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Radiohead Says Name Your Own Price for New Album

TechDirt is reporting that the band Radiohead has apparently chosen the path less traveled when it comes to the release of their new album. They are offering two very unique methods of purchase for their new music, the ability to name your own price for a digital download or the ability to purchase a special "discbox" which will contain the album on CD and vinyl in addition to a horde of goodies. Will be interesting to see how this new model works out for them and what it might do to more traditional methods.

498 comments

  1. Don't know if it will work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    But it is beautiful PR for Radiohead

    1. Re:Don't know if it will work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think it will work, it will get the downloaders to support nearly free music and a shout back at the RIAA and give us Radiohead fans who bought the roughly $80 record set something to pine about for 3 months till it get hear, something to let us down when it arrives, and something to find a melancholic equilibrium after having listened to it for 3 months straight to make sure we got it all...

    2. Re:Don't know if it will work by flitty · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Things that I would like to know about this, that TFA doesn't address directly: 1) How much of my money goes to Radiohead? I'd rather send them $20 by mail and say "for the albums i've downloaded" than give 90% of the money to the MAFIAA. If they get most of the money from this, i'll totally support it. 2) Bitrate/format of downloads? I'm not going to pay a lot for a 128 mp3. 3) Any future plans to release the Vinyl on it's own, with a card in it that gives you access to the MP3 downloads. That would be sweet. I just don't want to pay $80 for 2 records.

      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
    3. Re:Don't know if it will work by Nasajin · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Radiohead have finished their recording contract with their publisher (I forget who it is), and as such are basically responsible for their own publishing henceforth. As a band that's released 7 studio albums, is pretty big in a number of countries outside the US (UK, Australia, NZ, Japan), and remembered for more than just "Creep" in those countries, they're going to do quite well as individuals, capable of naming their own price. They've probably decided to outsource their publish, and distribute themselves in the UK and internationally, that way they can be outside conventional distribution control. While I'll admit that my guess is just that: a guess, Radiohead is a pretty socially conscious band, and probably like the idea of working with the RIAA as much as you or I do.

    4. Re:Don't know if it will work by davester666 · · Score: 1

      What if you don't like their music? Can you enter negative numbers for the value of their music then?

      Three in one: troll, funny and insightful [well, maybe two out of three]

      --
      Sleep your way to a whiter smile...date a dentist!
    5. Re:Don't know if it will work by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Until now, they were signed under EMI.
      Following Hail to the Thief, they finished their contract with EMI. Instead of resigning with them, or anyone else, they decided to go on their own. Rumors were already circulating for 2 years as to what they will do when distributing this record.

  2. Does... by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 0

    free count as a price?

    --
    while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    1. Re:Does... by TGTilde · · Score: 2, Informative

      Yes. You can choose no price.

      --
      --- Bah, who needs a sig?
    2. Re:Does... by multisync · · Score: 5, Insightful

      free count as a price?


      Of course it does. That's sort of the point, isn't it? You pay what it is worth to you. If it is worth nothing, pay nothing. If nobody pays anything, we are unlikely to see more music from Radiohead (especially under such permissive marketing schemes) but it wasn't worth anything to you so who cares?

      If, on the other hand, it is worth something to you, you might want to send them something to encourage them to continue making music.

      It's really quite simple.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    3. Re:Does... by markov_chain · · Score: 2, Interesting

      They should still ask people for a CC and bill them 0.0. That way at least the billing hassle is equal between the zero/non-zero cost alternatives. This hassle is really why many people pirate MP3s, it's too damn hard to deal with DRM billing proprietariness etc etc.

      --
      Tsunami -- You can't bring a good wave down!
    4. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 4, Interesting
      This problem is isomorphic to the tragedy of the commons:

      You are faced with the choice of supporting the band, or not supporting the band. Many people need to support the band in order for it to stay afloat.

      If you support the band, you have no reason to believe anyone else will support the band, but you are unable to spend the money you spent supporting the band on other things. So the rational decision is to refuse to support the band, and hope that someone else does.

      This might work because people feel good about giving away money, but it wouldnt scale very well for the rest of the industry.

    5. Re:Does... by hatchet · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Don't you think there's something wrong with the band or their music if no one else supports them? Or maybe, there's something wrong with your taste:>

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

      Wow, I just do it because it's free. Why pay money when you don't have to?

    7. Re:Does... by ShorePiper82 · · Score: 1

      Charging $0.00 to a card would be a bad financial move for anyone. Each credit card / charge transaction costs a fee.
      Effectively running a $0.00 charge to a card would cost the band. The cost is whatever is under their merchant license contract (pennies on the dollar, sometimes considerably higher). This is the reason why you see signs in stores $10 minimum for credit card purchases, etc. They're trying to discourage frivilous charges (mostly among small businesses, larger corporations receive better rates).

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

      A direct link to the mp3 plus some PayPal and co. icons would be so much nicer. The site keeps on saying "You have no items in your basked". Wtf!

      I'd be willing to pay an extra bug for a simple download. Anyway I first want to listen to the music _before_ I pay. This is what everybody does in CD shops btw.

    9. Re:Does... by Rolgar · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The nice thing is you can pay nothing, download the music and see if you like it, if you're like me and don't know Radiohead from the Black Eyed Peas or Coldplay (I've heard of all of them, but never listened to any of their music). Then, if you like it, go back and buy it again with the price you consider fair, or go to a concert. Hopefully this works for them so other bands will give it a try.

    10. Re:Does... by stranger_to_himself · · Score: 1

      Of course the optimal strategy is to try to get everybody else to cough up but to pay nothing yourself.

    11. Re:Does... by Conception · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Actually, I think in this case the rational decision is to give them money because you don't know if anyone else will. If you actually enjoy Radiohead and want to support them, why would you rationally rely on "hope" as a means to their support rather than the logical, "I know Radiohead is getting support, because I supported them."

      Now, if Radiohead announced, "Hey, we made 20 million off this idea! Thanks guys!" then I could see the Tragedy of the Commons becoming common.

    12. Re:Does... by Amouth · · Score: 1

      or like alot of shops (where i am) we just pay 2.9% of the total transactions..;. 2.9% of 0 is still 0.. so it wouldn't cost us anything.. although i am sure that if we did a million of them visa might give is a nasty gram...

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    13. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is the worst thing that could possibly have happened to music.

      The idea that all the hard work, and twenty odd years of practice, that it takes to be a real musician should be worth nothing is awful. People are not going to pay if they don't have to. End of subject.
      Look at all the open source projects that ask for donations.
      They get fuck all and people still use all the software.

      Oh well, welcome to the era of recycled music built in DAWS, as that's the only thing cheap enough to turn out in bulk and make a living on.
      The days of spending a year writing an album and playing it with other real humans in a great sounding studio are over.
      Just don't complain that music has got worse, the public gets what the public wants.......

    14. Re:Does... by binarybum · · Score: 1

      If, on the other hand, it is worth something to you, you might want to send them something to encourage them to continue making music.

          this logic might work on the local garage band I saw last week at the pub-- if me and a few dozen other people voluntarily paid for their album they might not need to go back to their jobs at Denny's. But it's hard for me to picture my mustering up a bit of change from my hurting budget affecting the release of the next radiohead album. I think I prefer the idea of having them be encouraged by my tick on their download counter rather than by my quarter anyway.

      --
      ôó
    15. Re:Does... by sh00z · · Score: 1

      If, on the other hand, it is worth something to you, you might want to send them something to encourage them to continue making music.
      What is the band willing to pay *me* to download their album? They owe me four stadium beers. These wankers were the opening act for R.E.M. in 1996, and they were so awful, I had to drink heavily in order to tolerate the noise and ego until the headliner came out.
    16. Re:Does... by phantomlord · · Score: 1

      I used to manage a small family restaurant. After years of urging the owners that we should take credit cards as an option (we also did birthday parties in our fun center and bad checks were a major problem), they finally broke down and got a credit card machine. At least for us, the terms were (going on memory, I might be off a bit): 50 cents per transaction plus a fixed percentage (varied per card with Visa and Mastercard being 2%, AmEx Business class cards being 5% and the rest falling somewhere between) and 25 cents for swiping an invalid card (whether the card was expired, over the limit, totally invalid or just a credit network we didn't use), 15 cents to modify a previous transaction (to, say, add the tip you added when you signed the receipt onto the charge), etc. There were also fees for checking and reserving a certain portion of credit (say, a security deposit on a rental), but we didn't have to deal with that, so I don't remember what they cost. We were also charged $1 to print out a summary so we could make sure the tills balanced out right.

      So... a $1 transaction with a personal Discover card would cost us a 50 cent transaction fee plus another 4 cents (the fixed percentage). If someone used an over the limit card and then switched to a valid card, that transaction would then take up 79 cents of that dollar. That's before we figure in the cost of the product, utilities, storage, labor, etc. I estimated that any transaction under $5 or so was costing us money when done with a credit card. Of course, that's selling a tangible product rather than a collection of infinitely duplicable bits and also take into account that we did less than $1000 a day in credit card transactions versus someplace huge like a big box retailer who can get more favorable terms.

      --
      Don't leave your mind so open that your brain falls out. Don't close it so much that you cut off the blood.
    17. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you might want to send them something to encourage them to continue making music.

      Do they have a tally indicating all their take thus far? If not, how do I know that they haven't already received millions and thus don't really need my funds to afford to continue to make music? You know, full time without having to take a second job as a waiter or whatever.

      OTOH if they already live on easy street and my funds are merely to feed their egos and buy more Ferraris, perhaps I could find a better use for my money.

    18. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      Because your support alone, is not enough to keep them afloat. You have to "hope" either way that the other parties will donate.

    19. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 4, Interesting
      Basic game theory shows that the amount that you were willing to pay is irrelevant to your decision to support or not.

      The only thing that it says about the band is that none of their fans have taken game theory.

    20. Re:Does... by snarlydwarf · · Score: 4, Interesting

      People are not going to pay if they don't have to. End of subject.

      Really?

      You do know that MagnaTune has requested donations for albums for years and done quite well for themselves and their artists? Admittedly they do ask for a minimum of $5 (most likely because for very small amounts it really isn't worth the trouble to process), but routinely get paid much more than that. Artists get a 50% cut of all sales (far better than any normal record company). But you can download 128k mp3's for free, and even use them in non-commercial podcasts.

      I've bought a couple albums from them in the past couple of years, and just now I see I need to go back and give them more money since I see some more stuff I want.

      The Residents have also had an online store for the past couple of years funded entirely by the honor system: if you need a track, download it and pay them: they only request that you pay more than $3 so that they don't get eaten by billing costs. And, of course, they have also had the "extra special cd" available for most of their works in the past few years (package with bonus CD, book, numbered edition, etc).

      They seem to be doing very well despite being the most obscure successful band.

      Sure, Radiohead may "lose" some sales... some people will download their music and not pay: most of these would be people who would have never listened to their music anyway. People who were willing to pay cash money for a CD will appreciate being able to pay less online (and not finance MegaMart Music Stores) and even appreciate the convenience of getting the music from their home. Completists will appreciate the bonus edition and will gladly buy it: possession is a major part of being a Completist.

      I see no reason why this won't work for known bands with dedicated fans. It would be harder for the little obscure bar band to survive like this, but, then, most of them aren't making much from CD sales either, so it isn't clear that they would actually lose money.

    21. Re:Does... by Amouth · · Score: 1

      we do about 100k a month in charges - but considering the smallest charge normaly is >500$ this might be why we are on a straight % instead of all the annoying little fees...

      --
      '...if only "Jumping to a Conclusion" was an event in the Olympics.'
    22. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      > This problem is isomorphic to the tragedy of the commons:

      Dude, just say "equivalent" or "akin". Seriously.

    23. Re:Does... by Anomolous+Cowturd · · Score: 1

      If only there was some way to destroy everything you're not a fan of... if only there were more people like you...

      --
      Software patents delenda est.
    24. Re:Does... by nine-times · · Score: 3, Funny

      Now, if Radiohead announced, "Hey, we made 20 million off this idea! Thanks guys!" then I could see the Tragedy of the Commons becoming common.

      Good point. In order to make sure this thing works, I'm going to refrain from paying them.

