law protects me from retribution

      No it doesn't. The only thing the law says about that is that certain classes of acts are not infringement on the creator's copyright.

      If that's not a right, I don't know what is.

      I think this remark speaks for itself.

    25. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      Okay, so...these 'acts' that the law singles out as 'not infringement'. They are acts which are specifically spelled out as legal. How are they not rights? It's not as if the law has this long list of things that you can't do with copyrighted texts and just forgets to include parody or critique. It specifically makes exception for them.

      -R

    26. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Okay, so...these 'acts' that the law singles out as 'not infringement'. They are acts which are specifically spelled out as legal. How are they not rights?

      A right is a liberty that is guaranteed by law. The law says, "No one (or possibly just 'the governent') can prevent you from doing X." Then X is a right.

      There's no law that says anything like that. The law merely says that if you happen to do X, you can't be held liable either civilly or criminally for copyright infringement. It's an exception, not a right.

    27. Re:Own? by Alphtoo · · Score: 1

      Actually, I DO own some songs; I wrote them and haven't sold them, so they are by-God mine. But I also own a good many albums and CDs, and I don't expect to own that music. I own fair-use rights to it. I can legally copy it for my own use. I should be able to give copies to my friends and family members (which I do). I have many tapes recorded off various FM radio stations... there used to be a station in Atlanta that, every year, played the (I think) top 40 albums so they could be taped, each album played with no commercials or interruptions. That was cool. I got some great cassettes that way (didn't have a computer or CD burner back then). This was twelve or fifteen years ago and I don't know if they're still doing that, but they'd announce the next album to be played, do a commercial, and then play the album. This gave the listener plenty of time to load a blank cassette and get ready to record.

    28. Re:Own? by Remik · · Score: 1

      To your rhetoric, I need only reply A=A. If it's legal, I have the right to do it.

      Now, let's consider the first ten amendments to the Constitution of the United States, commonly referred to as the Bill of Rights under your interpretation:

      Amendments III, VI, VII, VIII, IX, and X (and to an extent V) are not rights, according to you, because they do not mention a specific action which the government cannot prevent you from doing.

      I hope this highlights for you how ignorant your conception of 'rights' is.

      -R

    29. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it goes to the First Sale doctrine of Copyright. It's what the RIAA tried to do to stop The Warehouse (the Wherehouse?), at one time a largeish US music store chain, like MusicLand or Tower Records, from selling previously owned music-containing media. Well, that pretty much got shot down without much argument in court.

      I may not own the rights to the original work, but I do own the actual copy of the media I possess, and I can do with it (short of copying it) what I want. Destroy it. Listen to it. Give it to someone else to listen to. Yada yada yada.

      The RIAA *HATES* this with a passion, because they see everything past the First Sale as a lost financial transaction...

    30. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      KZOK or KISW in Seattle used to do that ("CD Sideshow"). Play entire album side w/ maybe one commercial interruption. Of course, they did it around midnight.

    31. Re:Own? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's legal, I have the right to do it.

      You have a fundamental misunderstanding of the meaning of the word "right." A right is not merely any act which is not presently illegal. It is a liberty which may not be abridged by law. It's not presently illegal for me to watch "The Simpsons" in my underwear. But there's nothing stopping Congress from passing a law making it illegal to do that. So I don't have a right to watch "The Simpsons" in my underwear.

      Amendments III, VI, VII, VIII, IX, and X (and to an extent V) are not rights, according to you, because they do not mention a specific action which the government cannot prevent you from doing.

      Amendment 3 prohibits the government from quartering soldiers in private homes without the consent of the householder. Amendment 4 prohibits the government from conducting trials in inappropriate ways; Amendment 6 grants several very specific rights. Amendment 7 does the same thing, but in civil suits. Amendment 8 limits the ways in which the government can punish the accused. These are all specific and inviolable limitations on the powers of the government.

      Amendments 9 and 10 do not describe rights.

      I hope this highlights for you how ignorant your conception of 'rights' is.

      Quite to the contrary. It highlights for me how ignorant YOUR conception of "rights" is.

  12. Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Subscription services have already been done. They don't work. Period. iTunes works because you 'own the bits'. That, my friend is why they have sold more music to more customers than any other online pay service COMBINED, and it only took them two weeks.

    1. Re:Subscription does not work. by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      The sub services currently don't allow you to transfer to a portable device without pay an additional $1 per track. That means that they are only valuable for listening to music on your PC. The point of the article is that once portable players support the new DRM, the value of the sub services should go up tremendously.

    2. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While portable support will vastly increase the legitimacy of the sub services, it still does not address the issue of evaporating music (and thus money) if you fail to pay the subscription. Also, the MS service probably doesn't let one burn CDs, does it?

    3. Re:Subscription does not work. by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      It's a different way of thinking about music - you've paid to use the music for a specific length of time. You've received that. So how is your money "evaporating"? It's like saying that if you rent from a video store, and that video store goes under, the money you spent renting movies from them has now "evaporated".

    4. Re:Subscription does not work. by Turing+Machine · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That, my friend is why they have sold more music to more customers than any other online pay service COMBINED, and it only took them two weeks.

      Yes, indeed. And they did it with a platform that only has 2 to 4% of the market (depending on who you believe). AND they've announced that they're porting iTunes to Windows. Imagine how many songs they would've sold if their store was available for the other 90% of the market.

      Something tells me it's brown trousers time in Redmond.

    5. Re:Subscription does not work. by 26199 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      How about emusic? Subscription service, 'unlimited' downloads, and you own the (high quality VBR) MP3s.

      I say 'unlimited' because they get upset if you download more than a few thousand tracks a month... still good value though.

    6. Re:Subscription does not work. by -tji · · Score: 1

      Charging for non-essential services on a subscription basis is a REALLY tough sell. People have to many recurring costs today with their home phone, cell phone, Internet access, cable/sat TV, etc. Netflix and Tivo, are at the next layer. The question is, can M$ make it up to the Tivo tier, or only be one of the small irrelevant players trying to lock subscribers in.

      But, with so many services trying to get me to sign up for recurring fees, I have become even more skeptical of them, so I'm very unlikely to use any. I do subscribe to Netflix.. I'm a big movie fan, and it saves me money over Blockbuster. I don't do Tivo, though I would if they offered HDTV, so I could time-shift HBO-HD. And, I do use the Apple music service, one time costs are okay, and the integration with my iPod is fantastic.

    7. Re:Subscription does not work. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      iTunes works because you 'own the bits'.

      The iTunes Music Store restricts what you can do with a song you have bought, as it has DRM. Ergo, you do not own the bits, because if you did, you could do whatever you liked with them.

      I don't see how making music expire is any different to limiting it to 3 computers at once really. No matter which service you use, a set of restrictions are placed upon what you can do with the music.

      Considering that when I find a new track I really love, I tend to pig out on listening to it, then forget about it, I see no reason why a subscription/rental service would not work. It works OK for videos, DVDs, and books. Why not music too? As long as it's cheaper for me to rent than it is to buy, that's fine by me.

      Of course, it'd be hard to get much cheaper than 99c per track. But it could probably be done.

    8. Re:Subscription does not work. by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 0

      Yes, indeed. And they did it with a platform that only has 2 to 4% of the market (depending on who you believe). AND they've announced that they're porting iTunes to Windows. Imagine how many songs they would've sold if their store was available for the other 90% of the market.

      I gotta disagree, it's not gonna have much impact at all on the PC user market. Why? Well, first ask yourself why it did so well in the Mac market?

      Mac users are used to paying extra money for quality/convenience/glamour/glitz. Why buy a Mac G4 when a cheap PC at 1/3rd the price can do everything it does plus play the latest games? Why pay so much for a PB Ti when you can spend a lot less on a Dell laptop? The service was well tailored for the Mac user market, Jobs knew what he was doing there. But has he ever understood what the masses want?

      Even with a Windows client, the service will remain a niche player. The masses want things free. If there's a free option, people will choose that over any subscription service. We've seen it online with websites that tried or considered charging for access... how many of those are still around? How many sites today are making you sit through a full page ad before you see the content, because people refuse to pay for the content and will go elsewhere if the site makes it exclusive.

      As long as some form of P2P exists, subscription or pay-per-download will never catch on with the masses.

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    9. Re:Subscription does not work. by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

      How about emusic? Subscription service, 'unlimited' downloads, and you own the (high quality VBR) MP3s.

      I say 'unlimited' because they get upset if you download more than a few thousand tracks a month... still good value though.


      I just searched their catalog a bit, and I have to admit, I'm tempted.

      The only problem is the startup fee. The minimum you can spend to try it out is $45 (three months at $15) - you have to sign up for at least a year to get the $10/month price.

      I love the iTunes music store, but I still buy CD's, and I don't think I'm going to spend $120 there this year. Maybe $40-50.

      I estimate that eMusic is a great deal for someone who currently purchases 30 or more CD's a year. I say this because I'm assuming that for someone with varied musical taste, only about half of the albums they want will be on eMusic (though this could get better over time), and that no matter how good eMusic is, they'll want to purchase the CD of some of their favorite artists (to have the liner notes and the higher-quality uncompressed audio).

      So eMusic is great for some people - but what's great about Apple's model is that there's no startup cost. Anyone can download ONE song for $.99 just to try it out. That, plus the incredibly great interface of the iTunes music store (way better than eMusic's), is what made Apple so successful (financially).

    10. Re:Subscription does not work. by Simon · · Score: 1
      The only problem is the startup fee. The minimum you can spend to try it out is $45 (three months at $15) - you have to sign up for at least a year to get the $10/month price.

      You can do the free trial that they offer (50 free MP3s). Also, I don't know how much CDs cost where you are, but compared to buying CDs, I've paid $45 for three months and have already downloaded 25 albumns (just joined 2 weeks ago). Not to mention that the music I'm after (electonic, industrial) isn't really available in the shops. If emusic have what you want, it's a great deal.

      --
      Simon

    11. Re:Subscription does not work. by pi+radians · · Score: 1

      Ergo, you do not own the bits, because if you did, you could do whatever you liked with them.

      Your logic is flawed. I can own a gun, but I'm not allowed to do whatever I want with it. I can own a car, but I'm not allowed to do whatever I want with it. Hell, you can own a CD but you aren't allowed to copy it and distribute it.

      Just because you can doesn't mean its legal.

      --

      sin(6cos(r)+5A)
    12. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why buy a Mac G4 when a cheap PC at 1/3rd the price can do everything it does plus play the latest games?

      Spoken like a true guy-who's-never-owned-a-Mac.

      The masses want things free.

      Wrong. Most people are happy to pay a fair price for what they perceive to be good value. It's only a tiny slice of the population who are willing to steal music rather than paying for it.

      As long as some form of P2P exists, subscription or pay-per-download will never catch on with the masses.

      Careful. Your reasoning here is going to lead you to a place you don't want to be. Let's assume you're right and see where it goes.

      1. As long as the technology that enables piracy exists, the majority of people will steal music rather than paying for it.

      2. Piracy-enabling technologies, therefore, cause direct and measurable harm to those who make and sell music merely by virtue of their existence.

      3. If something is harmful because it has the potential for misuse, then it's never clear whether that thing should be allowed to exist or not. Guns are the classic example: they can be misused, but we still allow them to exist because they have important uses that we don't want to give up.

      4. If something causes harm merely by virtue of its existence, however, we must remove that thing or cause it to cease to exist. Pollution in the groundwater harms people merely by existing; it must be removed, and its creation must be prohibited.

      5. Because technologies that can be used for piracy will be (by your own reasoning), and because they cause direct and measurable harm to the people who make and sell music by virtue of their very existence, they must not be allowed to exist.

      Either most people will steal as long as they can and we have to get rid of "P2P," or most people will choose legal options when they're available and "P2P" can continue to exist. Choose.

    13. Re:Subscription does not work. by eMartin · · Score: 1

      I'm stupid because I went with the $10 deal ($10 is less, right?). But after less than a month I have more than 300 full albums (close to 6000 songs, and more than half of that was in the first day). Nobody has complained to me yet (I'm more worried about my ISP).

      I'm certainly not going to complain about the cost.

    14. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The iTunes Music Store restricts what you can do with a song you have bought, as it has DRM. Ergo, you do not own the bits, because if you did, you could do whatever you liked with them.

      You have just summed up in two sentences the main Slashdot argument against iTunes. Now let me tell you why you're wrong.

      The conversion of an audio file from AAC to AIFF is not lossy. The other way around is, of course, but not AAC->AIFF. So an AAC file converted to AIFF and burned to CD is a different encoding of the same data. Okay?

      When you buy music from iTunes, you can burn that music to a CD. A regular old Red Book audio CD that can be played in any player. In doing so, the software converts the AAC file to AIFF, losslessly, and writes the data to disc. The data is reencoded, but it's not significantly altered. You won't be able to tell the difference between the AAC and the resulting CD, modulo differences created by the equipment itself.

      So you are, in fact, able to do anything you like with the bits. You just have to do a lossless format conversion first.

      I don't see how making music expire is any different to limiting it to 3 computers at once really.

      When I buy a song from iTunes, at the point when I have downloaded the file and my credit card has been charged, the transaction is over. I have the data and Apple has my money. There will never be another transaction, informational, financial, or whatever, between Apple and myself regarding that song.

      The same isn't true of expiring music. If you want to listen to music that expires, you have to keep paying the company that sold it to you.

      That's the difference.

      Considering that when I find a new track I really love, I tend to pig out on listening to it, then forget about it, I see no reason why a subscription/rental service would not work. It works OK for videos, DVDs, and books.

      Well, not really. Rental yes, subscription no. Remember the "book of the month club?" Never really took off in any serious way. And with that scheme, you could still read the books even after you'd cancelled your club membership.

      There are subscription services for DVD's; NetFlix is the one that pops into my head, but I think there are others. They're not especially popular compared to Blockbuster and their ilk. This is certainly related to the various logistical differences between the subscription services and the a la carte services--there's no such thing as an impulse rental through NetFlix--but in general the rental service is more successful.

      The difference, too, is that people generally don't attach feelings of comfort or attachment to movies like they do to books and music. People buy books they love because they want to be able to read them over and over again. People buy music for the same reason. For these sorts of people, a rental model could never work.

      So generally I think Apple's on the right track here. It's got all the benefits of buying--instant gratification through broadband, you own the bits--but brings the new advantage of being able to buy a single track. The trade-off is audio quality; if you're the kind of person who can tell the difference between a 128 kbps AAC and a CD, then iTunes isn't for you. Apple knows this.

    15. Re:Subscription does not work. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Hmm, I think you make a lot of false assumptions here. Let's see...

      Even with a Windows client, the service will remain a niche player. The masses want things free. If there's a free option, people will choose that over any subscription service.

      Not necessarily, where do you gt your evidence? Perhaps the popularity of Kazaa has much more to do with the wholly unreasonable licensing restrictions and prices placed on legal music nowadays.

      We've seen it online with websites that tried or considered charging for access... how many of those are still around?

      Sites like Slashdot, that charge subscribers to see stories early? Seems like it's still around today. But it doesn't charge for access, I'll grant that.

      How many sites today are making you sit through a full page ad before you see the content

      Not many, but more than were doing so before. Even so, banner ads have always been a far better method of integrating ads into websites, and they're still the most effective model for financing websites.

      because people refuse to pay for the content and will go elsewhere if the site makes it exclusive

      1. Ads != payment. That's what's so good about them (IMHO).
      2. If a site makes something exclusive, you can't go elsewhere, it aint gonna be elsewhere.

      As long as some form of P2P exists, subscription or pay-per-download will never catch on with the masses.

      I think that's a ridiculous assertion. Why wouldn't pay-per-download catch on with the masses? Subscription sucks, but ownership doesn't.

      'As long as some form of black market exists, people will never pay more legally for a computer game'. That's not true... so why should this be?

    16. Re:Subscription does not work. by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      you are, in fact, able to do anything you like with the bits. You just have to do a lossless format conversion first.

      That's like saying, well you own a time-expired WMA file because all you have to do is download this cracking tool. The people who made the file did not really intend for you to do that, even though they probably knew it was possible.

    17. Re:Subscription does not work. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      I think what's being said is that it's such an incredibly bad way of paying for music that it seems like your money's 'evapourating'. There are still people out there with thousands of LPs and tapes. People like to have these collections around for posterity. Wouldn't it suck if you couldn't even access the music you paid for last *month*? Lots of people in this discussion have been saying that 'youngsters these days' don't listen to music unless it was released recently. For some this may be true, but for some this has always been true. Personally, I'm 19 and I still listen to music that was released in my young childhood (or even before it!) Nothing like a classic tune. I _certainly_ don't want to lose access to music I've paid for. Ever.

    18. Re:Subscription does not work. by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Considering that when I find a new track I really love, I tend to pig out on listening to it, then forget about it

      Do you? Well, I guess you're very different from me then. When I find a good track, I tend keep it forever, and play it regularly. Hence, my 'wonderful track' collection grows over time, and I don't just have to listen over and over and over to the latest releases! Could people reply to this post and say what their habit is when listening to music? How many people really listen to a good track many times, and then *never* want to listen to it again?

    19. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Spoken like a true guy-who's-never-owned-a-Mac.

      Spoken like another Apple zombie.

      Wrong. Most people are happy to pay a fair price for what they perceive to be good value. It's only a tiny slice of the population who are willing to steal music rather than paying for it.

      You and the grandparent neither provide any reasoning for your positions. Neither of you know what "the masses" (PC users) want. However this article can certainly shed some light on a trend in "the masses."

      Either most people will steal as long as they can and we have to get rid of "P2P,"

      You can't get rid of point-to-point data exchange. You can attack all companies that attempt centralized services. You can sue consumers until you've spent more in lawyers than you can ever hope to recover from the people you sue. You can pray to some old man in the sky for it to end, but it's not going to. It will simply adapt, as it's adapted before.

      You're far more likely to see supply-side changes than the removal of P2P file transfers.

    20. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The masses want things free.

      Horse... SHIT Ever been to Blockbuster? People have had VCRs for 20 years and still rent movies? Why? They could have copied them for free.

      They rent because copying movies is a pain in the ass, and so is P2P.

      iTunes is going to make so much money Apple is going to have to hire people to help count it.

    21. Re:Subscription does not work. by SN74S181 · · Score: 1

      They rent movies because most people only want to watch a movie one or two times. It wouldn't make sense for the average Blockbuster customer to buy all those VHS tapes and stack them on shelves after viewing them one or two times.

      There are fundamental differences between how customers utilize Videotapes of Movies and recordings of music (which people listen to over and over and over again). So your example is irrelevant.

    22. Re:Subscription does not work. by ibbey · · Score: 1

      I estimate that eMusic is a great deal for someone who currently purchases 30 or more CD's a year. I say this because I'm assuming that for someone with varied musical taste, only about half of the albums they want will be on eMusic (though this could get better over time), and that no matter how good eMusic is, they'll want to purchase the CD of some of their favorite artists (to have the liner notes and the higher-quality uncompressed audio).

      I disagree. If you love music, Emusic is an unbeatable value. For $10 a month (roughly 2/3rd the cost of a typical CD), you can download virtually unlimited music, from thousands of artists on over 950 labels. I joined about 3 weeks ago, and have already downloaded EASILY $120 worth of music, much of which I probably would have bought anyway. One perfect example, the boxed set "Cigarrettes & Carrot Juice" by Camper Van Beethoven is $50, or free with your emusic subscription. True, I don't get the liner notes, and in many cases, they are worth having, but in most cases, are they really worth $15?

      That doesn't even deal with the artists that I have downloaded that I probably -wouldn't- have bought. That's one of the most exciting things about Emusic, is that you can experiment. True, on iTunes, it only costs a buck to try out a new artist, but it's still a buck, and that's only for one song. With Emusic, it's free (with your subscription), and you get the whole album (if you want it, single track downloads are available if you prefer), not just a single track.

      As for quality, Emusic recently switched over to LAME stadard (AKA r3mix) VBR, so I challenge you to tell the difference between an Emusic mp3 and a CD track (Probably 95% of their catalog is currently vbr. There are a few lingering 128 bit tracks).

      Will you still buy CD's if you join Emusic? Sure. But I guarantee, in the long run, the $10 bucks a month you pay for emusic will not be money you regret spending.

    23. Re:Subscription does not work. by ibbey · · Score: 1

      In the long run, I bet you'll appreciate sticking around for the extra 9 months. In the 3 weeks since I've joined, they've upgraded everything from 128 bit to VBR, and added a few new labels, most notably (for me at least) Beggars Banquet/4AD (The Pixies, Throwing Muses, Bauhaus, the Fall, Stereolab, and many, many more). On top of that, keep in mind, they are adding each new release as it comes out as well (unfortunately, not necessarily on the street date, however). Overall, I think you'd be hard pressed to not be able to download at least one god album from emusic each month.

    24. Re:Subscription does not work. by bnenning · · Score: 1
      The people who made the file did not really intend for you to do that, even though they probably knew it was possible.


      Apple fully intends for you to be able to make unlimited lossless copies to CD; they advertise it as a primary selling point.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    25. Re:Subscription does not work. by jonearth · · Score: 1

      AND they've announced that they're porting iTunes to Windows.

      I just feel that Apple is a bit stupid in this move. Why don't they wait until a windows version is ready before announcing the itunes service? By then it will take MS hugh effort to fight back

    26. Re:Subscription does not work. by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

      Not necessarily, where do you gt your evidence? Perhaps the popularity of Kazaa has much more to do with the wholly unreasonable licensing restrictions and prices placed on legal music nowadays

      Evidence? Well, the RIAA has some numbers about piracy levels, which we all assume to be BS, but are there any numbers to counter it? How many of the people using P2P understand the licensing restrictions? How many times do I hear "hey, can I get a copy of that?" Quite a bit. How many times do I hear "no, it's illegal to do that?" Rare that anyone ever says that.

      Since the 70s and personal cassette tape recorders, people have been making copies of music for themselves, to share with others. For 30 years people have been freely sharing music someone purchased, without thinking about licensing or any legal ramifications of it. The medium was the cassette tape, the means was handing a copied tape to a friend. Today, the medium is the computer, the means p2p. Kazaa hasn't changed anything, it's just made it easier for people to copy and share music. If attitudes have changed, it's made it worse. It's much easier to find and download music off P2P, it's higher quality than cassettes, and there's the backlash against the music industry for gouging consumers as well. People don't think of it as stealing as much as they think it's a freedom to copy music. They might intrinsically think it's wrong, like exceeding the speed limit on the highway is wrong. But they'll do it anyway, what are the chances of getting caught and punished?

      I think that's a ridiculous assertion. Why wouldn't pay-per-download catch on with the masses? Subscription sucks, but ownership doesn't.

      You don't own the songs, any more than you own songs you download from p2p illegally. What you do own is the right to have those songs on your system. So when the RIAA sues everyone who has a portable music player, you'll be able to whip out the receipt and say "I've got a legal right to have these copies of these songs on my system, here's the receipt for each song and a copy of the contract from Apple that says I have a right to have these songs." That's what you're buying, you're not buying the song.

      Maybe I'm being overly cynical, but I don't think people will be willing to pay for it.

      'As long as some form of black market exists, people will never pay more legally for a computer game'. That's not true... so why should this be?

      But it is true. The only reason it doesn't seem that way is because of copyright protection built into the games. I haven't looked at *all* the games, but the most popular require the CD to be in the system to play. The CDs themselves have some sort of copy protection. The latest online games come with unique serial numbers required to connect to the gaming servers. PS2 games are on dual-layered DVDs which can't be copied. Mod this to oblivion if you want, but there are more people out there who'd rather copy a game than buy it. Otherwise, what's the point of copy protection? To prevent people making personal backups?

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    27. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can't get rid of point-to-point data exchange.

      Of course we could. Make it illegal, and then enforce the law. Poof. Done.

      You can sue consumers until you've spent more in lawyers than you can ever hope to recover from the people you sue.

      Fuck suing. We're talking about criminal harm here. Facilitation of piracy is a fucking felony. Soon, by the reasoning offered in this thread, that crime will be extended to include anybody who develops a technology that ends up being used for piracy.

      You can pray to some old man in the sky for it to end

      Oh, great. Another "athiest" who's probably just a high-school kid who's never had a spiritual experience in his life. Get off your fat slashdot-reading ass and go to church, you idiot! If you can keep your big fat mouth shut long enough, you might learn a thing or two.

    28. Re:Subscription does not work. by Tenebrious1 · · Score: 1

      Why buy a Mac G4 when a cheap PC at 1/3rd the price can do everything it does plus play the latest games? Spoken like a true guy-who's-never-owned-a-Mac.

      I loved my SE. Loved my Classic. Loved my PB140. Hated the Performa. Things went downhill from there.

      Wrong. Most people are happy to pay a fair price for what they perceive to be good value. It's only a tiny slice of the population who are willing to steal music rather than paying for it.

      Which is why teaching is the highest paid profession and schools are so well funded, right?

      Did you miss out on the Commodore 64 years, when 100 kids in your school had a copy of a program but nobody knew who had the original? Ditto the Amiga days? Ditto the early PC days? Yeah, Mac too.

      Yes, there are many who would be willing to pay a fair price. Of course, the big question is what is a fair price? Big artist making millions, record execs making millions, person struggling to eat... zero seems like a fair price.

      Either most people will steal as long as they can and we have to get rid of "P2P," or most people will choose legal options when they're available and "P2P" can continue to exist. Choose.

      I doubt option 2 will ever happen voluntarily. Thanks to the DMCA making copyright voliations federal offense, greater powers of surveilence granted by the USAPA to authorities, pressure from the RIAA and MPAA, Windows DRM, I think we'll see an end to P2P music sharing in a matter of a few years. Unless there's a huge backlash (as with Inuit and the use of c-dilla) by the masses when their (percieved) rights to freely copy music is trampled. Which may put it off a few years, but technology will ensure all music is paid for, at a price set by music execs, not the market or what people think is "fair".

      --
      -- If god wanted me to have a sig, he'd have given me a sense of humor.
    29. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What bnenning said. When you select an AAC file, a giant "Burn Disc" button pops up right in front of you.

    30. Re:Subscription does not work. by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 1

      Yeah, I'm thinking about doing their free trial since I realized they have Karrin Allyson.

      What happens if I cancel after my free trial, but want to start my subscription later? Any penalty for doing that? Can I put my subscription on hold at any point or are 3 and 12 months the minimum lengths?

    31. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you miss out on the Commodore 64 years, when 100 kids in your school had a copy of a program but nobody knew who had the original?

      You hit the nail right on the head. We're talking about CHILDREN for chrissakes. They are not expected to know right from wrong. That's why the law doesn't hold them accountable for their actions in most cases.

      Big artist making millions, record execs making millions, person struggling to eat... zero seems like a fair price.

      You're totally free to pay zero. You don't get anything if you pay zero, of course. Paying zero and taking it anyway is called stealling.

      I doubt option 2 will ever happen voluntarily.

      Okay. Then humanity is not to be trusted, and "P2P" must not be allowed to exist. Off with their heads.

    32. Re:Subscription does not work. by Ian+Bicking · · Score: 1
      I estimate that eMusic is a great deal for someone who currently purchases 30 or more CD's a year. I say this because I'm assuming that for someone with varied musical taste, only about half of the albums they want will be on eMusic (though this could get better over time)
      It's a lot worse than that. I'm betting it's something more like 5% of the time you'll find it on eMusic, or even less (though it depends a lot on your musical tastes). I'm not saying eMusic is bad, they have some cool stuff, but it's not a place you get the music you want. It's the place you find music you didn't know you wanted.

      The exception might be that they have a lot of old stuff, probably stuff the label has decided doesn't have any other sale value. I understand people who love older jazz can find a lot of stuff they'll like on eMusic. The other stuff is lots of indy music, mostly from kind of small labels, or bands that are kind of niche (like They Might Be Giants -- but even TMBG is very popular compared to most eMusic artists).

