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DRM Technology To Be Added To MP3 Format

Bob Zer Fish writes "Cnet News.com has a leading story saying that the venerable MP3 music format is getting a makeover aimed at blocking unauthorized copying. Thomson and Fraunhofer, the companies that license and own the patents behind the MP3 digital music technology, are in the midst of creating a new digital rights management add-on. Of course, there are current standards, but most are incompatible." An anonymous reader points to this brief mention as well.

515 comments

  1. So What? by Tassleman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does this mean we have to use it? All my old MP3s will work just fine.

    1. Re:So What? by michaelepley · · Score: 5, Insightful

      They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support.

    2. Re:So What? by Espectr0 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fast forward 5 years, wait until your cpu chip refuses to play non-DRM mp3 and you WILL care

    3. Re:So What? by oohgodyeah · · Score: 5, Interesting

      I say it's time to start saving the setup files to the existing MP3 players w/o the DRM crap attached.

      --

      - OohGodYeah!
    4. Re:So What? by garcia · · Score: 1

      and all the old encoders will still work too.

    5. Re:so what? by Krojack · · Score: 1

      Oooo I'm all for ogg however the 20gig portable i got 2 years ago this month only reads mp3 :(

    6. Re:so what? by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 1

      Oooo I'm all for ogg however the 20gig portable i got 2 years ago this month only reads mp3 :(

      Well, look at the bright side: there's also no chance that your 2 year old player will ever refuse to play some DRMey mp3.

      In fact, better start keeping those old devices preciously, since surely the new ones will eventually flat out refuse to play "unprotected" mp3s ...

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    7. Re:So What? by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      My VCR and DVD player both play things that are un-macrovisioned. I highly doubt that a company would build an mp3 compatible device with such a large limitation to only play encrypted music. What about those that encode their own music... as in music they made.

      Several government organizations (supreme court!) use mp3 as one of the means with which they provide transcriptions.

    8. Re:so what? by trentblase · · Score: 1

      Still waiting for the firmware revision huh?

    9. Re:So What? by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Its also been rumored that Longhorn will try to incorporate some versions of Windows Media player that will only play DRM MP3's.

    10. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      what new cpu ? my 486 plays mp3's nicely thank you very much.

    11. Re:So What? by timeOday · · Score: 2, Insightful
      How funny it would be if all the "where's OGG Vorbis support!?" people turned out to be 100% justified!

      But I doubt it. This is just going to be an obscure extension, like the encryption built into the .zip spec. There's no reason to adopt mp3+DRM. Other codecs already compress better, the only advantage of mp3 is that it's unrestricted and ubiquitous, and mp3+DRM is neither.

    12. Re:So What? by H4x0r+Jim+Duggan · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think a concerted push towards Ogg is what we need. Free Software, Free Society.

    13. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's going to be different about my cpu chip in 5 years, other than the fact that it will be 5 years older? I'm sure all the software I need will still support it.

      As for newer chips, I won't be buying any that limit me like that. Of course somebody would find a way to hack it anyways.

    14. Re:So What? by mcocke · · Score: 3, Funny

      My wife and I own 2 MP3 players (Sony and RCA respectively) and I've converted every bit of music in the house to MP3s, from vinyl and 7" reels onward. I'll go thru all that again - to say nothing of throwing away almost $600.00 worth of electronics that work perfectly - the day hell not only freezes over but hosts the winter olympics. If the RIAA doesn't like that, they can kiss my hairy &%$.

    15. Re:So What? by glass_window · · Score: 1

      Yea, but the sad part is that they gave in to the pressure of the stupid RIAA.

    16. Re:So What? by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      All my CPU's right now are five years or older. So in five years, I'll be using the CPUs from today. They don't refuse to play non-DRM mp3s, do they?

      --
      ---
    17. Re:So What? by SphericalCrusher · · Score: 1

      There will always be free players that doesn't require that. And besides, it'll only target another crowd of crackers to make the software read older MP3s. I don't think they are going anywhere with this, but that's just my personal opinion.

      --
      "Instant gratification takes too long." - Carrie Fisher
    18. Re:So What? by lambent · · Score: 5, Informative

      mp3 in not unrestricted. You have to license it and pay royalties. See here.

    19. Re:So What? by prockcore · · Score: 1

      So use a different media player. Like Winamp.

      Recent versions of Redhat don't come with the ability to play mp3s at all. That doesn't mean I can't play mp3s on my redhat box.

    20. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support."

      Of course you have no evidence to back up your assertion that they will not maintain backward compatibility. It seems that your suggestion is somewhere between paranoid and laughable.

    21. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      " Fast forward 5 years, wait until your cpu chip refuses to play non-DRM mp3 and you WILL care"

      Neither Intel nor AMD has any motivation to do this. They support DRM when it is wanted, but the file creator has the final say as to whther DRM should be used or not. Stop with the alarmist bullshit.

    22. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Right, so, you've spent countless hours converting all the music in your house to a poor quality lossy codec which cannot be transcoded to more advanced codecs without further quality loss, and then you have the nerve to get all holier-than-thou about it.

      No offense, but you're a fucking tool. gg forward-looking.

    23. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All my CPU's right now are five years or older. So in five years, I'll be using the CPUs from today. They don't refuse to play non-DRM mp3s, do they?

      Oh holy hell. Maybe you're enjoying your Pentium 133 right now, but most people aren't. And if you're really as annoying as you seem to be, try ten years. Twenty? How's that Sinclair Z80 doing? Running XP on it, are you?

    24. Re:So What? by ShortBeard · · Score: 0

      Aren't we all using Ogg Vorbis?

    25. Re:So What? by acidrain69 · · Score: 1

      Oops! Watch out for that analog hole! There will always be players out there that support the old stuff.

      --
      -- Having a Creationist Museum is like having an Atheist place of worship
    26. Re:So What? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      What about those that encode their own music... as in music they made.
      That is the point of a lot of this crap. Get rid of competition. You don't think the MPAA, RIAA, etc want you competing with them do you.
      Dave

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    27. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm sorry, but why would anyone get so upset over someone who can't scrape enough dimes together to keep a company running, let alone a website?

      Fraunhofer? really? when's the last time you found that name as any force on or off the Internet?

    28. Re:So What? by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 3, Informative
      Easy way out. Buy a box of Xilinx FPGAs, and some ADC/DAC chips. Download codec and USB cores from Open Cores. Voila - you have fully configurable software-defined external codec units.

      In couple years, when DRM will be ubiquitous, there will be a booming black market with "coprocessor" devices of this kind. Fueled by the abundance of out-of-work engineers and developers, whose job went to the East.

      Nature seeks balance, in medium-to-long-term ignoring the wishes of the money-hungry CEOs. [insert yin-yang sign here]

    29. Re:So What? by bogie · · Score: 1

      That will only ever be a rumor. Even the people designing the DRM code for WMP in Longhorn have non-DRM'd MP3's on their computers. No way they are going to put out a media player that can't play files that almost every user has. That's just silly. Longhorn might support this new DRM'd mp3 spec but it won't require it.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
    30. Re:So What? by Cornelius+the+Great · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Just wait until the RIAA tries to slap Ogg with a DMCA because it believes that the codec is circumventing copy protection by not utilizing any DRM-like technology to prevent unauthorized copying

      I don't agree with it; it's just that I wouldn't put it past lawyers to do that.

      --
      Sigs are for losers
    31. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      oh well, one more reason not use WMP, besides it being, slow, ugly, poor media type support, ................

      im just waiting for the day: "Buffering.....Buffering"

    32. Re:So What? by Technician · · Score: 1

      players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support.


      I'm guessing you are referring to new players. Currently the oposite is true. My indash, My DVD, and Panasonic CD MP3 players all would be unable to play DRM MP3's. Getting me to buy and use a player that won't play my library is going to be a very hard sell. Manufactures know making a player that won't support NON DRM files is a kiss of death. There is just too much stuff out there that is in the public domain (Old Time Radio for instance), Creative Commons, Home Ripping of CD's, LP's Cassettes, 8 Track, Reel-to Reel, Church sermon recordings for shut-in's, etc. There is little reason to deal with an incompatible player. They will be as readly made and avaliable as over the air DTV receivers. (Hint, go to your local store and ask for a 20 inch digital TV because you want to watch Public Broadcast in digital. You will get laughed out of the store. They will be willing to sell you a digital ready moniotr, but not an integrated receiver. Small digital televisions (DTV not NTSC) don't exist in the USA.)

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    33. Re:So What? by Technician · · Score: 1

      Actualy there was a company that tried it with a small optical drive. Remember the Data Play? Remember nobody bought it because it's use was so limited? It's media was so expensive, so restricted? Expect the same for DRM MP3's. Lack of DRM is what makes MP3 such a popular format. If you want DRM, just stick with Windows or Apple formats. DRM MP3 would be just an also ran against the giants, just like Liquid Audio format.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    34. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Fast forward 5 years,

      I can't. It seems that the DRM on this file prevents fast forward.

      wait until your cpu chip refuses to play non-DRM mp3 and you WILL care

      No big deal, I'll just play it on my potato chip. Or the DSP in my mp3 player that works fine today and as a bonus doesn't consume time on my CPU chip that I could use to crunch the numbers from the potato root harvest.

      I'll be more worried when my LAME encoder program won't produce mp3 format files without DRM restriction evilness. Or, worse yet, when it will only produce Windows Sports Utility Media Video files.

    35. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But they have a political agenda - to DRM the world, to help the entertainment industry. So it quite likely will play them, but, to borrow a possibile idea from previous posters, will auto-convert them to DRM'ed MP3s upon playback. They have a political agenda, and regardless of the alternative choices, they can force a market's hand. All your base are belong to them.

    36. Re:So What? by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support.

      This will never work. There are open source players out there, and they can't `outlaw' those (well, they can try, but that won't effect anyone).

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

    37. Re:So What? by mkro · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Let us hope Longhorn will let you install them, then ;)

      --
      I shall go and tell the indestructible man that someone plans to murder him.
    38. Re:So What? by Endive4Ever · · Score: 1

      My Pentium III is from 1999.

      Do I look like a fool? Windows XP?

      --
      ---
    39. Re:So What? by trezor · · Score: 2, Insightful
      • WTF? Do you know how a CPU works? Have you ever programmed in assembly language?

      Well, I do, even at a basic cicuitry level, and yes, I have dony my assembly work. Not sure this goes for the parent poster, and he probably has a tinfoilhat somewhere, but he's idea is not all that messed up as it could seem.

      His point being valid, he might just miss a valid source of paranoia. While the CPU only does what it's told, it's no guarantee that upcoming (Microsoft) OSes will grant access to sound- and video-hardware (with possible Fritz-chips in store) to none-authorized/signed/whatever applications.

      And no, not everyone uses OpenSource-OSes. Not yet anyway, but things like this might change actually that.

      --
      Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
    40. Re:So What? by CdBee · · Score: 1

      "They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons"

      There will be plenty of old copies of iTunes 4.x, Winamp and Windows Media Player in circulation - you can't kill a format, nor, with modern opensource activists and hackers, can you stop one being implemented.

      Besides, so many downloaded copies of iTunes, all capable of ripping to Mp3, the idea of being able to render all the archives of non-protected Mp3s on peoples computers unplayable, or prevent further creation, is ludicrous.

      People use Mp3 to be free of the grip of any one player. I've already defected twice (Real ->Winamp -> iTunes) and may do so a third time. Reinstalls of my operating system will not affect my ability to play my music, and nobody will stop me from doing so.

      --
      I have been a user for about 10 years. This ends Feb 2014. The site's been ruined. I'm off. Dice, FU
    41. Re:So What? by Threni · · Score: 1

      > Just wait until the RIAA tries to slap Ogg with a DMCA because it believes that
      > the codec is circumventing copy protection by not utilizing any DRM-like
      > technology to prevent unauthorized copying
      >
      > I don't agree with it; it's just that I wouldn't put it past lawyers to do that.

      They can try. If they can get money from clients to do that then good luck to them. But they won't win. As long as you are encoding data which wasn't protected (via encryption or whatever, not simply copyright protected) under the DMCA in the first place then it's outside the law.

    42. Re:So What? by ScottGant · · Score: 1

      They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support.

      Or, just use a player that refuses to bend to the will of these idiots. I doubt that xmms will play this game of theirs, or at least give people the option of disabling it in the source.

      But what am I saying, this is Slashdot...if it's not Ogg...IT'S CRAP!

      --

      "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
    43. Re:So What? by Thaelon · · Score: 1

      As for that go here.

      --

      Question everything

    44. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gotta love people who can't read. Didn't the OP say he had 2 MP3 players? Last time I looked, it was pretty difficult to find an ogg player that wasn't a PC.

    45. Re:So What? by Zangief · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Let MS hope that I will install Longhorn :D

    46. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is strangely relevant:

      http://cryptome.org/scappaticci.htm

      Read the bit headlined "A Note on the Original Microsoft WMA file"

    47. Re:So What? by 4of12 · · Score: 1

      I doubt there would be much of a case on that basis, since other media that RIAA members have produced in the past have not utilized copy protection technology.

      But the content is copyrighted and so can not be copied for redistribution, even allowing for copying for fair use.

      Where the legal attack would come is on re-distribution of Ogg versions of copyrighted material.

      The same legal tactic they employ now.

      --
      "Provided by the management for your protection."
    48. Re:So What? by 3terrabyte · · Score: 1
      I wouldn't worry about it. I am sure Justin Frankel would provide us with an openMp3 player.... if the 100,000 other programmers in the world who know how to do it don't continue to.

      Hardware mp3 players are more of a concern. But then again, it's not like it's hard to find a DVD player that can play SVCD's

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    49. Re:So What? by Short+Circuit · · Score: 2, Interesting

      So the DMCA will apply as a proof-of-negligence device?

      That will have enough implications to cause a severe backlash.

    50. Re:So What? by 3terrabyte · · Score: 1
      homebrew, mini-itx, open-source-out-of-the-box kits will be available for under $99 by then, no problem. The only thing we'd have to worry about is if the government actually outlawed ALL chips/chipsets/mb's/routers/ that were not DRM'd. I know that's a wet dream for the content tyrants out there, but we're not there yet. Currently, it's just Fraunhofer making a DRM-mp3 standard. Big whoop. None of us are paying them royalties for mp3 encoding now, why would we switch to their cripple-ware.

      With a superior product like LAME already available, there is no way to undo this solution.

      Hmmm. I noticed that I'm not actually arguing with you about anything. I might not even be replying to you. I just picked you to reply to because of your 'not everyone uses OpenSource-OSes' statement.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    51. Re:So What? by 3terrabyte · · Score: 1
      Why would the LAME encoder program you have now suddenly not work?

      Also, isn't the spirit of LAME to get around the Fraunhofer royalty to begin with? I can't see them making a DRM format, unless it was just an added feature to make files to work on your Ipod IV.

      Also, hasn't the latest version of LAME -aps or -ape already been almost perfected to... perfection? (Sound quality that is) The only reason *quality* mp3's will ever become obsolete would be file size.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    52. Re:So What? by 3terrabyte · · Score: 1

      With all the Justin Frankel's of the world, we'll be safe.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    53. Re:So What? by Johnny5000 · · Score: 1

      "They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support."

      That will work fine until someone finds a way around the DRM support, we continue using the old MP3 players, or write our own that will still play the old format.

      Ultimately, any attempt to break what works now, or makes playing the MP3s more inconvenient is going to fail.

      --
      The libertarian solution to the failures of capitalism is to apply more capitalism til the failures are fixed.
    54. Re:So What? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-ons and players start refusing to play music encoded without the DRM support.

      So in other words, un-DRM'ed MP3s will continue to work forever.

      There's not a single company out there dumb enough to think they can disable support for the terabytes upon terabytes of MP3 files that already exist out there without driving customers away to their more consumer-friendly competitors.

      Vanilla MP3 has momentum working in its favor. It's going to take a revolution to change that.

    55. Re:So What? by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Fast forward 5 years, wait until your cpu chip refuses to play non-DRM mp3 and you WILL care

      My CPU chip will do what I damn well tell it to. It's just a stream of opcodes.

    56. Re:So What? by the_truk_stop · · Score: 3, Informative
      I think a concerted push towards Ogg is what we need.

      Windows
      You can rip to Ogg using CDex and play using Winamp.

      Linux
      You can rip to Ogg using Grip and playing using XMMS

    57. Re:So What? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I already save all the setup files for my software as a matter of course. Especially the downloadable kind I paid for. It's perfect for quick re-installs (had to do it twice in the last 4 years... 1 flaky system, and 1 system disk upgrade)... just burn the directory with all the setup files, and all the registration info, and any updates applied, if that's the only version available. So even if Winamp or DUMeter disappear off the face of the earth, I'll at least have the install files. Now, registering, and verifying the registration for shareware, may be a bit of a problem...

    58. Re:So What? by ksiddique · · Score: 1

      Take a look here for older versions of WinAmp.

    59. Re:So What? by cens0r · · Score: 1

      who modded this up? This is only a rumor if you're wearing a tinfoil hat.

      --
      Jack Valenti and Orrin Hatch will be first up against the wall when the revolution comes.
    60. Re:So What? by Mateito · · Score: 0

      the day hell not only freezes over but hosts the winter olympics.

      Already happened.

    61. Re:So What? by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      And no one told you that the mp3 format was patented?

    62. Re:So What? by SeaFox · · Score: 1

      Hahaha, sounds like market rebirth and suicide all in one swoop. A new era of people paying for MP3 apps again when iTunes 7.0 and WMP 10 no longer play regular MP3's. And the bankruptcy filings of all the companies who try to launch new digital music players (hardware) that cannot play the most popular format on the internet. None of the companies now want to admit it, they say they're all against piracy, but you don't see any of them selling players that will not play MP3s. Because the vendors know the majority of their users are people who DO steal music over peer to peer networks. Any player that does not play the unprotected format will fail in the marketplace.

    63. Re:So What? by tgrigsby · · Score: 1

      Next step: applying the DMCA to software such that software companies must register with Microsoft or some government agency before they are allowed to sell any software that *could* circumvent or be used to replace DRM technologies.

      Imagine: Windows will stop running any software that isn't certified --- oh wait, they already have that......

      hmmm....

      --
      *** *** You're just jealous 'cause the voices talk to me... ***
  2. One word... by UnassumingLocalGuy · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Ogg.

    --
    "Hu, ho, ho-ah-oh-oh-oh. Hu, ho ho-ah-oh-oh-oh. Mario Paint! Whoaaa!"
    1. Re:One word... by the_mad_poster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Yes, yes. Yap yap. Ogg ogg. Zippity doo da and the yellow-motherfucking-brick road.

      In case you haven't noticed, mp3 has made a successful push into the consumer market through concerted marketing efforts. Now, all the geeks can scream OGG! until they're blue in the face - hell, it's the first thing I thought of when I read this (followed closely by "why do I give a shit, I have plenty of mp3 encoding tools that will work just fine") - but nobody is listening.

      Not enough people in the mainstream consumer market are going to adopt Ogg because nobody will support it and they don't know to ask for it. Unfortunately, unless you're preaching to them, you're preaching to the choir.

      As usual, the ignorant consuming masses will continue to get raped on new technologies because they don't know any better and it's in various industries' best interests to keep them ignorant.

      Yippee freakin' ki-yay for capitalism at its shit-eating modern-American finest.

      The government really ought to just lock up the whole population for whatever reason happens to be most convenient, liquidate all their assets, and then turn them (the assets, not the populace) over to the various industry leaders. It's really the only thing that'll make them truly happy.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    2. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No shit! The tighter the grip, the more sand that slips between the fingers.

    3. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative

      I think the word you wanted was "Vorbis". Ogg is a container format, so not really comparable to MP3 (it can also contain video, or audio in other formats such as FLAC). Vorbis is a compression scheme (usually contained in an Ogg file) that's comparable to MP3.

    4. Re:One word... by zoomy · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify in case it already hasn't been done, ogg is the name of a "container". Vorbis is the audio codec which sits inside the ogg containter. So the audio format we want to preach about is infact called Vorbis.

    5. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      no, he meant what he said. it's quite acceptable to refer to a Vorbis encoded stream encapsulated in the Ogg container format as just "Ogg"
      many of the other developers do. Monty even suggests "Ogg" as the ideal way to refer it.

    6. Re:One word... by TheLinuxSRC · · Score: 1

      Ogg. Absolutely. Cuz it works perfect on my CD/DVD/itunes/mp3 player. Seriously though, how much sound quality is lost with a digital --> analog --> digital copy? (For those that did not understand that, plug your CD/mp3 player into your soundcard and record and encode). Granted it is a bit more work, and guarenteed not to be a true 100% copy, but there is some loss in any compression anyway, right? I am wondering if it is distinguishable from a rip and encode.

    7. Re:One word... by micromoog · · Score: 4, Funny
      Not enough people in the mainstream consumer market are going to adopt Ogg because nobody will support it and they don't know to ask for it.

      That, and because Ogg Vorbis is the worst fucking name of all time.

    8. Re:One word... by Gldm · · Score: 1

      Matroska is up there with the worst names too. What is it with multimedia file formats having lame names?

      --

      Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!

    9. Re:One word... by Logicdisorder · · Score: 0

      He speaks the TRUTH!!! We all new it was going to happen DRM MP3s, it was just a matter of time. Ogg is the way the light the truth as is FLAC. :)

      --
      "The most dangerous creation of any society is that man who has nothing to lose." - James Baldwin, American author
    10. Re:One word... by tehdaemon · · Score: 1

      Try it. It sounds like you have the equipment. I await your results.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    11. Re:One word... by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      The file extension says .ogg so unless you want to get into bullshit semantic arguments with everyone you run across, I suggest you try to get the developers to change it.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    12. Re:One word... by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      It depends on what format you're going to. Going out to cassette is going to sound like ass, probably. Going out to another computer's Line In won't lose enough quality for any but the most anal audiophiles to notice.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    13. Re:One word... by ShortBeard · · Score: 1, Informative

      Both the Neuros from Digital Inncovations and the iriver and rio, from some company I cannot remember, support Ogg

    14. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I have the equipment, I do this all the time, you can't tell the difference in ogg vorbis or mp3. This is what the RIAA calls the "analog hole". There is no patch for it at present.