    25. Re:Does... by trickonion · · Score: 1

      "You're a douche. That's a douche word. Why don't you just say 'raw material' or something?"
      http://www.wired.com/gaming/virtualworlds/magazine/15-09/mf_pennyarcade

      --
      I got you an Andes mint, but it melted in my pocket
    26. Re:Does... by francisstp · · Score: 1

      It does, it's just not the price for the music. The price of the music is 0. This is the lowest price the seller is willing to accept. Any amount paid to the band is not for the music itself, but rather for "goodwill". It's a donation, the same way giving money to your church is.

    27. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The only thing that it says about the band is that none of their fans have taken game theory.
      FWIW, game theory is a major part of my PhD (specifically social dilemmas), and I've just paid 5 pounds for the album. Usually I download music illegally and only buy CDs from my friends' bands, but I'm prepared to spend 5 pounds to reward the generous gesture of offering me the album for nothing.

      Your mistake is to assume that standard game theoretic notions of "rationality" apply to human beings. There's ample evidence to the contrary.

    28. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That'd be a bad move. My credit card issuer (MasterCard) rejects attempts to bill it for 0. I know this due to a special offer on Jessops for free photo development. I couldn't actually use it because it tried to bill me and was rejected as "probably fraudulent".

    29. Re:Does... by Psychochild · · Score: 1

      Really?

      Yeah, really. Stephen King did this with a story called "The Plant" (see the Jon Katz Slashdot article!). He published the story directly to the net, one chapter at a time, and told people to pay what they thought it was worth. End result? Not enough people paid, the story wasn't finished, and it isn't even available for download anymore on King's official site these days.

      Now, say what you will about King's stories, but he has more than a few fans. The fact is that few will pay if they don't have to. Who doesn't like getting something for nothing? And if it is a question of people preferring a physical book to a downloadable file, then the same thing will apply to music as some people prefer a CD to compressed files.

      We'll see. I'm willing to be wrong, but history doesn't seem to indicate that I will be.

      --
      Brian "Psychochild" Green
      MMO developer's blog
    30. Re:Does... by rs79 · · Score: 1

      TFA implies/says bands get $0.72 (USD. Snicker, Eh?) from a CD sale. It's hard to imagine poeple not giving them a dollar.

      I don't even like their music that much but am tmepted to give them a couple of bucks, "just cause".

      --
      Need Mercedes parts ?
    31. Re:Does... by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      Because your support alone, is not enough to keep them afloat. You have to "hope" either way that the other parties will donate.

      What if you could make the donation conditional? E.g. "I donate $5 provided the band releases no less than three new songs approved by [independent-rating-agency] in the next two years." The money could be held in trust and refunded (possibly with interest) if the band doesn't meet the conditions for whatever reason -- including the case where not enough others provided similar support.

      Fans would probably be much more likely to donate if they could be sure of getting something in return, or their money back if things don't work out. Theoretically this could even scale up for very large projects, like motion pictures or medical R&D.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    32. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >These wankers were the opening act for R.E.M. in 1996, and they were so awful, I had to drink heavily in order to tolerate the noise and ego.....

      Then you did heroin to tolerate Stipe's ego?

    33. Re:Does... by m00seb0y · · Score: 1

      I'll pay $20 ... for OK Computer 2.

    34. Re:Does... by Futile+Rhetoric · · Score: 0

      Did you just compare music to books? When Apple successfully markets the bookPod selling it to millions, the analogy will make sense. I know this is extremely anecdotal, but no one I know has ever read an e-book (certain articles which are required reading for school, perhaps, and they get printed most of the time, too) -- while everyone uses mp3. The last time I've seen anyone walking around with a Discman was years ago. Sure, people still buy CDs -- they get ripped immediately. There is some satisfaction derived from owning the physical media of course, but it simply isn't that big a deal for most people.

      Lastly -- no one cares about files being compressed other than audiophiles, and they have their FLAC and APE and vinyl anyway.

    35. Re:Does... by twohorse · · Score: 1

      If you support the band, you have no reason to believe anyone else will support the band, but you are unable to spend the money you spent supporting the band on other things. So the rational decision is to refuse to support the band, and hope that someone else does.
      In that case, why bother voting?
    36. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm not worried about radiohead, more about acts that are not yet established.
      Do the artists on Magnatune produce work that can compete with well funded commercial acts?
      In theory they can, as it's an artform after all, but in practice I wonder if this will be the case.
      Good quality recorded music is not cheap, or easy, to make.
      It's also risky. You cannot guarantee that the money and time making it will produce some thing people will buy.
      My fear is that by reducing the price of music so very low, people will no longer be able to dedicate the time and money to create works that compete with the major labels.

      Then, a gulf may appear between the amateurs and professionals that will be very difficult to cross.
      To say nothing of the cost of advertising and administration required to make a living.
      I don't consider the Residents obscure. They have had a long and fairly successful career before starting their online store.

      If there is no competition in the middle ground, the majors will have television/radio/films etc sewn up.
      While putting your song on a web site may get it heard, it won't necessarily get heard by the right people.

      I hope in many ways you are right, as I have been a musician just about making a living for most of my life, and this could be great. I'm just not sure how people doing it part time, and very low prices, can hope to produce recordings of the quality required, and broad enough appeal, to sell the thousands required for them to live off it.

      (same ac)

    37. Re:Does... by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      "People who were willing to pay cash money for a CD will appreciate being able to pay less online (and not finance MegaMart Music Stores)"
      Would the mega music mart even carry RadioHead? Isn't this more likely to hurt the few small local music stores that are left then a MegaMart.

      Just a suggestion since I am not a RadioHead fan. In fact I don't think I have ever heard them.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    38. Re:Does... by Von+Helmet · · Score: 1

      I'm doubt that Radiohead need much to "keep them afloat". They've had 6 big selling albums (including a couple of very big selling ones) and plenty of successful singles, tours and the like. They have enough money to record and publish an album independently of any label. I imagine they could comfortably make precisely £0 on sales of this album and still keep going without any difficulty.

    39. Re:Does... by Stormwatch · · Score: 1

      I know how it feels... reminds me of the time I went to a Viper concert, and the opening acts were some awful local thrash bands. Even if they didn't suck, that's a completely different style.

    40. Re:Does... by multisync · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Many people need to support the band in order for it to stay afloat.


      This is true, but there are many ways of supporting a band. Seeing them live, buying merch directly from them, turning others on to their music, wearing a beaten-up old t-shirt with their name on it, performing drunken, off-key renditions of their songs to anyone who will listen ... these things all help to promote and support a band and probably do more for their bottom line than what they actually receive from the sale of their CDs.

      You bring up a good point about the "tragedy of the commons" though, and I don't have the background in economics to counter with anything intelligent, other than my gut feeling that tells me if something is truly "worth it," enough people will support it.

      A good example is my favorite Internet Radio station, which is entirely listener-supported and commercial free. A lot of people I have told about it think I'm crazy for sending them money every month when I could just listen to it for "free." And I'm sure a lot of people do just that. I did for a good year or so before I decided to start supporting them. But I have been supporting them for a couple of years now, and others must be as well since they are still in business, playing music 24/7.

      The reason I support them (and I assume the reason others do as well) is simply because I value what they do, and I would regret it horribly if they went quiet one day and I did nothing to prevent that. They still might go quiet despite my support, but I can't control that. I can only do what I can do.

      And this brings up another point. This idea of voluntarily supporting the music you like might not be enough to pay for all the payolla, Lear jets and cocaine that seems to be necessary to keep the traditional "music industry" going, but maybe we don't need all that. Maybe we just need people who love to create art (and we've had those since the stone age) and people who love to listen to/watch/feel/smell/taste it to recognize how much they value each other. It may not work in all cases, but I'll bet it would allow more musicians to give up their day jobs than the current system.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    41. Re:Does... by causality · · Score: 1

      Of course the optimal strategy is to try to get everybody else to cough up but to pay nothing yourself.

      That strategy is optimal if it's congruent with your personal values; otherwise there is an attached, non-monetary cost.
      --
      It is a miracle that curiosity survives formal education. - Einstein
    42. Re:Does... by shma · · Score: 1

      One of the things I like about this idea is that I can download the album for free and see if I like it. If I do, I can always choose to pay them later, or maybe save that money and go see them live (Radiohead tickets are very hard to get, so you're basically paying ebay prices). If it sucks, I can delete it and be on my way.

      --
      I came here for a good argument
    43. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      That would work pretty well, assuming the rating agency is well picked.

    44. Re:Does... by multisync · · Score: 1

      Or - if you really liked it (or are just the sort of music fan who likes to collect physical objects) - you could buy that vinyl/CD box set (did they say it was $80.00!?!? Holy shit!) I like that aspect too. There are those who will spend the money to get the premium (how's the beer over in Koln, BigA?); use them to generate revenue from the shiny discs.

      But really, the thing I like most about this is seeing a band is choose a model that suits them, sort of like a FOSS developer choosing the license that suits the project he is working on. I hope more artists who have fulfilled their contractual obligations and new artists as well will explore their options and use some of their creativity to market themselves to their fans.

      And I hope those SOBs who call us theives rot.

      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    45. Re:Does... by ringm000 · · Score: 1

      Not only a Radiohead fans are irrational and unpredictable using game theory. It turns out even game theory professors are.

    46. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 1

      Good question, why bother voting? If political change were the sole reason why people voted, turnout would be much lower. Luckily, people seem to enjoy voting, or do it out of some sort of "civil duty".

    47. Re:Does... by jmdc · · Score: 1

      I attended a Renaissance festival last weekend. The entertainers who perform there make money mostly from tips (and maybe a bit of merchandising). Tipping is completely optional, yet many of the same acts return year after year. My understanding is that the performers typically don't have day jobs because they travel too much. They make their living by entertaining people and then asking them to put money in a hat so they can keep doing it. The rational person from the Tragedy of the commons won't tip, but apparently many people aren't rational. This makes me think that Radiohead's idea might result in good profits for the band.

      The psychology involved may be different; entertainers at the Renaissance Festival typically hold out their hats and thank people as they leave the stage. It isn't easy to walk away from an entertainer asking for your support, especially if you just enjoyed their show. Downloading from a website lets people feel much more anonymous. Guilt attached to a person seems worse than guilt attached to a download link.

    48. Re:Does... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you can pay twice. Looks like the site cookies you - I got a message 'you can only have one download'

    49. Re:Does... by Mutant321 · · Score: 1

      It doesn't necessarily need many people to support them for the band to stay afloat. It needs a few people to support them with large amounts. How much does a band need to stay afloat anyway? Probably they just need enough money to support themselves, their families, and to pay for studio time, musical gear, and website hosting. Maybe they can even pay a few people to manage and promote them (i.e. have these people work for *them* rather than the other way around, as the RIAA would have it). Not really huge amounts. They may not get rich, but if they're true artists, that won't bother them.

      In a lot of ways, this is how the dance music model works. The average Joe going to a club hardly buys any of the music directly (apart from the odd compilation, but a lot of the times DJs will give these out for free). He pays to get in, and drink at the club, money which goes to the club owner and event promoters. They then pay the DJs. The DJs use this to buy music (plus their own funds, most DJs are amatuer). So only a select group of people actually pay the music makers anything. But they tend to pay a reasonable amount (especially if buying vinyl).

      There's no DRM on downloads, and it would be easy for DJs to share music amongst each other, but most of the smart ones know this would be foolish. If they don't support the producers, there'll be a lot less music around to buy (and most DJs buy a *lot* of music). Producers very rarely get rich, but a lot of them make enough to get by. And besides, they're not in it for the money (the only people who can make a good living out of this arrangement is the club owners.. the system's not perfect..)

      I think this model (with some adjustments) could scale to artisticly sound bands such as Radiohead. People who like these sort of bands will be willing to part with their cash voluntarily to keep the band going. It might not scale to trashy pop, at least it may not provide as much money as it does now. Can't really see that being a bad thing..

    50. Re:Does... by sh00z · · Score: 1

      Then you did heroin to tolerate Stipe's ego?
      I got in the car prepared to tolerate Stipe's ego. Radiohead made him look like Ghandi.

      Off-topic, but favorite Stipe story: 1987 concert in which the man stood on stage preaching to the audience. "Don't eat meat." Of course, at the time, he happened to be wearing a leather jacket and sneakers.
    51. Re:Does... by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Radiohead from the Black Eyed Peas or Coldplay

      You apologize! Apologize RIGHT NOW!

    52. Re:Does... by DavidShor · · Score: 1
      It's not that people are not rational, but that people seem to like giving away money. The charity "market" can be more interesting by modeling it as givers "paying" recievers to take on guilt. Looking at it this way, this strategy makes a lot of sense for Radio-head.