      It's cool, but you have to invest a lot of time to get something out of it. Not like time on P2P, trying to find something, but time to listen to new music and explore, so you can find new things you like.

    33. Re:Subscription does not work. by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      I think E-music is by far a better deal than Apple or Microsoft offer. The only drawback is the contract. I will probably sign up despite that when they finally get some Bjork.

    34. Re:Subscription does not work. by 26199 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, you can cancel after the free trial and join later... careful where you click when you're in the free trial though, there are a few occurances of 'click here to start paying us money'.

      As for the minimum subscription lengths... no way to get out of those.

      There's recently been some trouble since they introduced a proprietary download manager (with Windows/Mac/Linux versions)... it's fairly bad software and has various problems, but new versions are on the way...

      Still, that's what the free trial is for... see how it works for you. If you can't stand it, figure out how to use wget instead, that's what I did ;-).

    35. Re:Subscription does not work. by 26199 · · Score: 1

      Well said -- it all depends on your taste in music. Since I'm pretty much anti-mainstream, it suits me well :-)... plus I enjoy sampling music for stuff that I like.

      The new high quality VBR encoding is great...

    36. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0


      Since I find most of the music out there to be crap these days, most of what I listen too is the latest releases from bangingtunes.com

      I just download the samples and put them on repeat until the actual recrods end up being shipped to me. Of course, I'm a special case. But at least I'm pouring my hard-earned money into your country's economy ;-)

    37. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, paying zero, taking anyways, such that one less of something is available for someone else, that is stealing. Stealing involves some measure of loss of something, not merely opportunity (i.e., sale).

      If that is the case, then flipping the logic around, and selling something that is offered for free is fraud. Hmm...

      Although it takes more chutzpah than I have, going to a semi-philantrophic function, that requests a donation, and walking in w/o paying is, at least on the face of things, perfectly legal (after all, a mandatory donation is not a donation, but a fee), I would imagine someone stepping in and requesting that you simply go somewhere else instead...

    38. Re:Subscription does not work. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stealing involves some measure of loss of something

      You've fallen for the propaganda. Stealing simply means taking without permission. That's all. The legal definition of the crime of theft involves the aspect of deprivation, but that's a very specific and narrow definition that the courts use to determine if the crime committed was theft or another type of stealing.

      selling something that is offered for free is fraud

      That's silly. If you stop and think for a few seconds, you'll realize that you're wrong.

      going to a semi-philantrophic function, that requests a donation, and walking in w/o paying is, at least on the face of things, perfectly legal

      Yes, it's legal. Asking for something and requiring something are two different things.

      But taking something that is offered for sale, and only for sale, without paying for it is stealing. It's both illegal (in various ways, depending on the circumstances surrounding the act) and wrong.

  13. $7500???? That's a little far-fetched by foolsdragon · · Score: 4, Informative

    Some of those 7500 songs will come in the form of full albums, which are only $9.99, and frequently come with more than 10 songs. Put me in the Own My Bits camp.

  14. Not out Yet by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Funny

    . . . but already a failure.

  15. Why? by DeusExInfernis · · Score: 0, Insightful

    At the risk of coming off as a low-down music pirate (aren't we all...), why on earth would anyone do this? If you have access to a computer and you're looking to load files on portable media, I see no incentive when you can get any songs you want, as many as you want, FOR FREE on Kazaa or one of the dozens of P2P programs now available.

    There are, as I see it, some advantages to buying the CD (directly support artists, etc.), but what's the incentive to buy this unless the customer is so clueless that they do not even know about P2P?

    --
    ad infernis is et flammas invenis
    1. Re:Why? by foolsdragon · · Score: 5, Insightful

      At the risk of sounding like someone who feeds trolls and replies to flame-bait, you're a scumbag. I for one am NOT a pirate, and have no problem paying for what I want. I'll admit that I have used services like Kazaa and was REALLY into Napster when it was new, but it still is and always has been theft.

      The incentive to buy is exactly the what you mentioned. If you like a band, you buy their music so that you can support them and they'll make more. It's just like potato chips or caffeine vendors, buy their stuff and they'll make more and continue to innovate. Don't buy it and they'll consider the venture a failure and stop doing whatever it was no matter what you thought about it.

      It's not about cluelessness about P2P, it's about paying for a product that someone else produces and you're enjoying the benefits of.

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

      you are gurantied to find the song within 30 seconds, you know it will be good quality, you know the download will be fast, you aren't comiting a crime, you get a fuzzy feeling for supporting the artist

    3. Re:Why? by grasshoppa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Because people deserved to be paid for their work. I agree to this and accept this, and I think iTunes is exactly what the industry needed all this time.

      Incidently, who else thinks the music industry messed up big time by not coming out with something like this before napster. Think about it, songs for a buck, easy to get, and consumer grade.

      Had they done this, we all would have been "Napster who?".

      --
      Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
    4. Re:Why? by MochaMan · · Score: 1

      At the risk of coming off as a low-down thief (aren't we all...), why on earth would anyone pay for candy at the candy store? If the clerk isn't watching and you're looking to stuff your pockets full of candy, I see no incentive when you can get the jelly beans you want, as many as you want, FOR FREE by stuffing them in your pockets or one of the dozens of bodily orifices available.

      There are, as I see it, some advantages to buying the candy (directly support candy manufacturers, etc.), but what's the incentive to buy this unless the customer is so clueless that they don't even know about pockets?

    5. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There are, as I see it, some advantages to buying the CD (directly support artists, etc.)

      Only if it's an independent artist that actually gets all the money from CD sales. Otherwise, forget it! And regardless, concerts are a far better way to make money in music.

    6. Re:Why? by MochaMan · · Score: 1

      Great minds think alike.

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

      "I see no incentive when you can get any songs you want, as many as you want, FOR FREE on Kazaa or one of the dozens of P2P programs now available."

      Perhaps you've forgotten. Downloading music "for free" is illegal. (Do you remember now that you actually shouldn't be doing it and that by doing so, you are breaking the law and reserving your spot in hell at the same time).

      Granted, this new service sounds like it sucks. Renting music!? I then am bound to pay Microsoft a monthly fee for the rest of my life to keep "my" music? And if they decide to raise the price?

      I'll own my music, thanks, and I'll do it legally if I can.

    8. Re:Why? by markogogo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      At the risk of sounding like someone who feeds trolls and replies to flame-bait,

      I'm glad you took the risk, because I feel the same way. I wish more people would realize how exactly it affects the industry and what they are doing when they use P2P services.

      Think of it this way - when you choose not to purchase CDs and instead download the songs for free, you are inadvertently 'boycotting' the artist. Now, I don't know how well boycotts work, but their intention is to shut down their target. Do you want your favourite artist to go golfing instead of producing music?

    9. Re:Why? by Vicegrip · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I wish I could mod you up. Because the parent poster is basically saying: "what's the point of being honest?", with the obvious implication that only heavily intrusive technologies will force people to be honest in their purchases.

      We've gone over add-nauseaum for years now all the reasons why many people might use P2P. It always boils down to the fact that the RIAA is an old dinausor that is incapable of adapting to consumer wishes.

      Apple has an interesting service that makes a very decent step towards giving consumers what they want. Want an analysis? Answer this question then: What's more expensive? Something you'll pay for the privilege of using for the rest of your life, or something you'll buy once for a dollar.

      In the end, these people just want gravy trains: products they can charge the consumer for over and over again without adding any new value. Hey, that sounds like taxes.

      --
      Do not spread "09 F9 11 02 9D 74 E3 5B D8 41 56 C5 63 56 88 C0" over the internet, thank you.
    10. Re:Why? by Politburo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      but it still is and always has been theft.

      No. It still is, and has always been, copyright infringement.

    11. Re:Why? by Kethryvis · · Score: 1

      ... because a lot of times Kazaa/etc is a crapshoot. I know I'm not the only person who's downloaded xyz song expecting *That* song... only to find that the person I dl'ed from is an idiot and didn't name the song correctly. Or it's crappy quality. Or it's got a virus. Or get halfway through the download to have the person go offline, never to be found again (along with that rare song I've been hunting for forever and a day). Or it's Madonna telling us to fsck off :)

      I'd rather pay a buck a song for what I know is going to be a quality mp3 that's *mine* and is actually the song I want, then have to play roulette on Kazaa. (and I say this as a poor college student!)

      And perish the thought... I'd like to support the artist who makes the music. Tell them thanks for giving me good study music.

    12. Re:Why? by DeusExInfernis · · Score: 1

      Well, I find the store-theft analogies to be a bit off, because intellectual property and physical property are worlds apart. Intellectual property can be copied and taken without directly taking profits (unless it's done instead of buying a CD), while stealing physical property directly deprives a store of profit, but that's not really the point anyway.

      I wasn't arguing for intellectual theft so much as asking why would people do this. I think there are plenty of arguments to counter all of those, really. If you have the ability, you're not going to get caught, and it's essentially the same thing except that there's no need to pay, why not? To support the artists? Most of the profits go to the RIAA anyway, a seriously corrupt organization that exists only to take profits away from the artists. That's a hypocritical argument, admittedly (since by stealing, you're taking profits away yourself), but it does raise the question of just whom you're supporting. As for that fuzzy feeling you get when you do something legally, well, maybe that works for you, but I just get a sick feeling when I pay 13 bucks for a CD that has one or two decent songs, both of which I could have easily gotten free from Kazaa. (Which, yes, this service does attempt to fix, but it still seems overpriced, and there's still the question of where the profits go.)

      And finally, I would question just how much the artists get directly from a service like this. My impression is that the artists make a lot of their money thanks to 'filler' on their CDs, and using a service like this, that 'filler' is removed from the system. Take off the profits from the service offering (in this case Microsoft), take off profits for the RIAA, and so on, and just what's left for the artists?

      It just doesn't make sense to me, and I think there are millions out there who are going to realize that there are two ways to get music online; you can pay for it, or get it for free. Pick one.

      --
      ad infernis is et flammas invenis
    13. Re:Why? by b17bmbr · · Score: 2, Insightful

      since there was never a linux client for napster (?), i never used napster, and never even used kazaa, limewire, et al. actually never. in fact, the only mp3 i ever downloaded was actually for a graduate education class at csu northridge. the prof. wanted us to learn to use multimedia (okay, most of the teachers were technidiots, and my linux laptop floored them, anyways...) i hardly would call people who swap files pirates, as in the "arghh matey", eye-patch, peg-legged, crap. why?

      one, digital medium present am entirely new economic paradigm. why? since i'm an econ major, i'll tell ya. there is no scarcity or opportunity cost. (econ 101) scarcity means there is not enough of anything, even bubble gum. if i make somehting, anything, it uses scarce resources, and there is a cost associated with it. if ford makes a new pick up truck, the cost is not making a new taurus. or, to society, the cost is the steel, the plastic, etc., that could have been used for any number of things. that is why, if i steal a car, ford can't "just replace it". the other thing about opportunity cost is that the cost is borne by someone, that the reosurces are gone. they can't be used over and over. somebody actually has to "pay" if you will. however...

      with digital music, or anything digital, if i make 1 copy, 1000 copies, or even 1,000,000 copies, the cost is actually borne by me, not the artist or record company. my time, my cpu, my cd-r's, my electricity, etc. now one might say that "but that means people aren't going to buy the albums". we can never kow that people would have bought the album, if they couldn't get the song. predicting consumer habits is mighty tough. and unless you can strong arm them like microsoft, oh, off topic,

      the music industry has to face the facts that good artists sell cd's bad ones don't. plus, most cd's have 1-2 spongs on them worth a shit, the rest suck. so that is why apple is probably making a killing selling songs. i remember albums. when you listened to a whole one at home, in your car, knew all the words, the drum riffs, etc. it didn't matter if it was zep or sabbath, maiden or priest, or even parliament and george clinton. every song was good. the record insustry has been peddling crap. they want to blame us and call us pirates.

      the biggest beneficiaries of "piracy" are the artists. they make money on the road, not off album sales. so "piracy" helps them distribute thei rmusic, and creates new fans. new fans that wouldn't have been if not for "piracy". but alas, that is what the record companies don't want. because they don't make much from the tours. which is why most of the bitching about "piracy" comes from execs, not artists.

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    14. Re:Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not about cluelessness about P2P, it's about paying for a product that someone else produces and you're enjoying the benefits of.

      So I need to buy a $15 CD so the Artist can get $.03 from the sale? It would benefit the artist more if I download it from Kazaa and send them a nickel in the mail.

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

      *sigh*
      bands barely make any money from record sales, they mostly make it from concerts and such. You'd help them more by going to see their concert than just buy the cd.

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

      Yay. I agree with everything you said. I think it's important that those of us who don't steal our music speak up about it. Too many people, especially on Slashdot, are under the opinion that everybody steals, and that therefore it's okay, and that we're just waiting for the economic and judicial systems to catch up.

      But there are those of us who know better than that.

    17. Re:Why? by saiya · · Score: 1

      You're deluding yourself if you think buying CDs actually supports artists. The vast majority of CD sales go directly to fat-cat CEOs. Personally, not only do I feel no qualms about ripping them off, I feel morally obligated to do so.

    18. Re:Why? by benjamindees · · Score: 1
      that sounds like taxes

      There's a reason they're called 'royalties'.

      --
      "I assumed blithely that there were no elves out there in the darkness"
    19. Re:Why? by petsounds · · Score: 1

      the biggest beneficiaries of "piracy" are the artists. they make money on the road, not off album sales. so "piracy" helps them distribute thei rmusic, and creates new fans. new fans that wouldn't have been if not for "piracy". but alas, that is what the record companies don't want. because they don't make much from the tours. which is why most of the bitching about "piracy" comes from execs, not artists.

      Artists on major labels make a bit of money on tour, but they hardly make any profit. The money goes to pay off their debt. Most artists on major labels go on tour to pay off the advance they got from the record label, or to pay off the recording costs of the album which the record label also makes them pay back. And artists on indie labels make nothing on tour..they're usually lucky to have enough gas to get to the next city.

      The only way artists make money on major labels is to first make a hit record, then renegotiate the contract when their terms have been fulfilled and ask for a bigger cut of the profits. The only exception to this is if the band has already become popular before signing to a major, and thereby has some leverage during the contract process.

      Bands that have a sizeable fan base but are signed to an indie label can usually make out better than if they were on a major. This is because they can record their album for far less, and they usually have a fairer contract. When you're on a major, the label puts you in the most expensive studio they can find, hires a "known" producer and engineer, and then tells the band they'll have to pay it all back later.

      My main problem with the Apple Music Store is that it rewards the major labels for basically doing nothing to make it happen -- they aren't doing promotions, they aren't paying off radio stations, and they aren't pressing and distributing the music. Apple hosts all the files and did the technology to make it happen. The artists should be the only ones (besides Apple) making money off the digital music sales.

    20. Re:Why? by gerardrj · · Score: 1
      ...or one of the dozens of bodily orifices available.


      Exactly what species are you? Thinking generously I can only account for 9 orifices. Of those, only 6 are capable of accepting or retaining jelly beans without injury to the orifice. Of those, only 5 are useable at once as you need one to remain available for the passage of air to and from the lungs.

      Or are you somehow planning to enlarge your pores so you can stick a jelly bean in each one?

      But to further your argument... if your of the mindset that theft is tolerable as long as you don't get caught, then why don'y you simply eliminate the candy store clerk? Sneak up and whack the clerk over the head with a blunt onject. Then you can simply fill all the bags you want with candy and leave fully stocked. No-one saw you bludgeon the clerk, so what's the harm?
      --
      Article X: The powers not delegated... by the Constitution...are reserved...to the people
    21. Re:Why? by b17bmbr · · Score: 1

      The artists should be the only ones (besides Apple) making money off the digital music sales.,/i>

      i totally agree, except that most artists don't own the music. (like we're gonna "own" the music we buy, hell, if the artists don't own it...) the money goe to the owner, i.e. the company. the artist is paid for performing. now we know the "the day the music died". how i long for bands and albums. today, you make a few videos, sell some pimple cream, and get arrested. and everyone loves you, and doesn't even know WTF you do. you sound like everyone, and nobdy cares. oh, for the days of great bands, great albums. well, i still have mine, and you kow what, rush sounds as good today as ever!!!

      --
      My problem? I was perfectly gruntled, until some numbnuts came by and dissed me.
    22. Re:Why? by petsounds · · Score: 1

      i totally agree, except that most artists don't own the music.

      As far as major label acts you're right, except for the really big artists who have the clout to demand their own terms. A lot of indie label bands own their music though. I hope that Apple takes this into consideration when they pick up indie label bands. As much as I support indie labels (with my cash), I don't think they should be getting a cut of the profits in this case.

    23. Re:Why? by adamnit8 · · Score: 1

      Remember that RIAA only represents the top 1% of shitty music in America. The rest is free of their tyranny. You can support independent artists. For every average run of the mill band you hear on the radio there are a 100 indpendent artists that can pull off the sound much better. The labels that sign these bands take care of them as best they can (Lets face it they are all dirt poor). Its a good honest industry worthy of your support and you have everything to gain. Save money (concerts and CD's by these kinds or artists are normally under 12 bucks) support a starving artist directly, oh yeah... and enjoy music far better than the shit they feed you on the radio. Check out www.pitchforkmedia.com and www.insound.com. You'll fall in love with music again, and you won't think of stealing music again.

    24. Re:Why? by Mike1024 · · Score: 1

      Hey,

      I wish I could mod you up. Because the parent poster is basically saying: "what's the point of being honest?", with the obvious implication that only heavily intrusive technologies will force people to be honest in their purchases.

      I would have thought that intrusive technology would encourage circumventing. There's a risk the rent will go up or new MS technology will force you to change to the new (Rental only, or course) version of Windows. A change in system configuration or purchase of a new couputer could also cause problems.

      I wouldn't feel my investment was secure unless I had some DRM-free backups (I think backups might even be a legally protected right).

      Just my $0.02,

      Michael

      --
      "Goodness me, how unlike the FBI to abuse the trust of the American public." -- The Onion
    25. Re:Why? by MochaMan · · Score: 1

      ...or one of the dozens of bodily orifices available.

      If you live in Texas, those will be the ones left after the clerk has opened fire on you with a bloody great gun after stuffing the first six orifices. Not to mention you could stuff your accomplices orifices. I'll stop now before this gets out of hand.

      Too late...

  16. Trying to change a buyers habbit. by liposuction · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Why is it that all of these companies try to change the buyer's habbits? Much akin to groceries on the web, and the original DIVX discs, these schemes too will fail.

    None of these services gaurantee that I will be able to burn a disc, when I want, where I want. None of these services gaurantee that I will be able to re-rip a CD when my PC takes a chunk.

    All the schemes in the world won't have a chance in hell if they keep trying to shift public habbit.

    --
    "Thoughts are more powerful than any weapon, and I don't even let my people own guns." --Joseph Stalin
    1. Re:Trying to change a buyers habbit. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Welcome to the iTunes Music Store.

      You pay 99 cents a song (cheaper if you buy an album) and you own the music. Burn it to a disc. Rip it back. Put it on your MP3 player. Play it on up to 3 computers at the same time.

      You download the music you want conveniently and then you own it. The few limitations that come with the music is simply there to keep honest people honest. You'll find them hardly limiting. If you do bump your head against the limits, you just want to steal music anyway.

      Apple doesn't seem to by trying tho change your habits as much as give you a better solution. Microsoft, on the other hand, would just assume own the world and have you pay for the rest of your life in order to listen to your music. Not all services are the same; keep that in mind.

      But oh yeah. You Windows people don't have iTMS yet... Oh well.

  17. Can DRM ever compete with Kazaa & Gnutella? by replicant_deckard · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Just wonder what MS thinks of Kazaa, Gnutella & others. Perhaps they should also provide some service which selects the music according to user profile or offer even some sort of "added value" to the basic idea of downloaded music. Files with expiration date won't do it - what if the internal clock of my PC gets confused etc. Experience tells me MS can't anticipate every possible consumer error behavior.

    1. Re:Can DRM ever compete with Kazaa & Gnutella? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If they truely have expiring files, the RIAA could splash Gnutella etc with "teasers" copies of new albums that expire after a few days. If you want the song longer you'd have to buy it...

  18. Stupid question by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 5, Interesting

    "Of course it will expire once you stop paying the sub fee, but which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want"

    And if this subscripton doesn't have the music you want? What are you supposed to do - SWITCH and lose your existing collection.

    And when the price doubles what do you do then? Lose your collection or continue paying!

    and how about 5 times? How much can Gates raise the price before you give up your collection?

    What happens when the choice is crap and your paying just to play your existing music?

    1. Re:Stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      And what happens when MS releases the next version of Windows and stops supporting the old software. Upgrade or else lose your collection?

    2. Re:Stupid question by EvanED · · Score: 1

      No, 'cause you can still sit around using what you already have.

    3. Re:Stupid question by Surak · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Didn't I predict this about 5 days ago. Yeah, I thought I did. ;)

      Specifically, regarding your questions, if the sub didn't have the music you wanted, then where did this existing collection come from? ;) It would seem that it would have SOME Of the music you wanted, but not all of it.

      You could supplement it with iTunes of course, which requires no contract committment. No contract commitment is a key thing ... it's one of the key features that got Sprint PCS going in the early days. Look at pay-as-you-go cellphones, too. People pay *extra* to use these in order to avoid a contract.

      I don't know that this will fly... it might... it all depends on marketing. And no one in the industry does marketing quite as well as M$. ;)

    4. Re:Stupid question by NigelJohnstone · · Score: 1

      "Specifically, regarding your questions, if the sub didn't have the music you wanted, then where did this existing collection come from?"

      New music comes, if the service carries it you can buy it, if it doesn't you can only choose from what they carry. Do you switch yes/no? Do you subscribe to two? Or buy your music and keep subscribing to get the old stuff?

      "Look at pay-as-you-go cellphones, too. People pay *extra* to use these in order to avoid a contract."

      Exactly, they pay a fixed fee for X minutes, not a monthly contract. Pay as you go is closer to a purchase than monthly rental is. If only those damn minutes didn't expire after a year they'd be a proper purchase rather than a subscription.

    5. Re:Stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, you can't. Longhorn is going to be incompatible with current Windows software.

      "Microsoft has already stated that all their own software has to be rewritten for it - so will everyone else's."

      http://www.aaxnet.com/editor/edit029.html#longho rn

    6. Re:Stupid question by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1
      And if this subscripton doesn't have the music you want? What are you supposed to do - SWITCH and lose your existing collection.

      So? Most people have CDs that they loved 3 years ago but have since forgotten about. You don't have to continue paying - why not rent for a month or two, and when you've got bored of a song or album let it go.

      People are yelling about this because it's from Microsoft, and because Apple do something vaguely related and the current vogue is that Apple are perfect. Rental works in many other industries, why not here?

    7. Re:Stupid question by marauder404 · · Score: 1

      Why would they do that? That's suicide for them since they lose their revenue stream. Product obsolescence because of upgrades doesn't apply to subscription services, where newer products are the only way to provide upgrades. It is CRUCIAL to subscription services that it's backwards compatiable in every possible way. If newer incompatible services are introduced, Microsoft must a) heavily subsidize the fixed costs for service (perhaps even pay for it) or b) continue to support it until it dies. Instead of looking at a software model, a cell phone service model is much more relevant. People still use old AMPS phones as their primary phones. The cell phone companies must continue to support it until the costs of supporting it outweigh the revenues associated with it. With free phones in upgrade plans, there's no reason to move to a more modern plan.

    8. Re:Stupid question by bnenning · · Score: 1
      Rental works in many other industries, why not here?


      Because people quite reasonably consider music to be a product, not a service. It's a far easier decision to pay $1 for permanent ownership of a song (ok, there's DRM, but it's deliberately weak) than to try to figure out how long I'll want to have access to a song and whether I'll use the service enough to make it worthwile.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    9. Re:Stupid question by EvanED · · Score: 1

      Then don't get Longhorn. Just because lots of other people won't have it doesn't mean whatever Windows you had before will suddenly cease to function.

    10. Re:Stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Feel as the Long Horn of Microsoft slides up the Long Hole down below.

    11. Re:Stupid question by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Wow, that website is the biggest collection of Microsoft criticism I've ever seen :-) Thanks for the inspiring read.

    12. Re:Stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Does Windows expire if you don't pay a monthly fee? No. That analogy doesn't work.

    13. Re:Stupid question by Dunark · · Score: 1

      Does Windows expire if you don't pay a monthly fee?

      Not yet, but I'll bet that's Microsoft's wet dream. I'll also bet that's what happens as soon as most computers have the necessary hardware to support Palladium.

    14. Re:Stupid question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      HAHAHAAAHAHAHH
      But in just over 62 years, you would have paid more than $7500 with Microsofts service, and will have to keep paying them just to listen to the same music. HAHAHAHHA
      At least with iTunes I will have a lifetime of music. And if you spend $1 per song for your entire music library, you are just retarded. Download a full album for $10 and burn it with iTunes, and you've just saved 5 bucks. Unlimited listens. In fact, you can still burn it 9 more times.

  19. Competition! by l2718 · · Score: 1

    This can go in one of two ways:

    If things work out well, we'll have lively competition in the one-song-download business, leading to better, cheaper service.

    If things work out badly, M$ will bundle this into the next version of their OS, undercut the competition, and eventually kill the business.

    We'll have to wait and see.

    1. Re:Competition! by hastings14 · · Score: 1
      Competition is always good, but the big question is which competing service will succeed. But M$ seems to be going in the wrong direction, at least I think so. Usually they are more about ripping off good ideas poorly than ripping off bad ideas well. I bet after this Apple thing they will ditch their current plan in favor of letting users keep what they own.


      The bottom line is that people who bother to go online and download a song like it enough to want to own it forever. Everyone else just listens to the radio....

  20. Surely not even the RIAA... by AtomicX · · Score: 3, Funny

    Surely not even the RIAA is mad enough to trust Microsoft with the security of its' music? Oh wait...

  21. Simple question. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    Can i copy the file to a cd and ply it in my existing MP3 player? No? Gee, try again guys. WHy would i pay you for something with less functionality than I already have that works fine?

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  22. My music is all... by GrandTheftLazlow · · Score: 0

    pirated, damnit! I still get my music from Limewire, and transfer it out to an iPod via MusicMatch. No DRM problem here!

    --
    I have bad karma for speaking my Republican opinion. USA Rules!
    1. Re:My music is all... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And you've reserved yourself a spot in hell. Congratulations. Hope it was worth it.

  23. ISP's should bundle this... by John3 · · Score: 1

    The most likely way something like this would succeed would be for MS (for example) to bundle this with their MSN service, perhaps partnered with Verizon DSL service. Sell it as a stand-alone subscription for $10 per month to AOL and Earthlink users, but offer it "free" to MSN DSL subscribers. Then it becomes a value-added piece of their online offerings and puts them at an advantage over AOL and Apple (Apple is ultimately doomed with the $1 per song fee).

    --
    "We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers." Carl Sagan
    1. Re:ISP's should bundle this... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Apple has already succeeded, sad to say.

  24. Variety by Ann+Coulter · · Score: 1

    I wish that Apple would look into signing contracts with smaller labels so that they can increase the variety of music offered. Most of what I listen to come from obscure bands and I think that the music industry will benifit greatly if more people are aware of the variety of content available. If there was a distributor with the variety offered by Audiogalaxy, I would definitely spend money on it.

    1. Re:Variety by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 2, Informative

      chill out...they need time to expand...they have alreadytalked about adding indi lables.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    2. Re:Variety by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      I wish that Apple would look into signing contracts with smaller labels

      The iTunes music store wellcomes suggestion and is constantly adding new music and artists to their libraries.