    15. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Totally fucking funny...I agree. One of the main reasons I've never even looked into ogg is the weird name. I'm normally pretty rational when it comes to technology, but I really hate the name Ogg Vorbis. What the fuck does that mean? Nevermind. I don't care. Just change it.

    16. Re:One word... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well that is of course how we used to have to rip cd's. before drives that could rip red book audio wore made. We played the CD which went into the header on the sound card and recorded from there.

      I remember it being quite a big deal when we could start ripping directly as it was quicker and it was a better quality rip.

    17. Re:One word... by Prince+Vegeta+SSJ4 · · Score: 1
      The government really ought to just lock up the whole population for whatever reason happens to be most convenient, liquidate all their assets, and then turn them (the populace, not the assets ) over to the various industry leaders. It's really the only thing that'll make them truly happy.

      Soylent Green is people! it's people!

  3. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Funny

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  4. Try again, and fail again. by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Yet again, this will be a waste of valuable resources. We all know that any attempt at protection of unauthorized copying will fail. With today's standards of source codes being leaded and what not, someone from inside the company will surely provide a work around, but most likely, that won't be needed. Another genius will find some simple solution that works around the protection.

    1. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Scrameustache · · Score: 2, Funny

      Yet again, this will be a waste of valuable resources.

      This is what I think everytime I see some pro wrestling!

      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:Try again, and fail again. by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 5, Insightful

      On the contrary, DRM is amazingly successful at what it intends to do: make unauthorized copying annoying enough so that most people would rather pay 99 cents for a song or whatever it is.

      DRM's just supposed to keep honest people honest. Nobody expects it to pose much of a barrier to people who are hellbent on getting a free lunch.

      Of course, if the implementation is too restrictive, or incredibly obnoxious (like how you have to sit through 10 minutes of commercials at the beginning of the Lost In Translation DVD), then it'll fail in the marketplace. That still doesn't mean all DRM is a wasted effort.

      yours

    3. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 1

      Well, at least pro-wrestling provides entertainment. Trying to protect the illegal copying of music is comparable to trying to tell a young child not to pick up a $20 bill he finds on the ground. No matter what, the child will pick up the money. No matter what, the pirates will have a work around for the protection.

    4. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 2, Insightful

      While as of now, the DRM success is true, you know as well as I do that in the future, DRM will be lauged at. Someone will make it so the "average joe" has a perfectly easy time of getting around the DRM, or the "average joe" may become computer savy enough to figure out how to get around it himself.

    5. Re:Try again, and fail again. by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's what I used to think too, but I dunno... If it's iTunes you're thinking of, the "average Joe" already has a perfectly easy alternative to the music store--he can just go on Kazaa and download whatever he wants. Or on the rare occasion that Apple's DRM actually gets in the way of something you want to do, you can always just burn the track to CD and rerip. But in that case you've already bought the track, so it wouldn't matter.

      So it's pretty easy to defeat the DRM, and yet iTunes is wildly popular. I think this is generalizable beyond iTMS.

    6. Re:Try again, and fail again. by MikeCapone · · Score: 4, Insightful

      DRM might eventually get easy to get around for the "average joe" on computers (some kind of popular deDRMizer software), but I'm not sure that the average joe's mp3 player/DVD player/whatever will be as easy to crack.

    7. Re:Try again, and fail again. by webtre · · Score: 0

      You are an ignorant fool. I'm sure if I were to open up everything that you did in life I'm sure I'd find something wasteful.

      --
      litigious bastards
      suck it sco!
    8. Re:Try again, and fail again. by ddsoul · · Score: 1

      ... and monster trucks!

      --
      *604x
    9. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hit fast forward - you can skip through them

    10. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      You allude to the iTunes Music Store with your "99 cents for a song" comment, I assume.

      I just bought a new (recent release) CD from it for $9.99. I subsequently burned a copy for everyone at my office, and we all split the cost. 5 copies, $2 per copy = $10. The office paid for the blank discs, and it was sanctioned, as the boss was one of the recipients of the discs. The office also paid for the CD labels, whipped up quickly by our resident graphics guru (me) from only the included album cover art and a copy of Illustrator 10 (with a bit of chop-help from MS Paint).

      Total amount earned by the music industry for 5 copies of that CD: less than $9.99.

      I generally consider myself an honest person. Hell, at least my copy is "legal". But really, DRM doesn't keep even honest people honest. It just makes media company CEO's think they have a bigger penis than you do. And if that's what they wanna think, then great. I have some herbal viagra and some penis lengthener pills they could buy from me...

      Anyway, the fact is, super-restrictive DRM only pisses off paying customers. Why? Because paying customers don't know what it is. Anyone that knows DRM exists has the exact piece of knowledge needed to bypass it. So, in essence, all DRM is a wasted effort.

    11. Re:Try again, and fail again. by SeinJunkie · · Score: 1

      DRM might eventually get easy to get around for the "average joe" on computers (some kind of popular deDRMizer software), but I'm not sure that the average joe's mp3 player/DVD player/whatever will be as easy to crack.


      Sure it will:
      1. Go out with Average Joe's DVD player on some free dates in Hawaii.
      2. Tell Average Joe's DVD player that you like it a lot and have strong feelings for it.
      3. Choose a much more attractive DVD player instead to betray the trust you gained from Average Joe's DVD player.
      4. Tell the other DVD player you once dated Fabio and end up alone with no DVD player at all.

      What were we talking about?
    12. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Whilst DRM might seem sucessful, there is still currently an avenue for illegal copying/pirating whatever. If that avenue is closed, then it may not be as successful

    13. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DRM might eventually get easy to get around for the "average joe" on computers (some kind of popular deDRMizer software), but I'm not sure that the average joe's mp3 player/DVD player/whatever will be as easy to crack.

      That's ok, you don't have to crack it. Its input is a string of bits, you just need to know how to crack those bits.

    14. Re:Try again, and fail again. by LMCBoy · · Score: 1

      I have some herbal viagra and some penis lengthener pills they could buy from me...

      I HATE YOU!!! STOP SENDING ME EMAIL!!!
      DIE DIE DIE!!!

      --
      Liberal (adj.): Free from bigotry; open to progress; tolerant of others.
    15. Re:Try again, and fail again. by ratsnapple+tea · · Score: 1

      Touche. :-) Still, I doubt that most people, most of the time would go to even that small amount of trouble to save themselves 10 bucks. iTunes' DRM keeps most people in line most of the time, given current technological limitations and social habits. Maybe not even "most," come to think of it. Enough people, enough of the time.

      And that's really all DRM can hope to do, I think. Happily, that's still enough--apparently--to reassure content owners they can put their work online without the universe imploding around their heads.

      yours

    16. Re:Try again, and fail again. by erikec · · Score: 0

      Yes, iTunes is popular with a subset of computer/music users that are able to afford dropping money for luxury items like Macs and iPods. The biggest segment of music purchasers are in their teens and early 20's. People that have more time and networked knowledge (social and tech) than money. Are there any demographics on iTunes users deny my supposition or confirm it?

    17. Re:Try again, and fail again. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DRM's just supposed to keep honest people honest.

      To echo Dr. Felten, if that's all it's supposed to do, then all you need is a "don't-copy-me" bit.

  5. Ummmm.... by iLL_L0gic · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why not just illegally trade the "old format" mp3s then? Or am I missing the totally obvious?

    1. Re:Ummmm.... by lightspawn · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Why not just illegally trade the "old format" mp3s then? Or am I missing the totally obvious?

      Officer, arrest this man. He is obviously a user, and probably a dealer, of a terrorist-grade operating system weapon, capable of running audio playback software software (and undoubtedly encryption software too) not expressly authorized by the ministry of rights (MiniRight).

      Yes, I know it sounds like a joke, but so did the DMCA before 1998.

    2. Re:Ummmm.... by bored1 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I assume eventualy companies will stop supporting the old format

    3. Re:Ummmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why? What motive do they have to break people's old files?

    4. Re:Ummmm.... by Barlo_Mung_42 · · Score: 1

      I have one more mod point to burn but there isn't an option for Scary.

    5. Re:Ummmm.... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah you are kind of missing something obvious. Thomson and Fraunhofer aren't a media company, they just create the codec. Media distributors want DRM, so Thomson and Fraunhofer are just upgrading the product to reflect the marketplace.

    6. Re:Ummmm.... by Scarblac · · Score: 1

      Why not just illegally trade the "old format" mp3s then? Or am I missing the totally obvious?

      Officer, arrest this man. He is obviously a user, and probably a dealer, of a terrorist-grade operating system weapon, capable of running audio playback software software (and undoubtedly encryption software too) not expressly authorized by the ministry of rights (MiniRight).

      Ha ha ha, but copying music is already illegal. If that legal approach was working for them they wouldn't need all these DRM schemes.

      --
      I believe posters are recognized by their sig. So I made one.
    7. Re:Ummmm.... by throbber · · Score: 1

      The newspeak for Ministry of Rights would be "Might"

  6. new music protection by tsunamifirestorm · · Score: 0, Redundant

    ...and the never ending battle against illegal music use continues...

  7. OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quick! Everybody that's still using mp3 switch to Ogg !

    1. Re:OGG by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Quick! Everybody that's still using mp3 switch to Ogg !

      And how much do you want to bet no player will ever support ogg? If it's the only open music format left, you can bet music player manufacturers will avoid it like the plague, because if they don't, they might attract the wrath of the music industry on them. And it's not a bunch of OSS enthusiasts who'll change anything. Not player manufacturer will go openly against the RIAA maffia ever. Period.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    2. Re:OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      I'll bet you anything! Because there are already a number of music players, such as the Rio Karma that play Ogg Vorbis just fine.

    3. Re:OGG by JET+666 · · Score: 3, Informative

      too late there out there http://wiki.xiph.org/VorbisHardware

      --
      De sig boss de sig
    4. Re:OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      there are already a number of music players, such as the Rio Karma that play Ogg Vorbis just fine.

      What part of "If it's the only open music format left" don't you understand?

    5. Re:OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What part of "And how much do you want to bet no player will ever support ogg?" don't you understand?

      There are already Ogg Vorbis players. They won't just disappear.

    6. Re:OGG by base3 · · Score: 4, Informative
      Not player manufacturer will go openly against the RIAA maffia [sic] ever. Period.

      One already has. It was called Diamond Multimedia, the inventor of the Rio. If you'll recall, they stared down both barrels of an RIAA lawsuit, fought off a preliminary injunction (the RIAA tried to use the AHRA and the absence of a "serial copy management system" to interfere in the marketplace) and introduced the first commercially successful portable MP3 player.

      --
      One CPU cycle wasted on digital restrictions management is ONE TOO MANY.
    7. Re:OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Quick! Everybody be the squillionth persion to mention Ogg!

    8. Re:OGG by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      without a distrubution channel with the content and credibility of iTunes, player support for OGG might very well disappear.

  8. Couldn't you remove the DRM? by JustinXB · · Score: 0

    Can't you remove the DRM from the MP3s once this comes out? All you have to do is redirect the stream to a file instead of a MP3 decoder, no?

    1. Re:Couldn't you remove the DRM? by zero_offset · · Score: 1
      The concern is that hardware players will eventually be changed to refuse to play media without DRM tagging (which assclowns like Fraunhofer can force upon them because they own the MP3 format).

      I suppose the another possible concern is that the DRM will involve some kind of encryption which would prevent (thanks to the DMCA) anything but a legally licensed player (in code or in hardware) from reading the audio stream, making it effectively illegal to remove the DRM changes. Of course, at that point it would be an MP3 in name only -- not that most of your Man On The Street types would care, or probably even know.

      --

      Slashdot quality declines as the number of hot grits posts decreases. - Provolt's Law, Apr-09-2005

  9. Yet another reason by OverlordQ · · Score: 2

    to switch to Vorbis/FLAC/et al

    --
    Your hair look like poop, Bob! - Wanker.
  10. What? Why? by Liselle · · Score: 4, Insightful

    We have AAC/MP4, to name one, which is already superior to mp3 in quality, and ready-made for a DRM candy-coating. The only advantage mp3 really has at this point is penetration, and I'll wager that those days are numbered.

    --
    Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
  11. Useless by Tuxinatorium · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It won't stop anyone from using the old mp3 format, much less from distributing old mp3s. And then any music that can be played can be ripped to standard mp3 with simple tools. This will have absolutely ZERO effect on piracy.

  12. It won't make any difference... by zorg50 · · Score: 3, Funny

    but anything that makes the RIAA complain a little less is good in my book.

    1. Re:It won't make any difference... by Moocowsia · · Score: 0

      Hey you forget that they'll bitch and complain when they find out its not working :P

      --
      Moo!
  13. The point being? by eth00 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    What is the big deal about this? Sure if you use the new codec its going to be protected but what is to stop somebody from using cd-ripping software from today without it or just using a different codec? Its a good idea but there does not seem to be any point about it other then service like itunes can distribute smaller files but still have the DRM on it. Another good idea but it seems to be rather pointless and useless.

  14. Of course by savagedome · · Score: 4, Funny

    We all knew this was coming. Madonna yelling in the mp3s was never going to be enough!

    1. Re:Of course by DonServo · · Score: 3, Funny

      I thought that was a standard feature of all Madonna songs... Oh, wait...

  15. Oh yeah, THIS is gonna pick up BIG TIME... by MukiMuki · · Score: 0

    I'm sure EVERYONE's just gonna JUMP on this new standard. I mean, mp3's venerability can't POSSIBLY have anything to do with its lack of DRM. No sir, not at all.

  16. Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Cnet News.com has a leading story saying that the venerable MP3 music format is getting a makeover aimed at blocking unauthorized copying.

    And I have a shiny sixpence in my pocket that says people will avoid the new "improved" version like the plague and stick to the older, user-friendly, non-RIAA-bullshit-encumbered version of the standard.

    --
    "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    1. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by kakos · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I have a shinier sixpence in my pocket that says most people that use MP3s won't know the difference and will use it out of ignorance.

      For every anti-DRM nerd out there, there are 50 (or more!) common people that just want to listen to music.

    2. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Insightful

      For every anti-DRM nerd out there, there are 50 (or more!) common people that just want to listen to music.

      Yep, I agree, people are mindless drones who'll buy players, then will buy music, then will play music and not think twice about it.

      Then one day, they'll change their player and the new one won't play the 3 year old music files they had bought, because the "standard" has changed, and since the previous standard was not open, they'll have to buy their music *again*. And that is when the drones wisen up and begin to hate the music industry and stick to older, more "illegal", but open file formats.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    3. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Erick+the+Red · · Score: 2, Insightful

      For every anti-DRM nerd out there, there are 50 (or more!) common people that just want to listen to music

      But the common people are the ones that use Kazaa and will totally miss the new mp3s because they won't be traded over p2p.
      --

      DO NOT WRITE IN THIS SPACE

      ok
    4. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      non-RIAA-bullshit-encumbered

      I really wish you /. people would stop using all this technical jargon. It's getting hard to follow. ;)

    5. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by black+mariah · · Score: 1

      Hey, you just described how it's ALWAYS been. Records, then tapes, then CD's. Every 10-15 years a new technology comes along to usurp the old.

      --
      'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
    6. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by tepples · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Except unlike LP and cassette, Compact Disc Digital Audio has already crossed the threshold where the medium's noise floor is below an adult human being's noise floor, even if the listener can hear a sigma or two better than average.

    7. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At least until a single person cracks it and uploads it as a regular mp3.

    8. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Evil+Pete · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Although, what usually happens is someone has this nasty experience early on in the piece and then tells all their friends who tell their friends, by email these days as well. Pretty soon the product in question is dying due to 'word of mouth'.

      Eh. But then I'm an optimist.

      --
      Bitter and proud of it.
    9. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Jacer · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You know, I resent the fact that you consider anyone who doesn't know the difference between a ogg file, an mp3 file, and an AAC file a mindless drone. Do you know how everything in your body function? How to diagnose illnesses and treatments. The medical analogy might not be as comparative, so how about hobbyist mechanics. Do you know every part of your car, or even remotely all of them? How to change them and troubleshoot problems? They're are plenty of smart people out there, much smarter than you it would seem, who don't know much about computers, but it would seem that only us geeks are the really arrogant ones. Maybe it stems from all the social problems we had to endure. Anyway, I grew out of my elitest phase, I'm going to recommend that you do too. On a side note, I decided to reply rather than to mod you retarded, or troll.

      --
      --fetch daddy's blue fright wig, i must be handsome when i release my rage
    10. Re:Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already by Paulrothrock · · Score: 1

      You know, I resent the fact that you consider anyone who doesn't know the difference between a ogg file, an mp3 file, and an AAC file a mindless drone. Do you know how everything in your body function? How to diagnose illnesses and treatments. The medical analogy might not be as comparative, so how about hobbyist mechanics. Do you know every part of your car, or even remotely all of them? How to change them and troubleshoot problems? They're are plenty of smart people out there, much smarter than you it would seem, who don't know much about computers, but it would seem that only us geeks are the really arrogant ones.

      I don't find the fact that they don't know the difference between OGG, MP3 or AAC the problem. That just means they're uneducated on the topic, but still have valuable insights into other matters.

      My problem is with the people who can't be bothered to learn the difference between them. These people usually have very little to offer, and mechanics are often as frustrated as geeks are, because they can't be bothered to learn how their cars work.

      However, I also suggest we drop our elitist personas. Not because the ignorant deserve respect, but because mechanics are really good at taking their money, and we should be too.

      --
      I'm in the hole of the broadband donut.
  17. Hrmm.. by Metallic+Matty · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Just one more reason I love ogg.

    Besides, someone will just find a way around this, there always is, nothing ever works long against these ingenius pirates.

    1. Re:Hrmm.. by Krojack · · Score: 1

      Where theres a will.. theres a way...

  18. Won't Make A Difference... by gotroot801 · · Score: 4, Informative

    ...since Lame doesn't use the Fraunhofer codec, and is widely available for most major platforms.

    Honestly, has anyone even consciously *used* Fraunhofer's codec in the last four years for personal MP3 encoding?

    1. Re:Won't Make A Difference... by Ineffable+27 · · Score: 1

      There's nothing in the article that says the DRM 'add-on' only applies to MP3's encoded with the Fraunhofer codec.

      --
      "He'd be a broader guy if he had dropped acid once." - Steve Jobs on Bill Gates
    2. Re:Won't Make A Difference... by DeeKayWon · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Honestly, has anyone even consciously *used* Fraunhofer's codec in the last four years for personal MP3 encoding?

      What, other than every single person who has made MP3s with iTunes or MusicMatch?

      Cripes, man! Ever gone to a mainstream P2P network? LAME-encoded MP3s are the exceptions there, not the rule. I see far more Xing and FHG-encoded files on Kazaa and WinMX than LAME-encoded files.

    3. Re:Won't Make A Difference... by LighthouseJ · · Score: 1

      I'm using it right now to encode the audio tracks of episodes of Sealab 2021. Yeah, I could use another codec but it's not like tomorrow every mp3 player available will be DRM-only.

    4. Re:Won't Make A Difference... by modipodio · · Score: 1

      Doesn't itunes use its own mp3 encoder and not Fraunhofer's one?

      http://www.sonarnerd.net/projects/wavcomp/

      --
      __________________________________________________ "UNIX is a fascist state, Windows is a democracy.
    5. Re:Won't Make A Difference... by DeeKayWon · · Score: 1

      Nope. In Help -> About iTunes, right after the Apple copyright notice, it says "MPEG Layer-3 audio coding technology licensed from Fraunhofer IIS and THOMSON multimedia."

  19. There Goes the Neighborhood by Fallout2man · · Score: 1

    I truly hope this move is reconsidered, and if they do make this move, I hope everyone who's makes use of mp3 decoding/encoding refuses to add this. The public DOES NOT want DRM, and I can only hope that enough people in the right places will at the very least make this sort of move as painful and slow as possible.

    The mp3 format was the one "standard" you knew would always be DRM free, I truly hope it continues to be that way.

  20. not ogg again!! by AmigaAvenger · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I can hear all the geeks screaming how ogg is the best thing on the planet. only problem is hardware support is almost nonexistent... Yeah, there are a couple of devices, but by and large most devices support one or maybe two formats. mp3 and wma. mp3 is here to stay!

    1. Re:not ogg again!! by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Did we not say that about tape cassettes, or VHS's? Sooner or later, I think there will be a transition to OGG, or some other format, and MP3 will become a thing of the past.

    2. Re:not ogg again!! by garbagedisposal · · Score: 1

      " mp3 is here to stay! "
      not any more man...

    3. Re:not ogg again!! by Rosco+P.+Coltrane · · Score: 4, Funny

      I can hear all the geeks screaming how ogg is the best thing on the planet. only problem is hardware support is almost nonexistent

      Dude, you so don't understand the ogg philosophy.

      See, ogg is the true geek music format: it is therefore *expected* not to be widely supported, otherwise it'd be taken over by big bad corporations, taken on by the music industry, and it'd become well-known and geeks couldn't go about preaching the good word on how good it is to the ordinary pleb.

      Anyway, no need for ogg players, true geeks listen to Metallica just by reading the hex printout of the ogg files, printed with mpage -16.

      --
      "A door is what a dog is perpetually on the wrong side of" - Ogden Nash
    4. Re:not ogg again!! by Cid+Highwind · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...and you think those existing devices are going to support this new lobotomized mp3 format? Not a chance. MP3+DRM will require a whole new crop of music players that are built to deal with licenses and encryption.

      If you're going to rip your music to an incompatible format with little to no hardware support, you might as well pick ogg vorbis.

      --
      0 1 - just my two bits
    5. Re:not ogg again!! by nmoog · · Score: 1

      No, but there is also no hardware support for MP3s with DRM. If you have to make your hardware support MP3 with DRM, you may as well implement OGG Vorbis compatiblity as well - seeing as ogg sounds so good compared to mp3.