      The guilt transfer market is very income-elastic, rich people purchase far more of it then poor people: That is, they need to give away far more money before they feel good about themselves. Radio-head's system allows everyone, rich and poor, to give exactly the amount of money that makes them feel good. This is classic price discrimination, and it allows Radio-head to capture nearly all of the consumer surplus.


      Good for them.

    53. Re:Does... by zacronos · · Score: 1
      So what you are saying is that the rational choice -- for everyone -- is not to support the band. Is that still true under the assumption that if no one supports the band, the band will stop producing music?

      If everyone followed your logic, the band would stop producing music. Even if, for every individual, it is worth it for them to pay $1 for the download in order to keep the music coming, and even if that additional payment (in aggregate) would make the difference in whether or not the band continues producing music.

      So, to recap, let's assume every rational person would be willing to pay $1 to the band to keep them producing more music, but instead makes the "rational" choice not to pay anything. The result would be that the band stops producing music, and all those "rational" people didn't get the outcome they would have preferred (and which they could have achieved, but failed to achieve due to your "logic"). To put this in more technical terms, global adoption of your strategy does not result in a globally optimal situation, even though it is optimal for each individual. (Or to use game theory jargon, your strategy may result in a Nash equilibrium, but it does not result in a Pareto optimum.)

      You know how they say "A little knowledge is a dangerous thing."? I think that is the case here -- you know enough game theory to decide what a rational player would do, but not enough to realize there is a better end result that can be achieved if you take a global view. The situation here is essentially the Prisoner's Dilemma:

      The unique equilibrium for this game is a Pareto-suboptimal solution--that is, rational choice leads the two players to both play defect even though each player's individual reward would be greater if they both played cooperate. In equilibrium, each prisoner chooses to defect even though both would be better off by cooperating, hence the dilemma.
      Some of us hope to achieve the Pareto optimum, which would be better for all involved than what would result if everyone adopted your strategy. So do not discourage others from supporting the band. Do not delude yourself into thinking that the only thing that makes sense is not to support the band -- that sort of thinking often leads to worse results than an approach which is a little less "rational".
    54. Re:Does... by dslauson · · Score: 1

      "You are faced with the choice of supporting the band, or not supporting the band. Many people need to support the band in order for it to stay afloat.

      If you support the band, you have no reason to believe anyone else will support the band, but you are unable to spend the money you spent supporting the band on other things. So the rational decision is to refuse to support the band, and hope that someone else does."
      ...
      "Basic game theory shows that the amount that you were willing to pay is irrelevant to your decision to support or not."
      Or, perhaps you are just modeling the problem incorrectly.

      You're oversimplifying this to a zero-sum game where the only possible reward is the ultimate long-term survival of the band, but you're ignoring the other possible rewards that could be involved. For many, the gratification and self-satisfaction in offering support for a work of art they enjoy is its own reward.
  3. I don't even know what music they make by aliquis · · Score: 1

    ... but this kind of make me wondering about buying it for two dollars or whatever just to get them some money and show them that it works =P

    1. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is this legit?

    2. Re:I don't even know what music they make by SilentChris · · Score: 4, Funny

      Just out of curiosity, is there such a thing as track lighting for a cave?

    3. Re:I don't even know what music they make by kalidasa · · Score: 1

      Thank you for making sure that if I posted my immediate reaction to that post, it would be modded redundant. . .

    4. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Hatta · · Score: 1

      There's nothing stopping you from downloading it for nothing, deciding whether you like it and tossing them a couple bucks if you do.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    5. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Jawnn · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Two bucks, if delivered straight to their pockets, is more than they would make on the sale of a CD under the typical record company deal, even after subtracting the expense of producing and shipping the media. So...
      Cheap CD's for us. More money to the artists. What's not to like? I mean, unless you're the record company.

    6. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Radiohead? Is that like phone sex?

    7. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Tetsugaku-San · · Score: 1

      Don't worry they're only one of the biggest and most popular bands on the planet. Think sales that out do U2 :).

    8. Re:I don't even know what music they make by aliquis · · Score: 1

      I'm just not into rock, and some pop, and prefer electronic music of various sorts. Screaming people are not for me ;D

    9. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Heh, well, in that case, you might like Radiohead's more recent work. "Kid A" and "Amnesiac" are both very much experimental electronic forays, and "Hail to the Thief" has a similar flavour. You could also check out Thom's recent solo record, "Eraser", which also has a strong electronic flair.

      Incidentally, Thom's vocals only rarely approach what I would call "screaming". 'course, that's not to say you'll necessarily like them (not everyone does). Then again, in songs like "Let Down", IMHO, his voice approaches near perfection (the three-part crescendo in that song is simply mind-blowing).

    10. Re:I don't even know what music they make by dreddnott · · Score: 1

      "strong electronic flair"??

      Don't let Abcd1234 fool you. The Eraser is the *definition* of laptop music.

      --
      I may make you feel, but I can't make you think.
    11. Re:I don't even know what music they make by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Heh, understatement, given it was literally composed on a laptop. :) But I wouldn't call it a pure electronica album... it's still fairly organic in places, using a lot of live samples produced by the various band members, not to mention Thom's signature vocals.

      Then again, my definition of "electronic music", as a style and genre, may be unnecessarily strict...

  4. SSS! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Heretics!

  5. direct link? by darthpenguin · · Score: 5, Informative

    How about a direct link to the page where you can pre-order the album (in either form)? http://www.inrainbows.com/

  6. Radiohead++ by paullb · · Score: 0

    Great band, and if they lose money they're still rich anyway right? =) Besides, I hear most of the money is not off CDs but off of tours

    1. Re:Radiohead++ by stranger_to_himself · · Score: 2, Insightful

      That's not true at all. Major tours cost huge amounts of money to move around, and are only used for promotion for the records. Bands don't tour so much these days because more of that promotional money is spent on the videos that they make.

      I agree with you though that Radiohead can afford to try this kind of stunt even if it fails, so they're not laying a lot on the line. It'll be valuable for less well off bands though to see if it works.

    2. Re:Radiohead++ by snarlydwarf · · Score: 1

      Actually it is true these days.

      In the Olden Days, tours were used as a way to promote album sales: record companies heavily subsidized tours and they routinely lost a ton of money. The logic was that they would more than make that money back with merchandising and album sales. (When the record company was funding the tour, they got a cut of every T-shirt sold.)

      For most acts these days, however, touring is the only way they make money: they make less money on plastic discs than they used to, but they get to keep the tour profits (these are not shared with the record company, since the label rarely supports the tour at all). T-shirt sales go to the band and maybe the venue, but not the label. Alas, CD's sold at the show routinely make less money than those sold at Amazon... but that's because the band doesn't get a break on their own material while large vendors like Amazon and Walmart do.

    3. Re:Radiohead++ by Evets · · Score: 2, Informative

      The bands always make more money off of the tours because there are less middle men between the consumers and the artists. That and their contracts for tours are significantly better than recording contracts.

  7. heh, make the minimum price $1 by revlayle · · Score: 4, Interesting

    and even after hosting/bandwidth fees and site maintenance, they are probably still making more $$ per sale than they would have with a traditional record deal

  8. Name my own price? by deadhammer · · Score: 5, Funny

    -$50,000.00. I'll take cash or check.

    --
    I'll be honest, we're throwing science against the wall to see what sticks. -Cave Johnson
    1. Re:Name my own price? by wiggles · · Score: 0, Troll

      That's about what it would take for me to pick up anything by Radiohead, so long as they didn't force me to listen to it.

    2. Re:Name my own price? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yeah, accept that I would pay them if they stopped releasing that awful whinging. Haven't they already done their part of releasing shit disguised as artsy pop music, why torture us even more.

      Actually let them release all they want, but off with the heads of dj's who play it on radio.

    3. Re:Name my own price? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You mean "except" not accept, douchebag...

    4. Re:Name my own price? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Thanks for correction, I was stoned while writing that. That is my excuse for spelling, what is your excuse for likíng radiohead? Angst? Teenage? Lack of taste?

    5. Re:Name my own price? by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      That's about what it would take for me to pick up anything by Radiohead, so long as they didn't force me to listen to it.
      Just out of curiosity, what songs/albums do you particularly dislike? What music do you prefer?

      Me personally, I like Radiohead, with the exception of their latest, which I found uninspired.
      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    6. Re:Name my own price? by wiggles · · Score: 1

      I prefer the eight hour "symphony of white noise", which took exactly eight hours to compose and record.

      Seriously, I gave up on modern music after the whole Napster crackdown. When Lars Ulrich came out and bitched about his fans 'stealing' his music, I realized that modern rockers are just RIAA stooges taking advantage of kids like drug pushers. I pretty much only listen to talk radio now, but will throw in some classical, jazz, or classic rock on the rare whim. These morons will never get another dime from me.

    7. Re:Name my own price? by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      So it's nothing to do with their music then?

      As a side note, I must say, I don't get why artists complaining that their music isn't being paid for makes them akin to "drug pushers", or "RIAA stooges". Can't they just, y'know, want some money for their work? Can't they think it's unethical for people to consume but not pay for their art?

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
  9. been there, done that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Name your own price on any music you buy at Magnatune.

    1. Re:been there, done that by aliquis · · Score: 1

      Cool store, I posted url on "sweclockers" for others to check, if only it carried ALL music aswell :)

  10. Austin Powers by BlowHole666 · · Score: 1

    Dr. Evil: Okay, here's the plan. We get the CD and then hold the world ransom for... 1 MILLION dollars! Number Two: Sir, strictly speaking, a million dollars will not go very far these days. Virtucon alone makes over 9 billion dollars a year. Dr. Evil: Really? Okay then... we hold the world ransom for 1... hundred... BILLION dollars!

    --
    I smoked pot once. But I DID NOT inhale. Will you hire me?
  11. If the RIAA sues us... by O('_')O_Bush · · Score: 3, Funny

    for illegally downloading their music, can we choose how much we can settle for too?

    --
    while(1) attack(People.Sandy);
    1. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 2, Funny

      If the RIAA sues us for illegally downloading their music... can we choose how much we can settle for too?

      With peerguardian, you shouldn't fear getting sued - or am I wrong?

    2. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by wishmechaos · · Score: 4, Informative

      Yes, you _are_ wrong.

    3. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      Right, i forgot about this whole thing "ISP spying on us" business :(

      *sigh* when are the fully-encrypted + anonymous filesharing apps coming?

    4. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by torkus · · Score: 1

      Hey now, if i *buy* it for $0.00 and then post it on P2P can the MAFIAA still claim a loss?

      --
      You can get rich if you own a politician, but you have to be rich to buy one in the first place.
    5. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by wishmechaos · · Score: 2, Informative

      http://freenetproject.org/

      though it's dog ass slow... and there's always the concern of being sharing stuff you don't agree with.

    6. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sounds like a troll, but

      They Don't Have A Recording Contract

    7. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by flitty · · Score: 1

      you shouldn't fear getting sued - or am I wrong?


      yes, You might be wrong
      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
    8. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by xantho · · Score: 1

      Check it out, though. Radiohead isn't on a record label any more. So RIAA doesn't represent them for this album. Sure, somebody owns the rights to the first batch of their music, but if this takes hold and actually makes money for them, they won't go back to it at all. As it is, they could probably start their own label and destroy sales records anyway, considering that they're one of the most popular (and good) bands that I know.

    9. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by ShatteredArm · · Score: 3, Funny

      I think he's living in some strange world where 2+2=5.

    10. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by flitty · · Score: 3, Funny

      What an idioteque.

      --
      Whether or not there is some sort of god, I'm not supposed to say/god is a word and the argument ends there-Smog
    11. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Spy+der+Mann · · Score: 1

      I tried setting up freenet the other day. I had to pick 10 nodes to connect to, just to get connected. So i ended up in an irc channel asking stupid questions like "nodes plz?". Worse, the format for adding the nodes isn't clearly documented.

      If you want my opinion, freenet is yet another one of the reasons why linux gurus shouldn't write programs.

    12. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by alxbtk · · Score: 3, Funny

      Stop posting crap, you're going to alert the karma police.

    13. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Thomas+Miconi · · Score: 1

      Stop posting crap, you're going to alert the karma police.

      Feeling a bit paranoid, android?