      If you have the latest iTunes, all you need to do is use it to tell apple who you want to see in there. If not, tell me the name of the bands and maybe I'll let 'em know : )

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    3. Re:Variety by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm very good friends with a small band from Austin and they were just asked to have their one band label on iTunes. Apple invited them to send a rep (which will be me since I live in SF) to go to a seminar in early June to handle the technical details. They have no idea how Apple found out about someone so small as themselves but they are thrilled!

  25. I see potential here... by craenor · · Score: 1

    If we can get M$ and the RIAA to go head to head, maybe we can kill two turds with one stone.

    ...err, birds, sorry.

  26. They wish... by stefanb · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Ironically, the appeal of the Apple music store is that you "own" the titles that you buy for. I believe that many people rather choose to pay for specific offers, instead of subscribing to some service.

    By way of example: I pay for cable TV, and I have certain expectations. Especially, I don't expect stuff to be worthwile to keep after (possibly) timeshifting it; if there's a movie, series, mini-series I feel I might watch more than once or twice, I'm quite willing to pay some premium to get (practically) unlimited rights to it. Apple's offer is not unlimited, but it's close enough for me to accept it.

    On the other hand, a music subscription service, for me, is full of hassles. I need an Internet connection to have my right to listen confirmed; I might need to stream stuff, at potentially low quality, I can't use the devices I want to, etc. pp. In essence, I don't "own" the music.

    A newspaper or magazine subscription is similiar in that I don't care that much about last month's issue (with most publications, anyway), but with my personal interest in music, I want to be able to "own" a recording, and rest calmly knowing that I can listen to it when I want, not when some commerical service deems appropriate.

    1. Re:They wish... by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1, Informative
      Ironically, the appeal of the Apple music store is that you "own" the titles that you buy for.

      You don't own them, Apple dictate what you can and cannot do with each track.

      On the other hand, a music subscription service, for me, is full of hassles. I need an Internet connection to have my right to listen confirmed;

      I would note that you need this for Apples service as well, you need to log in to listen to music on another computer...

      I might need to stream stuff, at potentially low quality

      No, they give you a DRM wrapped music file that will be played by compliant players for a timed period....

      I can't use the devices I want to

      Many more players support WMA than Apples DRM wrapped AAC, in fact, with Apple you can use the iPod and that's it.

      In essence, I don't "own" the music.

      Nobody owns music today, if you did it would be legal to copy it and give it to your friends.

      with my personal interest in music, I want to be able to "own" a recording, and rest calmly knowing that I can listen to it when I want, not when some commerical service deems appropriate.

      That's fine, not everybody is like you. I listen to the radio a lot. I don't mind if a track is here one minute and gone the next. Maybe I hear a track and like it, and want to listen again. This service would let me do so in a reasonably cheap way.

      This almost certainly wouldn't work with Linux, but I'd have no real problems with subscribing to something like this if it did. The main problem is finding one that stocks plenty of music in a timely fashion in my interests, mostly trance, chill and jazz. eMusic doesn't seem to have that.... besides I can't really justify a subscription to any non-essential service right now, I'm supposed to be saving money :) But in principle I'd like such a thing.

    2. Re:They wish... by tfoss · · Score: 2, Informative
      Ironically, the appeal of the Apple music store is that you "own" the titles that you buy for

      You don't own them, Apple dictate what you can and cannot do with each track.

      Hence the "" around own. The point is that you have the file, period. It won't expire, won't stop working when microsoft decides to do x, y, or z. You don't own the music, but you don't own the music if it's on a CD either. You own a copy of it. Moreover, the limits apple puts on your capabilities are stomachable to most people.

      I can't use the devices I want to

      Many more players support WMA than Apples DRM wrapped AAC, in fact, with Apple you can use the iPod and that's it.

      First of all, how many of those players do you think will be compatible with this new windows DRM? Sure firmware upgrade, but that argument works both ways. Second, which mp3 player is the most popular now? Third if you are so inclined, burn, re-rip, and you can put it on *any* player you want.

      Basically there are arguments for both a tethered system and for a more apple-like system. Which will succeed depends on what people feel more comfortable with. It seems from the experiences of all available digital music distributors so far, tethering and limited time use seem to be the less preferred (remember DivX?).

      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    3. Re:They wish... by Dominic_Mazzoni · · Score: 2, Informative

      You don't own them, Apple dictate what you can and cannot do with each track.

      You DO own them. Apple gives them to you encrypted and gives YOU the key to decrypt them. The mechanism they give you for transfering the key is by logging in via your Apple ID, but you can continue to listen to YOUR music when you're not on the Internet.

      Furthermore, you can burn the songs you purchased to a CD, and from there you can do anything you want with them.

      I would note that you need this for Apples service as well, you need to log in to listen to music on another computer...

      Yes, but only ONCE. After that, the second computer doesn't need to be connected to the Internet to listen to that music.

      I wish that Apple's service had fewer restrictions, too, but please get your facts straight. And Apple's service has nearly the fewest restrictions of any other service out there today. The only other services that offer unrestricted downloads are subscription-only services, so they're not worth it unless you purchase a large volume of music.

  27. The problem is, I'd want both by Viqsi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Frankly, there are some songs I love and want to listen to all the time; these are ones I'd want to "own" so I can have them available whenever/whereever, and be able to demonstrate to others and stuff like that.

    And then there's others that I have a sort of periodic interest in, and usually stop caring about after a few weeks. These are ones I'd prefer to "rent", because there's no point in paying more so as to keep them later.

    Plus, I'd like to be able to control the difference between these two states easily.

    Does *anybody* offer something like that? Not that I can see...

    --

    --
    viqsi - See "vixen"
    If we do not change our direction we are likely to end up where we are headed.
    1. Re:The problem is, I'd want both by RevAaron · · Score: 1

      Sure you could have both... If one company provided both in one package, there'd probably be $10/month sub fee, then $1/song if you wanted to "convert "it to a sold song. This price may change as they found people were doing more conversions fo owned songs or doing more rentals. No reason you can't subscribe to a service like this one, and buy the song from someone like Apple, freeing up 'space' in your queue (if there is such a thing) in the rental service, while owning a real copy which you can burn or copy to multiple devices.

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
    2. Re:The problem is, I'd want both by RevAaron · · Score: 1

      Surprise! Such a service does exist, and at the prices I mentioned. $10/month for tethered downloads plus $1/song you want to keep. It's MusicNow, and I saw it listed in a BusinessWeek story linked to from pressplay's website.

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  28. Renting vs Buying? by Sebby · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Gee, renting DRM crippled songs, or buying DRM crippled songs.

    I'll take buying. Still the better deal of the two, and I'm not helping to support a monopoly.

    --

    AC comments get piped to /dev/null
    1. Re:Renting vs Buying? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 4, Insightful

      you are such a baby..apples "drm" is hardly there.....what "drm" system lets you burn unlimited cds?

      oh poo you can't encode streight to mp3...I can only make a cdda cd :-(....that is pretty weak ass drm is you ask me and it will be a matter of weeks before a shareware maker comes up with a program that takes your aac files...tricks iTunes into writing them to a cd Image and then allowing you to rip to mp3 from the cdImage.

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
    2. Re:Renting vs Buying? by Graff · · Score: 4, Informative
      it will be a matter of weeks before a shareware maker comes up with a program that takes your aac files...tricks iTunes into writing them to a cd Image and then allowing you to rip to mp3 from the cdImage

      You mean like this program? It takes the audio output from pretty much any source, including a running program like iTunes, and encodes it into mp3 or AIFF. It can even pipe the sound data into a command-line program so you can encode using FLAC, Lame, Ogg, or whatever.

      Pretty sweet program. You can even use it like to do timed recordings of internet radio shows, kind of like a Tivo for streaming audio.
    3. Re:Renting vs Buying? by SiMac · · Score: 1

      There is. It's called iMove. Just import the AAC and get the AIFF out of the project clips folder, then encode it to MP3 with LAME or iTunes.

    4. Re:Renting vs Buying? by bnenning · · Score: 1
      it will be a matter of weeks before a shareware maker comes up with a program that takes your aac files...tricks iTunes into writing them to a cd Image and then allowing you to rip to mp3 from the cdImage.


      Somebody already mentioned Audio Hijack, but iMovie can also do this. Just import a protected AAC file into a new project and export the audio as MP3.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    5. Re:Renting vs Buying? by FuzzieNorn · · Score: 1

      A program like .. Quicktime! Open Quicktime, open your 'protected' AAC file, go to export, save it as aiff.

    6. Re:Renting vs Buying? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Linux users are as dumb as PC users sometimes. Why use a stupid command line program for everything when you can use beautiful and intuitive Mac programs like iMovie and Audio Hijack? Mac programs have better interfaces, heck even icons and names. Firebird. Dumb. rogueamoeba. Gee that describes what it does. Cellular biology? Anyone who likes how M$ copies Apple should take Bill's dick out of their mouth. Apple created iTunes and was first to market with a FEASIBLE purchasing system. They make everything so EASY like Linux and Windows never can. I'm surprised with 80 billion that M$ can't copy Apple better, same with the legions of Linux programmers. They get away with copying the ideas of Apple but they just don't EXECUTE right.

      I guess I'll be modded as troll or Apple snob but you really have to give Apple props for the iPod and iTunes. Apple keeps getting better with their OS X apps, lots helped with open source yay, and M$ keeps getting more evil. I want Perfect Dark on Gamecube too damnit!

  29. A better alternative already exists! by Groucho · · Score: 4, Informative

    I'd rather go somewhere else where the music is better, the downloads are virtually unlimited and the sound quality is the best of any subscription service on the net (Lame VBR encoded MP3s).

    What am I talking about? EMusic of course.

    No, they don't have stuff like Britney Spears and Led Zeppelin, but they have more excellent indie, experimental, electronic, metal, jazz, punk, classical and uncategorizable music than you could ever listen to in a lifetime. If you're sick of Clear Channel bullshit and hungry for something exciting and interesting, it is a feast.

    And you get to keep every single file you have downloaded. Permanently.

    (I know they had some trouble recently with their new servers wbut that seems to be resolved now)

    1. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 1

      I am an emusic customer. An extremely happy one, at that. I pay my 10$ a month and I get GOOD music to listen to, no limits, no limitations. Do I get the greatest hits? No. Will I ever get them? No. Will most people who subscribe to emusic be disappointed? Yes. Why? Because most people think that Britney and Christina and all the other pop idols are "music". They are not. Emusic is perfect if you know what you are looking for. It is even better if you don't know what you are looking for and are willing to experiment. It is horrible for the kazaa crowd. But in terms of value for money, hell, I can't fault it!

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    2. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Monkelectric · · Score: 1, Informative
      The problem with emusic is their mp3 quality is *SHIT*. The 128kbps rate is bad enough, but, I encounter songs *all the time* that have errors (jitter mostly) in them.

      To me this is not acceptable.

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    3. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting

      The bitrate has recently been increased on most songs to 192 VBR encoding. Sounds much, much better now.

      As for errors, I haven't downloaded a glitchy song yet.

    4. Re:A better alternative already exists! by RevAaron · · Score: 1

      For $10/month, who do you get? How many songs or albums? What format are the downloads in? Do you get to *keep* the downloads? Any DRM?

      It looks like MP3s. Which is good. Is it all really just encoded at 128 though? Any option to get something better?

      After reading your claim about finding a lot of stuff, I checked for a bunch of industrial crapola I've always wanted. It had a bunch of it, although no Skinny Puppy.

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
    5. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Klaruz · · Score: 1

      I don't subscribe, but emusic is plain mp3. No DRM or anything. The rips should be good quality, I've never heard otherwise.

    6. Re:A better alternative already exists! by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      eMusic does look good...... but they have no trance :( Searches for "Chicane" or "Paul Van Dyk" give only compilation albums. Is there a way to request music to be added? Or does that kind of stuff fall under the "clear channel bullshit" banner?

    7. Re:A better alternative already exists! by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      Well, I found their trance section and signed up for the trial. So far not really impressed, their download client failed to download the album yet still counted the tracks against my 50! We'll see what tech support say about it.

    8. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Commutative+Monoid · · Score: 1

      It looks like MP3s. Which is good. Is it all really just encoded at 128 though? Any option to get something better?

      This discussion seems to indicate that they're moving their service to providing fairly decent LAME encodings.

      --
      You have exactly 314 seconds to come up with a less retarded plot.
    9. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I did a little searching of eMusic. Here's what I found:

      Artist Apple eMusic
      Chi A.D. No No
      Mattias Grassow No No
      Splashdown No No
      Rob Zombie Yes No
      Republica Yes No
      Tool No No
      My Scarlet Life No No

      At least the iTunes Music Store has SOME of these guys!

    10. Re:A better alternative already exists! by WiggyWack · · Score: 1
      I'd rather go somewhere else where the music is better, the downloads are virtually unlimited and the sound quality is the best of any subscription service on the net (Lame VBR encoded MP3s).

      What am I talking about? EMusic of course.

      You forgot, "Where the selection sucks."

      --
      Macintosh humor! MacComedy.com
    11. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Dot.Com.CEO · · Score: 1
      For $10 a month you get a fairly decent selection of good music. It is all mp3 encoded, 192VBR lame encoder. Not bad quality AT ALL.

      If you want something and they don't have it, go to the forums and ask for it. If more people want it, they WILL try to get it.

      The best thing about emusic, though, is not finding stuff you want. It is finding stuff you would NEVER have listened to. I like 80s rock and punk rock, I found a lot of stuff from that period there, but due to their catalogue I am gaining an appreciation of blues music and I am redescovering other areas too.

      --
      Mother is the best bet and don't let Satan draw you too fast.
    12. Re:A better alternative already exists! by Polymath+Crowbane · · Score: 1

      To clear up a couple of misconceptions about EMusic:

      They are now encoding CDs with Lame as VBR MP3s. I've downloaded several of them; the sound quality is quite good. The watermarking, I believe, is to allow them to track illegal uses of the files (on Kazaa, for example).

      A working Linux DLM should be out next week. I hate having to boot to Win2k for the sole purpose of downloading my music, but I'm willing to put up with the temporary inconvenience for the sake of the music I can get. While EMusic's initial response to the problems with the 2.0 DLM was not very good, the message board moderators are becoming more open.

      Granted, the selection leaves something to be desired. However, new music and labels are being added weekly. I've been able to find Messiaen, Partch, Wuorinen and other composers, as well as some wonderful jazz. Since the entire collection is available for visitors to search and sample, it certainly won't hurt to give it a try.

      Yes, the search engine sucks (especially for classical music). However, I've used that to my advantage to find new artists by browsing through their lists (something like perusing card catalogs in a library). That's how I discovered Cat Power, the single most depressing singer I've ever heard (and that's meant as a compliment).

      Is EMusic perfect? Of course not. Is it worth a look? Definitely.

    13. Re:A better alternative already exists! by PsychoKiller · · Score: 1

      I refuse to be a customer of EMusic.

      I signed up for the trial version to look at the titles they had. I gave them my email address with -emusic appended to my username, I customize my name for any website I give my email address to.

      A few weeks later, I'm getting spam to that address. G1rls L0ve h0rse c0ck. Great. I send a complaint to their postmater, no response.

    14. Re:A better alternative already exists! by 26199 · · Score: 1

      The DLM is a recent addition and decidely screwed up, unfortunately. New versions should be out soon...

      If you go to 'My Account', there's a page with details of everything you've downloaded... you try to download again from there and it won't count against you.

      Depending on why the DLM isn't working, with a bit of messing about you can tell it to use a local proxy then get the proxy to give you the URL's and use a real download manager... have a look on my site under java/emusic for what I use.

    15. Re:A better alternative already exists! by adamsc · · Score: 1

      I'll second that: their coverage is uneven but I've downloaded a hundred or so albums and found quite a few keepers. Fans of blues or jazz will find a particularly nice collection of the classics and their rock/alt/techno selection has quite a few gems if you look around.

      The real value of eMusic is that it takes the pain out of trying new groups. $10/month means you're ahead if you average one album a month and my average is probably in the 15-20 range. It's about as easy as it gets to round out your collectiom, too - they have many albums which are hard to find unless you live near a truly excellent record store.

  30. DRM != Service by sker · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The article mostly talks about Microsoft trying to improve their DRM so that other companies can use it in their services... not about MS coming up with a service themselves.

    I believe MS'd like a consumer service for MSN, and I think it may actually be in the work, but the article doesn't really address it. MS either views the back-end b2b type DRM-provider stuff as more important at this stage or is under a lot of secrecy.

    --
    nonsig. unsig. desig.
  31. It's only a matter of time by jezzgoodwin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    As soon as they introduce this it'll only be a matter of days (maybe even hours) before there's a program made which will just convert your downloaded payed for time-limited music into a codec of your choice.

    And also it's always going to be difficult to actually sell the music to the consumer when the consumer can just download the music he/she wants from KaZaA or whatever file sharing program takes their fancy.

    So people are either going to need to be either self-concious enough that they want to pay for their music.... or? Or companies are going to need to make a service that is vastly supieror to the free alternatives, or maybe perhaps you get a certain amount of months of subscription to the service every time you buy a portable player or something?

    This seems to me like taking a step up a ladder which leads to a large, half eaten fish. It might be something to do, but what's the point?

  32. Different target by Maxwell42 · · Score: 1

    With that kind of subscription, their target for this service wouldn't be the same as AMS. Maybe people that listen to the last hit on the top 10 would like to swap their music very often, I don't. I have my prefered bands and music style, i wouldn't want to get rid of them.

  33. Do my eyes deceive me? by crashnbur · · Score: 3, Funny
    Or is that a Slashdot story with a bias in support of a Microsoft product over an Apple product?! I thought I'd never see the day...

    But, seriously, a flat rate makes a helluva lot more sense to me than a per-song rate. Some songs are longer/better than others, and I'd hate to have to pay the same dollar for Blur's "Song 2", which kicks ass but is barely two minutes long, as I have to pay for Metallica's "One", which is arguably as good in its own ways and is nearly four times as long.

    Penny per Megabyte or flat monthly rate, whichever is cheaper! Every body wins!

    1. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by clifyt · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Or you buy the entire album for $9.99 instead of just the song and you would get both albums for the same price -- even if one has 20 2 minute songs and the other has 10 4 minute songs.

      I don't look at size as a serious quantitative method of determining value. I know I know -- you are just going off of the line of reasoning your ex dumped you for, but not everything a woman tells you is the truth. Personally, it would be in my best interest to say that it did, but us guys have to support one another :)

    2. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by rigau · · Score: 1

      When you buy art, music, literature, etc... you are not buying extra ram for your computer. Fuck if it were like that I would go grab fifty yards of canvas and make a few million since Picasso's go for that much and they are only a few feet big.

    3. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do slashdoters or anyone else believe that music should be sold by the song per time or data bits. You just comoditized a creative artist to nothing more than bits.

      You value nothing. What if it was your algorithym they were stealing. Your code, your creativity. It is exactly what I am talking about here. Pay for what you use, don't buy whatever from whomever, that's the free market.

      If you support stealing music (no debates an how the industry pays artists, please) you should not be surpised when your code is stolen and used elsewhere. Grow up children! Artists choose to work with record labels or not!

      I know of no music slave camps on this planet! Think of a song as a piece of elegant code you'd like to "hear" over and over again.

      My 2 cents +

    4. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by Scudsucker · · Score: 1

      that would be copyright/trademark infringment, not stealing.

    5. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by crashnbur · · Score: 1
      Um, well, if it were my stuff they were "stealing", I would be glad that my stuff was good enough to steal, and I would be glad that someone was learning something from me, even if what I have to offer may not be worth much to the rest of the world. (Hey, as long as it holds some value to someone, I'm happy.)

      See, I'm an individualist, and I believe everyone should have the right to be able to choose their own needs, methods, prices, etc... I think that, in the end, everything would balance out if everyone realized that they were each given the same benefit of the doubt. Just set up a few mechanisms to harshly punish the criminals.

      That said, I don't mind volunteering to give my own stuff away at all. The key to that is that I do it of my own volition, not because someone or something else compels me to do it. If you want to use my ideas, go for it. I hope it helps you. Out of respect, I would like you to give credit where credit is due, but if you don't, I don't really care that much. But that's just me. I'm sure that's not a normal point of view.

    6. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by Steve+Cowan · · Score: 1

      Buying music by the minute is not the same as buying gas by the gallon.

      Your comment is like saying that the value of a painting is proportional to its square footage.

      A buck a song is simple and effective, and I would hate to see Apple listen to your suggestion. If you don't feel that your buck is well spent on a 2-minute song, then buy a longer song. Better still - why don't you see if you can put them out of business by only downloading 7-minute songs!

    7. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? by crashnbur · · Score: 1
      This comment deserves moderation for being insightful. :-)

      I know that there is no absolute rule governing the quality of songs. I think the only thing we can all truly agree on is that $1 per song is too much. We're still paying $10-20 per CD (if we choose to burn the songs), and a collection of 100 songs would cost $100. A family (or anyone) with only moderately diverse musical tastes would have to pay $400+ for only a CD's worth of music.

      Isn't the idea to make downloading music profitable for the supplier yet reasonably priced for the consumer so as to make downloading an advantage?

      Better question: now that so many have experienced free downloading, how likely is it that the public will accept a pay-for scenario? (Morality has nothing to do with the answer I want to this question...)

  34. Depends on how good it is by bethanie · · Score: 1

    How much is it worth to you to "own" the bits?

    Personally, I like having both options open. It goes like this: first I rent the DVD, then if I really like it, I go ahead and buy it.

    And truth be told, I think that the cost projection of $7500 to "fill up" a 30GB player is a little absurd (leave it to the marketers!). The vast majority of users (not /.ers, of course, since we always carry things ad absurum!), will never buy that many songs. The player will be obsolete before that happens, and they'll move along to the next platform.

    ....Bethanie....

  35. Well, no by MAXOMENOS · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Part of the "advantage" of Microsoft's DRM is that the files will expire if you don't pay your bills. So you don't really own the songs. You're subscribing to a service, like cable.

    1. Re:Well, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      and the point was that somebody would crack the DRM, so the files would not expire, and you can do whatever you want with them

    2. Re:Well, no by Fembot · · Score: 1

      How will my Creative lab's jukebox know that I havent paid my bills?

    3. Re:Well, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I wondered this, too, and decided that new devices would either require you to plug it into a computer once a month (or all you music would expire) to renew the service on that device, or you would just be able to keep playing your music until it was "discovered" you hadn't payed by plugging it into a computer.

      I'll own my music, thankyou.

    4. Re:Well, no by Dylan+Zimmerman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You'll probably have to buy a new player to use this service. Microsoft seems to be pushing for clocks to be added to players, so I would guess that all of the files have a time stamp that a computer can renew. Whenever the clock hits a particular time, date, or whatever they use, the files with that time for their expiration date are deleted. If you plug into a computer and it tells your player that you've paid your bill, the expiration time gets moved a month into the future. Or perhaps the clock gets wound back a month.

    5. Re:Well, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Microsoft will probably just give you a player when you subscribe... players are cheap enough to make and it won't hurt microsoft any.

    6. Re:Well, no by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 1

      There is an internal clock built into the Jukebox BTW - it's been there ever since the NJB 1.

      It's not visible on the NJB menus or display, but you can set it/read it with the creative playcenter software.

      --
      "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
    7. Re:Well, no by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You: "the files will expire if you don't pay your bills. So you don't really own the songs"

      Parent:" 3) Use the new /. utility to bust the DRM protection."

      Way to show you are a complete moron.

    8. Re:Well, no by tillemetry · · Score: 1

      Well, no.

      If this is like any Microsoft effort, the fees will go up when they reach critial mass, and drive everyone else out of business.

      They have you right where they want you from the word go.

    9. Re:Well, no by Dylan+Zimmerman · · Score: 1

      I mean a "trusted" clock. It would need to be tamper-proof, encrypted, and all that other fun stuff. The software in the player would neet to be "trusted", too. Can't have someone just using audio-out to copy a file, now can we?

  36. No need. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    Why would someont put the time and effort into cracking the DRM for stuff thats available already? Unless pressplay has music unavailable anywhere else.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  37. do both by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 4, Interesting
    First, note that $120/year is cheaper than $7500, no matter how long you plan to subscribe, because you can generate $120/year by sticking $6000 up front in any safe investment that earns 2% interest. Yeah, I know that would be a silly thing to do! :-)

    Anyway, I'd prefer a rental system with an option to buy. I could then fill the device with rental music, and when I decide I like something enough to want it permanently, I'd buy it.

    1. Re:do both by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      But why buy? if you're already planning to keep the subscription going, renting is the same as buying. Unless you just like the feeling of "owning" the bits.

    2. Re:do both by harlows_monkeys · · Score: 1
      But why buy? if you're already planning to keep the subscription going, renting is the same as buying

      I'm assuming that renting would lock the files fairly tightly to a specific device, and that buying would allow more flexibility, such as making a CD for the car, or making a copy to play on the computer, etc.

    3. Re:do both by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      OK, fair enough. But I look at my portable player as my music collection. I bring it everywhere, I use it in my car, etc. I'm very happy to have my music in one place and never to have to deal with CDs. So for people like me, renting is the same as buying.

    4. Re:do both by Graff · · Score: 2, Insightful
      note that $120/year is cheaper than $7500

      Look at it this way, for $120 a year you would be buying 12 albums a year at $10 each at the iTunes Music Store (iTMS). You would then own these songs and pretty much be able to do whatever you want with them. Even if you go broke and can't pay $120 for the next year you will still have the songs if you buy them.

      Many people buy less than 12 albums a year so those people will save money by using iTMS rather than renting the music. I seriously doubt that anyone will fork over $7500 all at once to fill their iPods. The reason most people get a 30 meg iPod is not to fill it with new music but to put in the songs bought over the years, along with some new stuff. Not only that but the iPod has many uses other than to store music - I use it all the time to move gigs of files from one machine to another in work, or even as a quick way to boot up a machine if I'm a pinch.

      Lastly, I know for a fact that Apple's DRM can hardly be called a DRM. How many people would HONESTLY have a reason to use an audio file on more than 3 computers? Even if you did how hard is it to burn a CD with the songs and then use that CD on as many computers as you want? Judging from Microsoft's history I just don't see them offering DRM files with this degree of freedom. You know for sure that you won't be allowed to burn standard CDs with Microsoft's rental service, if you could then you would now own that song forever and the rental idea would be dead.
    5. Re:do both by prockcore · · Score: 1


      Lastly, I know for a fact that Apple's DRM can hardly be called a DRM. How many people would HONESTLY have a reason to use an audio file on more than 3 computers? Even if you did how hard is it to burn a CD with the songs and then use that CD on as many computers as you want?


      Nice rose colored glasses. The fact is, it *is* DRM. If Apple gets enough pressure from the RIAA, Apple can make it so that you are no longer able to burn those songs to CDs, they retain complete control over how you use your music. Just because they allow you to do certain things now, is no guarrantee that they'll continue to work in the future.

      Apple has a history of forcing you to upgrade. Want to use Safari? You have to pay $120 to upgrade to Jaguar, because it won't run on earlier versions of OSX. Want to use Apple's Music Store? You have to upgrade to iTunes4 and upgrade your Quicktime libraries to 6.5. Who's to say that they won't force you to upgrade to iTunes 4.1 if you want to continue to use the Music Store, and lock everything down.

      In fact, you can count on that happening.

    6. Re:do both by ipjohnson · · Score: 1

      Hold on your complaining because they produced new versions of their software to bring in new feature ... damned if you do damned if you don't.

    7. Re:do both by bnenning · · Score: 1
      If Apple gets enough pressure from the RIAA, Apple can make it so that you are no longer able to burn those songs to CDs


      They could conceivably update the software so that songs I buy in the future would have more restrictions. They can't do a thing to the songs I already bought and transcoded to an uncrippled format. I'd still have the music I bought, they wouldn't get any more of my business, and life would go on.