    6. Re:not ogg again!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I've kind of wondered why Vorbis doesn't have wider support in portable devices. Isn't there free source available for decoding using only integer math? Seems like that would make it reasonably easy to add Vorbis support. Is it a matter of low consumer demand? Insufficient processing power?

    7. Re:not ogg again!! by bishiraver · · Score: 1

      The Neuros is a 20GB mp3/ogg player with open source software, linux software, etc. It retails for about 200 bucks, and has one of the best battery return policies I've ever seen. I've had mine for about 2 months and am extremely happy with it... especially its built-in FM transmitter.

    8. Re:not ogg again!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm surprised you could hear that over the din of the much louder crowd of people who invariably whine and complain about those who enjoy using ogg more than other, encumbered, formats.

    9. Re:not ogg again!! by Politburo · · Score: 1

      The difference between OGG and MP3 is not the same as the examples you mention. In going from audio tape to CD, or VHS to DVD, the difference in quality and features was HUGE! That was the reason DVDs, and to some extent CDs, caught on so fast. The difference between MP3 and OGG is currently almost non-noticeable.

    10. Re:not ogg again!! by dragongrrl · · Score: 1

      I can hear all the geeks screaming how ogg is the best thing on the planet

      uhhhmmm noooo... not exactly

      OGG is lossy, too. just like mp3. bootleg traders (and music lovers) flee from lossy compression formats like Homer flees from the PBS Posse.

      vive la FLAC, SHN, APE ... !!

  21. Finally... by ryanvm · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Good - perhaps this is what we've been needing to finally kill off MP3. Thomson and Fraunhofer are morons if they think this will help market share. The *only* compelling feature of MP3 over WMA or whatever is that you don't have to dick around with licenses for your MP3 playing hardware.

    Long live Ogg Vorbis.

  22. cracked/ by sumdumass · · Score: 1

    i suppose it would be craked in a couple of hours. i asume microsofts will b e cracked too but, who wants to be a felon by doing this in order to have fair use of the stuff they buy.

    1. Re:cracked/ by kccricket · · Score: 1

      Wasn't there a time when using/linking to/possessing DeCSS made you a felon? Despite that, it seemed popular enough then.

      --
      * chirp * chirp *
    2. Re:cracked/ by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      You suffer the "felony" punishment only after being busted. If your "illegal behavior" can't be easily detected, you're fine.

      As long as people won't be stopped on the streets and the firmware of their players audited by the cops, I don't think people will be too concerned about commiting this kind of crime.

    3. Re:cracked/ by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      So verry true. But i think it is still ironic (with the laws and courts) stating you have fair use rites and then possibly throwing you into prison for attemping exorcize to them. I guess i'm just dismayed about the state were you make a criminal out of someone that should be completly inocent. As this type of stuff goes on with time it can become a frighning place to live in. what would happen if they made sure everyone over 18 had the right to vote but due to security measures no-one could drive a vehicle on election day. Thats a bit of topic but shows the lunacy of this.. maybe there should be a law defining fair use and that drm couldn't violate that and/or the dmca won't apply in those scenarios. i know they have rules (guidelines) already in place to deal with obsolete software and such.

  23. What incentive? by re-Verse · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I mean really... why would anyone, except those making a profit off of selling music, adopt this? I guess I can see someone shifting to a new format - lets say a lossless format came out with the same filesize of mp3, but with DRM, maybe people would tolerate it. But this.... this makes no sense? Its just plain old mp3 all over again! Its like saying Hey buy this new TV - its the exact same in every other way from your old TV except it punches you in the face every time you change channels to avoid commercials"

    Am i missing something here, or am I just stupid?

    1. Re:What incentive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't worry, the marketdroids will call it enhanced and Grandma E-mail will fall for it.

    2. Re:What incentive? by jjeffries · · Score: 1
      Neither, I think. Perhaps they just want to have a format that they can pitch to those who want to distribute DRMed content, and make money by licensing the software. It's better from a business perspective to have a go at it rather than nothing at all, and no different from plain ol' Windows Media vs. DRM-encrusted WMA files.

      disclaimer: yes, yes, drm sucks

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

      Don't underestimate the power of marketing.

    4. Re:What incentive? by LittleBigScript · · Score: 1

      No, you're just not seeing the old bait and switch. They'll either make it the default somehow MP3 off of a music site. Or they will advertise it with something like 50% better compression, or better sound quality. Then by the time people have switched, they will start to realize they've been had and all of their music files have been "corrupted" with this.

      Fortunatly there is no pefect security, or unfortunatly.

    5. Re:What incentive? by Atmchicago · · Score: 1

      Dude, in Soviet Russia, TVs already punch you in the face when you change channels. Get with the times.

      --

      You can lead a horse to water, but you can't make it dissolve.

    6. Re:What incentive? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Thomson's (flawed) business argument is its
      relationship with content owners; specifically
      not audio but video content owners. Thomson owns
      Technicolor, and Technicolor has special
      relationships with movie studios, notably Disney.
      Thomson's consumer electronics businesses are
      handcuffed by this greater corporate need.

      There are other forces at work in this particular
      case. The OMA DRM is the only viable alternative
      to Microsoft DRM, which locks people in to wma and
      wmv. Thomson has a strong patent portfolio in
      non-proprietary audio and video codecs including
      mp3 but also mpeg2 and parts of mpeg4. Microsoft
      offers a "one stop shopping" including Windows
      Media codecs and MS DRM, and Thomson needs a
      little industry leverage to avoid getting raped
      by MS in licensing fees (a game they know a lot
      about.) and also getting locked in to the loser
      MS Windows CE operating system.

      This is all even further complicated by the
      fact that M$ owns a few percent of Thomson.

  24. This is great by ixplodestuff8 · · Score: 0

    Now when I defeat the DRM I can keep the same filename and not have to update my playlist!

  25. Extension? by Rexz · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I really hope this changed format has a new file extension. If it doesn't then it will make searching for even legitimate MP3s using peer-to-peer software a nightmare. OGG is looking more attractive all the time.

    1. Re:Extension? by Junta · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly why companies would be very interested in having something that 'makes sense' to call .mp3. They want the market to be confused in the hopes that DRM becomes more ubiquitous, as it has failed to thus far. People are not crazy about .aac and .wma precisely because the names are closesly tied to the DRM concept in people's minds. True, neither require DRM, but that feature weighs so heavily on the mind of the consumer, the (.wma/.aac)==DRM perception is pretty well entrenched. .mp3==good/free beer is very entrenched and thus people wouldn't have the same issue with DRM-enabled mp3, and the best DRM (in the minds of the RIAA, etc) is where the user doesn't know his file is afflicted until it is too late. If someone wants to retrieve a file, that person has thus far been frequently willing to go a little out of the way to get the 'safe' mp3 format version rather than risk .wma/.aac files even if they are easier to get. If user ends up with crippled mp3 and is a common person, I would give >90% probablity they won't bother to do anything about it so long as they have already went through the trouble and can hear it themselves. Sharing with his buddies is a nice plus, but he won't give a rat's ass if it involves a sufficient amount of work when he has already gone through enough to get what he has for himself.

      --
      XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    2. Re:Extension? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hmm, a new file extension?
      What would a PHB pick...

      I know! mp4

    3. Re:Extension? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah and I hope it doesn't even really matter what the fuck the extenstion is. Who wants another fucking Three Letter Extention. Can we please get away from the +3 extention bullshit.

  26. I think by asit+ler · · Score: 0

    I think this will usher in the time when we see Ogg Vorbis and FLAC and other non-DRM formats floating around the major P2P networks. Already, 80% (estimate mine) of the music floating around the OpenFT network is in ogg vorbis format. Lots of the stuff floating around the FastTrack network is in mp3 format, but some is in WMA. I have seen around 20 or 30 ogg vorbis files (other than my own) on FastTrack. Gnutella has plenty of Ogg stuff floating around, due to the OSS nature of the network. At least the Neuros and the Karma support Ogg and (at least with the Karma) FLAC formats, so when my media becomes DRM-"protected", I'll be able to still listen to my music without constraints.

    I assume the creators of LAME won't incorporate this "technology" into their very fine encoder until heavily-armed military officers show up at their developers' doors and breathe down their necks as they incorporate it.

    --
    This is not the sig you're looking for.
    1. Re:I think by asit+ler · · Score: 2, Informative

      They want to double click an installer and have their OS Ogg enabled.

      They have one:
      Winamp 2.91 plays Ogg Vorbis, among others

      If they're using Windows Media Player to play their music, they deserve to have the DRM chain yanked, hard.

      People switching to WMA or AAC with iTunes instead of sticking with an older MP3 encoder as has been suggested here would be dumb as hell. WMA and AAC both have DRM installed, and enabled by default (iirc from my unhappy times trying to convert my WMA crap to Ogg goodness, but I don't know about AAC's default)

      DivX is commercial software, and can thus afford to hire a webmaster who can be allowed to wake up stupid one day. Xiph's webmaster is probably one of their core coders.

      DivX is also supported by winamp 2.91, without any plug-ins other than what comes with it. In addition, I'd definitely say that the AVI format was originated by someone other than DivX, given that according to Wikipedia, the AVI format is defined (thus was originated) by Microsoft. So DivX becomes an extension on a Microslut format that can be played by extensions to Microslut World Domination Take-over Software (aka WMP), thus making DivX itself only playable by third-party software. (Am I correct here in saying that having another party other than the DivX team and the end user-- in this case, WMP-- makes DivX third-party software?)

      I'll give you that installing DirectShow filters is rather beyond certain users-- my mom included-- and that getting a standardized installer for the poor souls who have to use WMP would be a tremendous idea. But having users switch to WMA or AAC just makes for another inevitable format war; Ogg works on nearly every platform ever, with the possible exceptions of the Atari and the Amiga 500.* AAC works only on iTunes or very very compatible players; WMA works on Windows and WMP for Mac.

      On another note, has Fraunhofer shown any interest (positive or negative) towards Linux and the OSS community? If they have, could this be an attempt to squeeze Linux out of the market for multimedia and thereby desktop systems? And is it possible (conspiracy theory) that Microslut could have funded them and/or be providing coders for this heinous act? (/conspiracy theory)

      (*) For those who didn't catch it, this is a flat-out JOKE.

      --
      This is not the sig you're looking for.
    2. Re:I think by bigberk · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Ogg won't be popular until the developers get off their asses and put a big link on their front page that says "Install Ogg for Windows!".
      Winamp is a heluva bigger web site and is the media player of choice for anyone who knows anything about music. Winamp has supported ogg for quite some time now (in the full download). Most Winamp users can play ogg right now
  27. Re:Hi Ogg by Eric_Cartman_South_P · · Score: 5, Funny
    Hi Ogg, nice to meet you, i just broke up with MP3, want to go out?

    OK! But we have to walk to dinner. No car...

  28. Two more words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Nobody cares.

    1. Re:Two more words: by spune · · Score: 1

      No one cares about Ogg, or no one cares about the defiling of mp3? I care about both, eh, seeing as I like my music playable and all.

  29. Don't forget the power of the patents by Qzukk · · Score: 4, Insightful

    While they have been very willing to let anyone decode mp3s (charging royalties only for the encoders), there is nothing to keep them from announcing tomorrow that no more mp3 players can be made or released without this new DRM technology.

    And that they want a nickel for every download of a player.

    --
    If I have been able to see further than others, it is because I bought a pair of binoculars.
    1. Re:Don't forget the power of the patents by Snoopy77 · · Score: 1

      And then how long until Winamp will support Ogg as a standard file format (no plugin required). Musicmatch already supports Ogg too.

      Yeah converting Mp3s to Oggs is going to make for some crap quality audio files but you gotta start somewhere.

      --
      "She's a West Texas girl, just like me" - G.W Bush Iraqis
    2. Re:Don't forget the power of the patents by kfg · · Score: 1

      . . .but you gotta start somewhere.

      I start with CDs.

      KFG

    3. Re:Don't forget the power of the patents by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      how long until Winamp will support Ogg as a standard file format (no plugin required)

      I could be wrong about this, but doesn't Winamp use plugins for *everything*? I think it basically just takes stuff from an input pluging, optionally runs it through some DSP plugins, an writes it to an output plugin.

    4. Re:Don't forget the power of the patents by 0x0d0a · · Score: 2, Informative

      I don't believe Fraunhoffer has patents that would block decoder implementation -- just encoder implementation. This has come up on Slashdot before.

      Of course, I'd hardly shed tears if this damages MP3's viability. I'd much rather see people using Ogg Vorbis...

  30. Goodbye .mp3 hello .ogg ! by gentoo_is_hyped · · Score: 0

    and good fucking riddance!

    --
    [Gentoo is hyped. Modded into the ground to suppress opinion]
  31. Too Late by Lord+Kano · · Score: 4, Informative

    MP3 is so deeply entrenched in its current form, the public isn't going to switch. There are untold Terrabytes or even Petabytes of MP3s in the world that have no DRM. It's pure idiocy to think that people will just switch from the free and open (in their minds, if not truly in reality) format that MP3 currently is to another one.

    It's a waste of money to develop an add on and try to force it on the market. That won't happen.

    Then again, "Trusted Computing" might be enough to force people.

    LK

    --
    "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    1. Re:Too Late by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe its time to start calling it "Thrusted Computing"

  32. Putting DRM into MP3 at this point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...is like trying to take piss out of a swimming pool.

    Good luck, morons. Nobody is going to adopt it, plain and simple.

  33. so what? by unclefungus · · Score: 0, Redundant

    we still have ogg :)

  34. Goodbye .mp3 hello .ogg ! by garbagedisposal · · Score: 0, Redundant

    and good fucking riddance to DRM !

  35. Re:What? Why? by Fiona+Winger · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, actually, if you examine and MP3 and compare it to an AAC/MP4, you'll see that the MP3 picks up more of the static, higher frequency sounds. While this sounds bad, these are actually the sounds you hear on snare drums and high pitched singing and guitar solos. To me, it looks like AAC/MP4 will be past over until something new and big comes out. MP4's just won't cut it.

  36. You can have my music... by NotQuiteReal · · Score: 2, Funny
    ... when you pry it from my cold, dead ears.

    Eeeeew, is that a plug of earwax?

    --
    This issue is a bit more complicated than you think.
  37. MP3 to Ogg by k_stamour · · Score: 2, Informative

    Kinda not a good idea as goinf from one lossy to another makes the end result a file that sounds "less" that the original but......
    Here are some MP3 to Ogg Misory one could try

    --
    Julius Caesar - Act I, Scene i: "What mean'st thou by that? Mend me, thou saucy fellow!"
  38. Re:Hi Ogg by Trogre · · Score: 4, Funny

    OK! But we have to walk to dinner. No car...

    Not a problem. The dinner, like the lunch, is free.

    --
    "Nine times out of ten, starting a fire is not the best way to solve the problem." - my wife
  39. You're all missing the point by sahonen · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This will not destroy compatibility with existing MP3s, nor will it stop piracy from people ripping. They are just making a DRM-enabled MP3 format for online music stores to sell so that Fraunhofer can start getting the royalties it was trying to get in the first place when it started charging for the MP3 format. Microsoft is getting loads of cash for licensing WMA, and Apple is getting wads of greenies for licensing AAC, Fraunhofer is just trying to get in the game. There will still be MP3s without DRM, just like there are AAC and WMA files without DRM.

    --
    Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    1. Re:You're all missing the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This will destroy compatability with existing players. You'll be getting MP3v2004 when your players will only support MP3v1992. So you can go buy MP3s from some website that won't actually work on your old MP3 player. Blech.

    2. Re:You're all missing the point by ravenspear · · Score: 3, Informative

      Apple is getting wads of greenies for licensing AAC

      Nope. That would be Dolby. They own the rights to AAC and therefore are the ones that license and make money from it.

    3. Re:You're all missing the point by sahonen · · Score: 1

      Sorry, my mistake. Won't be making it in the future, thanks.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
  40. Two words... by Oopsz · · Score: 1

    Ogg Ogg.

    1. Re:Two words... by JamesTRexx · · Score: 1

      That should be "Ogg Vorbis". :-P

      --
      home
  41. Re:What? Why? by Quasar1999 · · Score: 0, Funny

    [Peter (family guy) nasal laugh] hahahaha... he said penetration! hahahahaha...

    --

    ---
    Programming is like sex... Make one mistake and support it the rest of your life.
  42. Thank God for Vorbis... by Supp0rtLinux · · Score: 1

    since we all know that once this is in place, all new versions of media players will support only this new type of MP3 and will likely not play our older ones. Maybe Johann (of DeCCS fame) will write a workaround...

  43. This could really suck by c · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seems like it might end up doing to the MP3 format what record company DRM is doing to the CD... Creating a format where you don't know if you'll be able to play it until you hit "play".

    And if they can enforce DRM in authoring tools through nasty patent licensing, well, you can maybe kiss MP3 goodbye as a useful format.

    That sucks. The CD in my truck doesn't do OGG...

    c.

    --
    Log in or piss off.
  44. Hmm... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I wondered how Napster 2 could be any worse.

    At least Apple/iTunes seems to have a clue...

  45. Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by RalphBNumbers · · Score: 5, Insightful

    You do all realize there's nothing stoping anyone who feels like it from putting a DRM wrapper arround an ogg file, right?

    Just because some people sell music in a DRMed/encrypted version of some open format like MP3 or AAC doesn't automatically make that format evil.

    --
    "The worst tyrannies were the ones where a governance required its own logic on every embedded node." - Vernor Vinge
    1. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by homeobocks · · Score: 0

      But .ogg is an open standard!

      --
      MOUNT TAPE U1439 ON B3, NO RING
    2. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by dtfinch · · Score: 5, Informative
    3. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Aneurysm9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      True, but vorbis is also dedicated to the public domain without patent encumbrances which would allow the extension of the format and forced acceptance of that extension on pain of license revocation. Xiph.org can do whatever they want with vorbis, but there's nothing they can do to prevent me from sticking with the version of libvorbis I currently have and improving it.

      --
      There was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of a bus to never-ever land.
    4. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, 'since everyone has been harping on how the GPL isn't viral lately, and the related rants at GrokLaw, it seems they can legally do something to "prevent [you] from sticking with the version of libvorbis I currently have and improving it."

      They could just withdraw their code, and while anyone with a copy could then sue them for monetary damages, they still wouldn't be able to legally use the code.

      Of course, the lack of pattents does mean they can't keep others from starting over and writing their own reverse-engineered version of vorbis.

    5. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure there is, I can always go to their competitor who sells a non-DRM'd version. Problem solved. Open source wins again.

    6. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      I can always go to their competitor who sells a non-DRM'd version. Problem solved. Open source wins again.

      Your problem is solved only if the media content you want is unprotected.

    7. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by LordLucless · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Yeah, but unlike MP3, OGG is not patented, and thus it's not possible for a single company to control the format.

      If some stupid media player company decides to make their player play only DRMed OGG files, nothing stops someone else from writing a player that doesn't from open specs. In the MP3 world, they could be sued into oblivion for doing so.

      --
      Just because you're paranoid doesn't mean there isn't an invisible demon about to eat your face
    8. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by dryeo · · Score: 1

      Well laws can be passed to make your old libvorbis illegal. Think about the next generation DMCA. Remember when having 128 bit encryption was considered the same as having a weapon. In todays climate that weapon might be helping terrorists so the government can do anything to stop you.
      And don't forget other countries are always trying to catch upto America the Free.

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    9. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And so is AAC. Anyone can license it. Anyone can also license Fairplay for that matter (but that's not an open standard like MPEG-4's AAC).

    10. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > there's nothing they can do to prevent me from sticking with the version of libvorbis I currently have

      Which doesn't help you at all if you buy a player that only supports OGG-DRM.

    11. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by boots@work · · Score: 2, Informative

      They could just withdraw their code, and while anyone with a copy could then sue them for monetary damages, they still wouldn't be able to legally use the code.

      What are you smoking? They can take down their own FTP server, but they can't stop other people redistributing it.

    12. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      But nobody can force device vendors to include DRM if they want to use ogg.

      It looks like future licensees of the (patented!) MP3 format may be required to include DRM, which would mean that no new devices with non-DRM MP3 could be produced or sold.

    13. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Much of the core vorbis code was written by people associated with Xiph, and therefore copyright for that code belongs to them. They could withdraw their code, and as the relavant groklaw rant points out, you can't sue for damages in the form of code.

      The original distribution would still be out there, but Xiph could make it illegal to use it.

      Sorry if this disturbs your illusions of what the GPL and related liscences can do, but it's simple reality.

    14. Re:Why does everyone automatically yell OGG? by boots@work · · Score: 1

      They could withdraw their code

      They granted me a licence to use and redistribute the code. The licence may only be terminated on certain specific conditions. The licensor cannot terminate the licence at will. Therefore, I continue to have a licence. I don't know where you get this "withdrawing" idea from.

  46. More insidious by nuntius · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Is when MS Media Player (or even Windows) automatically "upgrades" your MP3's for you. Unless you had good backups, all your MP3's are now DRM enabled.

    1. Re:More insidious by JET+666 · · Score: 1

      i'm just glad i went ogg

      --
      De sig boss de sig
    2. Re:More insidious by Aneurysm9 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      No, it's modded insightful because it offers *insight* into the dangers posed by technology when our own software can be used against us. The same could be said of Apple or Real or WinAMP any of the other closed-source media player providers. If we don't know what our software is doing there's nothing preventing it from appropriating our own content from us. To extend the GP's fear, what happens when I play an MP3 of my own music and a media player wants to add DRM to it? Who gets the right to tell me where and how I can use my own creation?

      --
      There was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of a bus to never-ever land.
    3. Re:More insidious by timeOday · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Why is this tripe moderated insightful? Because it bashes MS and has some absurd theory in it?
      Or is it because Microsoft explicitly reserves the right to pull this kind of crap?
    4. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Hi my name is clippy, I see your playing non-DRM MP3s would you like me DRM enable them?

    5. Re:More insidious by phrasebook · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, Media Player does have the ability to automatically update your WMA/MP3 files with tag info from the internet. So I guess it does already modify your files, if you enable that option (I think it is enabled by default, but you can turn it off during the install).