    14. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by SamSim · · Score: 1

      I'm interested to see whether anybody voluntarily pays e.g. $1000 for the album.

    15. Re:If the RIAA sues us... by Non-Huffable+Kitten · · Score: 1

      *starts playing exit music for the thread*

      --
      Medium cat is MEDIUM.
  12. They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

    They'll make up for the free digital download (and then some) with the $80 price tag on the discbox. There are easily enough Radiohead fanatics out there to make some major cash on this thing.

    That being said, I wonder if this is some kind of strange social experiment to see if anyone actually puts more than $0 in the price box. I probably won't.

    1. Re:They're make up for it by Chyeld · · Score: 2, Insightful

      There are plenty of us out there that are willing to reward those who behave in a manner we consider "good" with money as incentive to continue along that path.

      That's why I don't own Microsoft stock but do own Google stock. The question will be, how many of those people are aware of this and how many are Radiohead fans? I'm a bit shamefaced to admit that while I've heard of them, I wouldn't be able to name a song by them without resorting to Google/Wikipedia. But then, I'm not that into the music world. I probably have heard their songs day in and day out and simply haven't connected the song to the group.

      This model, the cheap disc vs the expensive collector's item with goodies, has worked well in the video game and anime markets. I don't see much of a difference here other than the fact that they are marketing the cheap disc as "really cheap". I hope it works out for them. If previous experience is anything to go by, I think it will.

    2. Re:They're make up for it by kebes · · Score: 4, Informative

      That being said, I wonder if this is some kind of strange social experiment to see if anyone actually puts more than $0 in the price box.
      It's an interesting social experiment, to be sure... but not the first. Jamendo, offers Creative-Commons music for free download, and provides a link to "support the artist" if you want to. Evidently, people are willing to donate money for free music.

      Magnatune also allows the buyer to set the price for an album purchase online: from $8 to $18. As far as I know, they've never released stats about how much people decide to pay.

      So, this new model is not entirely unique.

      I probably won't.
      That's your choice. Many other people (myself included) certainly will pay some amount for the album. I guess the idea is that although lots of people will download it for free, those people would probably have downloaded it for free (via P2P) anyways. At least in this case, you allow those people who value easy downloading to conveniently "do the right thing" and directly support the artist.
    3. Re:They're make up for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Stephen King did something similar with his online-only The Plant series. IIRC about 60% paid to download the first chapter, but by the time he released the fifth that dropped down quite a lot and almost everyone chose to get it for free. King then pulled the plug on the pay-if-you-like project saying something like "I could get much more money going through a traditional book publishing route, but I might change my mind in the future."

    4. Re:They're make up for it by neurojab · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That being said, I wonder if this is some kind of strange social experiment to see if anyone actually puts more than $0 in the price box. I probably won't.

      Maybe if I was really hard up for cash, I'd consider putting in a lowball amount, but not $0. Putting in $0 would be worse, IMO than stiffing the waitstaff at a nice restaurant on their tip. You're not required to tip them, but you should. Why? They work hard, and make most of their money that way. Maybe it's just me, but I think that artists deserve to be paid for their efforts, even when they don't force the payment. They're asking to be paid a fair price, not to be stiffed. They've cut out the middlemen here, so perhaps that amount is less than you'd pay for a CD on Amazon. Perhaps it's more, for that very reason. They've let you decide.

    5. Re:They're make up for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's being done in other industries too: Another Sky Press ( http://www.anothersky.org/ ) has been doing it for years - not only do they allow free download but they sell their physical books 'at cost' plus optional contribution.

      The Radiohead thing is great because they're so high profile. This will become a trend.

    6. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      Well, it's like tipping the waitstaff before you've been served.

      What remains to be seen is if they do a "normal" release later on. My little quandary is that I'm perfectly willing to pay them (even up to $20 if the music is good enough) for a physical CD, but I'm not really getting much value for a digital download. I hardly ever listen to the music I download, because I mostly listen to music in the car, and mp3s don't sound so great (to me anyways) with relatively decent speakers.

    7. Re:They're make up for it by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      On a related note, I hate the whole, "you have to leave a tip" attitude. A tip should be a little extra money when they do an extraordinary job. It should not be the main source of income for the waitstaff. Just charge me whatever it costs so that the waitstaff can be paid a decent wage, and stop trying to make me guess what level of tip is acceptable in whatever city and restaurant I happen to be in. Also, tips seem be be getting a little ridiculous. Some waiters say 20% is what is expected. So if I go out for a $50 meal, and spend 1 hour in the restaurant, then the waiter gets $10 from me. But they probably were serving at least 2 other tables, meaning they make $30 an hour. That's way too much for somebody with no specialized skills.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    8. Re:They're make up for it by apusskidu · · Score: 1

      Issa (previously known as Jane Siberry) has a similar scheme for pricing. There are a few stats on the page.

    9. Re:They're make up for it by king-manic · · Score: 1

      So if I go out for a $50 meal, and spend 1 hour in the restaurant, then the waiter gets $10 from me. But they probably were serving at least 2 other tables, meaning they make $30 an hour. That's way too much for somebody with no specialized skills.

      Being pretty, flirty, and having a nice body are somewhat specialized skills.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    10. Re:They're make up for it by TheGeneration · · Score: 1

      If you're alone in a restaurant and paying $50 for a meal the wait staff should be fairly high caliber. They should be very knowledgeable about the menu and wine pairings. They should be friendly, intelligent, patient, and not hurried in their serving style, or in trying to get you out of the restaurant. If they are all those things it is justifiable to tip 20% on $50.

      --


      The Generation
      I'd say something witty here, but I'm not that bright.
    11. Re:They're make up for it by esmrg · · Score: 2, Informative

      As far as I know, they've never released stats about how much people decide to pay.

      Now you know. They also provide you statistics for a specific album before you buy it.
    12. Re:They're make up for it by bilbravo · · Score: 1

      On a related note to your related note, I ate at a restaurant this past weekend that automatically included 18% ... and it was a party of 2! This is common for big parties, but not for 2. What if I decided the service was horrible and deserved no tip?

      That being said, only once in my life have I left $0 for a tip, and only on 1-2 occasions have I left anything under 15% (my norm is 15% lunch, 20% dinner). I still feel the need to leave a tip based on the waiter's performance, and the restaurant did not allow me that choice. I was a bit put off, but luckily the waiter was very good.

    13. Re:They're make up for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Being pretty, flirty, and having a nice body are somewhat specialized skills.

      Thus were the fool and his money parted.

    14. Re:They're make up for it by justinlindh · · Score: 1

      I guess the idea is that although lots of people will download it for free, those people would probably have downloaded it for free (via P2P) anyways. At least in this case, you allow those people who value easy downloading to conveniently "do the right thing" and directly support the artist.

      To add to this, they're ensuring that the downloader gets a high quality copy. P2P downloads can be of drastically varying quality. It's possible that a person who downloads a high quality copy from the band/label would be more likely to either support the album with their money and/or attend a concert since what they're hearing is superior to something they might immediately dismiss as garbage due to poor quality.

    15. Re:They're make up for it by nine-times · · Score: 1

      Magnatune also allows the buyer to set the price for an album purchase online: from $8 to $18. As far as I know, they've never released stats about how much people decide to pay.

      I'd love to see an analysis of those stats, particularly if they could be set side-by-side with an analysis of Radiohead's stats. I would bet that if you compared the percentage of people buying from Magnatune and Radiohead who paid the minimum ($8 and $0 respectively), you'd find that fewer Radiohead purchasers paid the minimum. Just a guess. But I would think that psychologically, setting the minimum at $8 allows people to pay the minimum with a clearer conscience. There will be more people who look at $0 and think, "Well I should give them *something*."

      Of course, that doesn't mean that the average sale price of Radiohead's album will be over $8. I'd just be interested to see how it worked out.

      Beyond that, I think there are a lot of people who will pay. A lot of the problem with "piracy" is that people have such a negative association with the record industry that they don't feel any guilt about downloading music. If you could somehow offer that music for free with a suggested donation, it might very well turn into more money for bands in the long run.

    16. Re:They're make up for it by antifoidulus · · Score: 1

      Not to mention, at least where i worked at, most of the non-wait staff only gets a straight wage, a wage that is in most cases significantly lower than what the waitstaff makes. The people who actually cook your food, wash all the crap you leave behind etc get stiffed while the waitress, who btw doesn't work any harder for a $10 meal than she does a $30 but gets paid 3x as much for the latter, doesn't cook your food, doesn't for the most part have to deal with bits of food stuck on plates and all the other nasty stuff, but gets paid the most. I have been living in Europe/Japan for most of the past 4 years and not having to tip here(though I usually will round up to the next euro when paying the bill) is so refreshing. Maybe that is one of the reasons the food tastes better here. People can actually be a cook and not be stuck making 1/3 of what the wait staff is making.

    17. Re:They're make up for it by kpwoodr · · Score: 1

      I'm inclined to go with $0 download the album and evaluate it. If I like it, I'll come back pay what I think it's work. I think $5 is a good price for an album I accept from a group I don't follow. So, if I like their work, I'm inclined to contribute and will likely continue to follow the band. If it's a band I like, I may contribute more. I'm even more inclined to contribute if I have some assurance that it's going to the artist and not the record company.

      Now if I don't like it, I'm not out anything, and they're only out the bandwidth. I'm happy to not get stuck with $9 worth of hard product (CD, Case, inserts) that is worthless to me anyway. I'm too lazy to share it out on teh interwebs, so they're no worse on account of me not paying for an album I didn't like in the first place.

      --
      This sig has been removed pending an investigation.
    18. Re:They're make up for it by 2short · · Score: 1


      I find the American tipping system odd, and sometimes a pain. On the other hand, in Europe I've found it much more common for the service to suck...

    19. Re:They're make up for it by shinma · · Score: 1

      Having worked as a waiter before, I'd say that you have no idea how stressful and hectic it can be. A good waiter does have a number of specialized skills, including diplomacy, efficient time management, and expectation management. Having a good memory, the ability to multitask and think on your feet, and keep the customer satisfied as their sole conduit to the (usually harried and even more frazzled) kitchen staff is a lot more challenging than you'd think.

      --
      Shinma
    20. Re:They're make up for it by Score+Whore · · Score: 1

      We're not talking about strippers here.

      I'm with the parent poster. When I go out to eat at a service restaurant I should have a good experience (fast service, good food, clean dinnerware, etc.) A good tip is for when the service is above and beyond the basic level that everybody should get for the price of their meal.

    21. Re:They're make up for it by Fex303 · · Score: 1

      I've found the complete opposite. Also, I blame the tipping culture for the abysmal retail service in the US. All the people who have even the slightest motivation go into bar/restaurant work and the idiots/jerks/etc all end up doing retail. In most of the rest of the world they're spread throughout the different work environments.

    22. Re:They're make up for it by king-manic · · Score: 1

      We're not talking about strippers here.

      I'm with the parent poster. When I go out to eat at a service restaurant I should have a good experience (fast service, good food, clean dinnerware, etc.) A good tip is for when the service is above and beyond the basic level that everybody should get for the price of their meal.


      I'm just making the observation as a former waiter and dating a waitress is that tip varies more with how flirty and good looking you are then how hard you work to please others. You may deny that it ought to be this way but I can attest that it is the way most people tip.

      --
      "There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy."
    23. Re:They're make up for it by zippthorne · · Score: 1

      Except waitresses make less than waiters on average even in the same restaurant.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    24. Re:They're make up for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You cannot attest any such thing, because you're using a biased sample to make the conclusion.

      That doesn't make you wrong, but it does make the reason you think you're right wrong.

    25. Re:They're make up for it by Mr.+Underbridge · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Having worked as a waiter before, I'd say that you have no idea how stressful and hectic it can be. A good waiter does have a number of specialized skills, including diplomacy, efficient time management, and expectation management. Having a good memory, the ability to multitask and think on your feet, and keep the customer satisfied as their sole conduit to the (usually harried and even more frazzled) kitchen staff is a lot more challenging than you'd think.

      I've never been a waiter but I'll second that. Let's say the average tip is the aforementioned 18%, and since the whole point is to be a discretionary reward, that I range from 10%-25% for below average to above average service. If the check for a party of two comes to $50, then I might tip between $5 and $7.50 (examples only, I don't actually count pennies). Surely the difference between a good and bad server is worth $2.50.