      --
      How to solve most of our problems: 1.Lots of nuclear plants. 2.Cure aging.
    8. Re:do both by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you can generate $120/year by sticking $6000 up front in any safe investment that earns 2% interest.


      Don't pay our taxes, do we?

  38. Why pay per song? Usenet rules... by penginkun · · Score: 2, Informative

    Usenet is the only way to go. I spend $10 a month for 750mb of downloads per day. That works up to 5.25gb per week, and 21gb a month. OK, so it's not as simple as Kazaa, but you don't have to put up with spyware and you won't wind up with partial files. You can place requests and (usually) have them filled pretty quickly. And you'll be exposed to a larger variety of stuff on Usenet, stuff you probably won't see in the P2P communities.

    At the moment Usenet doesn't seem to be the focus of any RIAA crackdowns. Just go out and get a good newsfeed (there are plenty which protect user anonymity) and start downloading! You'll never pay for music again unless you want to!

  39. ownership by jest3r · · Score: 2, Insightful

    owning the song 'forever' is worth it ...

    being locked in a subscribtion service 'forever' is not ...

  40. Don't overpay for music by briggsb · · Score: 2, Funny
    1. Re:Don't overpay for music by Tyrdium · · Score: 1

      Seeing as that article ignores the fact that P2P apps are available for the Mac too...

  41. They'd have to pay me... by MoOsEb0y · · Score: 1

    Microsoft would have to pay me to use their inferior Windows Media Audio codec. I could take a crap, and throw it in a blender and come up with something that would sound more realistic. I'll stick to MP3, OGG, MPC, or even better.. a plain old regular CD.

    1. Re:They'd have to pay me... by SILIZIUMM · · Score: 0

      Thumbs up. Well said.

    2. Re:They'd have to pay me... by davidstrauss · · Score: 2, Informative
      I could take a crap, and throw it in a blender and come up with something that would sound more realistic.

      I'm guessing you're ignoring Windows Media Lossless, because it doesn't lose anyting. I use WM Lossless for recording before converting to another format. By the way, MP3 (not pro) is far worse in quality at the same bitrate as WM8 or WM9 Lossy compression. WM8 and WM9 Lossy use the same frequency separation technique with two types of compression as MP3pro. I agree with your politics, but politics do not determine the quality of a format. The parent poster is just another troll.

    3. Re:They'd have to pay me... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Unfortunately, I disagree - in my own listening, WMA sounds *different* but equally bad compared with MP3 at the same bitrate. In other words, if you compare WMA and MP3 at (say) 128k the coding artifacts are equally audible - and if you can hear the coding artifacts, you cant enjoy the music in my opinion! If you crank the bitrate up to 192k, MP3 is almost good enough - you can hear coding artifacts sometimes, particularly on rock music / electric guitar. (As I recall, WMA still had audible high frequency artifacts at 192k.) At 256k MP3, I can't hear any coding artifacts - but some people with better ears might be able to hear something. At 256k the compression is only about 4:1 - with the capacity of jukebox players continuing to rise, I am looking forward to the day where a reasonable music library will fit on a portable player in a lossless compressed format - like FLAC or something. (Typically around 2:1)

  42. Not a matter of owning... by batobin · · Score: 3, Insightful

    To me, it's not a matter of owning. It's a matter of feeling a sense of freedom. Any time I'm forced to make a long term monetary commitment (a loan, gym membership, etc.) I'm reluctant to do so. This is because there's always that shred of doubt regarding the future. What if something happens and I'm unable to pay this monthly fee?

    With a gym membership it's easy: stop going to the gym. With a car loan it's different. You're going to get your car repossessed. Obviously this is not ideal, because you've invested time and energy into this automobile and you'd be losing this.

    Getting your music repossessed is the same concept. I've put time and money into this collection, and I'll be damned if some company takes it back if I fail to make a payment. Because the future is unpredictable (especially for me, a poor college student), I'm going to stick with owning my music.

    Also, I just want to point out, only singles on the iTMS are 99 cents. Albums are usually 10 dollars, and often contain WAY more than 10 songs.

  43. Finally, a match MS will lose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Apple has shown the industry the way to do it, and (judging by the response) the way consumers want it to be done-- or at least, the way consumers will tolerate it being done.

    Since Windows market saturation is complete, from now on Microsoft will always be trying to throw a "you must keep paying" aspect into their products and services-- because they're a bunch of greedy fucks, and because when there's no new people to sell Windows to, it's the only way to keep revenues up.

    It looks to me, though, like the buying public has spoken in favor of the ITMS model-- so I'd say that for once, Microsoft's half-assed, "me too" copy of Apple's offering will NOT prevail.

  44. Re:iTunes * by JJahn · · Score: 1

    Interestingly enough, you don't own the music from Itunes or buying a CD in a store either.

  45. What kind of morons would pay for mp3s? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What kind of morons would pay for something that is free. I own a ton of music I got for free from k++. Doesn't expire or anything, and I own it!, it's all mine!

    1. Re:What kind of morons would pay for mp3s? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ya, but your music is pirated, you pimple faced geek.

  46. screw em by theDigitizer · · Score: 1

    I already have tons of music ripped. Screw em all.

    --
    Contrary to popular belief, I don't actually make my website for other people to look at.
  47. Ownership is outdated. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 2

    It's digital media, how the hell can anyone really own it? I don't mind paying for a subscription service, but I'm sure as hell not going to buy into one run by microsoft. That's their dream, to make you "rent" their crappy software a year at a time.

    I think, eventually, a lot of stuff will come this way. I pay for XFM radio, because it's worth it to me not to have to listen to open air radio. Same deal with this. There are a lot of games I'd rather spend $5 to have access to than $50 to "own".

    Still, this is more of a paradigm shift than a solution that can be expidited by simply adding hard DRM to modern services.

    Just my (Mostly incoherent) opinion.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
    1. Re:Ownership is outdated. by davidstrauss · · Score: 1
      I pay for XFM radio, because it's worth it to me not to have to listen to open air radio.

      Given that you pay them a significant amount every month, I would hope you know the company's name is XM satellite radio, not XFM.

    2. Re:Ownership is outdated. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      While I would rather own my music, I admit you do have a point about games. Most games don't get played much after you've gone all the way through them once, and you can get there in a month of spare time. So a subscription service for games would be something I would definitely be interested in.

  48. I prefer the freedom of owning by DavidinAla · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Renting music is sort of like having cable TV. You can enjoy whatever the operator happens to make available at that time. But when you own the music (or DVD or book or whatever), you don't have to be concerned about whether the things you want to hear will one day be unavailable because of lack of demand or other reasons.

    How much music does a normal person acquire in a year (legally or otherwise)? I have every CD that I own on my 10GB iPod -- plus various MP3s from other sources -- and it's still only half full. The issue as it was framed in this question ($7,500 for ownership vs. $120 a year for rental) is absurb, because people don't buy thousands of dollars of music at once. The real question is whether you want to be committed to listening to whatever a subscription service wants you to listen to OR be able to spend a tiny amount of money on a song or album when you happen to feel like it. The subscription model does at least three bad things: 1) It takes away your ability to legally own music for as long as you want it, 2) It takes away your freedom to time your purchases to your own whims or budget, and 3) It takes away your ability to "vote with your money" to give the market feedback about what you want to buy.

    I understand the theoretical allure of a subscription model, but I believe it's one of those things that looks best when it's in theory. In practice, people want to buy what they want when they want AND they want to be able to own it. (You can argue about whether Apple's mild restrictions are too strict concerning what you can do with the file, but that's another argument. For me, Apple's approach basically means that I can do virtually anything that a normal music consumer wants to do with his music.)

    1. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      Not sure how this ended up with an "insightful" moderation:

      1) It doesn't "take anything away". It's another option. That's like saying that the existence of NetFlix takes away your ability to buy music. The existing subscription services like Pressplay do include the ability to "buy" a song as well as "rent" via a tethered download.
      2) Huh? "Freedom to time your purchases"? I'm not sure what this is supposed to mean. The sub model is all-you-can eat, download as much as you want whenever you want. Not sure how you could get much more freedom than that.
      3) "Vote with your money" - again, huh? Are you saying that with a sub service there's no way to tell what's popular? Of course there is - the sub service can tell what's most downloaded.

    2. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      A lot of interesting points here. If I say that the average cost of a CD is $12 (and that's being very conservative), then I have at least $3000 worth of music. Of the few hundred CDs that I own, I listen to maybe fifty of them on a regular basis.

      Some people have tried to downplay the argument that many CDs only contain 1 or 2 good songs. From my experience, it certainly seems that the argument is fair. I imagine that allowing me to "cherry pick" the good songs would give nightmares to music companies; but it certainly is better for the consumer and I imagine better for bands that no longer need to generate 8 filler songs to satisfy a contract.

    3. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by dirk · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Almost everyone I know who has started downloading music (and doesn;t have a dial-up connection) has ended up downloading massive amount of music. People will only buy 1 or 2 CDs in a week (at most), but it is nothing to download 4 or 5 CDs worth of music in a week. People don;t buy because of the inherent cost. They will download much more, because they realize there is no inherent cost to downloading (they have already paid their 10 dollars). Most people will download more music than they will buy.

      I find interesting the arguements that aren't being used though. The MS system would allow you to try out any CD or artist, which is what every claims is so great about P2P. As far as I know, you have to buy a song on Apple's service to hear the entire thing. Also, while everyone is saying how great it is to be able to get a whole album for $9.99, what happened to the "fact" that almost all albums contain only 1 or 2 good songs. Everyone is pointing out you can buy whole albums cheaper than songs, but the whole idea of this service was you could buy individual songs because most albums sucked.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
    4. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

      Regarding your points, in the same order you listed them:

      1) The question was framed as a choice between a subscription model and a purchase model. If you'd like to advocate a hybrid, that might be a reasonable argument, but it wasn't the issue I was responding to.

      2) If you don't know what a simple phrase like that means, I'm not sure how to make it more clear. If I want to buy a song (or an album or multiple albums), I can make the purchase when I happen to have the money and the desire to fork it out. If you're using a subscription model, you pay something out every month whether you use the service or not. There's no ongoing commitment with buying as you go; even if you can theoretically drop a subscription any time, there's is still an element of being committed because of the hassle of canceling and later restarting the service.

      3) Measuring how often something which is essentially free is downloaded doesn't provide the same information as knowing what people are specifically willing to pay for. There are a lot of things that I might download if they're free -- just as a novelty, for instance -- which I wouldn't pay a dime for. If someone has to pay for something (even if it's just 99 cents), it says that someone places real value on the item. (It's for this same reason that advertisers are willing to pay substantially more to place ads in paid circulation publications than in free publications, even if the readership is the same.)

    5. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

      I'm confused by something you're saying here, so maybe I'm misunderstanding what you mean.

      In your first paragraph, you seem to be talking about people downloading a bunch of music because it's free, but you also refer to them having "already paid their 10 dollars." So are you talking about people using illegal P2P services? Or are you talking about people using subscription services?

      If you're talking about the illegal P2P services, I'm not sure that's within the scope of whether purchase vs. subscription is a better model. If you're talking about the subscription services, though, the point is that the music they downloaded is no longer there for them to listen to if they quit paying a subscription or if the company goes out of business.

    6. Re:I prefer the freedom of owning by dirk · · Score: 1

      In actuality I'm refering to both. Your post brought up that people only buy a small amount of music, saying that people generally don't buy thousands of dollars of music at once. My point was that they may not buy it, but if they can download it they will. Whether it is "free" from Kazaa, or from a subscription service is moot. People don't buy thousands of dollars of CDs, but if you give them the option of running wild on a P2P service, they will download the equivalent of thousands of dollars of music. The subscription service will be similar in user experience to "free" P2P, so it is logical that if people go crazy d/ling from P2P, the same would apply when they got on the pay service.

      And i agree for some people the point is whether they will have the songs when they quit the service, but other people just want the music now. It could be used to try out thousands of songs and artists a month, all for one low price. If they really like something, they will pay for the CD (or download from something like ITunes) if they quit the service. But the subscription service offers them unlimited music for a lower price than the pay service. If they are like most people, their musical whims switch so often that they are not listening to what they bought 1 year ago. If that is the case, then a subscription service is much better, because they can (theoretically) stay on top of the music trends at all times for $10 a month.

      --

      "Information wants to be expensive" - Stewart Brand, the same guy who said "Information wants to be free"
  49. Overlooking... by sinco · · Score: 1

    One thing that I think people are overlooking is the problem with data storage with MP3s/whatever format. Say someone downloads $500 worth of MP3s, and their hard drive goes bad. Will they be able to re-download these files they PAID for with the new services coming out? Or will they be out of $500 and no music?

    1. Re:Overlooking... by DavidinAla · · Score: 1

      That's like saying that it's not fair today that you might break or otherwise harm a CD or DVD that you own. At least with music that's on your hard drive, making an identical backup of all of the music is trivial.

    2. Re:Overlooking... by sinco · · Score: 1

      I propose that they should come up with a system that logs all the files you downloaded so you have the ability to retrieve the files you lost. At least for me I feel there is a greater risk of your hard drive going bad over you losing your whole CD collection.

  50. How much is it worth to you to "own" the bits?" by dj_paulgibbs · · Score: 1

    About $20.

  51. The price doesnt look right by watzinaneihm · · Score: 4, Interesting

    $120 for a year
    120 bucks a year works to 6 CDs a year . I doubt any music company is going to allow such a scheme to go forward.The catch is that the music industry expects a certain amount of money from a person (or family) per year.Apple is paying that money. And I am sure that if MS is too meet that, it would work out to something around 4 or fve times that. To top it you have to factor in the cost of the player (you probably need a portable, a car sterio and a computer ) which need to be DRM enabled.
    And I wonder if I have only 6 songs in my playlist and I have license to have 10, can I share my password with my friend so that he can download those 4?

    --
    .ACMD setaloiv siht gnidaeR
  52. Why would you _ever_ buy $7500 songs? by Fulcrum+of+Evil · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, at an average of 5 songs I like per album, that's 1500 albums! For comparison's sake, I know a guy who's been buying CDs since the 80's and has a very large collection - 600+ CDs. Hell, 7500 songs takes about 30,000 minutes to play - that's 20 days of continuous music! I gues the point is this: filling up a large amount of space with 128Kbps mp3s isn't a reasonable benchmark. Reasonable usage is.

    Microsoft's service is akin to buying 12 songs per month on Apple's service, except that, should you stop paying, you have nothing.

    --
    "We returned the General to El Salvador, or maybe Guatemala, it's difficult to tell from 10,000 feet"
    1. Re:Why would you _ever_ buy $7500 songs? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's a reasonable benchmark because Apple is trying to sell us an iPod with that capacity. A collection of 600 CDs is considered "very large" only because (1) CDs are costly, and (2) they take a lot of space. I know a guy who actually does have about 30GB of MP3s, and it doesn't seem that outlandish...what it does mean is that if you want to hear a song, he can probably play it for you.

      The point is, we have the technical capability now to carry 20 days of continuous music around in our pockets, and it's crazy that licensing fees based on obsolete technology prevent us from doing so. For the past century or so, we've gotten used to listening to the same, expensive, purchased songs over and over again. Now, technically, we don't have to - we can have our own personal libraries as big as the ones at radio stations, and play our own requests. We can completely change the way we use music.

    2. Re:Why would you _ever_ buy $7500 songs? by UnixRevolution · · Score: 1

      Microsoft's service is akin to buying 12 songs per month on Apple's service

      Okay, let's take a look at that...

      12 songs * 99c/song * 12 months = 142.56.

      I think you meant *ten* songs :)

      --
      You like your new Mac more than you like me, don't you, Dave? Dave? I asked...She said Yes.
  53. MOD PARENT UP!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    n/t

  54. My preference by pjdepasq · · Score: 1

    I prefer to purchase the song and have it as long as I dictate. I'm not going to spend $7500 on music any time soon, so a puchase-by-the-song model works well for some (many?) of us.

    Plus I have little desire to pay additional Microsoft taxes.

  55. Why? by Migrant+Programmer · · Score: 4, Funny

    At the risk of coming off as a low-down thief (aren't we all...), why on earth would anyone do this? If you have access to a store and you're looking to load items in your pockets, I see no incentive when you can get any item you want, as many as you want, FOR FREE with a quick grab or using one of the dozens of shoplifting techniques now available.

    There are, as I see it, some advantages to buying the item (directly support producers, etc.), but what's the incentive to buy this unless the customer is so clueless that they do not even know about shoplifting?

  56. Two questions by Elwood+P+Dowd · · Score: 1

    1) Will it work with an iPod and my Mac? I've got a PC, but I'm not interested in something that I can only listen to on that PC.

    2) Will the selection be *way* better than the Apple Music Store?

    It looks like the answer is "no" to both questions. Pressplay's selection looks *horrible*. If you're going to get me into a music subscription, your catalog better include every artist I've ever heard of, bar none.

    I want you recording bootlegs at concerts so I can listen to bands that haven't even been picked up by indies. Does that sound extreme? Well, for that I'd pay $50/mo, and I couldn't care less about whether I own the music because at that point, I'd be a subscriber for the rest of my life. No doubt about it.

    Since Apple is letting me keep the music, I won't ever request that kind of selection from them, but I'm not particularly drawn to them either, because I know they're not going to carry Legowelt, or Neutral Milk Hotel, or whatever. Last I checked, they only had one incomplete Radiohead album. I'm bored already. So, question #2 is keeping me away from Apple, too.

    Someday, someone will build the service I'm looking for. I long for the Central Intelligence Corporation.

    --

    There are no trails. There are no trees out here.
  57. Re:$7500???? That's a little far-fetched by bmarklein · · Score: 1

    OK, so maybe $5000 vs. $120 a year? $5000 would buy you over 40 years of a subscription, which also gives you the ability to swap in new music whenever you want.

  58. Kazaa users are a carbon rods.... by Beautyon · · Score: 1

    They make a commercial chain reaction of users switching to crippled DRM systems impossible.

    No one with one even one brain cell will buy crippled files when they can get the real thing in two clicks; this is what has artificially propped up the iTunes service.

    But you know this.

    The only thing that would make this service cool would be to make the files non DRM, and high quality, just like buying the CD. But how likely is that? Not, is the answer.

    --
    ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
  59. purchasing, renting ... selling by mechaZardoz · · Score: 2, Interesting
    is the real option i would like to see presented to the consumer.

    iTunes allows at least a 30-second preview of tracks at least prior to purchase, which greatly reduces the likelihood of buying something you don't like. still, seasons change and so do tastes; eventually, i'm sure those 'must have' trackes of yester-month will lose their luster and i'd like to dump them. allow a second-hand market to come into being that parallels that which exists currently for CDs. or books. perhaps a trade-in option : get some % for every track returned as credit towards a new purchase.

    i want to keep my music but i also don't want to feel *stuck* with music

  60. Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Microsoft is a miserable failure at everything. Aren't you paying attention? Their market share is virtually STAGNANT! They've been on the verge of being destroyed by Linux for years (read Slashdot - really, it's true!) - don't you think that's finally getting to them?

    1. Re:Of course! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The parents says "failure," meaning nobody likes it, but with that definition every Microsoft product is a failure. That doesn't mean it won't make money because MS will give it with their next OS and not allow you to use other services, etc until there is no competition. It's happened before and it will happen a million times again. It's the Microsoft way; get with the program.

  61. I never quite get the cost by Dark+Paladin · · Score: 1

    The $7500 to fill up a 30 GB iPod assumes that you don't own a single CD that you already care about, or an MP3 collection of your own.

    Just a small nitpick that drives me nuts whenever the figures are mentioned.

  62. what bug go up YOUR ass? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This person's point is right on; both are DRM, Apple's is better (for the consumer), and not buying MS's means not supporting a monopoly. I never read this person as complaining about the DRMs themselves, just what access to the songs are (renting vs buying), so STFU asswipe.

  63. Consumers by CaffeineKills · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The big question is, which way will the consumers go, Microsoft, where it is cheaper, but your music goes *poof* when you don't pay or apple, where you pay more but get to keep. Obviously there is gonna be some app that will come out that will change the codec so you will be having that music for keeps. Does this mean that apple will lose out? Also how would microsoft react to the app? And what is Emusic doing to respond to both of these contenders?

    --
    "Guns don't kill people, bullets do."
  64. Which would you rather do by kalidasa · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Pay $300 for your operating system on CD, so you can reinstall at any time if necessary, or pay $120 a year for a subscription to an operating system that will expire in a year, then HAVE to pay $150 the next year to keep it for another year. Because that's the same model. And who would buy 7500 songs in a *volatile* format anyway? That is about double the size of my CD collection, which cost me $3200 or so (over 18 years). iTunes works precisely because buying a song is an impulse thing, and is particularly useful for stuff that you like but not enough to by the CD: buying 1 song for $1 is a lot better than buying 1 song and 14 bits of static for $15.

    1. Re:Which would you rather do by mosch · · Score: 2, Informative

      I've spent about $200 at the Apple iTunes store so far, and I fail to see how the format is particularly volatile. I download the songs, copy them to a fileserver, and burn an unencrypted CD to put it into my CD colection. This whole process takes perhaps a whopping 5 minutes.

    2. Re:Which would you rather do by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      By nature electronic formats are volatile. When you put it on a CD (what do you mean by "unencrypted?" Only that you don't need the DRM authentication that AAC needs?) you're changing formats. And correct me if I'm wrong, but an original CD is of higher quality than an AAC burned one.

      Note that I'm not knocking iTMS, I just think the argument against it in favor of subscription services isn't as strong as it appears.

  65. It's human nature to own things by eyefish · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think Microsoft business people are missing one key point: owning things is an intrinsic part of being human.

    This does not mean that rental or subscription-based services will fail, it just means that owning media SHOULD be part of the deal. This also means that Apple should (besides selling songs) also contemplate renting songs for a specified amount of time (say, 25 or 50 cents for 1 year?).

    In other words, we need BOTH options, since people WILL want to own certain songs, but just rent others. Just look at the DVD market. People buy the movies they love (Matrix, Star Wars), but rent the ones they just want to have a good night with (i.e.: Van Damme and Steve Segal movies come to mind).

    1. Re:It's human nature to own things by bmarklein · · Score: 1

      But this is a bit different - you have to give back the DVD to the video store when you're done because it's a physical good. But you could keep the song file on your portable player forever (as long as you keep paying the sub fee). So renting is the same as owning in this case.

      Besides which, no one said that the services won't allow for buying as well. Pressplay currently supports both tethered downloads and permanent downloads. The point of the article is that the distinction between the two will be diminished once portable players support tethered downloads.

    2. Re:It's human nature to own things by MagPulse · · Score: 1

      I don't know if it's intrinsic to being human. American, or capitalist, yes. But humans got along without worrying every day about amassing capital for a long time.

      The example that comes to mind is the Native American civilizations that were doing fine until Europeans came and told them land should be owned, not shared. And they'd do the owning.

  66. I'm not satisfied yet. by Nucleon500 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    When I can pay $1 for an Ogg file (or even MP3), I'll be happy to do so (even from Microsoft). It's simple, and it's amazing nobody gets it: cut the DRM crap, and people will pay for the convenience and legitimacy.

    It's impossible to stop P2P, but P2P is very inconvenient, and people would rather not infringe copyrights. But DRM is much, much more inconvenient, and it shows the company's greed and mistrust of its customers. DRM does nothing to stop copyright infringement, and everything to curtail fair use. Fair use and convenience are one and the same, and and convenience sells.

    iTunes is closest to this, but it still has DRM crap, won't work on Linux, etc. Whatever Microsoft does is bound to be a step backwards, because they are talking about expiration, the format will probably be WMA, you won't be able to switch services, your music will die when you unsubscribe, you won't be able to use it on anything but Windows and Microsoft-blessed hardware, etc.

    Hopefully something even more open will come along, and do even better than iTunes, and things will become sane.

    1. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by hoytt · · Score: 1
      When I can pay $1 for an Ogg file (or even MP3), I'll be happy to do so (even from Microsoft). It's simple, and it's amazing nobody gets it: cut the DRM crap, and people will pay for the convenience and legitimacy. It's impossible to stop P2P, but P2P is very inconvenient, and people would rather not infringe copyrights. But DRM is much, much more inconvenient, and it shows the company's greed and mistrust of its customers. DRM does nothing to stop copyright infringement, and everything to curtail fair use. Fair use and convenience are one and the same, and and convenience sells.


      You got to be kidding. DRM is needed, otherwise people will copy it. If they can choose between $1/song at a service and $0/song of P2P they'll choose the latter. People have gotten used to the idea that software and music are "free".
      Some of my friends call me crazy that I'm willing to pay $270 for a student license of Macromedia Studio MX.
      Software and music piracy will never go away.
    2. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ah, so it's because of a lack of DRM that no one buys CDs? (Or tapes back in the day - we all know the CD was invented to keep people from copying tapes, yes.) And DRM prevents copying on P2P networks? Pleace elucidate further.

    3. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by tfoss · · Score: 1
      It's simple, and it's amazing nobody gets it: cut the DRM crap, and people will pay for the convenience and legitimacy.


      It's simple, and it's amazing nobody gets it: Music companies need the DRM crap, and won't let anything without it make it big. Given the iTunes sales numbers, it seems people are paying for convenience and legitimacy despite the (minimal) DRM.

      Seriously, as much as you'd like a totally unencumbered, perfect digital reproduction for a cheap price, that is not going to happen. Apple's deal is the most reasonable thing yet, and their sales numbers show that. They managed to get a system that is easy *enough*, cheap *enough*, user-friendly *enough* that people like it, while it is DRM'd *enough* for the record companies to deal with.

      And here's the thing about DRM that apple seems to get (& perhaps even managed to persuade the recording industry of): It doesn't need to be perfect. You don't need to clamp down the file with the digital equivalent of a 1000-pound weight. All you really need to do is make it slightly inconvenient to bypass. You won't stop the hard-core people who have some deisire to 'screw The Man,' but you will never be able to do that (as is pointed out after every fricking article here). You only need to stop the masses for the tactic to be effective.

      In a way, it's like speed limits (or all laws), you can't slow everyone down. Yet speed limits *do* lower the average speed very effectively, by targeting the masses and ignoring the corner cases.

      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    4. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by dr.badass · · Score: 1

      Ah, so it's because of a lack of DRM that no one buys CDs?

      No, the lack of workable DRM makes record companies unwilling to make music available in any other form than a CD. The CD, while easily copyable (dispite anti-ripping measures), at least has a pretty big profit margin. There's also the overlooked fact that it's MUCH easier for the casual-pirate to copy a file than to copy a CD.

      --
      Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    5. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      When I can pay $1 for an Ogg file (or even MP3), I'll be happy to do so (even from Microsoft). It's simple, and it's amazing nobody gets it: cut the DRM crap, and people will pay for the convenience and legitimacy.

      iTunes does this, it is great, get off your high horse. The DRM is practically not there. Unless you intend to give all of your 'friends' a copy (making you a real, actual, pirate), you won't run into any problems with it. That it doesn't work on Linux is really a matter of time and mindshare. Linux is not mainstream (hell, Apple isn't mainstream!).

      Honestly, itunes is in the same league as sliced bread -- not worth buying a Mac for alone, but there are plenty of other reasons...

      [Also, before someone chimes in with the argument that "if your hard drive crashes, you have to re-buy all of teh music!!!!!1!".
      1) When was the last time your hard drive crashed?
      2) How many songs are you going to have? Nobody is going to be spending thousands of dollars on this store! Most people are only going to have a handfull of purchased songs.
      3) If your drive does crash, don't you have more vital data than your friggen music collection?
      4) I'd be more concerned with my ripped CD collection, which took weeks to rip -- my time is more valuable.]

    6. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by phear_the_penguin · · Score: 1

      I disagree,
      I myself listen to ALOT of indie music, and finding these songs on a p2p service takes alot of time and effort, but, finding and waiting for CD's takes even more time, and so, for now, i stick with p2p.