      And in the Copy Music options, the option to 'Copy protect music' is enabled by default for when ripping CDs.

      So I guess by some extension you might think 'Copy protect MP3s' would get in there in a future version and be on by default.

      But yeah. MS bashing again.

    6. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      easily fixed. make your mp3s read only. why would you ever have to write to the file post-ID3 tag adding anyhow?

    7. Re:More insidious by phrasebook · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Who gets the right to tell me where and how I can use my own creation?

      In reality it will probably be you who gets that right, under Tools -> Options...

      But if not then I see your point :)

    8. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

      As for me, I'm just glad I don't have to sit in the cubicle adjacent to yours and inhale your fumes all day.

    9. Re:More insidious by nomadic · · Score: 1

      Whatever MS' faults, and they have a lot of them, they so far haven't forced people to upgrade third-party software. Or at least I've never experienced it.

    10. Re:More insidious by Aneurysm9 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Right, there likely will be an option to turn it off. You and I are smart enough to know to look for such an option. Then again, you and I are also smart enough to look for other options, such as vorbis, xmms, etc.

      --
      There was Cowboy Neal at the wheel of a bus to never-ever land.
    11. Re:More insidious by iq+in+binary · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Wrong, the parent posts a good question because the answer is not only quite potent but quite obvious: they do . And we have made that way ourselves, people. The problem is many of you don't know that.

      The reason they get to decide is because of the DMCA, an act passed by our representatives in government. People that we elected. Is this situation a problem? Yes. Who's fault is it? Ours .

      The good thing is we can rectify this problem by being more responsible with our voting than we have been in the past. Look at Bush, only in the office in the first place because people felt picking the lesser of 2 evils (Gore would have been a nightmare)was prudent. Yet they had more than 2 choices. It's time to start looking at the ballot carefully folks.

      All would-be presidents promise to fix problems. Noone has made it to office on the premise of changing things, just on the premise of fixing broken things. Half the time, what they promise to fix isn't broken and the change stands to make the candidate's current employer benefit greatly. The promise of fixing things is their trick, it makes you think of his intentions as opposed to his motivation. Although determing motivation is hard, there is a way to vote responsibly even not knowing this information.

      Next time you go to the ballot, try thinking about things like a natural human being. Think about their negatives. All the advertising is meant to focus your mind on things the are a benefit to them when you see or hear their name (even accusationally slanderous ads, everyone knows who funded those ads--the opposing team). If everyone thought about the problems Bush would cause as opposed to the "good" things he'd do, he would have never been elected. Same thing could be said about Gore too, but if everyone had taken my advice 5 years ago they would have never been elected to candidacy either.

      --
      Of all the Universal Constants, here's one I know: Nice guys finish last ;)
    12. Re:More insidious by Solosoft · · Score: 1

      Let them ... when you have 15,000 MP3's you'll notice when it does this and it will only take X amount of time before someone cracks Windows Media Player.
      Whatever they send out it seems crackers will crack it
      as long as XMMS plays my music im happy

    13. Re:More insidious by dryeo · · Score: 2, Informative

      Sure they have. They used to change DLLs regulary to make sure Win programs didn't run anywhere else which broke some programs and they seem to need new upgraded device drivers every couple of versions

      --
      https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverted_totalitarianism
    14. Re:More insidious by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1

      One of the reasons to keep things on read-only mediums (including but not limited to CDROMs, DVD-Rs, and read-only network drives).

    15. Re:More insidious by orthogonal · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, Media Player does have the ability to automatically update your WMA/MP3 files with tag info from the internet. So I guess it does already modify your files, if you enable that option (I think it is enabled by default, but you can turn it off during the install).

      It is apparently enabled by default. I take great care to set up my mp3 tags "just so", using the excellent OSS MP3BookHelper.

      I took my portable to work one day, and in order to charge the battery, I plugged it in as a USB drive and played my mp3s with Windows XP's Media Player.

      Naturally, Media Player went out and started downloading supplementary information about the tracks being played, including a .jpeg of the album cover. Ok, more than I asked for, and I don't need Microsoft cataloging my music, but not terrible.

      But then, once Media Player discovered that there were MP3s on the drive, it insisted on iterating over the entire 60GB drive, in order to make a "convenient" database of my mp3s. Now, recall, the whole point of using Media Payer had been to recharge the portable's battery via USB. Iterating over the entire drive, of course, ran down the battery faster than the USB current could recharge it.

      Then, to provide further "convenience", Media Player -- without so much as asking -- also rewrote the Mp3 tags I'd worked so hard to get the way I wanted them, adding proprietary Microsoft tags that didn't conform to the ID3 tag specification (the tag names were longer than four bytes, being prefixed with something like "MediaPlayer/"), and, worse (iirc) using its own judgment to rewrite some existing tags.

      It's this sort of attitude on Microsoft's part -- that they are going to "help" me, whether I like it or not -- that more than anything else drives me away from using Microsoft products.

    16. Re:More insidious by jack_csk · · Score: 0

      Now, is it clippy or crappy?

    17. Re:More insidious by krusadr · · Score: 1

      This is not the fault of the voters. this is the fault of the electoral rules that allow for unlimited financial contributions to political candidates so that they can _appear_ to be be representing the people when it's perfectly obvious they have to pander to their paymasters first. And their paymasters are of course big business.

      Most European countries have strict limits on campaign contributions, so this type of large scale corruption is easily spotted. Why should anyone be suprised that while there is big money in politics there is no room for the interests of the little guy. Big business interests come first.

      We can bitch and moan and wonder at the crazy decisions of our political leaders but they are mostly decided behind heavy panelled doors with a promise, a cigar, a handshake and a slap on the back.

      When the system changes to restrict this ridiculous corruption then you'll start to see polititians who actually represent the people instead of this charade that exists now.

      --
      while sco {
      wget -O /dev/null http://www.sco.com?sco=litigious%20bastards
      }
    18. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The interesting thing is that its obvious to the rest of the world - who get more objective news - that in fact Bush never was elected in the first place. In the second place we know that the world is a less safe place for us all now - with Bush in power ... and we are sympathetic with the view that Time magazine and the new your times quietly expressed - that the probability of set 11 actually occurring was much higher with bush in power as the recommendation to crack down ol Al Quaida was sent back by bush for a re thing where as Gore would have acted on it....

      I wouldnt look carefully at the ballots... i would start insisting that your elections are rigged.

    19. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...because campaign contributions have been linked to the First Amendment, as a form of protected speech.

      How is spending money an act of political speech?

      Lobbying, campaigning, voting...those are all actions of speech. But spending money?

      What it has turned into is quasi-Constitutionally protected bribery.

    20. Re:More insidious by denzombie · · Score: 3, Flamebait
      felt picking the lesser of 2 evils (Gore would have been a nightmare)

      Please enlighten me here. Maybe you know something about Gore that I'm not aware of. I though his only drawback was Tipper who spearheaded getting maturity labels placed on CDs.

      Well, there was the quote about him inventing the internet. But, I can't honestly think he would have been worse than that squity eyed little redneck we have for president now.

      --
      --- Evil robots don't kill people, Mad scientists kill people.
    21. Re:More insidious by Technician · · Score: 1

      Unless you had good backups, all your MP3's are now DRM enabled.

      Anything worth keeping is backed up on write once media (CDR). Any OS that changes the format when moved with the OS is a defect in the OS. If my copy of my CD MP3's won't play in my car, the hardware/software that made the copy is broken and will be treated as such. I have a good back up of a working OS and media.

      --
      The truth shall set you free!
    22. Re:More insidious by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      from what i read, this doesn't apply to WMA's. Definately not OGG's. Just convert all your songs to OGG's (or wma if you have to).

      And how long till this gets hacked anyway?

    23. Re:More insidious by scottme · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I took my portable to work one day, and in order to charge the battery, I plugged it in as a USB drive and played my mp3s with Windows XP's Media Player.

      Why? Why? FFS, WHY? And why act so surprised? You should know what WMP is like - if you didn't, you do now. Plus, there are well-known and superior alternatives to WMP, so it cannot have been anything other than pure indolence that caused you to choose to allow WMP to screw up your files.

    24. Re:More insidious by MikeDX · · Score: 0, Offtopic

      Sorry to sound negative, but this is akin to:

      I took a shredder to my bedroom once, and started to put my penis into the gap where you normal put paper. To my horror, my penis started to get shredded! blood and cartilage everywhere. The shredder was eating my penis faster than my body could grow a new one! Ok so it repainted my room all red but still, I didnt ask for it. Oh the pain, the pain of it all!

    25. Re:More insidious by hrm · · Score: 2, Funny

      You typo of Media Payer gave me an idea. In the spirit of M$, may I coin "MediaP(l)ayer"?

    26. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hardly, try this:

      "Hi, my name is Clippy. The music you are playing is not Trustworthy(tm) and may contain viruses. Upgrading now..."

      Notice the scaremongering, the gratutious (and dishonest) use of "Trustworthy", and the lack of choice in the matter.

    27. Re:More insidious by norite · · Score: 1

      Yeah, just change the access permissions on your Linux mp3 directory to "read only"
      Then when you have a bunch of freshly ripped mp3's from that CD you bought that you want to add, just change the permissions to allow writing, then change back to read only... Much faster and convenient than burning a new CD every time. :)

      --
      -- Fuck Beta
    28. Re:More insidious by parksie · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But they won't say it like that. It will most likely be "Would you like your music files protected against unauthorised access?" with an explanation about how you paid to get them (micropayments/napster/yadda yadda) and other people are dirty freeloaders.

      They seem to be quite good at brainwashing the average user...

    29. Re:More insidious by filenabber · · Score: 1
      I was thinking the same thing. He mentions using OSS to get the tags the way he likes them then plays them with WMP. There are plenty of free (and some are OSS) players. I run Windows and NEVER use WMP to play ANYTHING.

      Brian

      --
      Are you a Candy Addict?
    30. Re:More insidious by parksie · · Score: 1

      Quick question...is it possible to convert an mp3 to mp3-in-ogg...that is, Ogg MP3, without transcoding the audio data to Vorbis?

      One nice thing I'd love to do is have my existing encodes re-containered with decent tagging, but all I could find were transcoders.

    31. Re:More insidious by visgoth · · Score: 2, Funny
      Hmm... a show of hands, please. Who here uses MS Media Player to play their mp3 files?

      [tumbleweed rolls by]

      Ahh, I thought so.

      --
      My patience is infinite, my time is not.
    32. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's right. Blame the user.

      - Bill G.

    33. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative
      Okay, for the last time. Gore never said he invented the Internet. He said, "During my service in the United States Congress, I took the initiative in creating the Internet." His words were taken out of context. He never said, "I created the Internet." If he honestly believed he had created the Internet, he would have said, "... I took the initiative by creating the Internet."

      See for yourself.

    34. Re:More insidious by HTH+NE1 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, there'll be an option to turn it off, just like there is in Macromedia Fontographer to save fonts with embedding allowed (there isn't).

      --
      Oh, say does that Star-Spangled Banner entwine / The myrtle of Venus with Bacchus's vine?
    35. Re:More insidious by npsimons · · Score: 1

      The reason they get to decide is because of the DMCA, an act passed by our representatives in government. People that we elected. Is this situation a problem? Yes. Who's fault is it? Ours .

      Wrong, at least in my case. I didn't vote for the fuckers, and it sure as hell wasn't my money that lobbied to have them vote in favor of DRM.


      Besides, in this case, this has nothing to do with government. This is a corporation responding to "market forces" (those forces being media corporations that will buy this technology). The proper response is to boycott. Don't use DRM and you kill two birds with one stone: boycotting the company and not allowing yourself to be restricted.

    36. Re:More insidious by Experiment+626 · · Score: 1

      The Clinton/Gore administration did bring us the Clipper chip, DMCA, Mickey Mouse copyright extention act etc. As Vice President he may not have quite as much influence in such short-sighted policies as the President, but in the absense of policy statements to the contrary during his campaign, it's not unreasonable to expect more of the same if Gore moved into the Oval Office. Unfortunately, Bush isn't really any better on IP reform either - when is the last time you heard him call for an overturning of the DMCA?

    37. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      u dick

    38. Re:More insidious by Fear+the+Clam · · Score: 1

      Look at Bush, only in the office in the first place because people felt picking the lesser of 2 evils (Gore would have been a nightmare)was prudent. Yet they had more than 2 choices.

      Bush won because of people failing to pick the lesser of two evils. People who exercised other choices (Nader) cost Gore Florida and New Hampshire. It's all well and good to be idealistic, but not at the expense of reality.

      I'm registered as an independent, but today I was a Democrat for ten minutes to vote for John Kerry. I prefer Howard Dean, but Kerry has a better chance of beating Bush. Right now getting Bush out of office is more important to me right now than worrying about sending a message.

    39. Re:More insidious by gebbeth · · Score: 0
      I agree. People have the tendency to vote along the lines of who is most likely to win citing that they "do not want to throw their vote away." I say, don't throw your vote away by voting for someone other than the candidate that you want in office. It is not about the lesser of two evils, it is about who you think should be in the office in question. There are more than two candidates, look into them.

      Wrong, the parent posts a good question because the answer is not only quite potent but quite obvious: they do . And we have made that way ourselves, people. The problem is many of you don't know that. The reason they get to decide is because of the DMCA, an act passed by our representatives in government. People that we elected. Is this situation a problem? Yes. Who's fault is it? Ours . The good thing is we can rectify this problem by being more responsible with our voting than we have been in the past. Look at Bush, only in the office in the first place because people felt picking the lesser of 2 evils (Gore would have been a nightmare)was prudent. Yet they had more than 2 choices. It's time to start looking at the ballot carefully folks. All would-be presidents promise to fix problems. Noone has made it to office on the premise of changing things, just on the premise of fixing broken things. Half the time, what they promise to fix isn't broken and the change stands to make the candidate's current employer benefit greatly. The promise of fixing things is their trick, it makes you think of his intentions as opposed to his motivation. Although determing motivation is hard, there is a way to vote responsibly even not knowing this information. Next time you go to the ballot, try thinking about things like a natural human being. Think about their negatives. All the advertising is meant to focus your mind on things the are a benefit to them when you see or hear their name (even accusationally slanderous ads, everyone knows who funded those ads--the opposing team). If everyone thought about the problems Bush would cause as opposed to the "good" things he'd do, he would have never been elected. Same thing could be said about Gore too, but if everyone had taken my advice 5 years ago they would have never been elected to candidacy either. A professor in philosophy is not a philosopher, but a scholar. He who quotes merely knows of the matter, not what it is.
      --
      A closed mouth gathers no foot.
    40. Re:More insidious by holizz · · Score: 1

      *click* No
      Oh, you do?
      *click* NO!
      Sorry I thought you clicked yes. All your MP3s are now DRM-enabled.

    41. Re:More insidious by d34thm0nk3y · · Score: 1

      well, just because he reads slashdot does not AUTOMATICALLY mean he is unemployed. Some of us do actually have jobs. Some jobs involve computers, and some work computers will not allow users to install programs. I do not think that it is a lot to ask that playing some mp3 files through WMP should not result in the destruction of my data. It is bad enogh he had to use WMP in the first place!

    42. Re:More insidious by morgue-ann · · Score: 1

      Who here uses MS Media Player to play their mp3 files?

      I do, on Windows XP, because I'm trying to avoid booting it at all. The only thing I can't do on Linux so far is edit DV video, update the phonebook on my cellphone and do my taxes with TurboTax.

      If I install WinAmp, ExactAudioCopy, cygwin, and emacs, I'll be tempted to boot Windows more often.

      I have WMP 9 and Real Player in their least private settings because I don't believe I have any privacy from Chained software anyway.
      0

    43. Re:More insidious by wolenczak · · Score: 1

      Hi, my name is creepy

    44. Re:More insidious by gargan · · Score: 1

      wish i still had mod points. this is exactly the situation i am stuck in at work.

      --
      Emory: Uh..we're still..beta testing that.
      Oglethorpe: What you're testing is me and my patience!
    45. Re:More insidious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why don't you just go through your folders and make your MP3's read-only once you're happy with the tags? Touch it once and forget it.

      - Tobasco

  47. The nice thing about standards... by notsoclever · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Of course, there are current standards, but most are incompatible
    The nice thing about standards is there are so many to choose from.

    Why does Fraunhofer think that their "standard" is going to get any more acceptance than any of the other options?

    --
    There are 10 kinds of people: ones who understand ternary, ones who don't, and ones who think this joke is about binary
  48. This is good. by miketang16 · · Score: 1

    Maybe now people will start switching to open formats like OGG and FLAC.

    --
    -------
    "In times of universal deceit, telling the truth becomes a revolutionary act."
    -- George Orwell
    1. Re:This is good. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I was talk to my MP3 friends of DRM and copping a lot of FLAC about using OGG. Then someone brought up AAC and we MPEGed them 4 ways from sunday.

  49. no by crabpeople · · Score: 2, Interesting
    with a nod to the 20+ fp comments that say, "switch to ogg, i want to marry ogg, omg i saw oggs boobies!!" i dont think mp3s are going anywhere. Why would this do anything at all? people with drm mp3s share them - and once you find out, you dont download off of them. it takes what a minute or less to download an mp3?


    what they are saying is that people will buy DRM'd mp3s, enmasse. Why oh why would they do that? if i wanted crippled, i would download WMA's or ituney music. And im sure people will love trying to get their DRM'd mp3s to work in their 5 year old mp3 car stereo.


    if their not labeled differently, all this will do is add more clutter to P2P networks, making people swtch to less cluttered p2p networks.

    --
    I'll just use my special getting high powers one more time...
  50. Not Open Standards by jfrumkin · · Score: 4, Interesting

    The article mentions that the MPEG community and others are working on open standards. I believe they are talking about using variations of XrML as the standard Rights Expression Language (REL). ContentGuard, a company heavily backed by Microsoft, originally owned the rights to XrML, but has stated that they will not control the actual language. What ContentGuard is saying is that they hold patents which cover any type of implementation of any REL - so that while the actual "standard" might be open (lots of discussion points around this in and of itself), any IMPLEMENTATION of the standard is not open.

    So, is a non-open source implementatable standard actually an open standard? I would say not.

    --

    "What we have here, is a failure to communicate." - Cool Hand Luke
    1. Re:Not Open Standards by PCM2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      To this topic, I wrote an article about rights expression languages a while back. Of particular interest might be the sidebar at the end, "Rights: Patent Pending."

      --
      Breakfast served all day!
  51. Two months later...: by LordK3nn3th · · Score: 2, Funny

    New MP3 DRM technology cracked; DMCA invoked in lawsuit...

    --

    ---
    Never criticize religion on Slashdot. You will be modded down for "Troll" no matter how factual it is.
  52. Why add DRM to MP3? by mczak · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Seriously, what's the point? MP3 as a codec is outdated. All new codecs (be it aac, ogg, or even, god forbids, wma9) are a BIG step above mp3 in the quality / compression ratio department.
    The only reason why everybody uses MP3 is exactly because of that, everybody uses it! But adding a DRM layer will make it incompatible to all existing (hardware/software) players, so why wouldn't you use a better codec for some shiny new drm scheme?

    1. Re:Why add DRM to MP3? by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      I have never seen the point in these miniscule media formats

      why not just take a PCM or WAV file and tarball it and gzip or bzip it, then the player can decode it to a temporary location (/tmp) until its finished playing, then delete it. Surely tar.bz2'ing a WAV is better quality/compression ratio than an mp3.

    2. Re:Why add DRM to MP3? by bleak+sky · · Score: 1

      Oh, boy. Either I missed the humor, or you are clueless...

      Have you ever tried to bzip an audio file and compare it to an MP3 encoded version? The MP3 file will always be smaller, because the encoder throws out data that it doesn't expect people will actually need to hear.

      Even for lossless compression, [b,g]zip sucks on audio. Codecs like Shorten and FLAC work really well for that purpose.

    3. Re:Why add DRM to MP3? by Mr+Smidge · · Score: 1

      The only reason why everybody uses MP3 is exactly because of that, everybody uses it!

      Perhaps you hit the nail.. Imagine the big companies could blow MP3 out of the water and force everybody to use WMA.. *shudder*

    4. Re:Why add DRM to MP3? by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      fine, sorry i pissed you off so much - it was just a suggestion no i haven't ever tried it - it was just a suggestion arsehole

    5. Re:Why add DRM to MP3? by mattyrobinson69 · · Score: 1

      A couple of years ago, when i used windows, i was ripping cd's, and i was given the choice of mp3/wma as the file format. i didn't know if there was any difference in quality/size ratio's, but i (before trying it) hated wma. i dont know why. are there technical reasons why its better? (and is my subconcious smarter than me)

  53. One word by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Does this mean we have to use it? All my old MP3s will work just fine.

    One word: patents. They can start enforcing them whenever they want. (See www.mp3licensing.com.) Remember Unisys patent on LZW compression? All my old GIFs was working just fine too, which didn't mean I could keep using them. Fortunately, now with zlib, PNG and Ogg Vorbis, this is not an issue this time.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
    1. Re:One word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "One word: patents. They can start enforcing them whenever they want. (See www.mp3licensing.com.) Remember Unisys patent on LZW compression? All my old GIFs was working just fine too, which didn't mean I could keep using them. Fortunately, now with zlib, PNG and Ogg Vorbis, this is not an issue this time."

      Does anyone understand logic here? If you're lzw compressed gifs can't be displayed anymore, it's because no one thought it was worth paying the royalty. If you have a licensed player to play an mp3 file, you can play any file, no matter how old. See the difference? Why does this shit get modded up?

    2. Re:One word by scottj · · Score: 1

      It doesn't matter to me if they start enforcing these patents. I already own plenty of hardware that plays non-DRM MP3s. And thousands of others own similar hardware. The installed base is too great to be overcome by some silly patent enforcement. It's just not going to happen.

      --
      .-.--
    3. Re:One word by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Fortunately, now with zlib, PNG and Ogg Vorbis, this is not an issue this time.

      And, don't forget, with LAME. While LAME generates MP3 format-compatible files, it does not use any Frauenhoffer patented techniques to do it.