      So what do I get for my extra $2.50? Not having to ask twice for condiments. Having the guy notice I need a refill before I give up in vain and start holding the glass above my head. Not sitting for a half hour waiting for my check. Not getting my order screwed up. If someone does all those things they make my dinner more enjoyable; I have no problem rewarding them for it.

      Now, one could claim from a statistical standpoint that the amount of the tip need not correspond directly to the value of the service, but to the discretionary portion of the service alone. A tip of zero should correspond to bare minimum service or the least amount a humane person would leave, with the employer picking up the difference and increasing salaries. In America, anything below 10% is considered unconscionable. What's the point of the tipping system, if it's not actually discretionary? Just save me the hassle and pay the servers more. That way, they don't worry about getting stiffed by tightwads, and leaving a sizeable tip would be more of an actual reward than something servers count on for their salary (which seems to have been the original point of the whole custom).

      But in general, having had a number of friends who were servers in college and hearing all the crap they have to do...yeah, cut the server a break. Another reason that tips seem high: yes, they probably do make $30 an hour on Saturday night - but that accounts for 1) the fact they have to work Saturday night, which sucks, 2) it's not always that busy and lucrative, and 3) at a lot of places, they have to show up before the restaurant opens to do prep and stay afterwards to do close, at which point they make half minimum wage. And if it really were that lucrative, you'd see a lot more non-teenagers making a career out of being an Applebys server, but somehow I think it's not that great a deal.

    26. Re:They're make up for it by 2short · · Score: 1


      Well, YMMV, obviously. Mind you, I'm thinking of low-mid range restaurants; expensive places tend to have good service regardless. You may be right about the waiter vs. retail connection... but personally, I like good service at a restaurant, but at retail stores I mostly want to be left alone to figure out what I want, so inattentive staff is great!

    27. Re:They're make up for it by N-icMa · · Score: 1

      Just to clarify; Magnatune offers the possibility to pay between 5 and 18 dollars, with the standard set at 8 dollars. They claim the average purchase to be 8,3 dollars to my recollection.

    28. Re:They're make up for it by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Maybe he got a little too prima donna about the whole thing, and that showed through in the work as it progressed?

      (Not a fan, so didn't participate in that little experiment of his, but the thought occurred to me since so many people started out paying.)

    29. Re:They're make up for it by mochan_s · · Score: 1

      Chinese restaurants are perfect for you.

      Most owners do not allow the waitstaff to take tips but rather consider tips as restaurant income and the waitstaff is only given a certain wage.

      No matter how many times you don't leave a tip, the waiters in Chinese restaurants aren't going to be mean to you.

      And, don't give the money directly to them. They will be too scared to take it with them and will just give it to the restaurant owner.

    30. Re:They're make up for it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'll do it. I don't even particularly like Radiohead. But I've been saying this is how I want to get my music for sometime now. So it's time to put my money where my mouth is.

    31. Re:They're make up for it by Puff+Daddy · · Score: 1

      That being said, I wonder if this is some kind of strange social experiment to see if anyone actually puts more than $0 in the price box. I probably won't.

      I have no doubt that people will. I think the truly interesting statistic would be the number of people who pay more than the expected retail price. Ever been to a farm stand that works on the honor system? It's great, you take your vegetables, leave the money in a box, and take change if you need it. No one watches you, no one's even around unless they're taking a break. I always pay more money than I'm asked at those places because I feel like the trust and respect is worth a little extra. When this comes out I'll most likely pay $20+ for it. Not because I think I'm striking a blow for freedom or anything like that, I just genuinely appreciate not being treated like a thief, and I'm willing to pay extra for it.

    32. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      Keep in mind that a regular release is planned for early next year. You could very easily have a physical CD for well under $20.

    33. Re:They're make up for it by mwvdlee · · Score: 1

      If the new album is anything like the last few, I wouldn't even download it for free.
      If it's more like the good stuff though, I'll be sure to pay some.

      --
      Slashdot social media options: AIM, ICQ, Yahoo, Jabber and Mobile Text. Why no MySpace?
    34. Re:They're make up for it by MrSplog · · Score: 1

      Of course, what you fail to note is that the reason the people on said websites are using a free model for their music is that they quite literally can't give it away.

      Radiohead on the other hand are arguably the biggest band in the world with millions of (worryingly) obsessed fans.

    35. Re:They're make up for it by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      How are

      because I mostly listen to music in the car

      and

      mp3s don't sound so great (to me anyways) with relatively decent speakers.

      Not entirely self-contradictory? The car is precisely one of the reasons most people don't notice the encoding artifacts of MP3: it's probably one of the worst listening environments imaginable.

      Honestly, just get yourself a little MP3 player and a car adapter. You'll thank yourself later, trust me (who the hell wants to jigger around with CDs while driving? CDs which get scratched, skip, get damaged by heat and sunlight, etc, etc).

    36. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      I can actually notice the deficiencies in CD audio better in the car than I can at the computer. My car has a better stereo than I have anywhere else, and I can actually notice the limited storage capacity of regular music CDs... When the music has too much going on, some of the sounds are compromised (most noticeably the bass). MP3s? They just sound flat.

      And I don't change the CDs while driving, I just plop one in before I leave and take it out when I come back after work. If you take care of your CDs, they don't get damaged. Or you can just burn copies, which you have to do anyways if your stereo doesn't have an input.

    37. Re:They're make up for it by Thwomp · · Score: 1

      I always wondered what a Slashdot version of Reservoir Dogs would be like. Now I just hope the Karma Police don't show up.

    38. Re:They're make up for it by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      I can actually notice the limited storage capacity of regular music CDs. ...

      In the car... you notice the "limited storage capacity". By which I can only assume you mean the sampling frequency, the aliasing of which is only audible to dogs and the superhuman.

      Gotcha.

    39. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      So surround sound/DTS/5.1 is a hoax?

    40. Re:They're make up for it by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Since when could you buy CDs with DTS or Dolby 5.1 encoded audio on them? And what does that have to do with riding around in a car and supposedly detecting CD audio defects due to "limited storage capacity"?

    41. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      You buy DVDs with DTS or 5.1 on them. You don't buy CDs with DTS or 5.1 on them, which is exactly my point. If the CDs don't have limited storage capacity, why don't they just do the DTS or 5.1 on a CD, since it would be cheaper? My point is that even CDs don't have optimal sound quality. They simply don't have the ability to store all the information needed to reproduce any sound in any way desired. And CDs have much better sound quality than mp3s.

    42. Re:They're make up for it by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Well, given that studio music *isn't recorded* in surround sound, I fail to see how you can detect "limited bandwidth" in the audio produced by your CDs. Unless, of course, all you ever listen to is movie soundtracks.

      IOW, you aren't making any damn sense... but, I'm beginning to realize that's not that surprising.

      And, incidentally, DTS and Dolby Digital are both lossy digital audio compression codecs. So I'm not sure how you can possibly believe that a studio CD, encoded as DTS or Dolby Digital, would be of inherently higher quality.

    43. Re:They're make up for it by ShatteredArm · · Score: 1

      Yes, because artists who release music in DTS and Dolby Digital format are just taking a studio CD and encoding it as DTS and Dolby Digital... It is the very fact that DTS and Dolby Digital have more "bandwidth" that is proof that there are limitations in CD storage capacity. If musicians don't record music in a way that is benefitted by having higher quality, it is because of the limitations of CDs, not the other way around.

      But clearly you're just being belligerent, so there's no point in continuing this useless discussion.

    44. Re:They're make up for it by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      I think the biggest reason for this was more that their was a long delay (not to long as book writing goes, but sizable to keep interest) between chapters. If I remember correctly some gaps where near 4 months. Who can really be kept in suspense for 4 months by the beginning of a book...?

      Having done a series of stories myself online, though I offered my work free to the public. I can say honestly that it's not easy making something that is effectively 'episodic content' work. The rate of content/versus time is key and the more content that exists the more interest in it you will see. If I look today I'll see I had nearly 20,000 readers for the six months I was actively writing. I couldn't keep up with the schedule though when I went back to work, and people started trailing off. If every person who ever read my series donated a dollar to me I could have lived on how much I'd have made, In fact 20k isn't bad money at all for a first time author.

      Btw the other consideration as well is in how many people felt that they had already spent $X on the series, why spend more...? I mean if you donated, say... $5 the first chapter, why not wait a few chapters to pay again...? An entire book is usually $20 for near 400 pages (hard cover, soft cover is about $7). You also have to add in that readers to read the files for this don't really exist in a hand held fashion (there are some, but they are rare/restrictive/expensive), so you are stuck sitting at a PC to read them... Quickly the investment becomes to much for most people to deal with.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    45. Re:They're make up for it by Puff+Daddy · · Score: 1

      I could even more easily put $0 in the suggested donation box. I know, my thought process doesn't mesh well with capitalism, but I would pay extra for the privilege of not being forced to pay at all. Capitalism is a primitive system that encourages distrust, but until something better comes along this is how I'm gonna play the game. Also, Radiohead is one of my favorite bands and I feel certain that the album will be worth more than what I pay.

  13. Even more interesting by Conspiracy_Of_Doves · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It will be even more interesting to see the reaction of some of the big labels.

    1. Re:Even more interesting by Stringer+Bell · · Score: 1

      It'll rhyme with "meh," and be accompanied by a shrug of the shoulders.

    2. Re:Even more interesting by sdo1 · · Score: 5, Interesting
      There's some comments in this Time Magazine article. Some choice ones...

      "This feels like yet another death knell," emailed an A&R executive at a major European label. "If the best band in the world doesn't want a part of us, I'm not sure what's left for this business."

      "That's the interesting part of all this," says a producer who works primarily with American rap artists. "Radiohead is the best band in the world; if you can pay whatever you want for music by the best band in the world, why would you pay $13 dollars or $.99 cents for music by somebody less talented? Once you open that door and start giving music away legally, I'm not sure there's any going back." Translation: "If this works, it's time to panic."

      -S

      --
      --- What parts of "shall make no law", "shall not be infringed", and "shall not be violated" don't you understand?
    3. Re:Even more interesting by Abreu · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I would hardly call Radiohead the best band in the world, but I will certainly admit that they are way above average (when the average is the latest-britney-clone records and hip-hop records)

      --
      No sig for the moment.
  14. "Unique" by Ancient_Hacker · · Score: 5, Informative
    Something is either unique or it isn't.

    There's no "Somewhat unique", or "very unique".

    1. Re:"Unique" by pokerdad · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Something is either unique or it isn't. There's no "Somewhat unique", or "very unique".

      My mother was an English teacher and she used to complain about people misusing the word unique in this way all the time. And while I certainly understand the point you and she are making, I have long wondered at what point does a commonly misused word simply become redefined?

      You can argue that "very unique" is non-sensical, but the truth is that everyone reading that phrase knows the intention of the author, and therefore information information is being conveyed.

    2. Re:"Unique" by Waffle+Iron · · Score: 5, Funny

      You exhibit a rather unique sort of pedantry.

    3. Re:"Unique" by stranger_to_himself · · Score: 1

      However you redefine it, it's still a tautology and shouldn't be used.

      I agree with your mother. It makes me slightly furious too.

    4. Re:"Unique" by Frosty+Piss · · Score: 1

      Seinfeld. Rava: "there are no big or small coincidences just coincidences"

      --
      If you want news from today, you have to come back tomorrow.
    5. Re:"Unique" by smellsofbikes · · Score: 1

      I disagree with the basic premise of your statement.
      Every ladybug is unique, because every ladybug is different than every other ladybug. A ladybug that can shoot fire from its eyes is *more* unique than a ladybug that has a 0.00000000001% genetic difference from all other ladybugs.
      In other words: while 'unique' is a boolean, it can be modified in speech to indicate degree. If not, then your definition of 'unique' is kind of useless.

      --
      Nostalgia's not what it used to be.
    6. Re:"Unique" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think that's wrong. Here's the definition:

      very unique: in many aspects
      somewhat unique: feels unique but speaker knows that it is not

      Btw, how do you feel about the word 'pure'? Or, purely unique?

    7. Re:"Unique" by maxwell+demon · · Score: 1

      Well, "unique" means "different from everything else", right?
      Then "very unique" obviously means "very different from everything else".

      --
      The Tao of math: The numbers you can count are not the real numbers.
    8. Re:"Unique" by GMFTatsujin · · Score: 1

      "...therefore information information is being conveyed."

      Is that like, twice the amount of information, or redundant information, or what?