      If i could easily pay $1 for a song that I like, without DRM, and be listening to the song a minute later, it would be worth it, and i don't think i'm alone on this one.

    7. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by Nucleon500 · · Score: 1
      iTunes does this, it is great, get off your high horse. The DRM is practically not there. Unless you intend to give all of your 'friends' a copy (making you a real, actual, pirate), you won't run into any problems with it. That it doesn't work on Linux is really a matter of time and mindshare. Linux is not mainstream (hell, Apple isn't mainstream!).

      I know the DRM's practically not there, but that being the case, why isn't it just not there, period? Then it wouldn't even be an issue to get it to work on Linux, Windows, etc, you could just have the files. I realize it's there because the RIAA insists on it, but as everyone points out, it's a piece of cake to remove it. Surely the RIAA must know this. That slightly idealistic and slightly pratical barrier is all that keeps me away from iTunes.

    8. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by Nucleon500 · · Score: 1
      Seriously, as much as you'd like a totally unencumbered, perfect digital reproduction for a cheap price, that is not going to happen. Apple's deal is the most reasonable thing yet, and their sales numbers show that. They managed to get a system that is easy *enough*, cheap *enough*, user-friendly *enough* that people like it, while it is DRM'd *enough* for the record companies to deal with.

      I'm being optimistic here: if they cut out the DRM, it would be even more easy and user-friendly, and they'd hit a wider audience (me, phear_the_penguin, et al).

      If the DRM isn't perfect (and it never is), the music will appear on P2P, and once it does, you don't even have to bypass it. So you don't gain anything by doing DRM half-fast, except curtailing fair use. Since iTunes has shown that the RIAA doesn't have that big a problem with fair use, and even sharing CDs with realspace friends, I'm hopeful someone will convince them to drop DRM and just sell people cheap files and trust them.

    9. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by MacDaffy · · Score: 1
      [Also, before someone chimes in with the argument that "if your hard drive crashes, you have to re-buy all of teh music!!!!!]!"


      iTunes remembers the music you bought. All you have to do is sign in with your account and password and your selections are available again.
    10. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by tfoss · · Score: 1
      So you don't gain anything by doing DRM half-fast, except curtailing fair use.

      That's just not true (and i think the term is half-assed). You only need it to be somewhat inconvenient to prevent most people from doing it. If you combine that with a system that is relatively unobtrusive (like Apple's), you are in pretty good shape. People on the whole won't burn then re-rip just so they can seed kazaa.

      Think about trespassing signs...they will deter a lot of people from going somewhere, but not everyone. So then you put up a chain-link fence, and that stops a lot more people. Of course there are those who will bring wire cutters and still get through, but you've eliminated the huge majority of potential trespassers. Like DRM, it isn't perfect, but it is good enough.

      -Ted

      --
      -=-=- Quantum physics - the dreams stuff are made of.
    11. Re:I'm not satisfied yet. by Nucleon500 · · Score: 1
      If it's possible to copy it, it will find it's way onto P2P networks, and then however difficult it was won't matter, it will be as easy as P2P. So if the cost (money, time, bandwidth, risk, morality) of P2P is lower, people will use it. To use your analogy, if the first one with wire-cutters throws all the valuables onto the street, the fence doesn't matter.

      P2P is inconvienent and immoral enough that it should be possible for record companies to compete with it and win. But in order to do this, they must realize that if they make their service inconvenient enough, people will use P2P, and they gain nothing. People won't buy music, try to copy it, fail, and then suddenly change their view as to whether they should copy it. They'll just try harder or go P2P.

      In practice, iTunes is pretty close, but it's barriers are still a bit too high for me. As everyone tells me when I complain about iTunes, it's DRM is so neutered it's almost not there. I just hope iTunes will get the RIAA over it's mind-block that it needs to be there in the first place.

  67. Not a bad deal, but... by greendoggg · · Score: 0

    It doesn't sound like such a bad deal at all. $120/year for all the music you want. But I don't trust m$ to keep the price at $120/year. On the other hand, it wouldn't surprise me if, after 6 months of this service, someone cracks their file format and can convert them to mp3's or ogg's, in which case it would be a GREAT deal. But iTunes sure does have a lot of peace of mind with it, since you own the music, and don't have to worry about the service being terminated, or the price increasing, or....

  68. Let's do a little math by NetDanzr · · Score: 1

    Let's be generous and say there are five songs per CD that you really like. You would need 1500 CDs to get those 7500 songs. That makes me think that 7500 songs is not too realistic. I personally listen to anywhere between 30 and 200 songs until I'm sick of them (that can take a month or two) before I load up a different songlist. Throuhout the year, I listen to maybe 500 different songs; probably less. So why would I need a service that allows me to download 7500 songs (or more) if all I need is 500 of them? Considering that I own more than half of them on original CDs and can rip them at any time (which I did), all I really need is to buy 200-250 songs. That's $200-250 on iTunes, or $10/month using Microsoft's new project. Within 2-3 years (adjusting for new songs I may want to own throughout this period), it will be heaper for me to use iTunes than Microsoft's service.

  69. Actually, This is divx by appleLaserWriter · · Score: 0

    When the engineering portion of divx closed down, Microsoft acquired much of the talent and sent them off to work on Windows Media Player.

  70. It's the SERVICE, STUPID! by TwinBeam · · Score: 1


    The publishing industry needs to wake up and realize it is providing a service, not selling products.

    I'm not buying until they get a universal standard DRM - none of this proprietary stuff - that lets me access any 'content' on any device upon which it can be presented (home PC, work PC, car stereo, beach via a portable player, etc) more easily than with a CD or DVD.

    I want to read a bit of an ebook off my PC screen, click once to buy it, pick up my handheld reader and find the book already on screen ready to read, jump in my car and have my car stereo read on from where I left off, get to the beach and have it come up on my black-out videoshades as I lie in the sun.

    Now THAT I'd pay money for, because they're providing me SERVICE. Content? That's just something they pay people to produce to make their service desirable.

  71. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  72. Some Bad Math by Beautyon · · Score: 1

    Kazaa has broken some records for number of files downloaded. 229,150,955 is the "official" number.

    Lets say that each of these users has an average of 200 MP3s on their machine.

    That means that there are :

    229,150,955 * 200 = 45,830,191,000

    Fourty five billion, eight hundred and thirty million, one hundred and ninety one thousand MP3 files in the wild.

    Apple is selling 125,000 files per day. It will take them 366,641.528 days or 1004 years to sell that many files with iTunes.

    Apple has achieved these numbers because there is no viable p2p competition. On windoze there are alternatives to crippled files and paying.

    These pay for music systems are doomed to failure as long as free files are available. And I mean free as in free to use as you like, as well as no money.

    --
    ATH0 Bitcoin: 1DnwFLXczVZV8kLJbMYoheUrpqHesjxrSi
    1. Re:Some Bad Math by Desperado · · Score: 1

      Apple is selling 125,000 files per day. It will take them 366,641.528 days or 1004 years to sell that many files with iTunes.

      Apple has achieved these numbers because there is no viable p2p competition. On windoze there are alternatives to crippled files and paying.


      Actually Apple has achieved these numbers in spite of viable p2p competition. Acquisiton being one example which works pretty well.

      --
      If you're not living on the edge, you're taking up too much space.
    2. Re:Some Bad Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A Gnutella client? be real, thats in no way competition. there are only ever 40k users on gnutella. Thats NOTHING.

    3. Re:Some Bad Math by HeavensTrash · · Score: 1

      You've got Some Bad Math of your own. 229,150,955 total files downloaded. Nowhere does Kazaa say these are unique downloads, or that each download is from a unique user. For all you know, there have been 229,150,955 downloads of the same song. 229,150,955 * 200? The original number you listed wasn't the number of users, so I don't know how you can even attempt to multiply the two.

      Besides that, Kazaa isn't only for mp3's you know...

    4. Re:Some Bad Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nowhere does Kazaa say these are unique downloads,

      News.com says this is the number of downloads of the Kazaa client. Deal with it.

      For all you know, there have been 229,150,955 downloads of the same song. 229,150,955 * 200?....

      The rest of your post is just stupid. Go back to sleep.

    5. Re:Some Bad Math by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The current iTMS sales only reflect Mac users. As soon as the Windows version is released, expect a huge increase in sales.

  73. The "Evil" Problem by Nova+Express · · Score: 1
    "which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want?"


    Hmmm, all other things being evil, I think I'll go with the music service where all my money doesn't go directly to Satan, so Apple it is!

    And speaking of music, that's Satan and not The Great Satan. Don't get those two confused...
    --
    Lawrence Person (lawrencepersonh@gmailh.com (remove all "h"s to mail)

    http://www.lawrenceperson.com/

  74. Too little, too late. by miu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Too late for iTunes and whatever Microsoft winds up releasing. I've got at least 500 CDs of music and I'm tired of reading about the latest RIAA atrocity with the feeling that I'm funding it. Artists and labels that give money to RIAA get no more of my business.

    --

    [Set Cain on fire and steal his lute.]
  75. Of course, one doesn't have to choose... by Blondie-Wan · · Score: 1
    Why argue about which one to go with, when one can have *both*? I can easily see someone buying a lot of individual tracks from the iTMS or something similar for one's "core" music library - the stuff one wants to have forever, with minimal or no usage restrictions, while at the same time using a subscription service to fill out the rest of one's library at a given time with a rotating selection of songs one might enjoy but doesn't necessarily want permanently and isn't willing to pay a lot for. I don't think it has to be an "either/or" choice; one should eventually be able to choose "both."

    That said, I personally don't want anything to do with these particular subs given their reliance upon M$, but as a general model, the sub model does have some appealling points that mean it shouldn't be dismissed entirely just because the iTMS is "better," even though I'd agree it is.

  76. Boycott them all! by Ogerman · · Score: 1

    All of these new DRM-enabled online music services are gatekeeper enablers! Think about it, folks. If this stuff becomes popular, it will become even *harder* for independent musicians to survive because the (now online) gatekeepers will get to pick and choose what music to put on their services. It's all a return to status quo--the artists and consumers getting screwed.

    This *should* have been the point all along: to eliminate the middlemen and connect artists directly to their fans; to drastically weaken corporate control of our culture. But that point somehow got entirely lost in the fervor of the P2P scene. So now the RIAA folks have finally woken up and are on the brink of controlling the new media that could have set the market free.

    The music world desperately needs a grassroots movement similar to Open Source. Just as warez kiddies were no solution to proprietary software monopolies, P2P will never overthrow the corrupt culture gatekeepers. Independent, consumer / community friendly music is the only viable long-term solution.

  77. Actually... by rzbx · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "How much is it worth to you to "own" the bits?""

    It isn't about owning, it's about control.
    Remember, intellectual property was never meant as a means for ownership, but a means for control.

    --
    Question everything.
    1. Re:Actually... by rzbx · · Score: 1

      Forgot to mention. That is why Microsoft is using DRM. The DRM is about controlling the music distribution. If you don't pay, you don't play. This gives them a constant flow of money. This all goes back to the question of intellectual property. Something I do not believe in and neither did Thomas Jefferson. Only reason he agreed to it is because at the time it provided a means for distributing ideas which before the communication technology we have today was a good thing. Anyway, I'm going off-topic, sorry. Microsoft is attempting to gain control of music distribution just like everyone else. That is part of the reason why the RIAA is fighting so hard. The top executives at these recording companies do not want to hand over the control of distribution to these technology companies, but want it for themselves. Can MS get part of the share? That is something that will depend upon a lot of factors. It especially depends on what music they get to distribute using the system. DRM is a technology that is doomed to fail in a free world. If someone sold you a car with a device that prevented the car from running after a certain amount of time or if you stopped paying, what would you do? Even worse is the fact that DRM attempts to prevent one from doing what they wish with an intagible item (is item even the right word?). MS is putting a lot of hope on this Orwellian technology. Let us all hope it fails.

      --
      Question everything.
  78. availabilty... by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    a couple thousand cd's takes up a lot of space! and, there is always more to buy. i would much rather have constant availability of whatever i wanted to listen to than own it. same with movies. but quality is important, and i am not sure we are quite there yet. perhaps a higher bit rate acc--double 128... how does this change the economics though? do more subscribers at $120 translate into higher earnings than with cd sales?

  79. yeah, but do people care about quality? by budcub · · Score: 1
    I care about quality, and my old roomie used to download stuff from bearshare, and the mp3s were full of ticks, static clicks, jitter, etc. Sometimes you wouldn't get the whole song. That's why I never got into napster or gnutella. I do subsribe to emusic.com and get high grade legal stuff from there. Not a perfect selection, but it expands my horizons.

    I think enough people don't care about quality, or only listen to the music from the computer speaker system, that DRM will always be circumvented. All it takes is one patient person to make the digital copy (mp3 or ogg) then it will replicate everywhere.

  80. An "Alternative" exists - NOT necesarily better by anagama · · Score: 3, Interesting

    They require you to use their own proprietary DL manager now, which is designed to run on RH 6 and similar. Their suggestion to Linux users who couldn't get the thing to run on modern distributions was to downgrade! And no, you cannot use third party DL managers (until someone cracks the encryption they've gone to for linking to the downloadable songs).

    Here's their most recent email:

    Dear EMusic Customer,

    In response to your email regarding issues you have had with the new EMusic Linux Download Manager 2.0, we are pleased to inform you that within the next few days, we will be releasing a new version which addresses many of the bugs that have been reported. While we have fixed many of the bugs that were reported, the versions have not changed their system requirements and may not work on all flavors of Linux. In the future, we plan to create new builds of the Download Manager to be functional on other flavors of Linux.

    We apologize for any inconvenience the current Download Manager may have caused you and appreciate your patience as we address the issues in future versions of the EMusic Linux DLM.

    More information will be available early next week.

    Regards,
    EMusic Support

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    1. Re:An "Alternative" exists - NOT necesarily better by elbobo · · Score: 1

      fyi: i got the download manager to work just fine on a debian unstable box. of course, that doesn't excuse the fact that the app is a buggy and just generally dodgy otherwise.

  81. Re:I think pr0n is cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    bah. i still prefer the newsgroup option.

    aC0=

  82. That is why the Apple approach is better by PotatoHead · · Score: 4, Interesting

    They get some money per tune. They make the music easier to get than with downloading. You can even download a couple times and not get charged so your money is not wasted.

    The DRM approach is foolish. No matter what, people will be able to move the music outside the DRM. Why not get enough cash up front for the whole thing to be worth it?

    That is exactly how the current CD model works now and they have made plenty of money doing it.

    Streaming via monthly subscription sort of works, if you don't mind sitting at your computer to listen. The Satellite and Cable people have been doing this for a while now and people like it. Think about those systems a bit. The music can still move, but it takes a bit of work to do that. Plus there is some value in their rotating playlists. It would take quite a while to reproduce a couple days of their service in a way that makes sense. So, people pay.

    Subscription DRM where you basically give up all your rights to your own damn hardware are not going to fly when perfectly workable business models exist that work with what we have now.

    Seems to me Apple has understood something most companies don't. Though, they could save some time and read Slash. Most of us have this down cold for a few years now... Heh.

    BTW: I purchase DVD media instead of rent and or pay per view because I do want to have some ownership of the bits. Costs more that way, but I find it very worth it.

    1. Re:That is why the Apple approach is better by greggman · · Score: 1

      Personally I think Apple has it wrong. I'm subscribed to Listen.com. I get access to 20000 CDs, no downloads, all streaming (well, it downloads the song it's going to play next but it doesn't save it).

      I pay $10 a month and can listen to over 200,000 songs. I listen to new music everyday. If I was instead on Apple's system I'd have to spend about $200 for 15-20 CDs of music and then that's all I could listen to without having to spend more and more money.

      I know that this approach doesn't work for everybody but as a programmer I'm in front of my computer at work 6-10 hours a day. My computer at home is connected to my stereo so when I'm at home I log in, select a few CDs from Listen.com or a playlist or one of their playlists and go.

      Sure, I **might** like to fill an iPod with music but the truth is I really don't have much of a need for an iPod. I'm either at the computer at work, at home or in my car, places I don't need an iPod. Almost any other time I'm not doing something where an iPod would come in handy. And, even if I was it wouldn't be the majority of my music time.

    2. Re:That is why the Apple approach is better by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

      I am not sure I do.

      You are not typical among music listeners. Given the time you spend in front of your machine, streaming from a large catalog seems to be a great solution.

      Personally, I would do just that if I were in your position.

  83. itunes music + .mac by paradesign · · Score: 1

    im surprised apple has done nothing to use their music store to entice people to subscribe to .mac. although there is plenty of free music in your idisk. they could have a 10 free songs a month for .mac subscribers, or something to that effect. or maybe im just crazy.

    --
    I want 2D games back.
    1. Re:itunes music + .mac by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 1

      im surprised apple has done nothing to use their music store to entice people to subscribe to .mac. although there is plenty of free music in your idisk. they could have a 10 free songs a month for .mac subscribers, or something to that effect. or maybe im just crazy.

      The reason is actually pretty simple. Dot Mac is available worldwide. So far iTunes music store is available only for US residents (or - to be more precise - to holders of credit cards with billing address in the USA). This is due to licensing issues. The kind of deal you are talking about would lead to incredible legal difficulties, probably not worth the hassle. This may hovewer change at some point in the future, when iTunes music store will also be available for everyone.

  84. Depending on your musical tastes... by boobox · · Score: 1

    Why not buy CDs used and digitize them yourself? Maybe you won't be able to find this second's "hot" sound, but if your aural palate likes diversity, this is probably the most economical (legal) way to solve your tune jones. Some of my best finds fall in the $1.99 to $4.99 range, so I'm still beating the iTunes price... Besides, Microsoft's the Devil.

  85. Apple and MS by jfengel · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I hope Apple gets its Windows version of iTunes quickly. Microsoft has a habit of making mediocre software available quickly, taking advantage of its large installed base, eliminating competition, then ceasing improvement.

    People will pay for music, as they've demonstrated. Provide them a good interface and give them a reasonable deal and they'll pay. I think a lot of people find $1 per song to be a reasonable price, and iTunes is far easier to use than Kazaa/Gnutella. Most people don't want to hack, they don't want to circumvent DRM, they don't want to wait forever to download music, and they sure don't want spyware. They're happy to pay a fair price for the service.

    My worry may be misplaced, because unlike other Microsoft placements, this won't be free. Even if it comes on your computer for free (and people are upgrading much more slowly than they used to, so just providing it with the OS doesn't provide the channel that it used to), you still have to sign up and pay. Microsoft is pretty good at tricking people into doing so; the service will assuredly use Passport and they can be very...insistent about signing up for a Passport account.

    But a lot of people won't pay, because it's too much trouble for them. Many of those who will pay will go the extra step to get Apple's software. That is, of course, assuming that Apple gets the software out. It's claimed it for the fall, but Microsoft can probably get its software out at least that quickly and into a "service pack" for Windows.

    That also assumes Microsoft intends to actually develop the software at all. Microsoft doesn't even need to develop software at this point. Many users will read the announcement and forget about Apple's take on it, because they'll assume it'll come free with their next computer.

    It won't make them happy, but my basic assumption in marketing is that users are lazy. Look at the number of people whose home page is still MSN because they never bothered to get a different browser or even to change the home page to something they care about. Users will put up with a lot of crap if it means no effort. It takes a very smart company to work around that laziness.

    I hope Apple can be that company, because it's the best shot I've seen at getting music to people and money to musicians I've seen yet. It's not perfect for a host of reasons (mainly due to the record studios and Clear Channel), but I think it's the right compromise today.

    1. Re:Apple and MS by the+end+of+britain · · Score: 1

      I am enormously skeptical that MS will actually generate something worthwhile here. Why? I bought a new wintel laptop about 1.5 years ago for the express purpose of digitizing as much of my life as possible--this project included scanning in all personel records, setting up a digital camera, and burning every CD I owned and listening to them *exclusively* via the computer itself. Now there are various music clients available for winXP but, in that way the these things tend to happen, I gradually found that it was easier to just tolerate the MS music client rather than working around its interuptions with another piece of software. To make a long story short, this was a disaster. The MS software was ok for ripping and playback, but file organization was a big fat mess--I could edit files using the player but then the actual files on the disk wouldn't be changes, or I could change the files directly but the player wouldn't update the new data. I see a number of /. users saying they don't use the player to manage files--they just work with the files directly--and I totally get it; file management for music in XP sucks. Finally, I gave up and sold the damn thing (at a substantial loss). Now a month ago, on a whim, I setup an apple loan (I'm a starving math student), bought a powerbook, and tried to do the same thing as in the windows case. There is just no comparison to be made between the slipshod wintel music software and iTunes. iTunes is simply amazing--not just for 'look and feel' or the online store, but for FILE MANAGEMENT. The system they devised seems obvious, but having used other products I am acutely aware of how much thought actually went into it. I have no dificulty believing that, long term, my music will continue to be well organized. In less then a month, Apple has earned not only my money and my respect, but also my trust. To conclude, it seems like MS is grasping here the way they were back in the mid-nineties with the internet; they are late to take this market seriously, and it looks like the strategy is to rely on a huge bank account, the installed user base, and general complacency among users. Apple, on the other hand, has clearly been deliberately moving in this direction for years, devised solutions to both the legal and technical problems, and is really on a roll. From the sound of it, we all might be in for a replay of the browser wars, only this time it will be the music wars.

      --
      "Oh, the tragedy of math gone wrong. I can't even talk about it." -Wil Wheaton http://www.wilwheaton.net
    2. Re:Apple and MS by drunkenbatman · · Score: 1

      I hope Apple gets its Windows version of iTunes quickly. Microsoft has a habit of making mediocre software available quickly, taking advantage of its large installed base, eliminating competition, then ceasing improvement.

      I haven't gotten the impression that Apple's big problem with rolling out the service to windows users is anything technical- while iTunes is based on carbon just simply rewriting the whole thing for the windows platform with a mac-ish look and feel shouldn't take more than a few months if they throw enough resources at it.

      The big hurdle (and why the itunes store is such a big deal) is with the licensing- getting all the disparate record companies to actually sign on board... and one of the big ways they were able to do that was with the fact that macs have very low marketshare... hence it minimizes their risk and is a nice "toe in the water". The rest of it isn't "that big of a deal", ie it could be accomplished with anyone willing to plunk down the millions for the infrastructure... but getting all those guys to sign on board can't have been easy.

      What would really worry me is if for some reason they aren't able to negotiate good, broad releases of the catalogs from the record companies for the PC version due to cannibalization fears... there must be some HUGE talks going on between Apple, the record companies, distribution companies fighting to make it not happen, POS retailers (ie, tower records and the like can't be happy)... I'd love to be a fly on the wall.

    3. Re:Apple and MS by jfengel · · Score: 1

      Excellent points. I have no mod points (actually, I do, but not here) but you deserve them.

      I dearly hope Apple sewed up Windows rights along with Apple rights during the initial phase. Or at least set up a fairly solid "Let's roll it out for Mac and if it does X well you get Y terms when we hit the big Windows market." Otherwise, even at a million songs a week this is probably not profitable.

  86. Except for the fact that by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    you get to purchase a new player. One that will probably accept your existing music, but will never give it up again...

    Maybe the player will be nice, but you still need to buy another one.

  87. you know, youre right. by Unknown+Poltroon · · Score: 1

    Every time i read an article in the bookstore without buying the magazine, ill give them the 5 bucks anyway.

    Also, whenever i hear music being played anywhere, i will immediately send the RIAA a check.

    --
    All Troll + "offtopic" mods are meta moderated as "Unfair", because you abused the system.
  88. I beg to differ by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    how can you not own the bits. Afterall to enjoy them you have to have them right?

    In order for the subscription model to work, you are going to need to change your general purpose hardware into specific purpose hardware.

    Is that really worth it?

    It's is really *hard* to do pay per experience or use or whatever. Why not find ways to make money doing what our machine do now?

    We all will have more rights that way.

    I get the distinct feeling that this is nothing more than a way to sell DRM to everyone in a way that is not possible with software right now.

    1. Re:I beg to differ by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

      I agree that it is a vehicle for DRM, which is my problem with it as well.

      However you don't really own anything on your computer by current laws anyway. You don't own the software, you don't own the music/movies/etc (unless you create it yourself). All you get is the right to listen to it, and THAT is murky as hell now because of all the file sharing.

      I wouldn't MIND a subscription service as long as it was moderately priced (which it won't be), and as long as thye don't include massive DRM, which they will.

      I don't know. I kind of think of it like a library. There is a lot of really cool data out there that isn't freely available; I'd pay to have access to that.

      Bah, probably a pipe dream. Be kinda cool though, done right.

      Just my opinion.

      --
      ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  89. Typical by Nexum · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This seems typical of Redmond.

    Rent rent rent. This is the current plan, when the customer stops paying - *ZIP!* they're screwed.

    It's exactly what is on the cards with Palladium (NGSCB), no longer do you own your copy of MS Office, but you rent it, leaving yourself liable to increases in the rental cost that started out oh-so-reasonable (XBox Live anyone?).

    Should you fail to keep up with payments then all of your work for the last couple of years (documents, letters, spreadsheets, project plans etc. etc.) is down the drain... gone. It is all part of a very obvious strategy to lock people tighter and tighter into the godawful overrated buggy mess that is MS software...

    And the worst thing is that *the average Joe does not see this*!

    Now, Microsoft see's another company (Apple) which has worked incredibly hard, battling against the stubborness of the 5 big labels, encoding hundreds of thousands of songs, doing all the groundwork, figuring out the streaming system to get high-quality streams to anyone anywhere in the world instantly for the previews etc. etc. Microsoft see's this company (GASP!) actually reap some monetary reward for this hard hard work and surprise, the fat and greedy "software" company wants it... all of it.

    Why, Microsoft, if you wanted to get into the online music business, was it not YOU that took the risk of being first, why was it not YOUR money on the line opening a new market to users, why was it not YOUR reputation in the balance of a high profile gamble???

    I know this is Slashdot, and I know this is repeated many times a day, but believe me, never with more spirit and emotion than I feel now - when will the consumer teach Microsoft a lesson?

    Has the semi-failure of the XBox been the first high-profile dent to MS made by the consumer at large? Perhaps... it is sure to say that the consumer is resisting these monopolistic practises... but how long will this last... MS has the cash to pay out for an XBox 2 and an Xbox 3 until Sony and Nintendo are gradually put out of the game for the sheer fact that MSoft's bottom line can go deeper than theirs?

    It remains to be seen... perhaps this will be one of those half-hearted assault on a competitior like iMovie versus Windows Movie Maker (hehehe). We DO know that Apple's traditional strengths (design, quality, usability, friendliness, media-related software) are the things that Microsoft has the most difficulty in achieving.

    -Nex

    --

    This sig has been deprecated.
    1. Re:Typical by Trurl's+Machine · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Has the semi-failure of the XBox been the first high-profile dent to MS made by the consumer at large?

      It was not their first market failure, and certainly not the biggest one. Windows 3.1 just by its very own name keeps the record of two products rejected by the consumers. And there was Xenix, and there were the early versions of Internet Explorer that nobody seemed to use, and there was the early MS Word for Windows, that seemed to be no serious competition to the mighty WordPerfect etc. Whatever you would say about Bill, you can't say that he easily gives up on anything.

    2. Re:Typical by Registered+Coward+v2 · · Score: 1

      Rent rent rent. This is the current plan, when the customer stops paying - *ZIP!* they're screwed

      That's nothing hew - people use the same model for housing, cars, movies - all things they could buy if they want to, but the total rental cost is less than a purchase for the amount of use they expect, so they don't buy.

      Why, Microsoft, if you wanted to get into the online music business, was it not YOU that took the risk of being first, why was it not YOUR money on the line opening a new market to users, why was it not YOUR reputation in the balance of a high profile gamble???