  54. Well that's nice by screwballicus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It being their business, they'd like to produce their own online music DRM scheme and get paid royalties for it. At the same time, they are not a manufacturer of devices which will be able to provide a presence for the format on the market or begin its popularisation. Furthermore, the most extremely popular and well liked online music distribution platforms already use existing formats. I doubt Apple is likely to change over to a third party licensed format. Understanding this, how can this possibly be feasible?

  55. Support? by phorm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Caldwell said he expected to see devices and services supporting the protected MP3 format by the end of 2004

    But, will the new devices support the old format (and if not, why would those with massive Mp3 collections buy them), and will the new format work on old devices (again, why would those with old devices use this format).

    It seems really that they're shooting themselves in the foot, but I'll be glad when that means my next deck for the car should support OGG.

  56. Rio Karma by BlastM · · Score: 5, Informative

    The Rio Karma, a 20GB HDD-based player, supports Ogg Vorbis AND FLAC, and gapless playback of these formats. It retails for around US$230, and is probably the most advanced DAP on the market.

    1. Re:Rio Karma by RockClimbingFool · · Score: 1


      iRiver IHP-140. iRiver is probably the only company
      %100 commited to releasing firmware upgrades to keep
      thier customers happy. They have released new firware for old players so they can play Ogg.



      That, and the fact the IHP series is just so sweet. It has a digital optical audio out for christ's sake.

    2. Re:Rio Karma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Damn! My stereo only has an analog optical in, I guess it won't work with an IHP.

    3. Re:Rio Karma by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      For those who are interested in buying an mp3 player, check out Amazon.com:

      In principle, the rio Karma is a wonderful device. Unfortunately mine failed after a very short amount of time. And unfortunately, this seems to be true for many Rio Karma users.

      To add insult to injury, the company does not seem to repair them very quickly, if at all.

      In comparision, I have a friend who's iPOD died AFTER my Karma died. She took her iPOD in to an Apple store, and it was replaced in three days. Me, it's a month after my Karma died, and I still have no new Karma - and the company refuses to say when or if they will ever send a replacement.

      Sadly, from checking the forums at www.riovolution.com, the rio support website, my story is pretty typical.

      My advice: Do NOT by a Karma!
      This is my second brand of jukebox style mp3 player. The last one also had problems. Perhaps in general, these large 10 gig plus players are delicate and easily broken. If true, then the company with the best service is the company you want to go with. From what I'm seeing, that is Apple. So go spend the extra dollars and buy an iPOD.

      A disgruntled user


      This, and plenty other reviews of karma, ihp, zen, etc. are all there.
  57. Just plain dumb.... by cyberworm · · Score: 2, Insightful

    or at least what this would seem like to me. I've not chimed in too much about DRM on /. (if I ever have) but this gets my ire up. At exactly what point is music and music sharing going to stop being one of those "marijuana" type of subjects, where everyone knows it's illegal, and judging from a good majority of people I've met on the internet, everyone does it.
    It's been said many times before but I'll say it again. The record industries failings are their fault. They've invested themselves in trendy "novelty" music, and are blaming their problems on digital file traders. It's been shown that time and time again any DRM can be gotten around (line out anybody?) This dragon needs to quit chasing it's tail. The problem isn't in the formats. It's in the medium. If I wanted to bootleg a CD for profit (which is really where the copyright issues fall IMO) I could simply copy the physical CD and start pressing out copies all night long.

    "Fixing" the MP3 format would be like buying all your blank tapes pre-recorded from the record companies directly.
    I'm not well educated enough about this, and I'm sure it probably shows, but I don't want a hassle if I get a new hard drive. I shouldn't have to ask for permission to listen to something I've paid for if some component fries out on me. This to me would be the equivalent of calling KitchenAid if my mixer fails on me, and after getting it repaired I need to check for permission to plug it in, even though I own it.

    I'm tired of being restricted because of what I might do, instead of for what I've done. There are plenty of other "secure" formats out there (I use that term loosly)... Why get another one?

    Mod me down if this seems too rambling and incoherent. I'm celebrating having mad vacation money. :D

  58. Added value? Screw that, DRM! by newdamage · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Now I just may be some naive college student with an econ minor under his belt, but last time I checked my professors were telling me that things increased in worth when they went through those nice little "added value" cycles. Apparently someone RIAA seems to be pumping out the FUD in mass quantities that says rather than make something people find so useful they want to literally throw their money at you, you should just cripple your product so it can only be used in limited ways and just frustrate the hell out of people. ...but that's just me.

    --
    ce n'est pas un Sig.
  59. Read carefully, boys and girls by buss_error · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "Cnet News.com has a leading story saying that the venerable MP3 music format is getting a makeover aimed at blocking unauthorized copying.

    Note that it says "unauthorized" copying. Not illegal copying, UNAUTHORIZED copying. Want to listen to it on RIO? Pay a fee. Computer? Pay a fee. Transfer to CD? Pay a fee.

    Again, the simple solution to broken music is to NOT BUY IT. The people in RIAA are real smart. As soon as no one buys their crapware, they'll quit trying to shove it up our a$$.

    --
    Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
    1. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by LordK3nn3th · · Score: 5, Funny

      That's why it's called DRM. So they can 'manage' your rights.

      --

      ---
      Never criticize religion on Slashdot. You will be modded down for "Troll" no matter how factual it is.
    2. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by NSash · · Score: 5, Insightful
      As soon as no one buys their crapware, they'll quit trying to shove it up our a$$.

      No, they'll blame pirates.

    3. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by jnicholson · · Score: 5, Funny
      The people in RIAA are real smart.

      I have yet to see any evidence of this.

      --
      "Do not drill any holes in your cat - it will not like it."
      -- Nick Davies
    4. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by bigberk · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Again, the simple solution to broken music is to NOT BUY IT. The people in RIAA are real smart. As soon as no one buys their crapware, they'll quit trying to shove it up our a$$.

      Exactly! Don't buy RIAA music. Download your shit online, use filesharing applications with bandwidth-limiting enabled so you are harder to detect. Change the default port numbers. Use obscure file sharing apps. Set up a node on freenet. Complain to your ISP and threaten to leave if they poo-poo P2P use. Teach others how to use file sharing properly. Avoid using file sharing at school, university, or work. Support BitTorrent by leaving your client running well after you're done downloading. Don't leave your filesharing apps unattended 24 hours a day. Keep your host free of viruses. Keep your music collections clean of tainted files or corrupt downloads.

      We're slowly killing the big record labels... keep up the good work. I'm not being sarcastic, I really want to see these evil bastards go poor.

    5. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by cfuse · · Score: 1
      The people in RIAA are real smart. As soon as no one buys their crapware, they'll quit trying to shove it up our a$$.

      Rubbish, they'll just lobby/bribe anyone they can to get listening to anything other than their crap illegal.

    6. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by cyberworm · · Score: 2, Informative

      That's all well and good, and I agree with your spirit and tenacity, but "Don't buy RIAA music. Download your shit online, use filesharing applications with bandwidth-limiting enabled so you are harder to detect. Change the default port numbers. Use obscure file sharing apps. Set up a node on freenet. Complain to your ISP and threaten to leave if they poo-poo P2P use. Bandwidth limiting kinda defeats (or at least slows down) the purpose, obscure apps mean smaller selection and limited hosts (especially if only a couple of people have that "must have song") Setting up a freenet node is beyond the scope of your everyday user; And while telling your ISP that "you pay them, so you are actually the one in control" is liberating and truthful (how many service based industries can you think of that actually tell you how they can serve you instead of actually asking you how they can please you)... It's a monopoly. People with cable in areas not served by DSL can't really go off threatening their cable companies if there is no other option than POTS. Like I said I agree with your spirit, but no. We are not killing them softly. They are killing themselves. As far as them being evil, that remains to be seen. Nice try though.

    7. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by Ogerman · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Exactly! Don't buy RIAA music. Download your sh** online

      What you describe is only half-right in terms of solving the problem of a corrupt entertainment industry. The correct solution is this: Don't buy RIAA music but support independent / local / non-RIAA artists. That's right -- don't even share RIAA crap. Doing so only makes it more popular - and thus keeps people buying CD's and merchandise, watching MTV, and going to RIAA-artist concerts. And. incidentally, Hollywood is another good boycott target. Don't want DRM-laden HD-DVD's and HDTV components? Stop buying today's DVDs and going to every movie that hits the theaters! Cancel your ridiculous cable/satellite premium package! These people can do evil things only because YOU enable them with your dollars.

      Look to software as an example. The answer to Microsoft's monopoly is not warez sites; it's Open Source. And it's working.

      When alternatives exist to fight corruption, the legal one should be chosen first--not necessarily because the law is just, but because it's the easiest path. Unjust laws can be changed far more easily after monopolists have lost the reins.

    8. Re:Read carefully, boys and girls by buss_error · · Score: 1
      Sure they are. Get a lot of people to work for you for peanuts, sell their labor, take their rights to it, dump them in the trash, and don't pay 'em.

      It's called "adding value" and "monitizing" talent. (And I use "talent" loosely.)

      --
      Necessity is the plea for every infringement of human freedom. It is the argument of tyrants; it is the creed of slaves.
  60. Try the new MpDRM! by dj245 · · Score: 4, Funny

    Try the new MpDRM! Now loaded with 50% more crap, 100% more agony, and 500% more incompatability than the equally obscure mp4. MpDRM! Because less really is more, if you live at the RIAA.

    --
    Even those who arrange and design shrubberies are under considerable economic stress at this period in history.
  61. The reason is simply economics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Leave MP3 DRM free and have only free thinking anarchists and pirates use your format...

    Or...

    DRM your MP3 and compete with WMA style of audio that the online music stores and OEMs use (or will use after threats of RIAA-style copyright violations).

    Just a thought.

  62. Your comment + your sig by uptownguy · · Score: 2, Funny

    You, sir, are a hypocrite. That's right: A hypocrite. I won't say much about your comment (except it was insightful and I think the online music business is going to eat this stuff up!) but I do have something to say about your signature.

    That's right, your signature. You know, the one that reads: End acronym abuse today! The one that linked to your rant against the overuse of acronyms. The signature at the END of a very short post that still somehow managed to be riddled with words like "DRM" "MP3s" "WMA" and "AAC". Just struck me as ironic, I guess...

    --


    I would have to say that explosives are the most abused technology in all of history.
    1. Re:Your comment + your sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Offtopic my ass. If I had mod points to share they'd be yours.

    2. Re:Your comment + your sig by sahonen · · Score: 1

      The point of my journal entry was that people will explain what an acronym means after they say it, thus defeating the purpose of using an acronym in the first place. =D

      I dont see it happening anymore (perhaps everyone's seen it and changed their errant ways? =D), I should probably upgrade my sig.

      --
      Make me a friend and I'll mod you up
    3. Re:Your comment + your sig by RexHowland · · Score: 2, Funny
      That's right, your signature. You know, the one that reads: End acronym abuse today! The one that linked to your rant against the overuse of acronyms [slashdot.org]. The signature at the END of a very short post that still somehow managed to be riddled with words like "DRM" "MP3s" "WMA" and "AAC". Just struck me as ironic, I guess...

      Hey, how's this for clarity?:
      This will not destroy compatibility with existing "Moving Picture Experts Group" Version 1, Layer 3 audio files, nor will it stop piracy from people ripping. They are just making a digital rights management-enabled "Moving Picture Experts Group" Version 1, Layer 3 audio file format for online music stores to sell so that Fraunhofer can start getting the royalties it was trying to get in the first place when it started charging for the "Moving Picture Experts Group" Version 1, Layer 3 audio file format. Microsoft is getting loads of cash for licensing Windows Media Audio, and Apple is getting wads of greenies for licensing Advanced Audio Coding, Fraunhofer is just trying to get in the game. There will still be "Moving Picture Experts Group" Version 1, Layer 3 audio files without digital rights management, just like there are Advanced Audio Coding and Windows Media Audio files without digital rights management.
      Be careful what you wish for.
    4. Re:Your comment + your sig by soybean · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The big problem with this, and a big reason that acronyms are so widley used, is that this more verbose version is not proper or even meaningful english. "digital rights management-enabled" does not mean the same thing as drm-emabled. Even "digital-rights-management-enabled" is subtlely different. "drm" is a (defacto) noun, whereas "digital rights management" is not. Granted, it's a _thing_, but not a noun.
      To properly un deacronym this para, you'd need to totally rewrite it, using weird phrases.

    5. Re:Your comment + your sig by igny · · Score: 1

      Thanks God, he didn't use the acronym LAME or GNU.

      --
      In theory there is no difference between theory and practice. In practice there is. - Yogi Berra
    6. Re:Your comment + your sig by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Granted, ["digital rights management" is] a _thing_, but not a noun

      Then what is it? Sure seems like a noun to me. How can a non-noun perform a verb, especially "to be" ("it's" = it is = "digital rights management is")?

  63. Exactly why... by Junta · · Score: 2, Insightful

    RIAA would love this... MP3 is deeply entrenched, if they feel they can pull something off where at first glance on an online file, users won't know if it is DRM-enabled or not and confusion reigns, they will acheive greater market penetration for DRM-enabled files. Once user goes through effort to get mp3 only to end up with a DRM-crippled MP3, the industry expects the user will be too lazy/apathetic to 'rectify' the situation so long as user can listen to music him/herself. If a user has a DRM-enabled MP3, the prospect of getting a traditional MP3 no longer means user gets to listen, plus share, it means the user would have to go through the trouble of getting the MP3 *just* so he can share what he already has. For most common users, selfishness/apathy reigns high enough it might just work...

    --
    XML is like violence. If it doesn't solve the problem, use more.
    1. Re:Exactly why... by Lord+Kano · · Score: 1

      I would posit that most of the illegally shared music on P2P networks are not being shared by the person who originally ripped/encoded it.

      The files are being shared by the original ripper/encoder plus 20 people who downloaded it from him, plus 10 people for each of them who downloaded the file from them and 4 people for each of them and so on and so on... DRM crippled files wouldn't even make it that far. People would notice before it got to that point.

      Besides there are more than enough tools available to create non-crippled content. Who in his/her right mind is going to use software that isn't any easier to use and has more restrictions. What I'm talking about here is their perception of ease of use, not reality.

      LK

      --
      "Hi. This is my friend, Jack Shit, and you don't know him." - Lord Kano
    2. Re:Exactly why... by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      The DRM information will be encoded somewhere in the file, typically in its header.

      It won't be difficult for eg. the WinMX developers to make the option to begin the download from a new source by fetching the first half-kilobyte of the file, then checking it for DRM, then refusing to download it and looking for a different source, if told so in the configuration. Same applies for all other P2P clients that support fetching of only a part of the file (which means de facto all of them).

      RIAA will gain at most some temporary advantage. Not for long.

  64. I think by Talez · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You're smoking crack.

    Ogg won't be popular until the developers get off their asses and put a big link on their front page that says "Install Ogg for Windows!".

    At the moment they just give out the codec and say "you do what you want with it". Doing something useful with it? Well... ummmm... here's a bunch of third parties that can maybe do something useful with it.

    If Xiph want Ogg to be popular they're going to have to break down and make actual usable technology with instant gratification for Win32 users. They don't want to have to know that a DirectShow fiter is what lets you play Oggs in Windows Media Player. They want to double click an installer and have their OS Ogg enabled.

    I'll even point this out to you using references avaialable on the plain old intarweb. See Divx. Theres a "New To Divx" section! Fancy that! There used to be a direct "download Divx whatever version" link but it seems the webmaster woke up stupid this month. Then you download a file and you double click on it once it's finished and it gives you Divx! You can double click on a Divx AVI file and it opens in WMP and plays with all the Divxy goodness.

    Xiph needs that for Ogg. They don't need a third party to fill the gaps. They don't need a billion programs nobody cares about with Ogg support. They need a standard installer package with instant fucking gratification and until Xiph get that through their heads people will either switch to WMA or download iTunes and switch to AAC.

  65. MP3? That bitch? by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 0

    Hi Ogg, nice to meet you, i just broke up with MP3, want to go out?

    MP3? I know her. She is such a bitch!

    Seriously though, this news is exactly why Ogg Vorbis was created in the first place. I was always asking my friends to read Why artists should be using Ogg Vorbis by Daniel James. For them this is not news, this is not news at all, it is just a boring, predictable consequence of the stupid inertia giving them momentum. Nothing more.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  66. "Their own music" by tepples · · Score: 5, Informative

    What about those that encode their own music... as in music they made.

    If you record a song to which you do not own the copyright, you have recorded a cover song. If you distribute phonorecords (e.g. in MP3 format) of a cover song to the public, then you owe a royalty to the songwriter('s publisher). If you write your own song, record it, and distribute it, then you owe a royalty to the songwriter('s publisher) whose song you subconsciously copied. Subconscious copying is actionable infringement. Bright Tunes Music v. Harrisongs Music, 420 F. Supp. 177 (SDNY 1976). Or do you know of a foolproof way to write music while preventing oneself from accidentally copying a copyrighted work?

    Several government organizations (supreme court!) use mp3 as one of the means with which they provide transcriptions.

    Granted. Works of the United States government enter the public domain upon publication.

    1. Re:"Their own music" by cpt+kangarooski · · Score: 1

      To be somewhat more accurate, 105 works are always in the public domain from the moment they're fixed. There's no point during which they're copyrighted between fixation and publication which are distinct events though sometimes simultaneous.

      --
      -- This and all my posts are in the public domain. I am a lawyer. I am not your lawyer, and this is not legal advice.
    2. Re:"Their own music" by MikeXpop · · Score: 1

      So true. I've written a few songs myself. I've actually composed about 20, but more than half of them were actually other songs. I'll be strumming away, writing down chords thinking to myself "Hey, this sounds kind of cool". It's then that I realize I'm just playing a song already written I have in the back of my mind. It's how I learned to play Minority (Green Day), Wish You Were Here (Pink Floyd), Chop Suey (SOAD), and White Riot (Clash) among others.

      --
      Etiquette is etiquette. He kills his mother but he can't wear grey trousers.
    3. Re:"Their own music" by Samrobb · · Score: 5, Interesting
      Or do you know of a foolproof way to write music while preventing oneself from accidentally copying a copyrighted work?

      Unacompanied Sonata

      (To avoid the inevetable off-topic moderation: this is a story about a young musical prodigy who is raised completely separated from any outside influences, so he can create "pure" music.)

      --
      "Great men are not always wise: neither do the aged understand judgement." Job 32:9
    4. Re:"Their own music" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Did you even read the Bright Tunes opinion that tepples linked to?

    5. Re:"Their own music" by jeffkjo1 · · Score: 3, Informative

      While I do not understand the connection you are attempting to draw to George Harrison, his case is marketly different than 'copying' something that one has never heard.

      Harrison admitted in court that he was familiar with the Chiffons - He's So Fine. While I do not believe his copying was intentional, his song was almost exactly the same (both the verses and the chorus.)

      If someone could truly admit that they had not heard the song before, I think that the case would be quite different.

    6. Re:"Their own music" by alienw · · Score: 1

      Dude.... lay off the crack.

    7. Re:"Their own music" by nudicle · · Score: 1
      I don't understand how the first paragraph of parent reponds in a meaningful way to the grandparent and I think the Harrisongs reference is particularly misleading.

      The Harrisongs example is one in which parts of the melodies were ridiculously similar (which is not to say the case was rightly or wrongly decided or that coming up with those similarities w/o "subconscious copying" is necessarily an oddity) and is instructive but is basically an outlier. I mean, how many songs created today don't generate from musical influences? Thus, the semantics of the sentence "If you write your own song, record it, and distribute it, then you owe a royalty to the songwriter('s publisher) whose song you subconsciously copied" frame the issue as much more inclusive and scary than in the real world. The fact is although many musicians are vigilant about copyright issues, if you write and record a song you honestly believe is new you don't live in a state of fear that someone's going to sue you for unconscious infringement. If that were the case the costs of creating music would be astronomically high.

      In my case, I'm a law student and I play guitar. If I pick up my guitar, call some friends to play drums and bass, and we hack out a song, I'm really not all that concerned about subscious infringement assuming we're trying to write an original song and we're honest about that.

      In sum, assuming a reasonable interpretation of the grand-parent's intentions as quoted in the parent refer to the creation of music they reasonably regard as new, although there is the *possibility* of subconscious copying liability, if the subconscious copying common law were as in effect as parent-poster's language suggests, there'd be even more rich lawyers than there are now and a lot less music. In reality, however, we have a lot of new music being made (although not embraced by the big record companies) ... go look at lulu.com, for instance. And those honest musicians who think they're creating new music aren't living in fear of a "subconscious infringement" action as defined by the Southern District of New York (and perhaps endorsed by other courts as well, beats me).

      Almost every sentence in above should contain IMHO ... I don't mean to be expounding received wisdom and truth, just offering my opinion. I omitted all the IMHOs so as not to clutter the prose but they are all intended to be implied.

    8. Re:"Their own music" by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      Or do you know of a foolproof way to write music while preventing oneself from accidentally copying a copyrighted work?

      What the fuck are you on about? For every song that is found to have been subconsciously copied from another copyrighted work, there are ONE MILLION songs that are taken to be original works.

      Show a little more respect for the creative process.

  67. That's the problem with closed technologies by JeffHeatonDotCom · · Score: 1, Interesting

    That's the problem with closed technologies like MP3. Sure its open in the sense that you can implement applications that support it. But its destinay is controlled by Thomson and Fraunhofer, if they decide to sell out to the likes of DRM that's their choice. Its their protocol and their patents. This is why an truly open protocol, such as OGG will likely become the standard song swapping medium. Especially as players begin to support it. Besides, WHO says we have to use the new MP3 format anyway?

  68. Copying protections by Scott.Simpson · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Trying to make bits not copyable is like trying to make water not wet.

    1. Re:Copying protections by tehdaemon · · Score: 3, Insightful

      That is easy, just freeze it solid. Not much good for drinking though, and i suspect that is your point.

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    2. Re:Copying protections by zora · · Score: 1
      Trying to make bits not copyable is like trying to make water not wet.