    9. Re:"Unique" by uglyduckling · · Score: 1
      "Very unique" is not a tautology, because "very" does not express an identical or simlar concept to "unique", rather the adjective "very" is nonsensical becuase it implies degrees of uniqueness. "Singularly unique" would be an example of a tautology.


      I suppose it's arguable that degrees of uniqueness are possible in the sense that a person, object or idea could be unique in some properties but not in others, however I don't think this applies to a non-complex entitiy (e.g. a method for selling an album).

    10. Re:"Unique" by Threni · · Score: 1

      > I agree with your mother. It makes me slightly furious too.

      Colorless green dreams sleep furiously!

    11. Re:"Unique" by UbuntuDupe · · Score: 1

      And while I certainly understand the point you and she are making, I have long wondered at what point does a commonly misused word simply become redefined?

      So would you say it begs the question of when a misuse becomes the definition? ;-)

    12. Re:"Unique" by kaffiene · · Score: 1

      (a) It's not a tautology, it's redundant

      (b) English is a juggernaut truck - it goes on regardless

    13. Re:"Unique" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your thinking seems somewhat simplistic.

      Something can be globally unique or unique within a given context. One could make the case that something is "somewhat unique" if the usage is unique within a given context.

      In this example, it would seem that the "name your own price" idea is not unique (Priceline has be doing it for some time). However it may be unique within the context of selling music. It's useful to preface their unique assertion with a modifier that indicates that someone is applying an existing methodology to a new purpose.

      To take another example, there's nothing unique about your comment. Many, many /. grammar nazis have posted comments almost identical to yours in the past 10 years. Without the concept of unique within a given context, your post should have been moderated into a "-1 Redundant" oblivion. But since no one had yet responded to this article with your assertion, your post was unique within the context of this topic. Hence, it is somewhat unique.

    14. Re:"Unique" by adamofgreyskull · · Score: 1

      This is Slashdot. What do you think?

    15. Re:"Unique" by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      My mother was an English teacher and she used to complain about people misusing the word unique in this way all the time. And while I certainly understand the point you and she are making, I have long wondered at what point does a commonly misused word simply become redefined? My high school English teacher used to say, and probably still does say, that language creates environment and environment creates language.

      Maybe it's different in places like France where they have government bodies dedicated to maintaining the purity of their language. But I have to think that the threshold is, and should be, pretty low for a language like English where we regularly co-opt terms and phrases from just about anywhere (geographically and semantically) we feel like.
    16. Re:"Unique" by CelticWhisper · · Score: 1

      On a semi-related note, my girlfriend was TAing a class in evolutionary biology at the University of Chicago last fall and, when grading exams, came across an essay response stating that some evolutionary event or another (not sure what it was, guilty, but then I do InfoSec and not biology, so sue me) was "extremely unprecedented." I (obviously) wasn't in the class, but was with her and the other TAs while they were grading, and we all had a good laugh at that one.

      --
      Help protect civil rights from abuse by the TSA - visit TSA News Blog.
      http://www.tsanewsblog.com
    17. Re:"Unique" by Ray+Radlein · · Score: 1

      However, one sense (the original one, in fact) of the word "very" is "truly" ("very," from the Old French "verrai," is arguably the only common French loanword to displace its Germanic counterpart — in this case, "sore," from the Germanic "sehr" — from the English language after the Norman Conquest); so while saying "somewhat unique" is meaningless, saying "very unique" can be legitimate.

      Better yet, giving people the benefit of the doubt on "very unique" allows me to keep my blood pressure from spiking even more often than it already does, while still allowing me to get pissed off at "mostly unique" and the like.

    18. Re:"Unique" by gosand · · Score: 1
      You can argue that "very unique" is non-sensical, but the truth is that everyone reading that phrase knows the intention of the author, and therefore information information is being conveyed.


      I don't know what your talking about, or for that matter what their talking about. All I know is that when choosing you're words, its best to use the correct ones. But this is the internet, so its neither hear or there. I guess I should of known better then to ask the question hear on Slashdot.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    19. Re:"Unique" by Spacezilla · · Score: 1

      Question.

      If there's room for 10 eggs in a basket and there are 5 eggs in there, is the basket 50% full or is it not full at all? I would say it's not full at all. It would be full if there were 10 eggs in there, but at it is, it's not full. Not 50% full, not half full, not full at all.

      There are no degrees of "full", "empty", "unique" and similar words. So the glass is neither half full, nor half empty, it's not full at all and not empty at all.

      Agree/disagree?

    20. Re:"Unique" by StrawberryFrog · · Score: 1

      but the truth is that everyone reading that phrase knows the intention of the author, and therefore information is being conveyed.

      It is possible to know what the author is trying to say, and at the same time to cringe at thier poor grammar and /or spelling. In cases like that they're conveying more information than they intended to.

      I have long wondered at what point does a commonly misused word simply become redefined?

      So, at what point does the apostrophe "'" start to officially mean "look out end of word, here comes an s"? At what point do "you're" and "your", "it's" and "its" become interchangable? At what point does "seemless" become correct spelling?

      --

      My Karma: ran over your Dogma
      StrawberryFrog

    21. Re:"Unique" by AP31R0N · · Score: 1


      Personally, i think the word is worthless. Everything is unique. Why point out what is true of EVERYTHING? "You're unique? So am i. So is everyone else and every electron and photon in the universe. Woopty fucking do. Can i have your autograph?"

      It is a case of using the wrong damn word. Unique has a meaning, it doesn't not mean "special" or "unusual", it means "the only thing like itself in the universe". When we use the wrong word we weaken the language. We lose the DIFFERENCE between the word unique and words like "interesting, special, novel, innovative, significant". The word impact has been utterly buggered up by journalists.

      Yes, languages change. i get that. However, this isn't a matter of fixing something that was broken, or simplifying something that was needlessly complex. When people say "ya'll" or "yous" they are correcting the problem created when we gave up "thou". i'm cool with that. In the case of impact and unique, people are using the wrong word out of ignorance, laziness or to hijack the significance/power of those words. Verbifying access works because we needed a word for "use my authority to open/control". People say impact when they mean effect because impact sounds important, powerful, shocking and unstoppable. Eventually, that use of impact will lose its effect (so to speak), and we've muddied the word for its original purpose. If every military conflict is a war, then eventually war will cease to be the scary word it should be.

      --
      Utilizing the synergization of benchmark e-solutions to pre-workaround action items!
    22. Re:"Unique" by ian_from_brisbane · · Score: 1

      "I guess I should have known better than to ask the question here on Slashdot".

      Wow, are you trying to set some kind of record?

    23. Re:"Unique" by ian_from_brisbane · · Score: 1

      Okay you got me... I re-read your post... mod gp +funny!

    24. Re:"Unique" by rhakka · · Score: 1

      That just proves the point really. That was very easy to read even though it was totally "incorrect". If I assume you were using the "wrong" words out of ignorance, then perhaps typing like that is a poor way to make an impression. But if I am not tied to that idea and I consider the substance of your communication, I have no care for whether you say hear or here, as long as it doesn't impede my understanding.

      The "best" word is simply one that is not misunderstandable by the audience. If you have an audience with aspergers, then you need to be more precise than with people who have mastered context. Unless they have what I call "elective aspergers", and insist that people not adhering to arbitrary linguistic rules are somehow less intelligent than those who do.

    25. Re:"Unique" by Floritard · · Score: 1

      at what point does a commonly misused word simply become redefined? You sir are literally on to something!
    26. Re:"Unique" by Nevyn · · Score: 1

      All I know is that when choosing you're words, its best to use the correct ones.

      "When choosing you are words" ... that's a very unique way of putting it.

      --
      ustr: Managed string API with ave. 44% overhead over strdup(), for 0-20B
    27. Re:"Unique" by gosand · · Score: 1

      read the whole thing.. if that is the only BLATANT mistake you see, then you have issues.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

    28. Re:"Unique" by gosand · · Score: 1
      That was very easy to read even though it was totally "incorrect".


      Really? I read it, and it was painful.. it was very hard for me to write that actually. There are certain grammar rules that are difficult, and easier to understand when people mess them up. But your vs you're? Contractions are SIMPLE, there should be no confusion around them. But this is the internet... what is really really sad is when I see these kinds of mistakes on TV or in big-name publications.. where they should know better.

      --

      My beliefs do not require that you agree with them.

  15. This is brilliant by TechForensics · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Radiohead wins, the fans win, the RIAA companies lose. Radiohead makes more for their music, fans pay less, and the greedy middlemen eventually begin considering honest jobs.

    Only immediate problem I see is that the record companies are going to be darned sure to sign new bands to perpetual contracts to prevent this kind of defection in the event of success. Maybe the new pathway will be for new bands to get exposure on iTunes or Amazon's new .mp3 download service. And just maybe, as the article suggests, big successful bands selling direct will feature or promote new, worthy acts.

    We can be glad the sun is setting on the **AAs.

    --
    Those are my principles, and if you don't like them... well, I have others.
    1. Re:This is brilliant by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      and the greedy middlemen eventually begin considering honest jobs. - this is not going to happen. The greedy middlemen will spend all of their money fighting court battles against everyone who stands on their way. Will they win, will they lose, will anything really change at the end, we'll just have to wait and see.

    2. Re:This is brilliant by roman_mir · · Score: 1

      Oh, and I doubt very much that even if the greedy middlemen lose all their money they'll consider 'honest jobs'. More like they'll continue trying to make lots of money in similar schemes.

    3. Re:This is brilliant by qortra · · Score: 2, Informative

      While I mostly agree with you, please don't forget independent music store owners. These people were [mostly] not greedy; they just made a living, and the internet age left them behind. They let us listen to music before we bought it, connected us to new music that we would otherwise have been unaware of, and they never tried to sue us. Generally, these people were being screwed by the RIAA's inflated prices just like everybody else. As physical media became less popular and the RIAA refused to lower prices, the independent owners had no choice but to watch their businesses waste away.

      There really wasn't anything that anybody could could do; the moment that the internet appeared, their business model was doomed. However, please don't lump these people in with the rest of the truly greedy middlemen; these were honest people, and I for one will miss them.

    4. Re:This is brilliant by WombatDeath · · Score: 1

      The immediate problem I see is that this approach requires people to pay money when they don't have to. I admire Radiohead's optimistic view of human nature but I suspect that an awful lot of people will 'contribute' between zero and one pound for the album, probably clustered at the lower end.

      "But people know that if they want more music in future they need to spend the money to make this approach work".

      Of course they do, but they also know that their individual purchase won't make a difference. It's a selfish attitude but a logical one, and people are often selfish and sometimes logical. Hopefully I'm wrong and this will work beautifully - in any event, I applaud Radiohead for giving it a shot.

    5. Re:This is brilliant by poot_rootbeer · · Score: 1

      the record companies are going to be darned sure to sign new bands to perpetual contracts to prevent this kind of defection in the event of success.

      Just like the passengers on La Amistad had neen signed to perpetual labor contracts?

      A contract that lacks clear and attainable conditions under which the contract may be terminated is almost certainly unenforceable, not to mention immoral.

    6. Re:This is brilliant by TheGeneration · · Score: 1

      In the neighborhood I live in there is this tiny store that specializes in gay music. I walk past this store often and wonder how the hell they'll manage to make a living as time goes on. I buy almost all of my music from iTunes now. There is the rare occasion though when I do buy something from that store because iTunes doesn't have it.

      If these stores are going to survive they are going to have to identify what iTunes doesn't have and simultaneously there is a demand for, and start stocking the store with those items.

      --


      The Generation
      I'd say something witty here, but I'm not that bright.
    7. Re:This is brilliant by Ray+Radlein · · Score: 1

      I am pretty sure that even California — home to Hollywood, the MPAA, and all that — has specific statutory limits on the duration of any contract of this sort. I think that's one of the things Courtney Love nailed her record label on in court.

  16. Not sure about you, but I like this by zappepcs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Not because $0.00 is a valid price to download, but because they are actually doing something right, valuing a download vs. real physical product in this test. No matter what they do, people will be sharing their music for free, so they capitalize on that for the news bite, AND offer up more than a license to listen to 3+ minutes of music for sale. The way the human mind tends to work, they stand a good chance of making money on this.

  17. Wimps by mmuskratt · · Score: 0, Troll

    Ha! They have to put it on us to fix the price for them selling out...used to be that they could sign a fat contract to a record company for that.

    So if social engineering works, who will pay the most for it? Who will pay the least?