      Becasue MS is to smart to do that - there is no real advantage to being first, so they can wait and see how it works and then jump in if it looks profitable. They're in this to make money for their shareholders, not carve new trails and go bust.

      Look at some of the trailblazers - AMPEX, Wright, Bomar? Where are they today?

      --
      I'm a consultant - I convert gibberish into cash-flow.
    3. Re:Typical by Nexum · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Perhaps I should have put more emphasis on MS's perseverance... but the fact still remains... MS has a LOT of cash... SURELY it is an abuse of their position (illegal?) just to muscle into other markets by way of financial attrition?

      -Nex

      --

      This sig has been deprecated.
    4. Re:Typical by nagora · · Score: 0, Flamebait
      SURELY it is an abuse of their position (illegal?) just to muscle into other markets by way of financial attrition?

      Nothing in George W. Bush's America is illegal to the rich. He made that pretty clear via the Microsoft Vs DOJ case as soon as he had seized control from President Gore.

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
    5. Re:Typical by 0bjectiv3 · · Score: 1

      Gore was never president, asshat. For better or for worse, we use the electoral college to determine who becomes president.

      If you don't like our system, do something about it or move elsewhere. I'm tired of hearing whiny knee-jerk liberals complain about how Bush "stole" the position from Al Bore.

      If you want a law to interpret stupid voters' actual intentions, then lobby your congressperson to have a (stupid) law passed. The blazingly blatant fact is that Bush won Florida. Many (otherwise left-wing) Florida newspapers have verified that, even if stupid voters were taken into account, Bush would still have won Florida.

      By saying that Bush should not be president, you must believe inherently that idiots should be given special treatment in the ballot box. While I can accept your appreciation of morons, I don't think they should be held to standards any different than that of those who can "bang the rocks together".

      People without the wherewithal to properly complete a ballot created by a fucking Democrat should not have their votes counted.

      Stop whining.

      For the record, I voted for the Libertarian candidate.

      --

      "Saddam Hussein cavorts with terrorists."
    6. Re:Typical by m00nun1t · · Score: 1

      The consumer doesn't need to teach Microsoft a lesson. It doesn't matter that much that "the average Joe does not see this". Most of Microsofts money comes from big companies - when a bank buys 100,000 licenses of Windows & Office. Those guys know. And if they start walking, sure, the consumer space is still left, but where ever the big guys walk to will have the money to fight the battle with MS in the consumer space.

    7. Re:Typical by nagora · · Score: 1
      For better or for worse, we use the electoral college to determine who becomes president.

      That being the system where one candidade gets his brother to remove 57000 of the other candidate's supporters from the election before you start and then has the count fiddled in areas where you know you won't win.

      I'm tired of hearing whiny knee-jerk liberals complain about how Bush "stole" the position from Al Bore.

      Yeah, the truth is just SO boring, isn't it?

      The blazingly blatant fact is that Bush won Florida.

      Yes, in the way that it was blatant that Ben Johnston won the Seoul Olympic 100m. Sometimes it's more important to pay attention to what happened after the race.

      Many (otherwise left-wing) Florida newspapers have verified that, even if stupid voters were taken into account, Bush would still have won Florida.

      They may have done that, but they'd be wrong. Even if the mis-counting was the real issue (which it is'nt). You are probably thinking of reports based on this CNN/Times back report. Trouble is, the "investigation" that is refered to in the CNN report actually found the opposite, ie that Bush lost. CNN etc simply lied. Basically, like Gore, they backed down in the face of the poitical power of a man that makes Nixon look like George Washington.

      The actual NORC data showed that the Supremes' aborting of the recount prevented Gore from winning by over 40000 votes. And that's still before we look at what might have happened if Jeb Bush had not prevented 57000 legitimate voters from registering in areas of Gore support.

      If you want to look at the data yourself instead of letting others do it for you then it is available from here but it is a 125MB download!

      By saying that Bush should not be president, you must believe inherently that idiots should be given special treatment in the ballot box.

      In fact, that's exactly what did happen. If you lived in a Bush area your ballot machine almost certainly had the "retry" function switched on, in which case an idiot that marked the paper incorrectly would have it returned for another try. In Gore areas this was switched off so the same mistake would simply loose you your vote.

      I don't think they should be held to standards any different than that of those who can "bang the rocks together".

      Well, Jeb clearly doesn't agree with you there.

      Why is it so hard for you to admit that the man in the White House is there by a massive campaign of dishonesty and criminal activity for which the evidence is over-whelming? What does it cost you to stand up to him? Are you embarassed? Is that a good reason to allow an unelected man to rule America and send its troops to die in order to further his friends' and families' business ventures? Would it be different if it was your brother or sister that died for that?

      Gore IS president (and an asshole, but that's not the issue here), and Bush is an unelected, military dictator of the classic type (money and favours to his supporters, war, fear and lies for the people).

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  90. "According to CNET" by Infonaut · · Score: 4, Insightful
    Actually, according to Microsoft. This is a typical Microsoft tactic. Take something a competitor already has on on the market, and announce that you're soon going to be coming out with something better, cheaper, faster, yada yada.

    But Microsoft's spiffy new DRM doesn't exist yet. We're all debating the merits of something that they might not even be able to bring to market. This reminds me of all the discussion prior to iTunes. Even though the broad strokes of the Apple Music Store were fairly well known, the devil is in the details. It wasn't until the product launched that anyone could really tell how useful it would be.

    Microsoft's number one goal here is to thwart Apple's Windows version of the Music Store before it even launches. The best way for them to do that is to float various alternatives, watch the responses, and adjust accordingly.

    While this is in keeping with their corporate character, it's also not the sort of approach that leads to a well-integrated user experience. The Apple Music Store was obviously built around making consumers happy, and it shows in all the little details. Microsoft is racing to catch up to Apple in this arena, and at this point the only way they can gain some momentum is by comparing vaporware to the Apple Music Store.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
  91. Maybe if they by PotatoHead · · Score: 1

    got it right the first time, did not go under, and the whole thing works on the open hardware and operating system I use now.

    It just does not make any sense otherwise. I can do what I want on my current hardware. Why replace that for the right to do as I am told?

    Put me in the own the bits camp. Life will be better that way.

  92. This does not even require discussion. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    All you have to do is look at the history. MS's idea has already been attempted 50 times over by many companies. People want to be able to copy it whereever/whenever. This is the sole reason Apple is winning right now. Remember the music companies said they would have been happy with a million in a month though so even a "failure" may constitute a solid business plan to the RIAA.

  93. All I am interested in... by PARENA · · Score: 2, Insightful

    ...is that Apple makes its service available to all platforms. I'm waiting for it (Linux user) and I would definately buy music that way. I'm not an audiophile and I don't mind a bit less than CD quality. Especially if I can get an entire album for $10 instead of $25 (in The Netherlands).

    --
    Here's the secret to immortality: ...oh dang, I forgot.
  94. Mmmm... Digital Rights Management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From the article:

    "Time-outs can be supported relatively easily on PCs, which have plenty of memory and processing power to handle a clock and the associated DRM. But supporting clock DRM on small handheld devices poses a considerable engineering challenge, thanks to limited CPU resources and battery life. Usher said Microsoft is working with consumer-electronics device makers to add clocks that can be hooked up to its rights-management system."

    They're talking about restricting how long one can listen to something they purchase of course, and if trying to implement a time-out clock is going to detrement the performance and battery life of my portable, I'll have nothing to do with it.

    This "time out clock" idea mirrors the "treating the symptoms, not the cause" of music piracy problem. Until the recording industry realizes that they need to reform instead of force us to conform, I will continue to send the message "We're done being forced into a business model that benifits the business more than the costumer."

    No I don't condone stealing, but what has the recording industry been doing all these years before the revolution was possible. I just hope the movie industry realizes this now and reforms before making same quality copies of movies becomes as trivial as doing the same for music.

    I do after all, want to work in the movie industry (cinematography or didgital effects) but I for one will not cry about my job being endangered when it happens, I will instead cry to the hollywood administrators, my bosses, to open their eyes and listen to the customers. Stop thinking about yourselves and make sure to think of the customers first. They will reward you with loyalty and money.

    -P

    1. Re:Mmmm... Digital Rights Management by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes I do realize that I could get a cease and decist for having the word "Usher" in my post, I could use a new T-Shirt.

  95. Psychological, economic differences by MarkCollette · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The MS service has a lower entry cost, and better provides immediate gratification (for the first few months).

    It is equivalent in price to owning 12 CDs, or 120 songs per year at the Apple service. Presumably one would use the Apple preview abilities to only buys what they like, and to roughly prioritise buying what they like most before buying other options that they like less. The average consumer buys more than 12 CDs per year, but usually receives less than 120 of their favourite songs per year, due to how CDs bundle good with poor songs. So, a person who buys more than average quantities of music, or would prefer to, given the economic means, would receive superior value, initially, from the MS service. A person who buys less than average quantities of music would receive better value with the Apple service, always.

    So, for the above average consumer, who sees better value in the MS service, they have to ask themselves:
    - Will the service price increas, at least proportionally over the Apple service? Since the Apple service provides more revenue for the labels, one could assume so.
    - Will the collection disappear for any reasons other than discontinuing paying the service fee, such as MS service being discontinued, MS Windows 2005, 2008, 2011... being required to run the service, in effect having additional hidden monetary, hardware and labour costs.
    - Will the collection disappear from not paying the service fee anymore. For those who follow the law that has a simple answer, no, but for those willing to bend/break the law, that might be resricted by technological concerns, outside of the user's control.
    - Psychologically, most consumers prefer the feeling of "owning" objects, rather than "leasing" them. The feeling of ownership is one of having increased tangible wealth, which makes one feel successful in a consumer society. Leasing an object is alright for short time periods, as little attachment has occured, and so the loss is not as noticeable, at least for small ticket items like individual songs. The feeling of losing wealth when a big ticket item, like a ferrari, or a 30 GB music collection is suddenly taken away, is not a pleasurable feeling. This affect is worsenned in the case of the MS service, because it proves its economic superiority only in the long-term for mot users. This one single psychological reasonning will undoubtedly be sufficient cause for many users to pay a price premium to own any product.

    So, depending on how the user can answer the myriad of questions, the MS service might be worth-while. That complexity of reasonning might tip the balance to the Apple service. Look for very simplistic marketing from MS, targeted at base, short-term neurosis, and immediate gratification to push their service.

  96. You know that's illegal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You know that's illegal, don't you?

    1. Re:You know that's illegal... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's so illegal, why aren't they putting people in jail?

  97. Another Analogy. by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 1
    An average wedding in America is about $20,000 for a nice middle-class one with a number of guests. Add the cost of living a life-time with a partner? Priceless, i'm sure. But I would rather get married than spend $100 every weekend to fuck a hoar.

    So yeah, I'd rather pay much more and OWN my music than stick my dick in Palladium. I don't want to RENT something I BUY. Anythying otherwise should be forced to advertise itself as a LEASE, just like cars.

    As a matter of coincidence (fuck spell checking) I got the new 15GB iPod last week and I'm spending a quiet Saturday afternoon sipping on beers and sorting-retagging all 1500+ mp3's. A lovely way to pass an afternoon or three if you love music. Check the iPod out. It's sweet, you will luv it.

    End of rant.

    1. Re:Another Analogy. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      han spend $100 every weekend to fuck a hoar.
      That is spelled whore, little boy.

  98. NEWSFLASH! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Apple comes out with DVD, Microsoft responds with DIVX!

    I'm sure "expiring music" will go over just as well as "expiring video rentals" (DIVX) did. Is Circuit City teaming up with Microsoft on this?

  99. This is ridiculous!... by mrdlcastle · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can't believe what I am reading.... People are actually saying that it's ok for me to pay $10 month for me to listen to music.
    I am sorry, I would rather "own the bits" so that I can listen to the same songs over and over and over again without having to pay a fee just to do so.

    I will stick with the iTunes service. I can see it already, you can listen to your music as long as your paying for the service.
    Knowing MS, any CD you burn will self destruct if you cease being a member (that is if you are allowed to burn CDs without paying some additional fee).

  100. I'd rather own by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ok- here's my 2 cents again....

    I'd rather own my music. And by "own," I mean own a pressed disc of black vinyl completely free of DRM and anything digital.

    Digital works for some purposes, but not for music, since it's analog by nature.

    But that's just my opinion.

  101. How much is it worth? by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 2, Interesting
    "but which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want?"

    Neither is the better deal for me. I won't go in for any pay service until the following occurs:

    1.I can actually afford it....i'm sorry, but i'm a broke college student, and while I wish I could support the starving artists, I need to support starving me first, and I'm not willing to give up music to do so when I am able to get it for free, but once I can afford it, i'd be happy to.

    2.They have the music I want....Sorry, Britney and Eminem don't cut it, I listen to a lot of electronic music and what I want is full DJ sets, such as those from the BBC's Radio1 Essential Mix. The only way I've found to get those so far is to download them off P2P apps. But god would I die for a high bitrate version that had the tracks available seperately, but still in mix form so I don't have to have one 100 MB file for a 1 hour set, but rather many smaller tracks that blend together seemlessly so that I can skip around the set easier.

    3. Apple makes a version of their service for Windows. Right now, there's not a chance in hell I'd sell my soul over to M$. Sorry, but if a better service comes along that steals the show from M$ and Apple, I don't want to have my entire music collection evaporate (sorry, it wouldn't evaporate, it would still be there taking up space, just useless) just because I have found a better place to spend my money.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  102. stoopid idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is it me, or are companies getting too carried away? i dunno about you guys but if i wanna download a song i go on p2p or irc.....for free!

  103. Why not both? by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    Because Apple is pay-as-you go, and EMusic is subscription... why not do both?

    As for myself, I dislike recurring fees and there is not quite enough music I really like on EMusic whenever I look around to pull me in. But I certianly would be more likley to use EMusic where I control the music I get rather than an MS service where I have to connect back to a server to keep playing music.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  104. The public library by drayzel · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I'll stick with my local library. They actualy have lots of CD's that I can borrow for free for 2 weeks. Plenty of time to rip into whatever format I want. No new releases, but thats OK I think most music is crap these days. Most CD's I check out I already have the tape stuffed in a box somewhere. I actualy buy new music CD's that I like after I have sampled enough of the disc dfrom kazaa etc.

    It's great for audiobooks on CD. I can listen to them at my leisure without worrying about late fees. I don't look at it as theft, more as maximizing my libraries circulation capabilities. I could renew them for 4 weeks, but if I return them after they are ripped some other poor schmoe can borrow them. Buying an unabridged audio book on CD is WAY to expensive for me to only listen to them once. I;ve noticed lots of new audiobooks are being released as MP3's burned on CD now. I wish they'd fall in price though. I'd pay $10 for one in a heart beat, but not $49.95 (SK's Dreamcatcher on three MP3 cd's).

  105. MS subsidy by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    What you're missing is that MS can pay the music industry $.10/song/month that you download (since it's all tracked), subsidizing costs to acquire market share.

    The ironic thing is that it still wont work! Expiration of digital files in no fun, and consumers won't buy into it. People expect to buy music and keep using it, and hang onto it far after they've lost interest... just go out and look at garage sales with all of the tapes people still have from the 70's. Tapes! The 70's!

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    1. Re:MS subsidy by RdsArts · · Score: 1

      Actually, I doubt you'll see anyone at Mircosoft would OK paying .10$ a song/unit either. I'm quite sure the people who own stock would first find I fit, then proceed to throw it.

      Expectally when they'd still have to pay that when they "own" the distribution stream. (I highly doubt the RIAA would OK having their cut ... cut)

  106. Itunes vs Microsoft's system by zakezuke · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Ok, back about 20 years ago, we were under the dillusion that we actually owned the music that we bought in a typical store. You paid money, you got music. It's was what we thought a simple concept, even the little disclaimer that it was for private expoition only in the rare cases an album actually had one. Still, there was a level of simplisity of it all.

    However based on what I read about many contries, it's been established that you don't own a copy of the song to do with as you please, but rather you own the media but not the contents, making it illegal to make a copy (aka a backup) for use in other media players.

    The apple i-tunes system gives you music in a file that can be placed on a CD if desired. This sounds very simple like it was in the 20th century. From what I can see, you buy a file, not the media. I assume you own the file and have the right to private use. Too me this is fair and reasonable.

    I would not support a microsoft system where files have an experation date. While I've never been an audiophile, I do own some tapes, CDs, vinyl, and the odd 8track. I own them, they are mine. While there is some argument about end user rights, I can if I so desire it place media on a player and play it when ever I wish without additional license fees, cause I bought a copy.

    While I am a fan of the idea of something subscription based... what I desire is the ability to actually support the folks who made the music. I would pay money for stuff I downloaded in order to get a jewel case, and an offical sleave for a particular release. Only diffrence being, I don't have to go to the store.

    --
    There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    1. Re:Itunes vs Microsoft's system by Josuah · · Score: 1

      The apple i-tunes system gives you music in a file that can be placed on a CD if desired. This sounds very simple like it was in the 20th century. From what I can see, you buy a file, not the media. I assume you own the file and have the right to private use. Too me this is fair and reasonable.

      And there's a good reason to believe that you own the file. That being that only you can access the contents of the file. It is keyed to your specific person, i.e. your Apple ID. It is not keyed to your individual hardware since you can move it between computers. You have the power to release the contents of the file as you see fit, e.g. to a CD in redbook format. If you destroy the file, then that specific arrangement of bits is lost forever (unless you reconstruct it at a personal cost of one dollar). If you copy the file, it is clear that it is your copy because your Apple ID and its related encryption is a part of the file.

    2. Re:Itunes vs Microsoft's system by zakezuke · · Score: 1

      And there's a good reason to believe that you own the file. That being that only you can access the contents of the file

      To me, this seems somewhat reasonable. I pay .99 cents for a file, it's my file. I can burn onto a CD, which I presume negates the id and restrictions so I can use in thoery legacy CD players.

      A subscription based service sounds far less spiffy if the files expire. At present, I can listen to the radio, over the cable line I get really good FM or digital based music.

      At present, I can record off the air/wire via either my sound card (analog to digital) or via an analog recording device (tape recorder).

      While comercial radio typicaly has DJs, the vast number of digital solutions simply do not. While not nearly so cool as a searchable system, there is much less in the way of red tape.

      --
      There is no sanctuary. There is no sanctuary. SHUT UP! There is no shut up. There is no shut up.
    3. Re:Itunes vs Microsoft's system by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

      However based on what I read about many contries[sic], it's been established that you don't own a copy of the song to do with as you please, but rather you own the media but not the contents, making it illegal to make a copy (aka a backup) for use in other media players.

      Just as point of note: in Canada, it is legal under the Copyright Act to not only make copies of your own music for personal use, but also to borrow and make copies of a friend's music for your personal use.

      From section 80 of the copyright act:

      1. Subject to subsection (2), the act of reproducing all or any substantial part of
        1. a musical work embodied in a sound recording,
        2. a performer's performance of a musical work embodied in a sound recording, or
        3. a sound recording in which a musical work, or a performer's performance of a musical work, is embodied
        onto an audio recording medium for the private use of the person who makes the copy does not constitute an infringement of the copyright in the musical work, the performer's performance or the sound recording.
      2. Subsection (1) does not apply if the act described in that subsection is done for the purpose of doing any of the following in relation to any of the things referred to in paragraphs (1)(a) to (c):
        1. selling or renting out, or by way of trade exposing or offering for sale or rental;
        2. distributing, whether or not for the purpose of trade;
        3. communicating to the public by telecommunication; or
        4. performing, or causing to be performed, in public.

      Just for anyone who still doubts (there are a few), I think it's important to know what rights you have in this age of 'land of liberty' rights being stripped away. Incidentally, this is one of the things the levy on writable media funds, so next time you feel like complaining about $0.29 on your CD-R, just go out and rip a friend's music collection in 'protest'.

      --Dan

  107. Purchase power is control by mAineAc · · Score: 1

    I would much rather buy my music. I like to listen to older music, but you can't get that usually. On the ideaofrenting the music industry controls what will be available. They will control whatpeople listen to more this way. It is bad enough now with the radio stations. it is almost impossible to hear what you want to hear you have to listen to the crap they let you hear. If you have to rent it, the music industry will have the control as to weather somethingis available or not and they will be able to pull the music even if you already downloaded it and it is still on your hard drive. Itwill just stop working because there is new stuff now. At least if you purchase you can control how long you want to listen to someone like Roger Miller :)

  108. media payer is unstoppable by hpavc · · Score: 1

    with this sort of innovation media payer will be unstoppable.

    but seriously, i run itunes4 and share my collection out to people and theirs to me ... dont think i am going to see that with media payer.

    i can disable the 'apple store' and it never shows up. as if media payer will give that option.

    i could go on and on but then i would seem too anti microsoft, i must admit they have some nice codec support out there.

    --
    members are seeing something, your seeing an ad
    1. Re:media payer is unstoppable by digital+photo · · Score: 1

      I hear ya.

      Been looking at the apple's itunes store and the more I look, the more I think it is a good idea compared to buying whole CD's and getting screwed out of the good sounding track or with something like MS where they will give you music that doesn't play at the best quality possible or won't play after you stop paying.

      Another way of looking at it:

      With Apple, I may pay $1 per song, but at the end of the day/month/year, that song still cost me only $1.

      With MS, I will pay $120/year. However, depending on how much I download, at the end of the year/etc, I would have paid more than $1 per song. To boot, I may not even have the right to play or keep the song if I stop paying.

      With choices like that, Apple's is the way to go by a far margin.

    2. Re:media payer is unstoppable by hpavc · · Score: 1

      i guess i really didnt have a position on the 'pay' factor other than i really dont want to pay at all.

      i really HATE realplayer because of the adware that it became and media payer can be like that as well if you go nuts with using it for online content.

      i can imagine it would get worse if there was shopping to be done within it.

      --
      members are seeing something, your seeing an ad
  109. THE ASTROTURFING MUST STOP by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What am I talking about? EMusic of course.

    Help me.

  110. in russia.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    you dont own the music - the music owns you!! - oh wait a minute - that here too :(

  111. Microsoft MyTunes by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    As in "mine," not "yours." You not being me and all.

  112. Microsoft behaves like a 3 yr old child by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Like a toddler, Microsoft can't seem to ever let anyone succeed without having to try to steal the concept and thunder. Always playing, "Me too" get's kind of tiresome.

    Anything Apple does, Microsoft always seems to HAVE to beat them at it. It's worse than sibling rivalry.

    I suppose if Apple decided to sell hamburgers at their stores, Microsoft would ave to buy all of the cows in the world to prevent Apple from suceeding in that venture too.
    sheesh...

  113. You don't own Apple AAC either - they expire. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the features of Apple AAC based DRM is that tunes encoded with it can also expire. Rumour has it that while the iTunes music store seems to be a success now, if it wasn't and rampant piracy came about due to unforeseen circumstances in the distribution, the existing AAC files could be disabled.

    I suspect when Apple's model fails due to competition from the big boys (like Microsoft and Pressplay) then those AAC files you're all so proud of from iTunes Music Store will be just heaps of useless bits.

    1. Re:You don't own Apple AAC either - they expire. by neomiasma · · Score: 1

      Where exactly did you hear that? I've not heard anyone say that Apple's AAC files are set to expire. What would that accomplish, other than pissing people off?

      Really, though, if you're so worried that your music will expire, at least you have the option to burn it onto a CD. As far as I know, CD audio has no time limit.

      Lastly, there's no reason to be all gloom and doom about it. You said "when Apple's model fails" like it was a foregone conclusion. You shouldn't go through life being so negative all the time. Cheer up. You're bringing me down, man!

      --

      -------
      And we also have a cancel button...in case you don't want toast.
  114. Another monoply suit in the works? by GuNgA-DiN · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Leveraging their 90% marketshare of the desktop this will become yet another monopoly for Microsoft. I say we wait until this thing gets going full scale and then file a class-action suit against them. Once this takes off -- there will be no alternatives on the Windows platform. Millions of lemmings will run right off the cliff and just start using this service because it is built right into the OS.

  115. Re:iTunes * by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, but when you buy a CD you own rights to the copy in perpetuity, subject to the copyright holder's exclusive rights. Same thing with music purchased from iTunes. But if your music becomes inacccessible when you cancel your subscription, that's a different kettle of fish altogether.

  116. Apple AAC based DRM has expiry too. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    One of the features of Apple AAC based DRM is that tunes encoded with it can also expire. Rumour has it that while the iTunes music store seems to be a success now, if it wasn't and rampant piracy came about due to unforeseen circumstances in the distribution, the existing AAC files could be disabled... Why put this feature in if it's not to be used? You can bet when there's an inkling it could be profitable that it will be used.

    I suspect when Apple's model fails due to competition from the big boys (like Microsoft and Pressplay) then those AAC files you're all so proud of from iTunes Music Store will be just heaps of useless bits.

  117. Thanks for doing our research! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After the goons surf slashdot on lunch break.... They will be now!

    shit! and the register can kill ebay auctions, can't we all just keep our little secrets??

    1. Re:Thanks for doing our research! by penginkun · · Score: 1

      Aw, shoot...me and my big mouth...

      But honestly, I doubt they're worried about it. It's not as easy to explain as P2P, and it's certainly not as sexy. And there are probably 100x as many people using P2P than Usenet.

      Once they kill KaZaA, THEN we should worry. ^_^

  118. Apple iTunes service has exclusive artists by AIXadmin · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Apple gives you access to exclusive tracks, and a better selection the Press Play. I personally would rather pay a little more, own the selection for life, have more digital rights with the music, have access to more music, and not be teathered by a monthly subscription like Press Play.

  119. How about 30 gigs of music for $0? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A music cd now takes up around 40-50 megabytes when compressed. MP3 players hold 30 gigs. People *WILL* pirate music, and all this fuss about DRM, paladium, expiring file formats, etc. isn't going to stop that. The cat's out of the bag, and I see no point in paying for music. If I enjoy an artist's music, perhaps I'll make a donation, but I will not pay for music when I can find it elsewhere at zero cost.

  120. Does MS have any sense at all? by coolmacdude · · Score: 1

    I would have thought the iTMS would have made it clear by now what people want in a music service. With a very small user base in a very short time, Apple has greatly eclipsed all the other services where you rent your music. Now MS thinks that rehashing Pressplay's model with probably even more restrictions is going to defeat Apple! WTF? Personally, I can't say I'm upset. Their service will end up going in the toilet and the Windows iTMS will blow them away. It will be fun to watch.

    --

    -You may license this sig for only $6.99.
  121. Geez by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

    Can Apple do anything without Microsoft copying them?

    1. Re:Geez by tbone1 · · Score: 1
      Can Apple do anything without Microsoft copying them?

      Yeah, create quality, user-friendly products.

      (Oh wait, is that bashing? It is? Good, so long as one knows ...)

      --

      The Independent: Reverend Spooner Arrested in Friar Tuck Incident - ISIHAC, Historical Headlines
  122. Rent or Buy and own? by joshsnow · · Score: 2, Funny

    I'd rather buy and own. That goes for anything - The house that I live in, the car that I drive, the clothes that I wear (unless I'm attending a one-off function) THE MUSIC THAT I LISTEN TO etc.
    Kinda like do you get married or rent a woman...
    Ok, so this is slashdot...

    1. Re:Rent or Buy and own? by sharkey · · Score: 1
      Kinda like do you get married or rent a woman...

      Well, you can buy one here without getting married.

      --

      --
      "Outlook not so good." That magic 8-ball knows everything! I'll ask about Exchange Server next.
    2. Re:Rent or Buy and own? by buckminsterinsd · · Score: 1

      > I'd rather buy and own. That goes for anything - The
      > house that I live in, the car that I drive, the clothes
      > that I wear (unless I'm attending a one-off function) THE > MUSIC THAT I LISTEN TO etc.