      It's easy as shit to copy something, Getting the bitch to play might be a trifle harder.

      --
      In the end they will lay their freedom at our feet, and say to us, "Make us your slaves, but feed us." - Dostoevsky
  69. Whoa there! Somebody needs to calm down... by bersl2 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    MP3 predated Ogg by years (AFAIK). So it has lots more "market share," if you will. Also, "mp3" has become synonymous with "music on the computer." It's like Kleenex. I can't recall off the top of my head a different brand of tissue paper. (But that example really only counts for a half point...)

    We mention Ogg so much because we honestly believe (at least I think so...) it to be at least as good as MP3. What's wrong with us wanting someone "big" to try to put it in the mainstream.

    So you can stop the vindictive ranting. I can't tell if you're a partial troll, or just disillusioned, or just a very confusing read to me.

  70. The way it works by MikeCapone · · Score: 1

    I think that the objective is for DRM to be built into the OS (windows is the obvious example) and for hardware makers (mp3 players, DVD/CD players with mp3 capabilities, etc) to incorporate them into their wares.

  71. regulation by Trelane,+the+Squire · · Score: 1
    that's what government regulation and government mandated standards are for... for those who don't think it could happen, just consider DMCA.

    I find it hard to believe that the government has so much trouble trying to discipline MS yet can so easily pass DMCA type legislation.

    1. Re:regulation by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      I find it hard to believe that the government has so much trouble trying to discipline MS yet can so easily pass DMCA type legislation

      It's not hard to beleive at all. RIAA/MPAA/et al. pay bribes^Wkickbacks^Wcampaign contributions, and in return they buy themselves a law^W^W^W^Wget special consideration^W^W^W"advise" congress that there really IS a need for this kind of law.

      The only reason they tried smacking down MS (and failed) was because of other COMPANIES pushing for it.

      If you think the government gives an airborne copulation at a ventrally rotating pastry about the people, you've probably also payed SCO for your Linux license...

  72. Patent infringement by tepples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    since Lame doesn't use the Fraunhofer codec

    This could be a lead-up to Fraunhofer cease-and-desisting the lead developers of LAME for patent infringement. The MP3 patents apply to the general processes of analyzing audio that result in an MP3 bitstream rather than to some specific encoder implementation.

    1. Re:Patent infringement by Lehk228 · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure LAME is a "sample implementation" ditributed as source code and fully legit, besides the FHG radium codec blows goats unless you have a shitty machine and are too impatient to use LAME, if the Frauenhofer people were smart they would encourage the use of the LAME codec 'cause hardware/ commercially available software for encoding mp3 still pays them money and the more mp3 files out there the more mp3 players, and mp3-cd players sell so frauenhofer gets more money, hell they should offer to host LAME on their website... if it wasn't for LAME i would have switched over to ogg, flac, or some other format a long time ago to escape the shitty FHG radium encodings. mp3 is popular cause anyone can make mp3's, if mp3 gets restricted it will die.

      --
      Snowden and Manning are heroes.
  73. Oh, Golly, Gee... by Snork+Asaurus · · Score: 4, Interesting
    ...there's another format that's consumer friendly and sounds better to boot.

    Obviously the new format won't affect the legacy, but it might pollute the waters.

    History lesson: Anybody here remember .arc ? Probably not - when its owners flexed their tiny muscles, it disappeared in a .zip. Yes, I know it was for different reasons, but the point is that in this digital age, things can adapt in a flash.

    --
    Sigs are bad for your health.
  74. Screwing over something decent...again. by Rodrin · · Score: 1

    Figures...they always screw something decent over.

  75. Re:Hi Ogg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
    Yeah MP3 is such a Pro

    tada

  76. Stupid scenario by AvengerXP · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Copyrighting music is just plain stupid

    "Hey man, put your jack in here to listen to my iPod this tune is great"

    "Sorry dude, i don't own the rights to that song, maybe another time".

    "Are you sure, here i'll put it on my portable speakers"

    "NOOO I DONT HAVE THE RIGHTS AND NEITHER DO THESE PEOPLE ARGH MY MORAL CONSCIENCE"

    (falls on floor in convulsions)

    Can you imagine that? Come on. If you like Open Source so much, i believe you might want the same to music. I agree with protecting your hard work but it's getting out of hand.

    --
    Trolls dont like to be Flamebait, because they burn so well. Protect our Troll heritage!
    1. Re:Stupid scenario by Froomb · · Score: 3, Funny
      "Sorry dude, i don't own the rights to that song, maybe another time."

      Reminds me of my wife's friend, who teaches modern dance and gets to deduct as business expense the music she buys for her classes. Her husband, an up-tight tax attorney, flees the room whenever she plays her music, lest by hearing it he might "taint" the purity of her business deduction. Go figure. . .

      "If you can't sing Siegfried, at least you can carry a spear" -- Thomans Pynchon

    2. Re:Stupid scenario by Tim+C · · Score: 1

      Copyrighting music is just plain stupid... I agree with protecting your hard work but it's getting out of hand.

      Well, which is it? Do you agree with protecting hard work, or is copyrighting music stupid?

      I do agree that it's getting out of hand, but that's not the fault of the concept of copyright, but with how it's being (ab)used by those few in power. That always happens though - there are exceptions, but in general, those in power use it such as to remain in power. This is no different, remembering that money and power are to a large extent interchangeable.

  77. Re:What? Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    hmm considering your sig I'm not sure you should comment.

  78. Let's not forget MP3Pro by cgenman · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Fraunhofer was flagrantly unable to get MP3Pro out as a format of choice for illegal music distribution, but still makes a few dollars on streams from sites like Live 365. Now, eyeing the legal distro market, it would make sense to pander to where the money is (or was, by the time they get there) and sell to these other sites.

    Yes, Microsoft could decide to upgrade your MP3 collection to DRMP3... but it could decide to jack everyone to WMA tomorrow anyway. And let's be frank, the more piracy there is in the world the more people they will sell their "secure" formats to.

    The people here seem to be seeing a tempest in a teapot. Fraunhofer was unable to change the role of "their" format before... why should we expect any more now?

  79. Winamp comes with Ogg Vorbis support by tepples · · Score: 2, Informative

    Nullsoft Winamp, since 2.9 or so, already comes with an Ogg Vorbis decoder plug-in right next to its MP3 decoder plug-in. Now all we have to do is get the Speex plug-in into wide use so that the audio book people can switch. (Speex is specialized to represent a human voice more concisely than a general audio codec such as Vorbis can.)

    Yeah converting Mp3s to Oggs is going to make for some crap quality audio files but you gotta start somewhere.

    Degraded, perhaps. Still rather listenable, yes. Option to go back to the original source from CDex, absolutely.

  80. Re:Hi Ogg by Jason+Earl · · Score: 2, Funny

    That might explain why ogg files are so much thinner than MP3 files. They get more exercise.

  81. This is sure to be a success! by ZackSchil · · Score: 4, Funny

    Welcome to the hall of corporate shame Mr Thomson and Mr Fraunhofer! Help yourself to the complimentary Crystal Pepsi and New Coke. In a few minutes, a waiter will swing by of a Segway with some Doritos 3D's and we'll start off the welcoming ceremony by awarding you metals made from recycled metric highway signs from the 70s. and top it off with a back to back showing of Gigli, Kangaroo Jack, and Glitter.

  82. DRM is just a "technology" by dtfinch · · Score: 2, Informative

    It assists content providers in exercising their freedom to control the distribution of their (their?) copyrighted works. If they want to sell a product of significantly reduced value at full retail price, they're free to go ahead and try, and see if they can trick, err, convince anyone to purchase their now worthless offering. There's no law saying a business can't close its doors to potential customers. It hurts both the business and the consumer but they're well within their rights.

    And you can't really put much blame on the developers of the DRM software either. They're just meeting demands for increased support for copyright protection. It's still up to authors and content providers to use it.

    So lets blame the lawyers!

    1. Re:DRM is just a "technology" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I'm well within my rights to use their works in ways that they don't agree with but which are legal under the fair use clause of copyright law.

      Oh wait, DRM prevents that. And I can't break the DRM without breaking the DMCA.

      The chains the slaves wore were "just a technology" too.

    2. Re:DRM is just a "technology" by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

      If they want to sell a product of significantly reduced value at full retail price, they're free to go ahead and try, and see if they can trick, err, convince anyone to purchase their now worthless offering.

      I frequently see computer-buying and software-buying situations where I feel that the buyer has been duped to some degree.

  83. I'm glad I drink Pepsi by krray · · Score: 3, Interesting

    I'm so glad right now that I drink Pepsi. Even after their lovely promotion I'll continue to purchase iTunes AAC locked type format. It's easy enough...

    Download.
    Import with Quicktime
    Save as AIFF
    Import to iTunes
    Convert AIFF to MP3
    Copy over the tag and delete M4P and AIFF files.

    (hint: easy enough to automated through Applescript :)

    And frankly I can't tell the difference from a original CD to their AAC format to the newly converted MP3 file. As long as it passed my ear test I'll just stick with their DRM scheme and work right around it (the day I can't is the day I stop buying).

    Of course with tools like AudioHijack ... if I can hear it I can copy it (heck, on a Mac the same applies that if I can see it [motion or otherwise] I can copy it :)

    Bah -- DRM.

    1. Re:I'm glad I drink Pepsi by sdibb · · Score: 1

      You know ... this just got me thinking...

      Someone needs to make a frontend gui to these indepedent music stores. I mean, sure they are web-based, that's true .. but it would be cool if there was a little iTunes-like gui/program/store that uh ... oh wait, don't they just use a browser as a backend to view their HTML pages?

      Hmm, maybe it wasn't such a good idea after all.

    2. Re:I'm glad I drink Pepsi by Curt · · Score: 1

      Wow, too bad that does not actually work. QuickTime will not allow you to export files with Apple's audio drm. That really shouldn't come as a surprise.

      However, oddly enough iMovie will work (it does have an audio-only export) and conveniently lets you search through your iTunes collection to find that "protected" file.

    3. Re:I'm glad I drink Pepsi by evilviper · · Score: 1
      I'll continue to purchase iTunes AAC locked type format.

      Sounds great! You're paying them a buck per song, just so you can go though the hassle of converting it to a decent format.

      No thanks, I'd rather get it for free, and already in a DRM-free format.
      --
      Slashdot gets worse every day... Pipedot: News for nerds, without the corporate slant
  84. DRM _could_ be cool by spentrent · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    I'd like DRM more if it would make me a fucking cent.

  85. Around the outer edge by youknowmewell · · Score: 1

    Wonder if we'll just need to use a permanent marker for our mp3's as well...

  86. da catalyst by MoFoQ · · Score: 1

    that's the final reason I need to make my final migration to ogg.

    go vorbis! long live patent-free and/or royalty-free and/or opensource formats.

    but wait....there's still LAME...go LAME!

  87. I don't think it will work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    " They will work just fine until the mp3 format license requires the DRM add-on"

    Sure. And all those millions and millions of MP3 players out there already will stop working.

    They tried this before with the SuperMP3 or whatever they called it. Sank without a trace. Made the titanic look like a "good idea".

    Sorry, Fraunhaufer, the genie is out of the bottle on MP3. There are "free" implementations, and 10's of millions of licensed players out there already.

    If I'm going to go licensed, might as well use a codec like AAC.

  88. Some predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Some predictions:

    (1) The P2P community will reject the use of the ".MP3" suffix on the new DRM-crippled files. ".MP3" will continue to mean the full-featured format, and something else will be adopted (by informal consensus) to label the crippled files. Expect a new generation of P2P clients that will do this suffix-renaming automatically.

    (2) The owners of the MP3 format will want to (eventually) start forbidding the playback of non-crippled MP3 files. (Without this, there's no way that the DRM-crippled version will catch on.) This will result in:

    (a) a huge demand for black-market "original" MP3 software (codecs, players, etc.), and,

    (b) Microsoft will fight hard to make sure that MediaPlayer doesn't end up rendered useless by new MP3 licensing that forbids playback of non-crippled MP3 files. This fight could get very nasty.

    1. Re:Some predictions by pacodease · · Score: 2, Interesting


      Or

      (a) The popular (as in Kazaa) filesharing apps will allow the DRM-crippled files because there will be a profit incentive for them in the deal

      (b) music industry "sponcered" seeds of DRM-crippled files will appear all over the networks, many users (other then the slashdot crowd) will end up downloading crippled files

      (c) this will leed to (i) users purchasing rights for songs when they stop working, or (ii) user frustration with poor quality, mis-named, and drm-crippled files on the open-networks, and may be pushed towards the legal services.

      either way it seems the record industry will gain ground by destabalizing the file sharing experience and pushing people towards legal services.

      Paco

    2. Re:Some predictions by ediron2 · · Score: 1
      (1) The P2P community will reject the use of the ".MP3" suffix on the new DRM-crippled files. ".MP3" will continue to mean the full-featured format, and something else will be adopted (by informal consensus) to label the crippled files. Expect a new generation of P2P clients that will do this suffix-renaming automat
      I nominate .mph

      As in MPeg-Hobbled.
      As in the sound someone makes when gagged/silenced.

      Also, the sound heard a split second before hurling.

      As with XP, TurboTax, Divx, and all the other hobbled stuff of the last 20 years, hurling is exactly how consumers seem to react to crap like this.

      Consumers don't pay attention to most details, but they get attentive fast if the details are annoying. Corporations just refuse to learn that DRM business plans are like tar-pits.

    3. Re:Some predictions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > The popular (as in Kazaa) filesharing apps will allow the DRM-crippled files because there will be a profit incentive for them in the deal

      Good point.

      There are really two sides of the P2P spectrum now:

      On the "scum" side of the spectrum are the opportunitistic P2P companies and their mindless users who will tolerate anything, including adware, spyware, and crippled files.

      On the "elite" side of the spectrum are companies who have integrity, and their informed user base.

      When I predicted that the "P2P community" will reject the MP3 suffix on crippled files, I meant the "elite" side of the spectrum. Obviously, the "scum" side of the spectrum will try to profit from DRM, and they will end up selling out their users in the process.

  89. Who the hell modded this as "informative" ? by brunes69 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you write your own song, record it, and distribute it, then you owe a royalty to the songwriter('s publisher) whose song you subconsciously copied


    WTF? Is this supposed to mean that no one can create anything new anymore, because it has "all been done before" ?

    I know a large number of independant musicians and artists who would now like to beat your ass.

    Maybe if you would get your ears out of the Top 40 drivel, you'd realize there's still a lot of original content being created daily.

    1. Re:Who the hell modded this as "informative" ? by MP3Chuck · · Score: 2, Informative

      "Is this supposed to mean that no one can create anything new anymore, because it has "all been done before" ?"

      No no ... but, when you write a song, you don't know whether it's been done before. [And if I'm not mistaken, there are no provisions for this in Copyright Law. "Oops" doesn't work.] The chances are slim, but it's entirely possible. I've written songs and later realized that they're ripoffs of a friend's song that I had heard previously.

    2. Re:Who the hell modded this as "informative" ? by zbuffered · · Score: 1

      It's like that Windows source code leak:

      If you ever plan on becoming a musician, or working with music, for god's sake, don't listen to any music! Or else they'll sue your ass!

      Unless perhaps we misinterpreted what he said.

      --
      Synergy is your friend
  90. Not a big deal.... by Eric+Damron · · Score: 2, Insightful

    MP3 does have that little propritary problem doesn't it.

    I find that ogg files suit me just fine thank you. I have ripped all of my CDs to ogg format and put them on my server so that I can listen to them from any room in my house with a computer. And since I'm a geek that means most of them!

    --
    The race isn't always to the swift... but that's the way to bet!
  91. MS would not do that by badriram · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Come on MS would never do that....

    They would just convert it to a wma with DRM.

  92. Two words. by Gldm · · Score: 2, Funny

    See sig.

    --

    Introducing the new Occam Fusion! Now with sqrt(-1) fewer blades!

  93. Who cares? by syberanarchy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Sorry, mp3. It's been nice knowing you! I like the smaller space req. of mp3 files, but if it comes down between that and being able to listen to DRM-free music, I'll just play AAC. If AAC goes this route (as a format standard, not talking about itunes, which I STILL won't use because of DRM) then I'll just use some other format.

    That, or download the inevitible cracked player off of suprnova that removes the DRM tags.

    There is no way these people can win. But if they want to keep trying, let them - the more they spend on futile copy protection, the less money to sue us with ;)

  94. I disagree... by No+Such+Agency · · Score: 1

    "The Hurd" is the worst fucking (software) name of all time. Fortunately it's not a user-oriented product, the people who run it couldn't care less what it's called.

    --
    Freedom: "I won't!"
    1. Re:I disagree... by Guilly · · Score: 1

      People run it?

  95. one word: (no, a different one) by Chr1s-Cr0ss · · Score: 1

    wav.
    yes, that's right, i bet they forgot about wav files. I'd like to see them put DRM on an age-old standard of uncompressed audio. Hard drives are big enough for them these days, and every audio player ever made will play them.

    So remember kids, no matter how bad life gets, there's always *.wav

    This does bring up the question though... will DRM kill compressed audio?
    It certainly will if they rabidly put it on every format they see.

    --

    68.3% of all statistics are made up on the spot.
    1. Re:one word: (no, a different one) by dtfinch · · Score: 1

      .wav is just a container, and pcm is the uncompressed audio format commonly associated with it. I've produced mp3 encoded .wav's that could be played back like other .wav's with the appropriate codecs installed.

  96. DRM covers more than just copyright enforcement by tepples · · Score: 5, Informative

    There's no point during which they're copyrighted between fixation and publication which are distinct events though sometimes simultaneous.

    It's true that unpublished works of the US government aren't subject to Title 17, but they're still potentially subject to 18 USC 798 until they're officially published, and some of the Defense FOIA regulations seem to translate "public domain" as "unclassified" rather than "uncopyrighted." I can easily imagine use of digital restrictions management systems to restrict access to works to promote national security rather than "the progress of science and useful arts."

  97. roadblock is an offramp by Doc+Ruby · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Any incompatibility this DRM upgrade introduces to MP3 is an opportunity to switch to a better codec. Unencumbered by DRM, patents, religious wars, brand stigma, merely adequate compression ratios and audio quality. If the alternate codecs/ players community is ready for the opportunity, this will be the best thing to happen to music playing since, well, MP3.

    --

    --
    make install -not war

  98. By the same logic by Killswitch1968 · · Score: 1

    Whether it's CD-ripping protections or DRM, they aren't meant to be invincible barriers, just deterrent. Hell even Fort Knox isn't 100% proof.

    Everybody knows that locking your door isn't going to keep the people out who really want to get in, but it doesn't mean we're going to stop doing it.

    --

    Corporations: your universal scapegoat for all society's ills.
  99. Heresy! by TrentC · · Score: 1

    some Doritos 3D's

    Heathen! The cool ranch Doritos 3Ds were manna from the gods I tell you!

    God, I could only find the cool ranch 3Ds a couple of times, but I could almost eat a whole bag at one sitting.

    Jay (=
    (Geez, Do I sound like a pot smoker or what...?)

    1. Re:Heresy! by Cliffm · · Score: 1

      they taste like bugles to me...

  100. Three more words: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Again, Nobody cares.

  101. Three words... by black+mariah · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Ogg Ogg GOOSE!

    --
    'Standards' in computing only impress those who are impressed by things like 'standards'.
  102. Combinatorics says you'll end up in court by tepples · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Is this supposed to mean that no one can create anything new anymore, because it has "all been done before" ?

    I once read a Slashdot journal entry that concluded that the chance of copying something copyrighted was so great that the risk of having to spend the funds to defend oneself in court wasn't worth it. The legal standard for copying is "access" (has the defendant heard the plaintiff's work even once?) plus "substantial similarity" (are they similar?); once Their Experts have presented strong evidence that the songs are in fact similar, you'll probably bankrupt yourself before you can get Your Experts to prove that you'd never heard the song.

    Oh here it is.

    1. Re:Combinatorics says you'll end up in court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      just claim you dont listen to music,. EVER.

      that would make for a good court record.

      "no i dont listen to that drivel, no i dont listen to it in socks, no i dont listen to it with ..." (green eggs and ham_

    2. Re:Combinatorics says you'll end up in court by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I once read a Slashdot journal entry that concluded that the chance of copying something copyrighted...

      Well, yeah, of course you read it. Though, according to this, you also wrote it. I really can't imagine why you'd want to come across as having not written it, as it is, IMHO, rather good.

      *shrug*

      And, I like everyone else originally read the nick as yerricide. That's odd. Not that tepples isn't odd either.

    3. Re:Combinatorics says you'll end up in court by yerricde · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the complement about the article.

      I really can't imagine why you'd want to come across as having not written it

      I didn't immediately want to take credit for the article because as yerricde, so many people had put me on their foe lists for allegedly repeatedly ramming the issue down their throats on every single music-industry-related article. I guess they just couldn't handle the facts about the copyright incumbents' monopoly on songwriting.

      --
      Will I retire or break 10K?
  103. Can You Say.... by crusher-1 · · Score: 1

    *.ogg?

  104. Penetration? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Troll

    DRM for all file formats has penetration - bend over and feel the penetration of the RIAA/MPAA's long, hard tool.

  105. In the immortal words... by Mister+Transistor · · Score: 2, Funny

    of Beavis and Butthead:

    "The more things change, the more they suck!"

    --
    -- You are in a maze of little, twisty passages, all different... --
  106. meh by sdibb · · Score: 1
    No worries here.

    abcde -o flac

    .. and I'm done. :)

  107. With apologies to Smuckers... by Odin's+Raven · · Score: 3, Funny
    That, and because Ogg Vorbis is the worst fucking name of all time.

    New advertising campaign:

    With a name like "Ogg Vorbis", it's got to be good...

    --
    A marriage is always made up of two people who are prepared to swear that only the other one snores.
  108. Radio by tepples · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yes, but if you're a defendant, how will you afford to prove that you have never, even once, heard a particular song on the radio in all the years you have been alive? Unlike with computer programs, where it's easy to avoid reading somebody else's source code, it's almost impossible in the United States to avoid hearing songs on the radio.

