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The Insanely Great Songs Apple Won't Let You Hear

FunkeyMonk writes "Slate.com has an article by Paul Collins explaining that the iTunes music store has thousands of tracks that you can't buy in the U.S. From the article: 'The iTunes Music Store has a secret hiding in plain sight: Log out of your home account in the page's upper-right corner, switch the country setting at the bottom of the page to Japan, and you're dropped down a rabbit hole into a wonderland of great Japanese bands that you've never even heard of. And they're nowhere to be found on iTunes U.S.' The article goes on to mention a few workarounds if you want to purchase foreign tunes. But this brings up a good point — why shouldn't iTunes be the great mythical omniscient music repository where all the world's music is available instantly? Is this simply a marketing decision?"

4 of 341 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Licensing, licensing, licensing by Nogami_Saeko · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I suppose the bigger question is "why do Japanese labels want people to pirate their music?". Because if you don't offer people a legit way of downloading tracks, then people gravitate to the alternatives.

    Doesn't really bother me much, but makes me curious about their business sense.

    As an aside, Apple/iTunes/publishers also do the same thing with video content that's available to US customers only, and not to people from other geographic regions. The reason? Who knows, but I do know that it's costing them money from people like me that would prefer to purchase it easily rather than using alternatives...

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    "Nothing strengthens authority so much as silence." - Charles de Gaulle
  2. Re:Licensing, licensing, licensing by TheRaven64 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    True, of course, but iTMS really highlights the problem. Back when the way of selling music was to press it to a record (or other physical medium) and sell it in a shop, it made sense to have different distribution deals for different countries. Company A might have access to retail channels in the USA, while company B might have access to retail channels in the UK. Giving either a worldwide licensing deal would be a problem, since neither would be able to exploit it. Giving both a worldwide deal might cause them to step on each other's toes in some areas, which would be bad for business.

    Amazon started to change the rules. They had almost the same store in a large number of countries. You could even get them to ship products to you from their stores in another country using the same account. They were not bound by the distribution contracts, since they were buying from the authorised distributor and selling them elsewhere.

    The movie industry tried to 'fix' this, rather than embracing it, by introducing region codes. Now, the DVD you bought from the USA wouldn't play on your player (although most stand-alone DVD players sold in the UK are now region-free, laptop drives are often not, which is irritating).

    A bigger problem than music and film, however, is TV shows. These are typically broadcast in one country up to a year before they are syndicated elsewhere. There is no option to buy them legally through any channel[1], but you can download them from the Internet within a few hours of their original release. The movie industry woke up to this and started launching things at the same time worldwide, but the music and TV industries are still stuck in the regional distribution model.

    iTMS simply serves to highlight the fact that entire industries are clinging to an obsolete business model. Now that worldwide distribution is a reality, they are still trying to enforce regional supply chains.


    [1] This, to my mind, means that they should not be protected by copyright. If you intentionally exclude a region, then it is not in the best interests of that region to grant you a monopoly on distribution.

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    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  3. Re:Licensing, licensing, licensing by CastrTroy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I think the other reason they don't let people buy tracks from other countries is because the pricing is different. In Canada a song costs $CDN 0.99. However in the US, the tracks cost $US 0.99. So you could buy a track for about $US 0.85 if the Americans were allowed to buy tracks in Canada. I'm not sure what the prices are in the UK. If they are GBP 0.99 then I don't think anybody would be shopping there if they had the ability to go to the Canadian store and buy tracks there.

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    Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
  4. Re:Licensing, licensing, licensing by name*censored* · · Score: 4, Interesting
    It's far more effort to work out how to buy things online as it is to illegally download them. Watch: (Legal[iTunes] vs torrent)

    Download and Install iTunes & Quicktime || Download and install torrent client (or just download if its uTorrent) Open iTunes || Open Web Browser Click on ITMS || Go to torrent site (via google, they aren't exactly hard to come by) Find song you like || Find song you like Give them your credit card number || Give that nice nigerian man your credit card number Download song and add it to your library || Download and run torrent Wait for download to complete || Wait for download to complete Cry because the quality makes your ears bleed || Cry because your razor blade makes your face bleed Yell at DRM for not working on a third party player || Yell at the pizza boy for taking 29 minutes and 30 seconds It's always perplexed me that all the illegal stuff (cracking programs, torrent sites, ) are both more comprehensive AND more user friendly than legal stuff; if they weren't operating below the law they'd certainly have my business. /
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    Commodore64_love: I don't comprehend people who're so frightened of death that they'll bankrupt themselves to stay alive