      I dunno. Ever hear the Carlin comedy routine about 'stuff'?

      Old George is 110% right on that subject. After just having past the half century mileage marker, my only big insight is that all possessions are a curse. I've had the big house, the built-in pool, the barn for the horses, all the stupid furniture, all the toys, and the rest of that 'stuff'. They don't mean shit. It's all just 'stuff' you wanna use but why do you need to own it?

      I'd rather live in hotels. No cleaning up. No maintenance. No insurance. Just hang out, use their pool, piss in it if ya feel like it, drink out of their glasses, use their towels. When you're finished using their 'stuff', ya get up and split. No worries about is my 'stuff' put away or is my 'stuff' in a safe place so nobody else can steal my 'stuff' or use my 'stuff' without my permission? Who gives a shit? It's not my 'stuff'! Your 'stuff' becomes a boat anchor as you sail thru life...

      About the only exception to how I feel are nice, old cars. I had this totally killer, '68 Pontiac Firebird convertible. Ya can't really lease or rent that kinda car because you have too much of a personal kinda relationship/investment with an automobile like that. I just miss driving down by the beach on Hiway 101. Or hauling ass 95 MPH across the desert to Vegas, top down, 105 degrees out, a very oral blonde in the passenger seat, a 12-pack of ice cold beer sitting in a cooler on the back seat... Ahhhh!

      > Kinda like do you get married or rent a woman...

      Kinda like you'd be outta yer mind to buy a cow when all ya really want is a glass of milk, right?

      Actually, both are just forms of ownership - the former is usually just over a longer time period than the latter. I don't understand the male need to possess females as if they were just more 'stuff'. Or females that wanna be the possession of some dude. I dunno if my attitude is PC or not on this subject.

      This attitude comes from being married for 25 years but now I'm living with these two beautiful women. Ya can't own, try to bribe, pay or otherwise control women like these two. That would just fuck up your relationship. It's really great just to hang out and share their beds with them . My buddies can't believe what a kinky little arrangement we have. (To be honest. I can't either.. ;) What makes this work out so well is our mutual attitude about "ownership".

      best regards,

      Buck

    3. Re:Rent or Buy and own? by joshsnow · · Score: 1

      > Kinda like do you get married or rent a woman... Kinda like you'd be outta yer mind to buy a cow when all ya really want is a glass of milk, right? Actually, both are just forms of ownership - the former is usually just over a longer time period than the latter. I don't understand the male need to possess females as if they were just more 'stuff'. Or females that wanna be the possession of some dude. I dunno if my attitude is PC or not on this subject. This attitude comes from being married for 25 years but now I'm living with these two beautiful women. Ya can't own, try to bribe, pay or otherwise control women like these two. That would just fuck up your relationship. It's really great just to hang out and share their beds with them . My buddies can't believe what a kinky little arrangement we have. (To be honest. I can't either.. ;) What makes this work out so well is our mutual attitude about "ownership".
      My point not being about ownership, but about continually paying for something which you could pay for once - or not at all... :) Have fun in your menage a trois!!

  123. 7500 songs? by Azureflare · · Score: 1
    Are there REALLY that many songs out there, that one person would want to listen to? Whatever happened to having "favorite" artists? Besides, most of the songs with the Microsoft offering probably won't be artists I would want to listen to. The Apple offering is vastly superior for me, because the fact is I don't want to listen to thousands of songs, I listen to select songs that I like. If I get bored with them, it is very easy to hunt around and pick out a few songs that I like the demo of. I don't want to pay money to rent songs; I want to own them, and the iTunes solution is the best I've seen so far.

    Of course, I also own cds, so maybe I'm just strange =P

  124. If its worth it... by 222 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I share the same opinions as most of the /. crowd, in that if i feel a product is worth it, i will buy it. I've been screaming for years about how if the RIAA wants me to buy more CD's, they need to offer more for what is already an obviously bloated pricing situation, or offer me a cheaper medium that i can access directly from home. Generally, when it comes to music, 1) Download a few tracks from kazaa at home. 2) Spend a few days listening to it. 3) Go purchase the album / Download the remaining tracks, or disregard the music as something not in my taste. I currently have about 10 albums sitting in the corner of my bedroom that have not even been opened, with the music residing on my PC. I also have no problems downloading albums that i have purchased (sometimes, 3-4 times) even though i dont currently posses a copy of the CD... due to theft, scratched cd's, whatever. The RIAA would have you believe that i am a thief in doing so. I believe the RIAA can lick my scrotum. At any rate, I think MS's plan would end up being worthless. As i've stated before, i feel that if i pay for something, i *own* the rights to posses it, no matter what. I once made the mistake of encoding one of my albums in WMA. The CD melted in my car... and since this was a couple of formats ago (yes, i run windows :p) I've found the files to be useless, because windows feels i dont "own" those wma files. The absolute LAST THING I WANT is for MS to be in control of what it feels i "own" and dont own.

  125. what it's worth to who?? by bninja_penguin · · Score: 0, Troll

    First off, all my macs run Linux, as they are too old to run OSX, and I don't have an iPod, so I don't really know the answer here: Are you saying that with Apple's music service, you can't swap out the songs whenever you like?? They are forever and only on that one iPod?? As for "owning the bits," with that comment, I feel you're attempting a large troll. I mean, I could say, gee, how much is worth owning a house to you?? $200,000 dollars to own, vs. $8,400 dollars a year to rent?
    In a major kharma burning move, I must say, you must be one of those people who like to lease their vehicles, rent their place of residence, and license their software on subscription terms, yet "own" a pet. Why don't you try owning something, anything....
    Or you could just fuck off with your comments, and go back to your safe little world where you must enjoy the feeling of paying someone a monthly fee, forever, (at least until the lease is up), then having to do it all over again, with someone else, for the same thing, and never getting to do what you really would like to do with what ever it is you're renting. I have never seen a lease or rental agreement where I could add a patio deck to a house, or put a lift kit on a 4X4 that's leased, or on and on and on. Just go away......

    --
    For those who describe their systems as 'boxen', do you order multiple 'boxen' of corn flakes also?
  126. expiration of files on portable devices by jetmarc · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Expiration of files on portable devices can only happen, if the portable
    device has either

    - a real time clock (RTC), or
    - a communication channel to a server, or
    - non-volatile memory for counters.

    Otherwise it would suffer from the "same state problem". That is, everytime
    when you ask it to play a song, it would not know if you ask the first time,
    or the 100th time.

    The small matchbox/pen-sized MP3 players have no RTC. Their comm channel
    is established only sporadically (when you're fed up with the songs and
    push new ones). The only possible way is to use the non-volatile memory.

    I don't consider this a particularily good solution. It's easily hackable,
    and works only for those devices that integrate and virtualize their storage.
    Otherwise you could just take out that CompactFlash card, connect it to the
    PC and make a backup of all files (including the DRM counters). You could
    restore the backup after 100 playbacks (effectively resetting the counters),
    and then "give back" the files from the DRM MP3 player to your DRM PC
    with 0 playbacks used.

    Obviously M$ is targetting at players with more sophisticated hardware.
    It appears to me that they will fail like with their Smartphone initiative.
    All the extra constraints on hardware make those devices non-competitive.
    They are heavier, bulkier, waste more battery energy and all for the
    sole purpose of enforcing more restrictions to the user.

    Marc

  127. I own the CDs by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I just bought 5 cd's this morning. USED. And even at used prices, the guy had a buy 2 get one free and he also gave me one at half price because I only found 5 I liked. This was at a store in the mall and there's plenty of them in the city. Another used place I bought five or six at last week often has relatively new stuff still selling for more than twice as much in retail chains.

    That's how I accumulate my collection (currently over 10 gigs, mostly greatest hits albums). Why the hell would I subscribe to anything that expires? Why would I pay those horrible prices?

    When I get sick of my music, I can sell the CD's and get 1/2 my money back. A huge music collection in CD's is actually WORTH something if you're in any financial trouble. They're also backups to the digital version.

    Seems to me, the only reason for this kind of service is you can't wait for goofs who bought the CD's when they came out to sell them (which is strange because all you have to do is tune in to the radio if you want to hear those songs which will still be playing.)

  128. Re:iTunes * by timmyf2371 · · Score: 1

    I think the OP is referring to the fact that if he buys music in form of a CD, or from AMS, then he is free to use it and listen to it forever - whereas with the MS service, it appears, like Pressplay and the rest, that you need to keep an open subscription in order to listen to them.

    --

    Backup not found: (A)bort (R)etry (P)anic
  129. Re:Kazaa users are a carbon rods.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No one with one even one brain cell will buy crippled files when they can get the real thing in two clicks

    Lately it has taken me many more than two clicks to get several songs I've been after, thanks to the RIAA liberally polluting KaZaa with dummy files-- despite my carefully examining file sizes and looking for other signs that the file is bogus.

    Luckily, I've got fast broadband, and my PC is just a game and occasional p2p machine-- I just queue up a shitload of copies of the same song and go back to working on my Mac while they download, then I check them out later to see if one of those files is actually a full copy of a good rip. Most of America is still on dialup and still has a single machine, and the inconvenience of the virtual fishing expedition you have to go on to download most of the popular music these days will eventually drive them to pay services whether they like it or not.

  130. it is crazy! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    it is crazy! because they start with a low fee to start with and once they've cornered the market hit you with the price-fixing later on. It's not about money, it's about control. if they own all control THEN, and only THEN can they hit you with the price-fixing. Economics 101, control, if you own it all there is sweet-fa your competitors can do about it. Especially if you own the government too.

  131. answer to your question by RestiffBard · · Score: 1

    it means alot.

    --
    - /* dead coders leave no comments */
  132. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  133. MOD PARENT UP! +5, insightfull. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    My goodness This was not a troll!
    this is clearly an Anti-Microsoft BASH!

    This should be praised! and not damned!

    Moderators, did you forget where you were?

  134. Thinking like the average person: by fireboy1919 · · Score: 1

    I have seen a lot of logic among mere mortals that they want to own stuff - software, music, etc, and do whatever they want with it other than copying.

    When I explained the "one computer, one copy of Windows" to a friend of mine, he thought Microsoft was nuts.

    Why? I think it comes down mostly to tradition - an unwritten rule.

    Ever since we've had recording devices, people have been able to BUY (not rent) a version of whatever it was that they had, and use it however they want. Things have only changed in the last decade - and they changed without telling anyone. The industries are trying to sneak the changes in without anyone really noticing until it's a part of the culture.

    I don't think this will pan out at all. On the other hand, it's a way to get more people pissed at microsoft (for suggesting it). :)

    --
    Mod me down and I will become more powerful than you can possibly imagine!
    1. Re:Thinking like the average person: by mgv · · Score: 1


      Ever since we've had recording devices, people have been able to BUY (not rent) a version of whatever it was that they had, and use it however they want. Things have only changed in the last decade - and they changed without telling anyone. The industries are trying to sneak the changes in without anyone really noticing until it's a part of the culture.


      The way to think of it is simple to my mind. Don't worry about the cost of replacing your old music collection. Think of it over a lifetime. Do you spend $20 per month every month on music? If not, then the microsoft model will cost you more. If you actually spend more than this per week then the microsoft model may make sense. Unless they increase the prices in the future, of course, or you lose interest in new music as you grow older. Fewer older people buy new music, and older artists stop releasing after a while, so they buy less of that, too. I can see where microsoft is coming from - revenue generation. They are aiming to make more of it than apple, for most people. And if they don't, they will increase the subscription rate until they do.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    2. Re:Thinking like the average person: by A+Naughty+Moose · · Score: 1

      Another thing is the media industry is talking out both sides of there mouth. They tell the goverment that they loose money to pirates, so everything digital needs to be locked up airtight, and then they turn around and tell the public that they own the video/music whatever in question. Don't believe me? Watch a commercial for videos/music. You'll hear the words: Order your copy now! Buy it today! Own your copy today! Supplies are limited. Now watch a commercial for something like "The Amazing Pasta Cooker": Buy today! Own it now! Supplies are limited! People know that if they buy the pasta cooker, they can do whatever they want with it, so they assume that they can do whatever they want with the music they buy. The advertisers use the same language, so the rights must be the same? Right??

  135. Hmm by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ignoring the whole Microsoft/Apple thing, I would much rather "rent" as provided here.

    If I could get the kind of selection that's on iTMS (and as it expands), and I could download as much music as I like, and listen to it on at least two computers and a portable player for as long as I pay $10/month, I'd be all over it. I don't feel a need to "own" music, I just want it for a reasonable price. $10/month for ALL I CAN EAT seems VERY reasonable. I don't think it'll happen quite like that, but if it does, I think it would be awesome.

    I realize that some people don't have a portable player integrated into everywhere they listen to music, e.g. their car, and for them they might need to burn some CDs to make it a good deal. But for me, all I need is two computers and my iPod.

    In fact, the "$7500 to fill your iPod" has really hit home for me. I've spent a grand total of $9 in the iTunes music store. I'm not compelled to spend any more at this point. It's not because of the DRM, it's because I simply can't find more than 9 tracks that are worth a dollar to me. There are a lot of tracks that I'd like to have, but not at $1 a pop. I would still happily fork over $10 a month, though, if I could download all the songs that I might even be remotely interested in.

  136. Soulseek by mackstann · · Score: 2, Offtopic
    Yeah, Soulseek! Even for free, it rocks, lots of obscure stuff, even some ebooks, movies, etc. The reliability of downloads is awesome compared to alot of other p2p apps, and for every $5 you donate, you get a month of priority downloads - that is, you get bumped straight to the front of queues. It's also cool because it's a little more people-centric and friendly, not like alot of p2p apps where you're just downloading from user3423523661@kazaa.com or whatever. It runs on unix, mac, and windows too (the python client should run damn near anywhere).

    Anyways, not trying to be OT, but for those people who aren't sympathetic to the twisted billionaire fuckfaces at RIAA et al, it's a great thing.

  137. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? eBayPLAY by telstar · · Score: 1

    I don't support pay-per-bit, pay-per-song, pay-per-album or pay-per-time. What I'd like to see is pay-what-your-willing-to-pay. Setup an auction-like system like eBay for music. Sell full albums. Sell individual tracks. Get rid of minimum prices. Let's see what the market will support in a completely user-driven market.

  138. Better ? by jefu · · Score: 1
    I haven't searched through itunes, but emusic does not impress me at all - first of all their search interface sucks badly - it should not continually reset to "artist search" once i've selected another kind of search - my assumption is that I'm going to be able to modify my current search after getting a result.

    Worse yet, I searched for the kind of music that I'm interested in - and the kind of music that stands to gain most from this kind of distribution. That is, the stuff that is a bit out of the mainstream. I'd love a place that I could download samples of Messiaen, Ligeti and the like to sample and see if I want more, a place that I could get several variants of (fer example) Steve Reich's "Music for 18 Musicians" - I already have all the published CD's of that, I think - making performances available - even if not the best quality - would be wonderful.

    Being able to download a sample of an artist or composer cheaply enables people to taste things that they might not otherwise try. Making the fringe, obscure stuff available relatively inexpensively could encourage recordings of performances that would otherwise vanish at the doors.

    So I did a bunch of searches (probably 50 or so) and got exactly zero matches. Some of the things I was looking for were :

    • Steve Reich - Music for 18 Musicians
    • Einstein on the Beach - Philip Glass
    • Nixon in China - John Adams
    • Harmonielehre - John Adams
    • - Axiom of Choice
    • - Carla Bley
    • Passion - Steven Sondheim
    • Sweeney Todd - Steven Sondheim
    • - Messiaen
    • Crawl - Ulcer
    • "Waiting for the Electrician" - Firesign Theater
    Some of this stuff is obscure. But thats probably the best area for such services to work in. If Celine Dion (say - or whoever is the manufactured popular choice of the day) puts out a new song, everyone will listen to it and there's a guaranteed set of buyers already. And I expect that that audience is pretty much saturated already. But there's much to be gained by building new audiences off on the fringes a bit - its risky, of course. But making some of this music more widely available could pay off nicely.
  139. Music industry is already dead by dbc001 · · Score: 0, Flamebait
    Only a sucker would pay for any of these services - whether it's Microsoft's, Apple's, or Pressplay or Napster. The music industry is already as dead as the painting or sculpture industries.

    I've never heard of the equivalent of "record labels" for painting or sculpture. That's because nobody cares! In those industries we have galleries, which are basically the same as concerts. But for the most part, painting and sculpture are things that people do for fun. That's what music will be - something you do for fun. Those of you who are actually supporting services like the ones mentioned above are:
    1. Supporting DRM and other oppressive DMCA-like technologies
    2. Supporting the oppressive and ruthless music industry which is already doomed
    3. Wasting your money when it could be used to really support artists by going to live shows
    4. Demonstrating to both Politicians and corporations that data can be "rented" instead of sold

    Think again before you support these services. As far as I'm concerned, even talking about them without mentioning the above points only serves to add to the hype, and will only make the transition to a new paradigm even more painful than it will already be.

    -dbc
  140. No, sir, it just isn't a good deal. by dr.badass · · Score: 4, Informative

    Of course it will expire once you stop paying the sub fee, but which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want? How much is it worth to you to "own" the bits?"

    Which of these is a better deal? :
    1) Pay $1 now, get the one song you want to hear, keep it forever.
    2) Pay $10 now, get the one song you want to hear, keep paying $10 a month for the right to listen to it.

    Apple pretty clearly has a better deal if you buy ten or fewer songs a month (or 120 songs a year). I suspect that this suits a very wide variety of people.

    Beyond that is a grey area, where the better deal basically depends on how much you value the convenience of not having to pay a monthly fee whether you use it or not.

    At the other end are those who could conceivably want to download (say) 30GB of music in a month, which is certainly more than I can listen to in that time. Ignoring bandwidth costs on both ends, these users are probably just as likely to use P2P services and not pay anyone at all!

    The emphasised ability to 'swap in' new music implies that every month you'll want to download all-new material. Not bloody likely, in my experience. But then, if you don't download new material, what exactly are you paying for? The right to listen to music you already paid for!?

    The worst part about this kind of scheme is some people can actually be suckered into it.

    [This post also makes the rediculous claim that filling up a 30GB iPod is going to cost you $7500,
    which ignores the fact that nobody is going to actually do that. At some point, even your average idiot realizes that it'll probably be cheaper rip CDs he already owns, (and those newly purchased -- yes, even people with iPods still buy CDs from time to time!) -- it makes me wish I could mod the whole story as a Troll.]

    I am interested in hearing realistic scenarios in which the subscription service actually is a good deal, but I've yet to hear one thus far.

    --
    Don't become a regular here -- you will become retarded.
    1. Re:No, sir, it just isn't a good deal. by unconfused1 · · Score: 1

      Exactly.

      I'd like to just emphasise your point about the fact that people likely already have MP3's and CD's already that they would like to put on portable music device. The money is already spent...so why pay $120 a year to rent the few more that you want to hear?

      This is just the same old banter from Microsoft about "leasing" media, including software and music.

    2. Re:No, sir, it just isn't a good deal. by JoeBorn · · Score: 1

      While I agree filling up a player with 7500 new songs is pretty rediculous, I'll give you a scenario where this is a good deal. I like to explore new music and I can't use commercial radio to do it, and I don't want to use Kazaa. If the service has a complete catalog (which none have at this point) and the technology is in order (ease of use, good codec, etc) Then for anyone like me, it could be a good deal. I probably spend $100 a year on bad music alone. Admitedly, the above assumptions are not reality for any service yet, but I'd argue if they were, this would be a good deal.

      --
      If you're going through hell, keep going -Winston Churchill
  141. Re:No, not really by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    this blows my load...

  142. I Like Both by overunderunderdone · · Score: 1

    I think the ideal service would offer both becuase each model offers something different. With a subscription service you lose the music when you stop paying - but while you are paying you have a *huge* (unlimited?) music library. You can try out any song or artist or listen to any song you just have a momentary hankering to hear but wouldn't necessarily consider worth purchasing. On the other hand there are some songs you want to "own" that you know you'll listen to years into the future and don't want to have any limitations on.

    I could see a "premier" version of iTunes where you pay a small monthly fee and the streaming 30 second preview tracks switch to being full length and can be added to your regular playlists (but go away when you no longer subscribe). Unpaying users would still have access to the same service they have now.

  143. One more example by Corpus_Callosum · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is one more example of how Apple understands "people" and Microsoft is antisocial. Truly, the Steve vs. Bill show has been funny lately.

    It really comes down to this: How do people feel about handing out their credit-card number, knowing their entire music library will be held hostage for a monthly payment vs. paying a buck for each song they like and keeping it forever without strings attached.

    It doesn't matter that the buck a song model is more expensive, human beings have a pack-rat like instinct to put things they want under their own protection away from "scavengers" or whatever... The idea of a monthly commitment is really just too much... The idea that all of your music can go "poof" if the monthly commitment isn't met is just too much...

    Music palladium will fly like a lead balloon... iTunes for Windows will simply destroy it...

    --
    The reason that it can be true that 1+1 > 2 is that very peculiar nonzero value of the + operator
    1. Re:One more example by saden1 · · Score: 1

      How many hot songs come out each month 2 or 3 at most. Everything else is pretty much garbage. I would gladly pay three bucks a month to buy those 2 or 3 songs I like. If a whole album I like comes out I'll just buy the whole album.

      Just like with their XBox Live thing Microsoft wants to control everything. I guess their thinking is it has worked for them in the past and so sticking to what has worked for them will lead to market successes. I boycott everything that is Microsoft and there are quite a lot of people I influence when it comes to making IT related purchases. They'll have tough time selling me anything and probably 80% those I influence. Good luck to them I say.

      --

      -----
      One is born into aristocracy, but mediocrity can only be achieved through hard work.
  144. quality, selection, guarantee by knowledgepeacewi · · Score: 1

    quality, selection, guarantee... Soon, as media capacity keeps growing, we'll all have every song ever produced as a wav file on our cell phones and this won't matter, but for now, the guarantee that the song I want is going to be there at decent quality, and named correctly, would lead me to buy a song for 99 cents rather than "steal it" (hypothetical). If I was given the lyrics and scores along with the songs I purchased I'd be even more inclined to by them all as one package for 99 cents. I might even pay 10$ for a set of the song, its lyrics, scores, and all remakes of it with the same information.

    1. Re:quality, selection, guarantee by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

      I am the same way. Pretty much I discover artists I like via P2P and a few other sources, and then I buy then CD so that I can rip it to mp3 format at 224bitrate for listening in my car/mp3 player/computer. I also feel better supporting artist I like. The downside is that I am often also supporting RIAA labels that produced the CD.

      You just can't win. At least I can't figure a way ou of this dilema. Also, I am only listening to European artists these days, which makes it hard to get the CD ( in the native language ).

      --
      I can't afford a sig!
  145. A working iTunes alternative by dirtyhank · · Score: 0

    It's called Puretunes. It's a subscription based service and they seem to have a rather broad catalog. I don't like the MP3 are 128kbps and download speed is quite slow. The good news is they're giving away 25 songs upon registration.

  146. i got a collection of around 100 lp's by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    and i dont remember them timing out - i still can listen to them.

    wheres the logic? is the consumer a cash cow?

  147. Different form of renting? by bobthemuse · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I don't mind the idea of 'renting' the music, but the price is too steep for the amount of music I would listen to. Seriously, how many people have 7500 songs they listen to on a regular basis? Is there a subscription service where I can pay to rent by the song by the month (to the tune of a few pennies per month per song)?

  148. Re:$7500 for 7500 songs? by DeusExInfernis · · Score: 1

    With all due respect to the mods, how is this a troll?

    He's right; maybe /. types recognize that this is stealing (or maybe everyone does, and only /. types care, it doesn't matter), but the general public could not care less.

    To the average joe, Kazaa is free music, no consequences, no risks, easy, and generally high-quality (except, perhaps, to audiophiles). So, why is a typical Kazaa user going to switch to iTunes or MS's new system or whatever? Maybe if the prices respected the fact that we're talking about INTELLECTUAL property, that is, property that can be copied without cost (at least digitally), there might be more people willing to pay (reliable downloads, higher quality, licensed, etc.) but until that point, Kazaa is going to be infinitely more attractive to almost everyone.

    --
    ad infernis is et flammas invenis
  149. What a shock... by The+Master+Control+P · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Let's see... A Certain Abusive Monopoly has only been doing this for decades:

    Every time their competitor comes out with a new, innovative service, they create some poor excuse for a copy and sell it as "New, Improved, Innovative." Most people are too god-damn lazy to see through it, and go along with the Party says.

  150. The first thing to give... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    After a couple of months, once a few /.'ers have downloaded more songs than they could possibly listen to in a month, MS will decide have charging bands based on the number of songs you are currently "renting".
    This isn't competition for any music purchase model, it's more akin to a subscription radio service where you get to choose the playlist.

  151. No one will buy all their music from iTMS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People already have dozens of CDs.

    NO ONE buys ANY mp3 player figuring "I need to get some music online and online only"

    People fill their iPods up to 60% with music they've already owned and ripped.

  152. O'Reilly's Safari by NineNine · · Score: 1

    From what I've heard (here on /. included), quite a few people like O'Reilly's Safari subscription service. There may just not be a good reason to "own" the music if you're not going to be interested in it after a few months, or if you like a *lot* of music, and want to have that variety without paying for it. Personally, when I was in tech, I loved Safari. I'd probably like this new service too, if I had all of these new gadgets and broadband. I'll probably use something like it in a few years when the technologies mature.

  153. Slashdot stories should be moderated as flamebait by FunkyMarcus · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Of course it will expire once you stop paying the sub fee, but which do you think is the better deal: $7500 to fill a 30GB player (7500 songs at $1 each) with iTunes Music Store, or $120 a year with the ability to swap in new music whenever you want?

    Where in the article does it say anything about $120/year?

    Are we supposed to be so gullible as to believe that a subscription service would allow unlimited "rentals" for a flat fee of $10/month? What kind of an asinine business model would that be? Does anyone really think that the recording industry would ever make such an offering?

    Mark

  154. the bill by SethJohnson · · Score: 1
    I think paying the "music" bill will eventually become one of those things people consider as part of their cost of living just like the phone bill or the cable bill (at least for people who could benefit from such a service).

    Perhaps you are right. Up front, I balk at the idea of this 'leasing' of audio content. But as you describe, it might convince me to buy in if the selection of content were beyond what I can get elsewhere. For instance, every day I download commercial-free recordings of Howard Stern from the binaries newsgroup. Howard Stern isn't broadcast in my city and is otherwise unavailable. If Stern's radio shows were part of an audio service that I could download and take on my mp3 player when I work out each day, I'd go for that. Could be a whole additional level of syndication for content.
  155. How do you Use the music? by oaklybonn · · Score: 1
    The Apple model gives you the right to burn the music to an Audio CD (as high quality as the original encoding, which is plenty good enough for consumer CD players in cars, etc.)

    It also gives you the right to use the music you've purchased for non-commercial soundtracks to slideshows and digital movies that you produce. A subscription service would obviously not work in this model.

    The only rational way to approach it is to purchase the rights to the music for use in your own creations. Apple has done the legwork in getting the labels to accept this model; they know that the video of your daughters confirmation, set to Madonna's "Like a Virgin", isn't likely to gross big bucks and step on their commercial licensing terms. Remember, this is about individuals applying music they've purchased, and the DRM is in place only to deter large scale duplication.

  156. No ownership? No Way! by bloodline555 · · Score: 1

    At the end of the day, I want to use my music the way I want to. I dont want to be held hostage by microsoft. According to the artical, if I stop paying, MY songs stop playing. If I payed for something I want to be able to use it no matter when I want to use it. Thats why I say, wate a little wile till apple' s service comes to PC, or even better yet, go and get a new Mac!