  109. DRM is already dead by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That whole DRM thing is basically already dead before it even started. Nobody I know would put any DRM "enabled" players or content on his machine.

  110. Doesn't mean much now. by Rick+Zeman · · Score: 1

    Apple has DRM'd extensions to AAC and they haven't affected my use of non-DRM'd .m4a's at all.
    At least at this stage of the game, the news about what Frauhnhoffer doing is Much Ado About Nothing. They just see the commercial world going AAC and WMV and want in.

  111. [OT] your sig by DylanQuixote · · Score: 1

    Heh, I came up with "do or do not. there is no spoon" as a signature (for email), too. I guess geek minds think alike? :)

  112. Local broadband monopoly by tepples · · Score: 1

    Complain to your ISP and threaten to leave if they poo-poo P2P use.

    What if all residential broadband ISPs in town disapprove of file-sharing, and what you do other than file-sharing won't work with dial-up or satellite Internet access? I guess you'd have to live with no file-sharing.

    1. Re:Local broadband monopoly by Thomas+Shaddack · · Score: 1
      New business model for places with cheap access to fat pipes: selling VPN tunnels. So your ISP refuses you access to full Internet. Big deal. You open a VPN to the endpoint you bought cheap access to, and use it as a gateway.

      It's common for cable ISPs to filter IPSec packets, but IPSec is not the only VPN solution. OpenVPN allows tunneling through both TCP and UCP, and I suppose there is a myriad of possibilities involving writing iptables modules.

  113. Needs a selling point by KalvinB · · Score: 4, Insightful

    For developers it's not having to pay thousands in licensing costs. That's an easy sell. There's no reason for a developer to say "no" to Ogg. I have a plug and play DSound 8 class that plays Ogg. It's available at IcarusIndie.com

    But, until MP3 becomes annoying Joe User isn't going to care. There's really no way that companies are going to make it cost effective for the user to choose a more open format.

    What companies fail to realize (or think the DMCA protects them) is that if you can see or listen to it, you can rip it to any format you want. And unless you're silly and start flaunting your rips for the whole world to see, there's nothing they can do about it. Who's to say that sound blasting from your stereo is comming from an "unauthorized" rip?

    I say let them do their thing. The sooner they get going DRMing everything to death the sooner they go out of business under the weight of their own stupidity.

    They should just stick to frying the big fish and not worry about how many fish are in the sea. If Joe User can rip a CD, oh well.

    Ben

  114. "The crack" by tepples · · Score: 1

    I don't do crack, and I don't do crack either. That's why I'm worried about going to the poor house for copyright infringement rather than going to prison for possession of cocaine without a prescription. Did you read the Bright Tunes opinion? If anybody needs to lay off the crack, it's the U.S. Congress *cough*DMCA*cough*Bono Act*cough*.

  115. ASCAP by cyberworm · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I was just thinking, could someone explain to me why ASCAP isn't the one complaining about the trading of MP3's? They are the ones collecting money from radio stations, so why couldnt' we just pay ascap a once a year royalty fee and trade mp3's all day long? That would be a lot better than the current situation of paying the RIAA who coninuously rips off artists. At least (as far as I know) ASCAP collects the royalties on behalf of the artists (and [sigh] the record companies) That seems to me to be the better way to do things.
    Any thoughts?

    1. Re:ASCAP by thumbtack · · Score: 1

      ASCAP collects royalties for the songwriters and publishers, not the performer. In meatspace, on terrestial radio stations, performers don't get paid, only the songwriters and publishers. On the internet the performers get paid, as do the songwriters. So it can actually cost more to license the music for the internet than real world. Add to that the assumption that the RIAA and labels consider a download to take the place of a purchase, and there you have the problem. There is a compulsory license for streaming, but not for downloads.

  116. Hi Jason! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're one of the bigger dorks I've come across...

  117. Here's the right solution: by Stevyn · · Score: 1

    First, we have the government suspend all the patents and copyrights enforced in this country. Then we'll send a secret police out to search for mp3 players that aren't ogg supporters and burn them on sight. Then we'll go to each American's house one at a time and convert their mp3 collection to ogg (I know! I know! but they won't know it's lesser quality cause of the horrible lossy mp3 format). They we will ask the portable music player manufacturers to release their schematics for their products to the open source community or we'll do to them what we did to the crumbling micro$oft and their win-BLOWZ. Once everyone has only oggs on their 'puter and they all own ogg players, we will have one.

    Death to WMA and other drm'ed lossy formats!
    be l33t like me!

  118. Re:Hi Ogg by Lord_Dweomer · · Score: 2, Funny
    "Not a problem. The dinner, like the lunch, is free."

    You cheap bastard.

    --
    Buy Steampunk Clothing Online!
  119. Let me be the first to say... by Joey7F · · Score: 1

    it's about time!

    --Joey

  120. It's a good time to switch... by demon_2k · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Maybe now people will which to an alternative format like Ogg.

  121. at which point... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    everyone says "too bad" and the demands are ignored.

    there's a story just above this on the front page about a situation just like this involving a company called SCO.

  122. Listen Up Beelzebub by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You think Gore would have been a worse disaster than Bush???

    This is how it breaks down for me. I don't care if the Democrats suite up a chimp and run him for president, whoever the Dems select will be getting my vote. It's not a matter of anybody but Bush, votes cannot be wasted voting third party should the going get close and matters get left to Florida. It is a matter of backing the only legitimate shot at removing this Bastard and that will be the Democratic Nominee. Anything else is a risk to great to comtemplate, that being a two term Bush. Most Republicans realize their mistake but it's to late to do anything about it other than voting to dethrone this Little Caligula. Another term lets the Neo-Cons run amuck! Don't waste your vote. For gods sake man, come to your senses.

  123. Can DRM actually work? by ace123 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Can they really change the source of cp, cat, more and every other program out there that reads files to check for drm?

    bash$ cp cool_muzak.mp3 /home/otheruser/
    cp: DRM Error: The RIAA is out to get you.
    cp: DRM Error: Your IP has been sent to the RIAA.
    bash$ cat cool_muzak.mp3 > /home/otheruser/cool_muzak.mp3
    cat: DRM Error: They is still out to get you. Mua ha ha.
    cat: DRM Error: Big brother is watching...

    It seems impossible to make every player and old install file support the DRM in the new and improved DRMed files

    Well at any rate, I'm going off to install debian stable. I'll be safe from this new technology for a few more years.

    1. Re:Can DRM actually work? by cavac · · Score: 4, Insightful

      They'd have to modify all development tools and backup software as well.

      I mean, it would be simple to do something like this:

      #!/usr/bin/perl
      open($orig, "mymp3.mp3");
      open($copy, ">", "piratecopy.mp3");
      $copy = ;
      close $orig;
      close $copy;

      And whatabout even the most simplistic backup tools?

      tar xv

      would normally read a directory from streamer tape. How can they even MAKE tar distiungish between illegal copied mp3's and ones that you lost during a harddisk failure?

      Anyway, IMHO the greatest threat to RIAA (and similar organisations) is probably not the file-sharing per-se but the ability of artists getting noticed (and therefore money) without having contracts with the Fuhrers in MusicCity Headquarters.

      Remember: the greatest threat to any monopoly is that your worst enemy finds good and cheap distribution and advertising channels! Even well-known artists start releasing some of their songs for free. To quote SCO: "Giving away something for free is against the law because it hinders us to make profit!"

      (Maybe they should sell products that are worth our money instead of pestering us with technology that won't make it anyway)

      --
      Look, this thing is totally safe! Built it myself, you know. You just press that button like this and then turn that lev
    2. Re:Can DRM actually work? by chrysalis · · Score: 1

      They can force hardware manufacturers to implement in in hard disks or controlers.

      --
      {{.sig}}
    3. Re:Can DRM actually work? by Knightmare+1 · · Score: 1

      But they can't force people to buy DRM hardware

    4. Re:Can DRM actually work? by SuiteSisterMary · · Score: 1

      Reuters/AP: Congress today passed into law the "Don't Sell Fucking Non DRM Hardware" act, known as the DSFNDRMH bill. This new law makes it illegal to sell computer hardware that doesn't respect DRM and other 'digital rights' technologies....

      Side comment: Any law which has a convenient acronym which is one or more English words (PATRIOT, CAN-SPAM, and so on) should be instantly shitcanned.

      --
      Vintage computer games and RPG books available. Email me if you're interested.
  124. In AD 2101... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Captain: What happen?
    Mechanic: Someone set up us the update
    Operator: We get DRM signal
    Captain: What!
    Operator: WMP turn on.

    Captain: It's you!!
    RIAA: How are you gentlemen!!
    RIAA: All your MP3 are belong to us

    1. Re:In AD 2101... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Captain: No way! We will never surrender!! ACTIVATE THE LASERS!!!!

    2. Re:In AD 2101... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Captain: Take off every ogg!

    3. Re:In AD 2101... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Funny

      Use Ogg for GREAT JUSTICE!

    4. Re:In AD 2101... by mandalayx · · Score: 1

      pretty good. most ayb references these days suck.

    5. Re:In AD 2101... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "these days"? I haven't seen one in ages.. well except for that one "punchline"..

  125. It's much harder actually by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 4, Informative

    The problem with all the schemes is that, at some point, you have to unencrypt the data. This means that you have two big points of succeptability:

    1) The location of decryption. All someone needs to do is modify the device to get at the data. I mean lets say you invent a scheme where the data is encrypted the whole time until it hits the audio card. Not decrypted and re-encrypted, but simlpy kept encrypted until the soundcard. That then decrypts it. Well what happens when the data is decrupted? It gets fed to a little chip made by Texas Instruments or Sigmatel or someone like that. That is the digital-analogue converter. So you just go and tap the signal right there, which will no longer be encrypted and you're good to go.

    2) The far easier method: The key. Encryption is inherantly a technology if trusted parties. You give the key to the people you wish to be able to decipher your message. Doing that, you lock everyone else out from being able to read it. The problem with DRM is that you are trying to lock EVERYONE out, including the person you give the message to. That doesn't work, you HAVE to give them the key in some form or another at some time or another. If you do that, they can find it, and make use of it to decrypt the data themselves. This is the problem with things like game copy protection. They release some new version of SafeDisc with 2048-bit, uber-secure, penis-enhancing encryption to keep the evil haxors out.... Which the key to resides on the disc. So, you debug the program, find where it gets the key, grab it yourself, decode the data, write it to disc and call it a day.

    However for things like audio, it is generally just easier to say fuck it to digital and capture it analogue and re-encode it. It's real easy to get soundcards that exceed the CD spec for a reasonable price, never mind the quality of compressed audio. Just re-record it and go. Sure you loose a tiny bit of quality, but if done right no one but people with good ears and high end gear will be able to tell (who won't put up with compressed music in the first place).

    Of course, once something is available unencrypted it can be quickly distributed.

    Companies pretty much just need to knock it the fuck off. People WILL violate copyright, it's just life. Been happening forever. Now I don't object to some non invasive controls to make it more than just pressing copy to keep honest people honest, but it just gets stupid. No matter what you do, you won't lock out the hard core people, and you'll just piss off the legitimate users.

    Game copyprotection has gotten really bad. Time was you were better off having a warez version of Neverwinter Nights. The new Securerom copyprotection was so screwed it wouldn't work on a ton of CD-ROMs with perfectly legit discs. It actually was punishing legit users, whiile doing nothing to stop the game from being copied by those that wanted to.

    1. Re:It's much harder actually by tehdaemon · · Score: 1
      So, what you are saying is that digital freezers are cantankerous beasts that are hard to maintain, and the frozen bits are really still slushy and only a pain in the neck to drink, instead of impossible?

      Seriously, my post was meant as a joke. On the other hand, I was considering NWN, has the copy protection thing been resolved?

      --
      Laws are horrible moral guides, moral guides make even worse laws.
    2. Re:It's much harder actually by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

      Near as I know, yes. I believe they finally just took it out and went to some simpler disc checks plus their key. I can't say for sure, as my drive is one of the ones SecureROM likes, but I recall a patch that just took the SecureROM checks out to make things work better.

  126. They have the download links. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe it's not a huge idiot-proof link but you just go to the downloads icon, get a choice of Unix/Linux or Windows. Pick Windows and get

    http://www.vorbis.com/download_win_1.0.1.psp

    Hell, just a couple clicks away you can easily find a plugin for windows media player.

  127. Two words by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Does this mean we have to use it? All my old MP3s will work just fine.

    One word: patents. They can start enforcing them whenever they want. (See www.mp3licensing.com.) Remember Unisys patent on LZW compression? All my old GIFs was working just fine too, which didn't mean I could keep using them. Fortunately, now with zlib, PNG and Ogg Vorbis, this is not an issue this time.

    Does anyone understand logic here? If you're lzw compressed gifs can't be displayed anymore, it's because no one thought it was worth paying the royalty.

    Two words: free software.

    If you have a licensed player to play an mp3 file, you can play any file, no matter how old. See the difference? Why does this shit get modded up?

    Nine words: You haven't read this and this, have you?

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  128. No, copyrighting music is NOT stupid by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 3, Insightful

    At least, not as copyright law was orignally written and not as the constitution intends it to be.

    The part of the constitution that allows copyright and patent laws to be created is Article I, Section 8, Paragraph 8 which reads: "To promote the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries;"

    Now as orignally written and enforced, they did just that. You'd make a creative work and get a copyright for 14 years, which you could extend once. During that time nobody could go and copy the work without your permission. This allowed you to profit from it. Remember, the U.S. is a highly capatalistic country so profit motive is important. Then, after your copyright expired, your work became the property of the people.

    28 years was a good long time to profit, I mean that's over a quarter of even a long life. However it ensured that your work would fall into the public domain in a reaonable amount of time. You couldn't horde control over it forever, just for awhile. The idea being, of course, that it would encourage people to create, since there was an ecenomic incentive.

    Also, your control wasn't absolute. You just got to control who was allowed to make copies. You couldn't control everything. People could resell copies they had legitimately purchased. Copies of portions could be made for education. People (or libraries) could loan a copy to a friend, then take it back later, and so on. This is what is collectively refered to as Fair Use.

    There was not a problem with this system. It gave profit motive, which is important in a capatalism, for creative works and saw to it that society reaped the benefit.

    The problem is with how copyright laws have changed. First there is the problem of extension. It is getting to the point of stupid how long a copyright lasts. Right now it's the lifetime of the author plus 50 years. Are you kidding me? How the hell does the +50 years have to do with profit motive for the author, not to mention that it flies in the face of the "limited times" clause.

    Then there is this concept that you don't actually own the rights to do anything with the copy you buy. You can't use it in ways the author doesn't like, you can't trade it, sell it, etc. Well the law hasn't actually changed to say that, they just passed a new law, that says those things can be forced on you technologically and there's jack you can do about it. This of course clearly flies in the face of the "To promote the progress of" clause.

    THAT'S the problem. Copyright is a good, and necessary, idea for a capatalistic country. It might intrest you to know that copyright is the reason the GPL can exist and be legally enforcable. With no copyright, the GPL would be worthless.

    What's bad is that copyright is being twisted to add levels of control that are not intended or allowed by the constitution.

    1. Re:No, copyrighting music is NOT stupid by hyphz · · Score: 2, Informative

      > THAT'S the problem. Copyright is a good, and
      > necessary, idea for a capatalistic country.

      Yes. But far more of a problem is that copyright law has NOT been updated in ways which are necessary to promote effective capitalism, and HAS been updated in ways which harm it.

      For example, no update to copyright law has been made which protects authors from being forced to surrender their copyright in exchange for access to a distribution cartel. This immediately harpoons the "it's to give a profit motive for creating works" angle because typically you have to surrender the copyright to have any change of making any profit. "But the distributors are providing a service!" come the cries. No they're not. They're providing a service that wouldn't be necessary if it wasn't for their own existance, which is a bit like saying the mafia provide a service by not burning down your shopfront.

      However, they were QUICK to update copyright law to put legal protection behind copy protection systems, which can clearly be abused: make all playback devices require DRM formats then make the DRM granting systems inaccessible to artists, either by exclusive arrangements or by pricing them too high, thus even FURTHER locking in the distribution system.

      Both of these are anticapitalist. Effective capitalism requires a dynamic market where competition is active and reasonable. Neither of these help that.

  129. No. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    At which point "illegal" format converters popup all over the net, and everyone changes to Ogg.

  130. I Say Fork It by loftis · · Score: 2, Insightful

    And I do mean the obvious double entendre. Let's just keep using the old non-DRM format. It that means no MS, then OK.

    If anyone needs a copy of non-DRM-forced Media Player or iTunes or VLC, I have .exe or .gzip files I will mail us.

    I do not believe that a company can legally force you to modify your information if you decide not to use their software. So what if I can't use Longhorn.

    Besides, in the time it will take to actually release it, someone will crack the DRM (can you say CSS).

    Why won't the RIAA spend its money giving us value instead of crappy music. I buy music I want to listen to. I just like to manage my music in MP3 format. blah blah blah

    --
    Developing Retail Point-of-Sale Software
  131. Worst fucking name my arse by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Not enough people in the mainstream consumer market are going to adopt Ogg because nobody will support it and they don't know to ask for it.

    That, and because Ogg Vorbis is the worst fucking name of all time.

    As opposed to MP3, which is the best fucking name of all time? The name of the format is Vorbis. It is much easier to pronounce than MP3 and for anyone being even remotely literate, it sounds instantly familiar. I am sick of those trolls in every story about Vorbis, Ogg, Theora, Tarkin, or anything made by the Xiphophorus Helleri Foundation in general.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
    1. Re:Worst fucking name my arse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Back to the crack pipe, buddy. VORBIS is easier to pronounce than MP3? That's a crock of donkey dookey dude. VOR-BIS is an obnoxious, rounded word that takes effort. M-P-3 couldn't roll off the tongue any easier. VOR-BIS is like the sound the tubgirl makes when she unloads her unholy payload.

    2. Re:Worst fucking name my arse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sick of those trolls in every story about Vorbis, Ogg, Theora, Tarkin, or anything made by the Xiphophorus Helleri Foundation in general.

      Mods, where are you? This is +5 (Funny)!!

    3. Re:Worst fucking name my arse by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am sick of those trolls in every story about Vorbis, Ogg, Theora, Tarkin, or anything made by the Xiphophorus Helleri Foundation in general.

      Mods, where are you? This is +5 (Funny)!!

      Thank you. Thank you very much indeed.

  132. Re:What? Why? by E-Lad · · Score: 1


    The reasons you give for your dismissal of the AAC format (which, by the way, is the same audio codec used in MPEG-2 movies - ergo DVDs and VCDs. MPEG-4's AAC is the same thing with some added features) are generally vague and uninformed.

    If you'd like to further develop your argument, lossy encoding formats of any type "just won't cut it." With LAME and Fh-encoded MP3s, the midrange is slopped up a good bit.

    Pick your poison, but singling out AAC in a way which makes you sound like a fool isn't going to earn you cred. As it is right now, AAC has the best combination of properties of any audio codec in terms of quality, accetpance, and extensibility.

  133. MP3's...anyone's still using them? by WheelDweller · · Score: 1

    When the owners of the patents did their 'call for papers' and wanted to start charging, I re-ripped all my 100+ cdroms in .ogg format at a higher rate and never looked back.

    Didn't everyone? :)

    --
    --- For a good time mail uce@ftc.gov
  134. well - there goes the neighborhood by spamspam · · Score: 0

    i guess i should start brushing up on those ogg and flac command lines

  135. Re:Hi Ogg by Mizery+De+Aria · · Score: 2, Funny

    Free food is a matter of the users' freedom to eat, consume, chow, gobble, slurp and devour the food. More precisely, it refers to four kinds of freedom, for the consumers of the food:

    * The freedom to eat the food, for any purpose (freedom 0).
    * The freedom to study how the food works, and adapt it to your needs (freedom 1). Access to the ingredients are a precondition for this.
    * The freedom to distribute the food so you can feed your neighbor (freedom 2).
    * The freedom to improve the food, and release your improvements to the public, so that the whole dinner party benefits (freedom 3). Access to the recipe is a precondition for this.

    --
    If you're religishitty, KILL YOURSELF!
  136. Re:What? Why? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Not nescessarily. What you describe as "penetration" I see as a hugely marketable brand. Think about it, when a user goes to download a sound file, they're going to choose mp3 over any others. And when a user wants music, they want it in mp3. Adding DRM is a good move from Thomson and Fraunhofer. They satisfy media distributors, and allow them to capitalise on the large mp3 user base.

  137. When does the patent expire? by waferhead · · Score: 3, Insightful

    GIF is in the public domain now...
    When thou MP3?

    Being a lazy ass, and not about to look it up.

    My point, I guess, is basically a quote from a Great Russian, General Zukoff IIRC(sp?) and I will badly paraphrase it I'm sure, as the beer is good:
    (Trying to provide attribution, please excuse)

    "The enemy of better is good enough."

    The current format works well.

    Everyone and their dog has MP3s, and the dog probably has a device that can play them.

    Anything that kills compatibility and the ability to move files, or god forbid, SHARE files, will sell like dog shit on a bun.

    1. Re:When does the patent expire? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Unless they put an "industry alliance" to "help the consumers" together, so that all the members of the alliance produce DRM-only materials. It's quite possible, and I'd bet it'll happen.

    2. Re:When does the patent expire? by PedanticSpellingTrol · · Score: 3, Informative

      January 26, 2015

  138. arg by zushiba · · Score: 1

    Damnit, can't big companies leave our stuff alone? Why do they feel they have a right to stick their money grubbing hands into everything on the internet like its their right to make money off of everything.

  139. Re:Hi Ogg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hi Ogg, nice to meet you, i just broke up with MP3, want to go out?

    Hwahahahaha!

    Why bother pursuing a relationship? All audio formats are the same, you'll just get hurt in the end.

  140. Re:Am i missing something here, or am I just stupi by Technician · · Score: 1

    but with DRM, maybe people would tolerate it.