    --
    man rtfm
  18. Only if the publish the results by jgarra23 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think this will be very interesting *ONLY IF* Radiohead publishes the results of such a promotion.

    It will be interesting because they are (for whatever reason) a relevant and popular band with access to traditional B&M distribution. So we can see (very approximately and inaccurate duh)
    -what geographic locations paid the most average price
    -what geographic locations which paid nothing
    -what the average per-download price was
    -highest & lowest price

    and so on... esp. since it's not often that a band with as much exposure as Radiohead (don't even say Prince or I will slap you) experiments like this.

    1. Re:Only if the publish the results by TheGeneration · · Score: 1

      You're going on the assumption they are tracking the above information. Sure they're going to know the average price per unit, but they may not be tracking geography info.

      --


      The Generation
      I'd say something witty here, but I'm not that bright.
    2. Re:Only if the publish the results by space+tyrant+xenu · · Score: 1

      Prince!

    3. Re:Only if the publish the results by rastoboy29 · · Score: 1

      All you have to see...is if they do it again next time.

  19. That's great, but... by markbt73 · · Score: 0, Troll

    ...it's still Radiohead.

    "This food is terrible." "Yeah, but the portions are HUGE!"

    --
    "Oh boy! Are we going to try something dangerous?"
    1. Re:That's great, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As long as it sounds louder than my old CDs I'm satisfied. I heard it will be motherclipping loud this time so everybody will be happy.

    2. Re:That's great, but... by ivan256 · · Score: 1

      Where's bad analogy man when you need him?

      You can live without the Radiohead, but if you're starving and on a budget you may well think "Yeah, but the portions are HUGE!" is an excellent thing to say about a restaurant with terrible food.

    3. Re:That's great, but... by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      TH#EE CHEE## F## #HE L##DNE## #A#!

      (*i am yelling you stupid lameness filter*)

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
  20. How about name your own price for concerts? by dada21 · · Score: 1, Interesting

    I like this idea, but I think it goes in a direction of a market that is already plummeting to zero code for recorded music (used primarily as a marketing resource to get fans to come to live shows or buy hard merchandise which isn't copied as easily or at a far greater cost).

    I love MeetUp.com because I think it is a great way to get to know others in your area who have similar tastes as you do. But MeetUp has a few shortcomings in terms of active financial participation of those who are part of the group, so I think it falls short of being a strong market incentive to use as a direction for bands, public speakers, and others to find markets of interest.

    There are websites where people can put up money to entice someone to visit their town, but I think they don't focus well on bands and speakers. Why don't we have more of a market support for live concerts, especially since they can be a "true market" resource for financing musicians and artist? Music has nearly infinite supply in MP3 format, with just the cost of bandwidth and hosting being the limiting factor for infinite supply (therefore zero or near zero market cost). Bands who produce great music at a low or no cost can produce a big profit if they entice people to go to their shows.

    Why isn't there, yet, a mechanism for bartering for live music, between fans and artists?

    Example:

    Radiohead says they'll go on tour in the United States. www.BookABand.com (made up site, might exist) lets all the fans put up their own money to "vote" for a venue for Radiohead to play at (or a city, instead of a specific venue). I may love Radiohead, so I'd say I'll pay $200 per ticket to see them play, preferably in a smaller venue. Note that my wife and I pay outrageous sums of money to see artists play at The Pearl at the Palms Casino in Vegas (small venue, tickets can be $250 per seat for standing room) because we like the closer quarters and the opportunity after the show to talk to the musicians. Not everyone wants to pay that money, but we love small venues, so it is worth it to us.

    Others can bid say $1, or $10 or $50 or whatever they feel is a cap. If Radiohead decides to pick that town, let's say Chicago, they can log in and say they'll play Chicago if they can raise $50,000 for the show. Venues can bid based on their capacity and what cut they want. We might have 10,000 Chicago Radiohead fans bidding between $1 and $500, 10 venues bidding between 1000 capacity and 10,000 capacity for a cut of say 10-30%, and Radiohead making the final decision. When they pick a venue, the rest is automatically calculated: fans pay what they think is a viable amount to pay, and the cut off occurs at the point that the band gets their $50,000+ total, with fans below the cut-off not attending. Anyone can raise or lower their bids up to approval by the band and the venue, and the band and venue can cancel their bid as well.

    Sort of a Dutch auction of sorts, but with market forces providing the final cost and service provided.

    Music sales may not be dead, but they're quickly heading in that direction. For every 1 album sold online, how many are pirated, given away, played on the radio or Pandora, or distributed at no cost or charge? 5? 10? 50? It would make sense for bands to try to make as much profit as possible -- based on their fans' financial desire -- and give more of their music away as a marketing cost.

    Some bands, say my brother's band Maps & Atlases, might be happy to play for only $2500 and set up 10 dates for their fans to bid on around the country. They might get 250 people willing to pay $10 each, or 500 people willing to pay between $5 and $20, with venues kicking in a negative cost (meaning they'd pay the band instead of taking a per-ticket percentage) to bid for a semi-popular band such as them.

    1. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by GungaDan · · Score: 2, Funny

      I heard Radiohead will play a free concert for you if you have cancer in your ass.

      Now where were those pubes...

      --
      Eloi are stupid, throw morlocks at them!
    2. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's an interesting concept for something, but it would never work for live music shows. Whether they're a garage band or Radiohead, touring is an insanely complicated process (moving and accomodating four people and their crew across the country and world, setting up and promoting the events, etc.) There's really no way any sane band would agree to a "maybe we'll play. maybe we won't" auction when they have thirty cities to hit on a tour.

      There's only one thing broken in the current system; Ticketmaster and their greedy stranglehold on prices. Bust them up (something has to be illegal about their business practices!) and allow competition and we'll see realistic prices again.

    3. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your idea, with a number of slight differences is at work in the House Concert movement. A community of music listeners will invite an artist or band to play at a house. The community guarantees a certain turn out of which all money goes to the artist - no money to the venue since it's a home. it works quite well, as long as the concert can be held in a home (~30-50 people typically).

    4. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by DollyTheSheep · · Score: 1

      You raise some valid points here. It seems, that records are not the primary source of income anymore for musicians now. It's the venues. 10 years ago, the gigs were for the support of the record sales, now it's the other way around: albums are promotion for live gigs and thats where the lion share of the money comes from.

    5. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by businessnerd · · Score: 1

      It's an interesting idea, but as an anonymous reply states, there are a lot of logistical hurtles when you are talking about concert tours. There is a lot more overhead to worry about, so right away, you need some kind of minimum price. The venue has it's own operating costs and is looking to make a profit, as well as all of the transportation and the roadies (the unsung heroes of rock 'n roll). At the end of the day, what you're really ending up with is the same system you have already. A lot of people don't see this side, but let's say a college or university (or any other organization) wants an artist to perform on their campus. There is a list out there with the price of every performer with official representation. It costs $X for this band and $Y for that band. The more in-demand or established an artist, the higher the price. The organization then buys a performance and sets the ticket price based on the venue capacity/expected attendence. With your model, you are doing the same thing, but not at your own venue and not everyone pays the same price (not even a tiered pricing).

      What I would like to see is moving to an auction based model. Essentially the band sets up a tour schedule, figures out how much they need to charge in order to break even. The band would then sell the tickets through something like eBay or Stub Hub. Under the eBay model, the tickets would start fairly low (below market value). You could "Buy it Now" for a fairly high price (or leave it open) and as the demand rises, so does the price. If the demand does rise, the tickets will sell for a fairly low price. I think Stub Hub is probably set up better for this, as the price will actually drop over time if no one buys them. I dont' have all the details, but the main point is that the band itself hosts the selling of the tickets without someone like Ticketmaster, just like a band could host their online music sales without the need for a record company. The prices would be based on demand, not what Ticketmaster decides is the proper markup.

      --
      "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how drunk you get." -- H. J. Simpson
    6. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by veganboyjosh · · Score: 1

      interesting/forward thinking idea, that of auctioning off tickets.

      what's to stop scalpers from scooping up all the tickets early, and then holding them for "ransom"? if there were a "buy it now" option at $100, i could just go buy all of the tickets for a major city's venue, then flip them and sell them for 300 bucks...

    7. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is horrible, this idea.

      --Samir

    8. Re:How about name your own price for concerts? by businessnerd · · Score: 1

      One thing that I feel is essential in this scheme is to prevent the scalpers from holding all of the tickets hostage. As you point out, a "Buy it Now" option would probably aide this problem. The Stub Hub model might fit better, but I don't know a lot about how their model works. Existing models might not fit and a new Artist Endorsed Ticket Auctioning model would have to be introduced. Maybe take a queue from the Ahmet Ertigan memorial concert (aka the return of Zeppelin) where only a ticket that has been purchased under the agreed terms (i.e. not scalped) is valid. Again I don't know all of the details on how their model works, or if it will even work. Clearly more thought needs to be done on this.

      --
      "It's not whether you win or lose, it's how drunk you get." -- H. J. Simpson
  21. Let's not see this one on the filesharing networks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Radiohead has the right idea and the courage to try something radical. Let's not spoil it, because if this works, we may not have to deal with a price-fixing music industry that takes it from the fans and the artists so often anymore. Tell your friends, and if you still have to share it, make sure the recipient knows where to buy it and what's at stake.

  22. love this idea... by Connie_Lingus · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think this (along with, unfortunately, corporate sponsorship) is the future of original music sales. Several years ago, after downloading the fantastic "Source Tags and Codes" album from the Band "And You Will Know Us By The Trail Of Dead", I tried to email the lads and offer them $5 directly for the music.

    I got a nice email from someone saying "thanks, but due to contract restrictions with the record label, they could not accept direct donations...please support us by purchasing our album from traditional sources" or something along those lines.

    There is something 10x more satisfying by trying to give my hard earned money directly to the artist, and not to the scum-sucking music executives who have, for years, been stealing millions from naive, unsuspecting bands.

    --
    never bring a twinkie to a food fight.
    1. Re:love this idea... by TimboJones · · Score: 1

      So send them a gift, "completely unrelated" to obtaining the music. Cash wrapped in heavy paper works fine.

  23. Shatner? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Where's Will Shatner in all of this?

  24. Not so novel by Trelane · · Score: 1

    They are offering two very unique methods of purchase for their new music, the ability to name your own price for a digital download or the ability to purchase a special "discbox" which will contain the album on CD and vinyl in addition to a horde of goodies.
    How is that first item--the ability to choose your own purchase price--in any way "unique", let alone the oxymoronic "very unique"? Magnatune has been doing it for years, and it's (one of) the reasons I love 'em. Aside from the ability to choose FLAC, ogg, or MP3, that is.
    --

    --
    Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  25. And Video Killed the Radio Star by penguin_dance · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "The traditional business model had been ruined by the Internet," said Grundy. "The industry is still trying to work out what on earth the new model or models should be and this is just one option."

    Sucks when you've become redundant, eh? Authors are self-publishing; musicians can sell their songs on-line. They've found that they're doing most of the promotional work anyway, so why are you getting such a big cut? They've peaked behind the curtain and found there is no wizard. You evolve or you get run over.

    --
    If you've never been modded as "flamebait" or "troll," you've never tried to argue a minority viewpoint here!
    1. Re:And Video Killed the Radio Star by kevin.fowler · · Score: 1

      Hey, if your milk money came from selling the same album to people every 10 years in a different format, you'd be unhappy too.

      --
      Bury me in mashed potatoes.
  26. Re:Jews will ruin it by DXMikey · · Score: 1, Troll

    Not that I should honor your remark by replying but WTF? I see you got fed on bullshit growing up. Hope you liked the taste.

    1. I'm a Jew
    2. I've moved away from downloading via torrent and/or emule to buying from the iTunes Store. I love the service and appreciate the fact that I can move my music in between 5 authorized machines. I have no feeling that I don't "own" my music and vids purchased there.
    3. I'm finally going to be a proud Mac Owner as soon as my Apple Store card comes this week. Macbook, here I come! (non-sequiter but thought I'd throw it in).
    4. I'm active in the local Jewish Community. Funny, I've never been invited to one of those meetings where we supposedly plot to overthrow the world or ruin some other country's economy. You should visit Israel sometime. The streets there are rather decidely NOT paved with gold.
    5. On the other hand you run into assholes everywhere. Some of them are at Synagogue - some of 'em here on Slashdot. In fact, I seem to be addressing one right now.
    6. So...if you have 10 dishonest used car salesmen and 9 of 'em are WASPs and one is a Jew, I take it your attitude is, "9 of 'em screwed ya, one of 'em Jew-ed ya", yes?
    7. Fuck you.