  157. Might be slightly OT but.. by fatbitch · · Score: 1

    On the subjeect of ownership of music and all..
    I have a CD...

    Its starting to skip and deteriorate quite a bit now, seeing as I have already bought the music, am I able to write to the record company asking for a replacement cd for the cost of the media ??

    James

  158. Owning the bits by fm6 · · Score: 1
    Well, existing services have also had the handicap of a limited selection of material. Still, I like to think you're right -- because I really hate subscription services.

    Not just for music. Why should I have to pay a monthly fee to HBO or Showtime just to watch the one or two programs they have that I like? Why should I have to pay a subscription fee just to WSJ.com to read the odd article? And I'm certainly not going to swith to AOL just to read the content on ew.com!

    Not that I object to paying for content. Content creators have to pay the rent. (Perhaps RMS would understand that if he lost his McArthur pension!) Voluntary payments, help, but not enough. Same goes for advertising, and besides, advertisers like to control the content they pay for.

    Thing is, there's this huge establisment that controls the creation and distribution of that content, and they don't want to give up that control. So they hassle anybody with an alternative distribution model, and lobby for ever-restrictive IP laws, even as technology makes those laws irrelevent. And of course they attempt to offer feeble substitutes, such as online "subscriptions".

    I also suspect them (and/or the financial industry) of stifling the development of technologies that would support a pay-as-you-read model, but I don't really have any evidence.

    I used to assume that the internet would simply make this issue irrelevent. But the content establishment has done a good job of maintaining its control. It's lost a little ground, but not nearly enough to satisfy me. Maybe things will change when everybody has cheap, portable bandwidth. Remains to be seen.

  159. Hey tin ears by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "what "drm" system lets you burn unlimited cds?"

    From 128kb encodings? Its like giving you unlimited ability to make copies of a cassette. Sure, you can, but the quality is iffy, so why bother? ...and before you can say "I can't tell the difference", people who care about quality can and do. Just because you accept shit on a stick, don't blame some of us for holding out for a decent meal.

    1. Re:Hey tin ears by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      then stop fooling yourself by listening to any frigen lossy format and BUY a god damn cd. if you realy gave a shit about sound then you would be paying for CDs not grabbing 256 kbps mp3s (which you can never find).

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  160. Moron Alert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "DRM is needed, otherwise people will copy it."

    CD's don't have DRM, and yet they are profitable.

    But hey, don't let facts stand in the way of your biases.

  161. OH brother. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    1) HD crash all the time. They are the most unreliable part of a PC. I've had 2 fail in the past 5 years.

    2) Worse, 128kb AAC files aren't good quality. And before you compare them to MP3's, notice you mentioned them first. I'm comparing to CD. If you can't hear the difference, people who care about quality can, and we want the option of much higher bit rates. So please do saddle us with crap because low-quality is good enough.

  162. *sigh* by tshak · · Score: 1

    Has the semi-failure of the XBox been the first high-profile dent to MS...

    Seeing as it has the highest attach rate (more profit per console sold because of the attach rate) and an incredible XBox live customer base (based on percentage of customers), I wouldn't call it a failure of any sorts.

    MS has the cash to pay out for an XBox 2 and an Xbox 3 until Sony and Nintendo are gradually put out of the game for the sheer fact that MSoft's bottom line can go deeper than theirs?


    You mean, more cash to dump into a console than Sony - a multinational, extremely diverse, multibillion dollar company? MS must answer to shareholders, and they can't just dump money for the sake of market dominance. For the record, the total amount spent for the XBox is nowhere near what Sony invested in the Playstation - it's an expensive market to break into. Do some googling - education is better than fanatacism.

    And don't worry about MS breaking into this new market. Apple has the unique edge of having the hardware already in place - and very good hardware at that. Apple's success is based on a total "turn key" solution. Something that MS doesn't have (at least for now).

    --

    There is no longer anything that can be done with computers that is nontrivial and clearly legal. -- Paul Phillips
  163. What the actually title for this story should be.. by f0rt0r · · Score: 1

    "Microsoft Prepares An Unworkable Business Model"

    The only way it will work is if they "integrate" it with the next version of their OS and force users to buy a subscription to activate it. Actually, I hope they do that so more people will stop using Windows.

    --
    I can't afford a sig!
  164. Save the $10 by artemis67 · · Score: 1

    Why even spend the $10? If you violate the terms of the EULA, the $10 you spent won't cover your ass. You might have well have just gone online with LimeWire and downloaded everything imaginable for free.

    Legally, you would be in the same situation either way.

    1. Re:Save the $10 by ncc74656 · · Score: 1
      Why even spend the $10? If you violate the terms of the EULA, the $10 you spent won't cover your ass. You might have well have just gone online with LimeWire and downloaded everything imaginable for free.

      More and more, I'm getting the impression that you're safer running warez than if you do the "Right Thing." I picked up a CD at the last COMDEX for some OCR software (FineReader Pro 6) that had some interesting features. I tried it out, found that it'd do what I want, and forked over the $100 to keep it.

      I figured the CD was just some sort of timebomb demo...no big deal, they've been around forever in the shareware market. However, the FineReader "try-before-you-buy" CD infects your computer with CDilla...the same malware that was at the heart of the recent TurboTax controversy. My computer usually goes just a few months between WinXX reinstalls, so the possibility of losing software that I had bought if Windows ate itself or the hard drive went tango-uniform wasn't too appealing.

      The next time FineReader Pro 6 turned up in one of the alt.binaries.warez.* newsgroups, I snagged it. I now have a copy that I know can be reinstalled without hassle. I shouldn't have had to do this with software that I bought. It used to be that you paid for your software to avoid the viruses that supposedly often rode along with warez. Nowadays, though, it seems that with the malware that software vendors such as Abbyy and Intuit are slipping into their products, warez might now be the safer way to go. I somehow doubt this is the situation that they wanted, but that's what they've done.

      --
      20 January 2017: the End of an Error.
  165. Re:emusic is great by Splork · · Score: 1

    They carry *no* Spears albums at all. That's double plus good in my book!

    seriously, these DRMed download services that won't even let you burn to a standard audio CD are a crock. don't expect them to catch on enough to stop CD sales. even if they do, what are the chances that said CDs have anything you want on them?

    (apple's service at least lets you make a CD from which you can rerip into mp3 if you have tons of time on your hands).

  166. Good point... by artemis67 · · Score: 1

    From the RIAA's point-of-view...

    The subscription model has been tried and has fallen flat.

    Apple's model, where the consumer virtually owns the digital file, is an unanticipated runaway success.

    In the subscription model, the RIAA pockets $120/yr. per user.

    In the Apple model, there is NO price ceiling; some consumers may very well spend thousands a year.

    So, seeing as how the ceiling-less model is a hit with consumers, why would the RIAA be so quick to cut their own profits by going back to a subscription model? It doesn't make sense. I would say that subscriptions do have a place, but that's years down the road, after the mainstream consumer has toyed around with the Apple model and begins looking for cheaper alternatives.

  167. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? eBayPLAY by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Auctions work best for limited commodities. What's the use in bidding up a single track or album when the seller can make infinite copies and the same thing will be available the next day?

    It's one thing to bid up a piece of used computer equipment, but something that's purely electronic and is being actively duplicated by the seller? Not a chance.

  168. oh no! by twitter · · Score: 1
    Part of the "advantage" of Microsoft's DRM is that the files will expire if you don't pay your bills. So you don't really own the songs. You're subscribing to a service, like cable.

    Does this mean all my outlook mail is going away if I ever stop paying the M$ tax?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  169. Re:emusic good - they appear to watermark tracks by Splork · · Score: 1

    they did this for obvious reasons. previously the ".emp" or ".rmp" files were simple XML documents with temporarily active URLs to the tracks hosted by mp3.com. scripts could easily rape & raid a huge amount of emusic (ie: not what they intended). Now the ".emp" is still the same xml thing but encrypted with the decryption key embedded in the download manager.

    i disliked the change as well. i had written my own downloader that i would use once or twice a month to get another 10 or so albums. so much for that idea. but their download manager combined with their 'my stash' function works fine for me so its no big deal.

    interesting tidbits after a little poking around:

    The emusic download manager 2.0 appears to be watermarking the mp3 files that it downloads. To check this for yourself, run tcpdump while the download manager is running and get the URL to the actual mp3 that emusic uses to download a track. Fire up wget on this URL and compare what you downloaded to the one the download manager saved. note the corruption + differences. (my own tests performed using the emusic dlm 2.0 for linux; i haven't compared the same track downloaded by two subscribers to check if it really is a watermark or just a bug. it would be difficult for them to screw up otherwise so its likely a watermark indicating who downloaded the track)

    also note that the ancient mpg123 player doesn't like many download manager mangled tracks (mpg321, xmms, and everything else i've tried are happy; mpg123 is presumably buggy about skipping bad frames/data)

    You still get unlimited downloads in an unencumbered format of high quality VBR music. quit whining and praise them!

  170. AGAIN Microsoft can't see the forest for the trees by artemis67 · · Score: 1

    I predict that the next way that the digital music market is going to be segmented is not going to be a resurgence of subscription services (although that will gain popularity down the road, I'm sure)... rather, if Microsoft was smart, they'd look at offering songs at differing bit rates at differing costs. The biggest complaint about Apple's AAC files is that they are encoded at 128 bits, and $0.99 doesn't seem like such a great deal for a rock song that sounds like hell on your home stereo system. So what Microsoft should do is to offer 128 bit songs at $0.99 OR 256 bit songs for $1.50 or even $2.00.

    Look at how wlidly popular Apple's system is right now. It's a perfect opportunity to position the 128 bit files as the low end, and upsell, upsell, UPSELL! And as long as Microsoft was the only place to get higher quality rips, then Microsoft inspires consumer loyalty. I can't believe all those ivy league MBA's at Microsoft don't see this.

  171. you funny! do neither. by twitter · · Score: 1
    $120/year by sticking $6000 up front in any safe investment that earns 2% interest. Yeah, I know that would be a silly thing to do! :-)

    Anyway, I'd prefer a rental system with an option to buy. I could then fill the device with rental music, and when I decide I like something enough to want it permanently, I'd buy it.

    So, you are willing to give M$ the equivalent of $6000 of your cash for songs that will go poof into the eather just as soon as M$ bellies up on declining windblows sales? Yeah, try buying the "rental" music for a buck a song then, sucker.

    All of this is going to blow over. The RIAA will soon realize that they have been "giving" away music on the radio forever because it drives sales. They will soon figure out that sales can be driven by free MP3s too. They will also notice that their Gestapo techinques to stamp out music sharing have failed. None of this crap will survive the colapse of the record companies and their obsolete business model except gimped boxes you can't use anymore.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  172. Be more realistic by jonearth · · Score: 1

    Guys, be more realistic, you think a college kid or most of us will spend $75k per year for music?!? I doubt only professional DJ will do that.

    $120 per year sounds more reasonable to me. The only concern is that the word "unlimited download". We all know that people will download like crazy when they saw the word unlimited. When M$ finds that their bandwidth bill is more than they are willing to play, we will see $120 per year with 100 songs per month...

    1. Re:Be more realistic by Radical+Rad · · Score: 1

      120 songs would be about 12 CD's. I don't buy 12 CD's a year now and when I do buy a CD it is usually for one or two songs. So $120 a year would be the highest priced of the two legal online alternatives for me. And to be quite frank, I usually just tune in one of the local college stations anyway. No commercials and a great variety of music and news.

  173. Subscribe to your bits and own them, too by Polymath+Crowbane · · Score: 1

    There is an alternative for those who want to have their cake and burn it, too: EMusic. For $10/month, subscribers can download reasonably high quality, VBR MP3s and do with them as they wish, short of sharing them with the world.

    The catch: if all you want is the latest ClearChannel dreck, you'll have to look elsewhere. The labels on EMusic are not the Big 5/Top 40 pablum. However, if your taste runs to the esoteric and the adventurous, as well as to college station material, you may want to check it out. 30 second samples of their entire collection is available for visitors to sample.

    I don't really know why this service doesn't get more publicity. IMHO, it's close to the perfect model for online music.

  174. Its not *that* so much as... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    " Are there REALLY that many songs out there, that one person would want to listen to?"

    No, but when you listen to your music at a crappy 128kb compression rate, then I guess you figure quantity has to make up for quality.

  175. [sound of me snorting] by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Nothing in George W. Bush's America is illegal to the rich. He made that pretty clear via the Microsoft Vs DOJ case as soon as he had seized control from President Gore."

    Pardon me while I laugh out loud.

    It was a Democratic president that signed the DMCA which favors huge media monopolies over individuals. Clinton's biggest failings were corruption as it related to breaks for big corporations. The health care plan proposed by his wife was primarily a way to reduce costs to corporations, the fact that a few more people might get health care was a nice PR move, but hardly the point.

    Clinton was the president pushing the clipper chip and key escrow. So he certainly didn't believe you had a right to privacy.

    Not that bush is better in any regard.

    The idea that the Democratic and Republican parties represent differing positions shows you that you've bought into the hype. Democrats and Republicans want the same things to happen. Democrats just trot out the poor and the Republicans trot out the flag.

    Its all sickening. And you buy it. Take the red pill dude and figure it out.

    1. Re:[sound of me snorting] by nagora · · Score: 1
      The idea that the Democratic and Republican parties represent differing positions shows you that you've bought into the hype.

      Be fair: the Democrats are right-wing and the Republicans are far right-wing. Surely that's enough choice for anyone?

      TWW

      --
      "Encyclopedia" is to "Wikipedia" what "Library" is to "Some people at a bus stop"
  176. again, information is not physical by Thinkit3 · · Score: 1

    How many times does this have to be explained...information can't be owned. Next thing people will start insisting 1+1=3, it's just as stupid to say.

    --
    -Libertarian secular transhumanist
  177. You have to ask yourself why... by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 1

    So, what does running a music service have to do with a computer software company? Oh, right, absolutely nothing. Apple went in a completely unexpected and innovative direction with the iTunes Music Store.

    So, why is Microsoft getting into this business? Oh, because Apple did. And Apple is a competitor and must be crushed and destroyed by every means possible. Right, I forgot.

    No, folks, no monopolistic behavior to see here, move along, move along.

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  178. iTunes Music Store: Limits of Ownership? by ml10422 · · Score: 1

    I'm still trying to get a grasp on what it means to "own" a song I bought from the iTunes Music Store. What legal restrictions does Apple place on your ownership?

    For example, if I buy a CD, I can sell it to somebody or give it away as a gift. Can I do the same with a song I purchase from Apple?

    The "Terms of Service" says, "You shall be authorized to use the Products only for personal, noncommercial use."

    Seems like giving a song away would violate the "personal" part and selling it might violate the "commercial" part.

    1. Re:iTunes Music Store: Limits of Ownership? by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1
      First off, the songs you buy from iTMS aren't MP3. They're 128 kbps AAC files. I'm not sure whether the whole file is encrypted, or just some sort of 'ownership' header that QT6 checks before playing.


      When you buy a song from iTMS, it downloads and gets stored in your library, you can play it on your machine, put it on your iPod, or burn it to a CD (audio) or DVD (computer data--won't play in your settop box, unfortunately). Using the new streaming feature in iTunes, you can stream it to computers on your network. However, every time you try to play the file, either streamed or locally, on another machine, it will ask you to "authorize" the computer using your account password, and you can only have 3 computers authorized per song. (This to play the original AAC file--there is no limit to how many CDs you can burn with a particular song on it.)


      But if you really want to pirate, it's not particularly hard, you could just burn it to an audio CD, then reimport the CD to an MP3 or AAC. It would probably be a bit lossy, but a step up from the "1/8-inch stereo cable from my Walkman to audio-in" that people are always talking about being the end of all DRM schemes. But for $0.99 a song, it's barely worth the effort.


      As for being able to sell the songs, I would say probably no, you can't. Same for giving away a CD as a gift, although you might have a little more wiggle room there.


      The thing that I like about the iTMS system is that it lets you burn the songs in a non-DRM format (audio CD) so you can take them and play them in your car, your walkman, etc., etc. I don't own an iPod or other music player, so without this feature the whole thing would be a bit limited. Based on what I've heard about Microsoft's system, they would not allow this because there would be no way to make the songs expire.


      Personally I think that if (and that's a big IF) MS comes out with a music store of their own with a membership system, Apple will probably follow suit. But for now, I think the $0.99 / song pricing is an excellent way to create new customers who want to try the service without getting into a subscription.

      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
  179. Closer by Unregistered · · Score: 1

    If i could keep te music if i cancelled my subscription and could play it on hardware that soesn't support DRM (b/c i already own it) I'd be all over this. $10/month for unlimited dl's is fair, but i don't want to have to deal with restrictions when i can get unrestricted music free. That's what these companies are missing. I was talking to someone who wanted to dl music. He was willing(and would have preferred) to pay, but only Kazaa Lite offered the features he desired.

  180. Re:emusic good - they appear to watermark tracks by anagama · · Score: 1

    I got the DLM running as well after a bunch of fiddling around, but I still feel like whining. I didn't have to do any fiddling around before. Plus, there are other ways they could have gone about preventing data mining, even up to including reasonable download limits. I'm just bitter, but perhaps I'll get over it.

    Thank you for the mpg123 tip. I was wondering why my burning script suddenly quit working. Looks like its time to learn another program.

    --
    What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
  181. The bright side by cplater · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I have been keeping an eye on CD prices since the iTunes Music Store went up, and I think that it may have had an effect on the price of real CDs. I have purchased more CDs in the last month than I did all last year. The reason being the I could buy the CD for the same price that I would pay for it on the iTunes Music Store. The upside being that I now own the full quality CD, and I can rip it at whatever bit rate I like. I have purchased some individual songs, and a few albums from the store when the cost was less than buying the CD, and I much prefer owning the song and being able to do with it what I like, as opposed to having it go away if I unsubscribe.

    --
    -- Charles A. Plater
  182. I know how to fool M$ into blowing dough ... by crovira · · Score: 1

    come up with a bad idea, hype it up, make it look like its making money, and M$ is sure to fall for it, integrate it into their OS and never realize why people look to Apple and Linux for alternatives.

    Repeat until the OS sucks so badly that not even a PHB would buy it.

    --
    MSBPodcast.com The opinions expressed here are my own. If you don't like 'em... Think up your own stuff.
  183. Re:Do my eyes deceive me? eBayPLAY by crashnbur · · Score: 1

    In other words, donations optional. Sort of like how it works now. Except include a more convenient method for donating...?

  184. Yes, $7500 is a bit high .. by McAddress · · Score: 1
    But noone will actually fill up their ipod completely from the music store anyway, so it does not matter.

    Plus, there is a reason why more people have a used the Apple Store than any of the subscription services. They have made a easier to use more inatuitive product, besides the fact that Apple users will use anything that Apple designs.

    More important, after each passport fiasco, will anyone, both users and record labels, want to use a product designed by Microsoft? The labels will be afraid it will be to easy to crack, and users will fear that their music will disappear, even if they do pay the fees.

  185. oh oh oh I got a idea Microsoft by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    the problem with apples software is if u dont know what your downloading you could be spending 99cents on crap.

    this 9.99 service would be great if you could then pay to unlock songs that you like, 50 cents to unlock a file (or download a unlocked song), the music industry would probably go for this since the 9.99 is pretty much only the preview of the music, this would also be great for people who like to buy alot of music, the more u buy the cheaper you really are paying, if you buy 20 songs your paying 1 dollar per song, but if you buy 40 songs your only paying 75 cents per song, 50 songs you would be paying 70 cents

    makes sence to me anyway

  186. How much music do we REALLY need to download? by as0k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Alright, 7500 hundred songs, let's assume an average of 4 minutes per song, that's 30,000 minutes of music, or 500 hours. now, let's say the average person is awake for 14 hours a day, and for the sake of argument, he was a zealotlike fan of music, so he only spends 6 hours a day without music (on average). At 8 hours a day (and I think anyone's willing to admit that's way more than most people listen in an average day) he can listen to his 7500 songs for more than two months at that rate and that's if he NEVER listens to a song more than once, in that 50 day period!

    I guess my point is, can you really fill 30 gigs with music that you actually want to listen to? (thinking music is 'good' and listening to it regularly are two totally different things)

    Just my two cents I guess... I've been doing mp3s since probably 96, but the thing I never understand about my mp3 junkie friends, is that they'll burn 50 gigs of mp3's and maybe 10 of it ever makes their playlist and probably only half get's listened to on a regular basis.

  187. Vaporware by inkswamp · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My take on this is that it's pure vaporware. By some accounts Apple has taken two years to line up deals with the music industry. How on earth could MS do such a thing in such short notice? They can't.

    So, one has to wonder about this. Hmm... could it be yet another attempt by Microsoft to scare potential customers away from what they perceive as a successful venture by announcing their own similar service COMING SOON! So whatever you do, don't get all tangled up with that other service because you know you want to stay on the winning MS team! Don't bother with that other stuff until our kick-ass music service is up and running, say in... um... late 2003 *cough cough* 2006 *cough* *cough* 2008 *cough* never.

    --
    --Rick "If it isn't broken, take it apart and find out why."
  188. Apple persumed dead 20 times .. by klang · · Score: 1

    during the last 20 years .. It must be part of their business plan.

    /klang

  189. More importantly.... by foniksonik · · Score: 2, Informative

    As a moderator who's giving up his points.. I just bought Primus: Sailing the Seas of Cheese from iTMS AND it sounds as good as I remember it from CDs!

    Best experience, best quality, best value for money spent, just the best.... no equal. 'nuff said.

    --
    A fool throws a stone into a well and a thousand sages can not remove it.
  190. Re:emusic good - they appear to watermark tracks by 26199 · · Score: 1

    The key is to stick a custom proxy between the DLM and the net, then extract the URL's and pass them to wget. Much more reliable... plus no watermarking (if that's indeed what's going on).

    Have a look on my site under java/emusic...

  191. Illegal to post, not illegal to download by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Think about it for a moment...

    I download something from Usenet. Why is that illegal?

    Its the equivalent of find a $10 on the street as you walk by.... it doesn't belong to you, but then, its not clear who it belongs to.

    1. Re:Illegal to post, not illegal to download by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you find something on the street which has clearly been stolen, you are committing a crime if you take it home with you. The same thing goes for purchasing suspicious goods. In the case of Usenet, you not only suspect that the files you are downloading have been illegally uploaded, you *know* it. So don't fool yourself into believing that what you are doing is in some way legal.

  192. One key point... by Sentry21 · · Score: 1

    You're missing the one key point about the whole Apple iTunes vs. MS Bagware issue: there are no good music management for Windows. I've tried every popular media-related program, like Sonique (absurd Winamp ripoff), Winamp 2 (player only, no management), Winamp 3 (horribly horribly broken player with hacked-on 'management'), and my current preference, WMP 9 (clumsy, often blatantly stupid, interface, but some of the features are there).

    If Apple releases iTunes for Windows, and it looks, feels, and works the same as it does on the Mac, it will be a better player. If it's still free on Windows, or is at least Quicktime-style trialware (but preferably not nagware), people will download it, and they will like it. The interface is simple and intuitive, and things work the way they should. It will very quickly take the music playing market away from Media Player, Winamp, and the like. Of this I have no doubt.

    Then, people will sign up for accounts with this service, because it's free to do so. Then, when they want to get some song, they'll think to themselves 'Hey, let's see if this really works', and they will. Maybe they'll buy, maybe they won't, but if they do, they'll enjoy the fact that they can move the songs around and everything. Copy here, move there, and if they stop wanting to pay, they stop paying. No loss of music at all.

    If there is a superior product for a similar price that does what people want, all you have to do is show it to them, and they'll switch.

    --Dan

  193. I still don't comprehend theridiculousness by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "If you hear it, they will record"
    As long as a file can be played through speakers it will be reburned into classic MP3s and therefore defy any attempt at revenue capture in the future.

    There is NO WAY to stop that.

  194. didn't you hear me the first time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I told you to SHUT THE FUCK UP asswipe!

    1. Re:didn't you hear me the first time? by the_2nd_coming · · Score: 1

      you shut the fuck up

      --



      I am the Alpha and the Omega-3
  195. Poor moderation by dbc001 · · Score: 1

    There's a difference between fact and flamebait. Just because you disagree with my argument doesn't mean you can call it flamebait. Apparently Slashdot doesn't like people who think outside the slashdot box - maybe I should have mentioned Linux or ripped on Microsoft...
    -dbc

  196. What if it wasn't MS? by JoeBorn · · Score: 1

    What if it was open source? Using Ogg for example? The real question here isn't MS or technology, it's the labels and the licensing. Truthfully, this is vaporware at this stage anyway. But we have been pitched by the services to implement something like this on our device. Now originally, I puked all over the idea, but the reality is that if you can fill up your PC with thousands of songs for $10 a month, its like music on demand for $10/mo. Every service already offers burning or "permenant downloads" for a $1/ea anyway, this would be IN ADDITION to that. If the rest of the service is in order (Codec, complete catalog) I'm kind of coming around to the idea.

    --
    If you're going through hell, keep going -Winston Churchill
  197. This will be a bummer because... by azav · · Score: 1

    Do people trust Microsoft? No.

    Will they use a Microsoft service because it comes installed on all new pcs? Yes.

    New services like this should be regulated if they are to be installed on new systems provided by a convicted monopolist organization.

    --
    - Zav - Imagine a Beowulf cluster of insensitive clods...
  198. WIill this make music even crappier. by metalhed77 · · Score: 1

    With subscription service the record companies don't care whether or not you download x songs a month or not. The only care that you keep on paying. This leads to a situation where there is no incentive to produce wildly popular music where people will truly demand it. With records a major star will cause people to go out and buy a CD. With a subscription popularity won't increase revenue from sales. Since the subscription revenue isn't ubiquitous yet the effects won't be felt. But if it were we'd probably see the smaller labels rise even higher. Either way I don't care because I listen to music almost exclusively from indy labels like www.warprecords.com www.mille-plateaux.net www.tigerbeat6.com www.thrilljockey.com etc.....

    --
    Photos.
  199. Re:emusic good - they appear to watermark tracks by Splork · · Score: 1

    i suspect their arrangement with mp3.com for handling all of the distributed music hosting doesn't allow for easy server side download limits.

    fyi - mpg321 is a drop in replacement for mpg123 i believe.

  200. Re:$7500???? That's a little far-fetched by WebMacher · · Score: 1

    People keep bringing up that "but it costs SO MUCH MONEY TO FILL UP AN IPOD" argument. Frankly, whether it would theoretically cost $5000 or $7500 is kind of silly. First of all, you have to figure people already own music, and they'll be converting it to mp3 and loading it on their ipods. Second, no law says you have to fill it up, any more than you're obliged to stream every song on a music service. (Personally, I want that 30GB iPod for file storage and transfer -- it's an elegant little portable drive!) Third, I don't know about you all, but I happen to work in an office where you're not allowed to stream audio. I have a bunch of mp3s on my hard drive ripped from CDs and downloaded from Emusic, and that's it. If I couldn't own my bits, I'd have no tunes.

    Another thing... I don't like this DRM nonsense getting in my way. I'm happy to pay a reasonable price for music (As I said, I subscribe to Emusic) but I don't want a bunch of complicated restrictions on what I can and can't do with it. I feel that Apple has done a pretty good balancing act here. Streaming audio is great -- if you have high bandwidth -- but that's what Shoutcast is for. Sure, you're not going to get specific songs on demand, but not knowing what an online radio station is going to play next is part of the joy, at least it is for me. (I've discovered a lot of great music through BoombasticRadio.com)

  201. Re:Puretunes by Choron · · Score: 1

    I highly doubt they will be still there after even a few months. Given they even used the non-commercial of Qt for developing their program (you can check that by downloading it , the dll is the qt*nc.dll one), why should I give those morons any of my money ?

    --
    "Naughty, naughty, naughty, you filthy old soomka !"