    Yes you are missing something. It's a cable box for subscription content.
    Those who want to listen to the pay to play subscription content will need a player that will play it. Think of it as a Satelite receiver. Your NON DRM TV can't view satelite stations. Your car radio can't receive XM or Sireus broadcasts. Hmm, I guess you need a DRM enabled Satelite receiver with a subscription. Funny thing, the Satelite receiver can't pick up the non-DRM evening news, or local clear channel morning ZOO show. The DRM MP3 is nothing more than a subscription box for the latest subscription content. It isn't for the non-subscription stuff the same way your XM tuner can't get the local traffic report in the morning.
    It doesn't replace your current car radio. It supliments it. Just like subscription radio, it's not for everyone.

    --
    The truth shall set you free!
  141. Too bad, the cat's out of the bag already-Zen. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Yep, I agree, people are mindless drones who'll buy players, then will buy music, then will play music and not think twice about it."

    Um, are these the same people who can't be bothered to learn how to operate their computers because it's a TOOL?

  142. Time to ditch MP3 by Qrlx · · Score: 1

    I wont be the first to make this suggestion..

    MP3 is good for "casual" listening but it actually sucks for "audiophile" listening and there are other formats that "sound" better.

    A "drm layer" will encumber any encoding scheme with a "feature" that will eventually be circumvented anyway. I can understand the MP3 spec owners wanting to "embrace and extend" their widely-accepted standard, but I don't want that.

    Shouldn't we be at the point where we can wipe the memory of your personal stereo thingie and put your own code in there for ogg or whatever floats your boat? Okay maybe not now but in five or ten years?

    I'm pretty leery of any DRM "solution" until the courts have done a better job establishing what my digital rights are in the first place.

  143. In other news... by serutan · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Owners of Everything Decide to Indenture the Rest of Us for Life

    Ungrateful sods and copyright pirates to be imprisoned, executed. "You're lucky to have those jobs we provide you with," says spokesperson for owners of everything.

  144. Ha ha ha! by preposterity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    These guys must be smoking something...

    The thing about illegal MP3 distribution is that the vast majority of the material originates from MP3 "groups".

    And guess what: the people in these groups are smart enough to use LAME rather than some DRM-restricted garbage.

    I wish these companies luck. They are going to need it, given the fact that most users can barely get their MP3 player working, let alone set it up to rip music.

  145. Time for oggasm by ringe82 · · Score: 2, Informative
    I'd say it's time to have a look at Oggasm. I converted a few thousand MP3s with it and Oggasm screwed less than ten.

    Just be aware that the script have hard times dealing with special characters. If you've got MP3s originating from a Windows user the characters ` and ' are probably mixed up, so you'll have to fix that before converting.

    You are ogg | s/gg/dd/
    1. Re:Time for oggasm by AllUsernamesAreGone · · Score: 4, Informative

      The problem with converting mp3 to vorbis is that both are lossy formats and the have different encoding methods: when you convert an original piece to mp3 you lose one part of the sound, then when you convert from mp3 to ogg you lose another part. See the Ogg Vorbis FAQ for more on this.

    2. Re:Time for oggasm by ringe82 · · Score: 1
      Screwed as my hearing is, I couldn't hear no difference..

      Hmm, maybe I should draw some waveline graphs to convince myself that the conversion gave me a bad experience.. Yeah, and then I'll just convert all my Ogg files to MP3 to ensure high sound quality again!

    3. Re:Time for oggasm by 3terrabyte · · Score: 1
      ....Just be aware that the script have hard times dealing....

      Just be aware that's called transcoding and is a terrible way to make lossy files sound even worse. Well, technically it's a great way to make crappy sounding files.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    4. Re:Time for oggasm by Mattsson · · Score: 1

      It's a big pain but you *could* just re-rip your cd's to Ogg Vorbis and thus circumvent the problem of loosing quality.
      Unless you actually bought the music in mp3-format that is. Or are using mp3's of records you haven't bought.
      But that's the downside of buying or pirating music in a lossy format.
      If the music was bought: That's to bad but not much to do about.
      If the music was stolen: Well, one wouldn't have much right to complain then, right? =)

      --
      /.Mattsson - My native language is not English, so please don't whine over linguistic errors. (That's lame anyway...)
    5. Re:Time for oggasm by Limburgher · · Score: 1
      Then re-rip to from CD to WAV or FLAC and re-encode to Vorbis.

      You do own the CDs, right?

      --

      You are not the customer.

    6. Re:Time for oggasm by alexpage · · Score: 1

      I tried re-encoding some mp3s to oggs just to see what the difference in quality is. I suspect that unless you're a total audiophile, you won't really notice anything. And if you're a total audiophile, why would you be using a lossy format in the first place? ;)

    7. Re:Time for oggasm by thetaikung · · Score: 1

      You would think that only people with good hearing would be able to tell the difference, if at all.

      --
      P226 .40cal
  146. a recommendation by cliveholloway · · Score: 2, Interesting
    DVD Free - Not only can I play my R2 DVDs (Yeah, Spaced!), but I can override the UOPs on insert and go straight to the root menu.

    Unless of course you're talking hardware DVD player - on Slashdot? Nah :)

    .02

    cLive ;-)

    --
    -- Trinity in high heels carrying a whip: The donimatrix - there is no spoonerism
  147. LAME seems OK by Durendal · · Score: 1

    The folks at http://lame.sourceforge.net/ seem confortable with their level of legal risk. I use L.A.M.E. because I feel my music sounds better. If L.A.M.E. encoded .mp3's end up being a "safe harbor" for non-DRM .mp3 files so much the better.

  148. Coming up next... by trezor · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Ok. I'm no oracle, but this is what i see. In this order:

    1. Secured files:
      These files are secured for you.
    2. Secured & authorized files:
      In the name of your security, the secure files must be authorized before playback.
    3. Authorized files:
      Security is implied, yet for a while. Un-authorized music is considered suspicious and mostly illegal.
    4. Authorized musicians:
      Poeple allowed to release music. Everything none-authorized is pirate-music, very much like pirate-radio. The RIAA has full control.
    5. Authorized client:
      People showing this system little respect are simply banned from using it, and thus has no access to audio medias. "No music for you!", the ironhand to keep control.

    That might be a bit extreme, but I find the current climate so extreme I wouldn't believe this was possible 7-8 years ago. So who's to tell what's next?

    So please tell me I have a tinfoil hat on my head, I just didn't notice, because I'd like this not to be true.

    --
    Not Buzzword 2.0 compliant. Please speak english.
  149. I disagree by 0x0d0a · · Score: 1

    How many codec produers provide this?

    Does Fraunhoffer provide an mp3 player that many people use?

    Does Sorenson provide a video player that many people use?

    No. They provide the codec. The player developers choose to support it.

    The only place I can think of that might do codec/dominant player development in-house would be Real.

    Finally, what you're asking for already happens. As another person pointed out, WinAMP already bundles Vorbis support. If I google for ogg media-player, up comes a page with a downloadable Windows installer, sure enough.

    1. Re:I disagree by Talez · · Score: 1

      I'm sorry. My language isn't clear.

      When I say codec I've used it in two different contexts.

      Fraunhoffer provide an MP3 codec to Microsoft that can be implemented system wide. The same thing Sorenson does for Apple and Quicktime components.

      Xiph on the other hand give the codec to you in more raw terms. Its like getting Iron Ore and trying to make a car out of it.

      If Xiph wants to make Ogg truly accessible it needs to stop pussy footing around and popping the champagne because yet another developer decides it was worth supporting. Make an official Directshow filter, make it easy and make it worth having and you'll see an increase in adoption.

      Winamp is bundling Vorbis support but you miss the point. If you want to pack up and leave Winamp should you have to leave behind Ogg support? Should you have to select a player based purely upon its support of Ogg rather than other more important features. Making an official Directshow filter would remove application dependent support because almost every media player out there in Windows land supports Directshow in some way, shape or form.

    2. Re:I disagree by asit+ler · · Score: 1

      You have a valid point here, however I would ask why in the name of God anyone would want to move away from Winamp 2.9x to something without media format support as extensive.

      --
      This is not the sig you're looking for.
    3. Re:I disagree by Talez · · Score: 1

      I did. I moved away because Winamp 2.9 started crashing every time I started it and I couldn't make it stop.

  150. Re:What? Why? by bleak+sky · · Score: 2, Informative
    The reasons you give for your dismissal of the AAC format (which, by the way, is the same audio codec used in MPEG-2 movies - ergo DVDs and VCDs. MPEG-4's AAC is the same thing with some added features) are generally vague and uninformed.

    A little nitpick: VCDs use MPEG-1, for video and audio. The audio is encoded in MPEG-1 Layer 2 (whereas MP3s are MPEG-1 Layer 3) at a fairly high bitrate, 224kbps if my memory serves me correctly.

    Now, the AAC codec used in DVDs is a much higher bitrate than what you'd purchase at iTMS. 448kbps at 48000 KHz vs. 128kbps at 44100 KHz. Naturally, the DVD will have surround sound channels, but since most of the bandwidth will still be devoted to stereo, it's not really fair to compare the AAC that everyone will actually hear when it comes to music to that used by DVDs. In practice, at "normal" bitrates (between 128 and 256 kpbs), MP3 and Ogg Vorbis almost always sound better.

  151. Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Parent makes a good point.

  152. It's a bait and switch scheme by elronxenu · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This is an attempt to extinguish the mp3 format.

    First, they'll add DRM and continue to call it MP3 even though the file formats are incompatible. "MP3" files won't play in a traditional MP3 player.

    Next, "MP3" files will be distributed widely on the P2P networks. Vendors will sell "MP3" songs. People with traditional MP3 players will never know whether an "MP3" file they are about to download is a real MP3 file or not.

    The resulting confusion will send MP3 and the P2P networks into obscurity.

  153. Mass-converters? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What I would like to know: does anyone know if there are (free) mass-converter progs on the Net?

    Like, if you have a directory full of mp3's, it auto-convert them all into say, ogg's?

    (And idem with pics; gif-files to open-formats?)

  154. Essentially already there. by guidryp · · Score: 1

    I have seen comments that people won't buy players that don't play MP3 players that need DRM.

    Please point out such players, because almost every Flash based MP3 player I have seen forces you to use some terrible software that adds some DRM layer to your MP3's. I hate it. It is crap.

    Who cares if there is a standard or if the have one standard form of MP3 DRM. The later is probably better.

  155. Rumored by whom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That sounds completely made up.

    Congratulations, you got a +5 so I guess you just successfully started a rumor!

  156. Simple : by Elusive_Cure · · Score: 1

    Simple : Convert to ogg... I have a really long database of mp3s and oggs (nearly 120gb)all legally acquired- i dont want to scratch my precious cds and i have been thinking to convert all mp3s to ogg considering the superiority of quality ogg provides. Now for the reason that an ogg zealot might pop up i know that my music quality is degraded when converting to mp3 at the first place and converting to ogg won't do much improvement, but at least i'm gonna have a full hard drive of pure/un-cencored/un-DRM'd music that I LEGALLY OWN BY DEFAULT. One last word... F**k you RIAA When i buy a cd I OWN the music and i use it as I SEE FIT !

    --
    Roses are red, violets are blue, most poems rhyme, but this one doesn't... ;^)
  157. "Ogg - it's like MP3, only better" by Quizo69 · · Score: 1

    Want to build Ogg Vorbis mindshare?

    Use this simple quote that will stick in impressionable people's minds:

    "Ogg - it's like MP3, only better"

    It makes them think, and ask followup questions such as "Why?" You can then tell them why. But START with this simple quote that is catchy and easy to remember and place everywhere:

    "Ogg - it's like MP3, only better"

  158. So voting is more like... by gosand · · Score: 1
    Next time you go to the ballot, try thinking about things like a natural human being. Think about their negatives.


    Voting is like a woman shopping for a dildo. She isn't looking for the one that feels the best, she is looking for the one that hurts the least.

    --

    My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    1. Re:So voting is more like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let me tell ya what "Like a Virgin"'s about. It's about some cooze who's a regular fuck machine. I mean all the time, morning, day, night, afternoon, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick, dick.

      Then one day she meets a John Holmes motherfucker, and it's like, whoa baby. This mother fucker's like Charles Bronson in "The Great Escape." He's diggin tunnels. Now she's gettin this serious dick action, she's feelin something she ain't felt since forever. Pain.

      It hurts. It hurts her. It shouldn't hurt. Her pussy should be Bubble-Yum by now. But when this cat fucks her, it hurts. It hurts like the first time. The pain is reminding a fuck machine what is was like to be a virgin. Hence, "Like a Virgin."

    2. Re:So voting is more like... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's kinda scary, I was hearing Quentin's voice in my head before I got halfway through the first line and realized where this was from.

  159. An MP3 with DRM is just... by nightwing2000 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    An MP3 with DRM is just another incompatible file format. If my current MP3 players and my current DVD/CD/MP3 player stero system won't play it, it ain't MP3.

    Mark Twain: "If you call a dog's tail a leg also, how many legs does a dog have?"
    "5?"
    "No, 4. Just calling a tail a leg doesn't make it one."

  160. Re:What? Why? by igrp · · Score: 1
    I beg to differ. What you fail to take into consideration is that, these days, MP3 does not automatically equal 'computer-based, software-only' implementation. Sure, the cost of switching from one software codec to another is, economically speaking, nil. All you need to do to make people switch is create an incentive and make sure that people don't consider the COA (cost of acquisition, ie. price, download time, availability) unreasonable.

    Nowadays, however, MP3 capabilites are widely available in consumer-grade hardware, including your average $39 DVD player at Walmart and the $50 memory stick you got your brother for Christmas. These devices typically cannot be easily upgraded; plus, there's often no manufacturer support at all.

    Your average consumer just won't accept a new encoding format if there's not an obvious, significant improvement. Joe Consumer doesn't want to throw away his old DVD player just to be able to keep listening to his music.

    Joe: Hey Bob, check out this new DVD player I shelled out $150 for. Now, I can do precisely what my could do with my old player. Isn't that awesome?

    Nope, not gonna happen.

  161. Glad I've got a Karma by erik_fredricks · · Score: 1

    Several mainstream mp3 players now support Ogg. The Rio Karma does a perfect job (gapless playback and everything), and most iRiver HD-based players now support it.

    Since Ogg already supported by Winamp and almost every Linux piece of audio software, the arguments not to switch are getting thinner.

    Despite the annoying DRM conundrums, mp3 was never ready for primetime anyway. Ogg isn't quite perfect yet, but it's capable of improvement, as opposed to mp3, which is essentially a locked standard with alot of inherent (and, at this point) unfixable bugs.

    Here's hoping more folks decide to check out "that Ogg thing" they keep hearing about.

    --

    THE GOOD HUMOR MAN CAN ONLY BE PUSHED SO FAR
    Bart Simpson on chalkboard in episode 2F18

  162. heh by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm not worried i still use winamp 2.74

  163. Re:[OT] my sig by Ineffable+27 · · Score: 1

    Hah. That's funny. It occurred to me a few weeks ago when I watched 'Empire' again and saw a parallel between Luke's and Neo's 'Hero's Journeys.' Cheers.

    --
    "He'd be a broader guy if he had dropped acid once." - Steve Jobs on Bill Gates
  164. They don't care that you can copy it by (void*) · · Score: 1

    This is what they want to do:
    bash$ play unDRMed_music.mp3
    play: /dev/audio permission denied
    bash$ play DRM_music.mp3
    play: legal mp3 format recognized and authenticated
    play: 44.1 kHz, 128 bps
    play: Title - All Your Bases Are Belong to Us
    play: Artist - Hilary Rosen and Darl McBride
    play: Copyrright - RIAA. Don't steal music.

  165. go ogg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I use ogg format - but I have from the beginning.

    what a smart choice. I am going to pat myself on the back for that one.

    lets just suck all the fun out of computers so they are nothing but advertising, mpdrm playing, viral pieces of crap.

    fsck off microsoft, riaa, and last but not least sco.

  166. This will hand it over to ogg. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This move is ogg's best bud.

  167. Player software. Sound archives. by donsaklad · · Score: 1

    Why would the player not work for the sound archives?... of Boston Public Library at http://www.bpl.org/soundarchives BPL personnel are adamant about any difficulties being at the users' end rather than difficulties of the player software. It does not represent good customer services practices to put the burden on users! It's always a good idea to offer an alternate player just in case users would have difficulties with one of the choices.

  168. it's DRM, not copy protection by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You can copy the file all you want, you just can't give to a friend. You in fact can't use it either past the expiration date, if they so feel like adding that feature.

    Anyway, DRM doesn't require controlling the ability to copy it, just the ability to play it.

  169. Time to save source code by nurb432 · · Score: 1

    This is why I tend to collect source to anything I use..

    That way they cant change their mind later on and take it away.. Or change the rules and start charging for its use..

    Sure this may blow the use new MP3 players, but I suppose I can convert what I have into the 'protected' format...

    Just for the record, this DRM and IP garbage is really getting old, and will end up killing the technological golden goose.

    --
    ---- Booth was a patriot ----
  170. MP3Pro by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    What you refer to as SuperMP3 is called MP3Pro. Big flop.

    I agree with all your points.

  171. Why I even need to write music by tepples · · Score: 1

    Compare with MikeXpop's story. I feel much in the same position, and I'm afraid that of the songs I do write, the one I decide to publish might turn out to resemble something that was played on the radio back when I was in second grade.

    Or, if you claim that I'm just unskilled at writing my own music, how else can I procure background music for a Free video game?

  172. LAME Ain't (freely usable) MP3 Encoder by Pan+T.+Hose · · Score: 1

    Fortunately, now with zlib, PNG and Ogg Vorbis, this is not an issue this time.

    And, don't forget, with LAME. While LAME generates MP3 format-compatible files, it does not use any Frauenhoffer patented techniques to do it.

    "Using the LAME encoding engine (or other mp3 encoding technology) in your software may require a patent license in some countries." So no, I didn't forget about LAME. It is just illegal to use as freely as Vorbis. LAME is free software using patented algorithm. For me, it might be proprietary software as well.

    --
    Sincerely,
    Pan Tarhei Hosé, PhD.
    "Homo sum et cogito ergo odi profanum vulgus et libido."
  173. OT: Sig by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The page cannot be displayed

  174. Re:What? Why? by Liselle · · Score: 1

    You're entitled to your opinion. Only problem is, your argument assumes that because AAC won't be in everyone's homes by next Tuesday, that it won't happen ever. That DVD player won't last, and neither will that memory stick. How many people do you know that still have a 64meg Diamond Rio? Hardware will need to be replaced eventually. The marginal cost of switching codecs you mentioned will accelerate this process. You'll see expanded support in all of the new gadgets you buy.

    A few years from now, MP3 will have waning popularity. How much of your music collection is in .WAV or .mp2? Welcome to the 21st century.

    --
    Auto-reply to ACs: "Truly, you have a dizzying intellect."
  175. Where are the links? by Wil63 · · Score: 1

    Has anyone seen links to the new tech? Does Thomson and Fraunhofer have extra detail about the work they are doing? Send in the links!

  176. Unlicensed MP3 uses are legally liable by acb · · Score: 1

    MP3s may not be going anywhere, but the software to work with them might. A patentholder is entitled to prohibit unauthorised implementations of their patents. All Fraunhofer has to do is send cease & desist letters to the websites hosting LAME, xmms and such (which they are entitled to do under patent law), and the software disappears. They could also C&D artists/websites publishing (non-copyright-violating) music in MP3 formats; in fact, the infrastructure for tracking down and suing large numbers of internet users already exists, courtesy of the RIAA, and we may well see FhG borrow it to sort out their own intellectual-property violation problem. (Especially if the RIAA pay them to do so.)

    1. Re:Unlicensed MP3 uses are legally liable by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      All Fraunhofer has to do is send cease & desist letters to the websites hosting LAME, xmms and such (which they are entitled to do under patent law), and the software disappears

      And since LAME is open source, all someone enterprising coder/group has to do is offload a copy of the source to a server in a country that ISN'T peopled by idiots and run by scumbags (read: country with software-patents), then they can wipe thier backsides with the C&D and tell Fraunhofer to kindly pound sand up their ass with a mallet.

    2. Re:Unlicensed MP3 uses are legally liable by geminidomino · · Score: 1

      Self-addendum: If these enterprising coders are located IN one of the aforementioned idiot/scumbag countries, it would probably behoove them to maintain some anonymity lest THEY be sued into a fine red mist.

      Might not be able to get lame off sourceforge, but it would still be available nonetheless.

  177. Re:Hi Ogg by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Free as in beer?
    OR
    Free! as in viagra?

  178. YOU are smoking. by Bilange · · Score: 1

    So, you need an easy-to-use solution for Windows?

    Don't tell me you're actually using windows media player for the usual listening. I would be laughing so hard!

    Winamp supports Vorbis since Winamp 2.80 (*). Is that mainstream enough for you?

    Now how about Vorbis encoding? http://www.dbpoweramp.com/dmc.htm

    *: Vorbis available on non-Lite (smallest) download packages - anyways, the plugin is findable on winamp's site.

    --
    "...a generation of kids has grown up thinking Trance is the shittiest music since country and western." - Paul van Dyk
  179. Insufficient processing power by Bilange · · Score: 1

    I think it was an issue in the "pre-Vorbis 1.0 final" days. I can be wrong, but the code was not optimized to decode using as less CPU cycles as possible. Near the Release candidates dates, there was the first "possible" hardware player (maybe it was due to unpopularity, though). Can anyone confirm?

    --
    "...a generation of kids has grown up thinking Trance is the shittiest music since country and western." - Paul van Dyk
  180. And isnt NINTENDO a weird name for a plasic box?NT by Bilange · · Score: 1

    NT!

    --
    "...a generation of kids has grown up thinking Trance is the shittiest music since country and western." - Paul van Dyk
  181. the end? by Saturninus · · Score: 1

    Does this mean the end of transferring mp3 files over the Internet?

    1. Re:the end? by Nicolae · · Score: 1

      MP3, maybe. But I doubt it, as long as someone has LAME somewhere, there will be non-DRMed MP3s floating around on the net.