  27. You're cheating yourself by PCM2 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Somebody once took me to a Radiohead show to get rid of an extra ticket. I wasn't expecting much, but I was curious enough to check it out. I have to say: They blew the doors off. They were a really, really, really solid live band, and it took me a bit by surprise. Since then I've gone back and listened to their records and gained a lot more respect for their music. It's still not necessarily my cup of tea, but if there are any mainstream rock bands working that deserve respect I would say that Radiohead is one of them.

    --
    Breakfast served all day!
  28. how about by xubu_caapn · · Score: 0

    -1,000,000?

    --
    FYI: I don't know what you guys are talking about half the time.
  29. RIAA companies win too by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    It's called "back catalog" and Radiohead don't own any of it.

    1. Re:RIAA companies win too by CastrTroy · · Score: 1

      Couldn't they re-record the albums under a different title, and sell those? From what I know, most labels only own the rights to the mechanical reproduction of the originally recorded album, and not to the actual song. They could re-record their old songs and release the songs again, under a new album name.

      --

      Anthropic principle: We see the universe the way it is because if it were different we would not be here to see it.
    2. Re:RIAA companies win too by Xtravar · · Score: 1

      Couldn't they re-record the albums under a different title, and sell those? You are correct. However, Radiohead would make more money touring or making new songs than wasting their time recording their old songs.

      Recording's a bitch. All musicians hate it. I've heard of very few instances where an artist re-recorded for a new label. It would probably take a great level of animosity and motivation.
      --
      Buckle your ROFL belt, we're in for some LOLs.
    3. Re:RIAA companies win too by Evets · · Score: 1

      In every contract that I have seen, the artists signed over the copyright to the lyrics. Artists that write their own lyrics are more rare than you would think, though.

      Even in the case where the artist wrote their own lyrics and retained ownership of the copyrights, the producers constantly push for changes during recording sessions - partially because they know what sells and partially to gain an ownership interest in the music should the song get popular and the relationship with the artist go poorly.

      There are no scenarios where the young and talented recording artist pulled one over on the recording company and got a deal that an impartial observer would consider fair.

  30. I for one just preordered by ericrost · · Score: 1

    for 1 pound. Fair price for a digital album in my book.

    1. Re:I for one just preordered by ericrost · · Score: 1

      Or at least I tried, their server is very nearly slashdotted, and didn't process the transaction.. I'll give it another try later.

    2. Re:I for one just preordered by timeOday · · Score: 1

      I can't afford 1 pound, that's like $20 dollars now!! :)

    3. Re:I for one just preordered by igorthefiend · · Score: 1

      I gave them three pounds for it. To me, that was a reasonable price, in that I've lost interest in their work of late and wouldn't have ordinarily gone out and bought the CD, but for a small amount, I'll take a chance. If it's good I'll end up buying the CD anyway when it's released next year - if it's not, I've not lost much. Win/Win.

    4. Re:I for one just preordered by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      Right now it seems £1 is marginally over $2, sure the USD has slid but not by an insane ammount.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
  31. I can't say I like them, but... by UbuntuniX · · Score: 1

    It's good to finally see a band taking independent action against the industry.
    Producers and labels would be nothing the artists, whether they are deemed insignificant or not, and they need to realise that.

    I doubt it really means your own price, rather a small cost price and add what you feel is fair.

    1. Re:I can't say I like them, but... by Score+Whore · · Score: 1

      You might want to review the relationship between artists and producers. Since in many cases producers bring half the talent to the music.

    2. Re:I can't say I like them, but... by e4g4 · · Score: 1

      Particularly in Radiohead's case. Nigel Godrich, Radiohead's producer, is effectively a member of the band, and a well respected one at that. If the GP doesn't believe me, he should listen to the difference between Pablo Honey (which Godrich had no hand in) and every subsequent Radiohead album.

      --
      The secret to creativity is knowing how to hide your sources. - Albert Einstein
  32. They're not independent by Loke+the+Dog · · Score: 1

    That's very nice and I am sure it will net them more than they would if they released it the traditional way. But I'd like to see a completely independent band do the same. These guys are famous because their record companies have invested in them. Extremely few independent bands could support themselves on their music by letting their customers choose how much to pay for the music. They don't get enough attention and hype.

    My point is that this doesn't prove that record companies are not needed. It just proves that the rich and famous can do whatever they want, and that has always been a well known fact. But those who only care about destroying the record companies and don't care about replacing them with a sustainable model, this is great, I guess.

    1. Re:They're not independent by Hatta · · Score: 1

      Extremely few independent bands could support themselves on their music by letting their customers choose how much to pay for the music.

      Extremely few independent bands can support themselves on music sales at all.

      --
      Give me Classic Slashdot or give me death!
    2. Re:They're not independent by N-icMa · · Score: 1
      Have you ever looked at Jamendo or Magnatune? Or for that matter heard about Creative Commons?

      These artists make far more than they would be able to make with a standard record deal. They might not be able to live solely off the income from their music, but if every person I knew who could sing or play an instrument could make a decent income on that alone, then the rest of the workforce would be a great deal smaller.

      Many artistic people would rather die than be prevented from using their talents. If there was even a slight chance of getting money to buy a cup of coffee, or even just get appreciated, that could be enough for them to put it out on the net. A lot of that stuff would be terrible of course, just like videos on Youtube or drawings on Deviantart can be horrible, but as long as a search will lead you to the good stuff, then the traditional businesses will die out slowly.

  33. OK by simpl3x · · Score: 1

    Given that I had three copies of the CD, one for the office, one for the car, and one for home, prior to the rise of digital players, this is good for the market. It seems entirely reasonable for me to pay ten dollars, likely more than they would ever get from a label, and use the files how I wish.

    This is the future of the market, which is why I feel that Apple should spin iTunes into the marketplace, and take their profits. An open marketplace for the music, and perhaps movie, industry would be fantastic.

  34. I adore Radiohead, but... by jaypaulw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    They are holding back disk 2 of the record for people willing to buy the ~80USD version. So it's not all happy happy fans we love you.

    CD 2
    MK 1
    DOWN IS THE NEW UP
    GO SLOWLY
    MK 2
    LAST FLOWERS
    UP ON THE LADDER
    BANGERS AND MASH
    4 MINUTE WARNING

    Also, the only reason radiohead are in a position to do this is the label they used to be on. And while I think this is the perfect direction for them, but I don't think it makes sense for labels to disappear. Good labels filter out the garbage to find and promote the good bands (please don't make me list a bunch of good labels.)

    Finally, the label actually does benefit from this because they will sell more copies of back catalog records as new people who have been living under rocks or graduating middle school will "discover" the band.

    Anyway it's a lot to cope with in one day for a sad Radiohead obsessive like myself.

    1. Re:I adore Radiohead, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The second cd is one of b-sides.. Much like when you buy a collectors edition. The album In Rainbows is just one disc and that is available for download. The Vinyl for instance is the first disc.

    2. Re:I adore Radiohead, but... by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

      Yes I understand the concept as I've purchased every radiohead b-side every released. What bothers me is that there is no middle ground for fans of their "music" (as opposed to people who like to buy "stuff.")

      Why not just release the other songs via download too? What is the point of holding back?

      People might argue something like Radiohead are holding back because they want more serious fans to have access but the masses wont be able to handle it. I think almost all of Radiohead's b-sides have been quite good and that the masses are capable of sorting through it all. Anyway that's the only reasonable theory I can come up with.

      JP

    3. Re:I adore Radiohead, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also, the only reason radiohead are in a position to do this is the label they used to be on. And while I think this is the perfect direction for them, but I don't think it makes sense for labels to disappear. Good labels filter out the garbage to find and promote the good bands (please don't make me list a bunch of good labels.)

      I actually agree with this. There's too much crap out there for one person to sort through on their own. Additionally, the labels don't just promote good bands (well, in theory anyway), they cover the studio costs of producing quality recordings (before they use the contract garnered in that process to strangle the creative soul out of their artists).

  35. Nyezzz by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Very logical.

    1. Re:Nyezzz by adolf · · Score: 1

      Somewhat uniquely so, even.

  36. pedant! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's a tautology, not an oxymoron.

    1. Re:pedant! by Trelane · · Score: 1

      I humbly disagree.

      --

      --
      Given enough personal experience, all stereotypes are shallow.
  37. Try it backwards.. by Diginosis · · Score: 1

    1) Download the album for free.
    2) a. If the album is good you give $.
    2) b. If you dislike the album don't pay for it.
    2) c. If you only like certain tracks give $ for those tracks.

    This way if you have high expectations for the album you won't be disappointed or likewise if you have low expectations you won't be disappointed either because you paid nothing. Those who file share it will either download it compulsively (which would happen regardless) or at least have a way to justify their activities.

    If implemented correctly you should be able to justify how much the album is really worth.

    1. Re:Try it backwards.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      You skipped a step:


      0) Profit!

      ...

      1) Download the album for free.
      2) a. If the album is good you give $.
      2) b. If you dislike the album don't pay for it.
      2) c. If you only like certain tracks give $ for those tracks.

    2. Re:Try it backwards.. by youthoftoday · · Score: 1

      Nobody in control of the process wants to know just how much the album is really worth.

      --
      -1 not first post
  38. Odd model by iabervon · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The problem with this model is that people haven't heard the album, and therefore don't know how good it is, so they can't decide in an informed fashion how much they want to pay for it. Even under the assumption that people will be happiest if they pay what they feel something is worth, I expect that people's happiness falls off more quickly on the overpaying side than the underpaying side, and that people expect this is general, so people will underpay to maximize their expected happiness if they don't know what they will feel something is worth.

    1. Re:Odd model by cowscows · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think most music consumers have an innate sense of what they consider to be a good, fair price for music. It gets adjusted a little bit for different circumstances (OMG RADIOHEAD IS MY FAVORITE BAND!, I think that digital albums should be cheaper because of the lack of physical media/shipping costs, I'm a dirt poor college student right now, etc...), but if you were to take a poll of random people on the street, I'm guessing a pretty clear baseline would start to emerge.

      People already pay ridiculously high prices for albums that they haven't heard all the way through. Often times they're buying it just for one or two songs that they've heard on the radio, and the rest of the disc is just gravy (or filler). The cost of CD's probably has a significant effect on the baseline perceived value of a digital album that I mentioned earlier, although I'd guess that most people would agree that a downloaded song should be cheaper than a disc.

      You're probably right in that people will tend to underpay initially out of fear of "getting ripped off", unless they're huge radiohead fans. But if you do that, and it turns out you really dig the album, and you wish you had paid more; I'm sure radiohead wouldn't mind if you paid for and downloaded the album again.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    2. Re:Odd model by iabervon · · Score: 1

      People choosing between paying $12 for an album and not getting the album won't necessarily be the same as people who, given the choice of how much to pay, would pick $12 or more. Huge radiohead fans would buy an album for whatever it costs, but still wouldn't necessarily prefer to overpay just in case. And I don't think people will decide they're short by enough to justify doing a second monetary transaction; there's a convenience cost to the process that makes it unpleasant to do it twice (especially with the store slashdotted).

      FWIW, I'm one of the most frequent buyers at Magnatune.com, and I never buy anything there without first listening to it enough to know it well. I always pay $10 for albums, and I'd probably choose $8 or less if I hadn't heard the album.

    3. Re:Odd model by cowscows · · Score: 1

      Your prices sound pretty darn reasonable, and I think far more people would generally agree with that valuation than the music industry would lead us to believe. And those who will download it and pay very little or nothing are the same people (students, low income, sometimes just plain selfish)who would download it elsewhere for free anyways.

      Even if you decided to buy the album having never heard a note of it, and threw down $5 just because you know that radiohead is pretty well respected, that's more than the band would likely see from a CD sold in a store. So they come out better, you come out better, and it's just the middleman that loses out. But I guess their job isn't necessary anymore.

      --

      One time I threw a brick at a duck.

    4. Re:Odd model by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      The problem with this model is that people haven't heard the album, and therefore don't know how good it is, so they can't decide in an informed fashion how much they want to pay for it.

      Then pay nothing for it (yes, that's an option), decide how good it really is, then go download another one for the price you think they deserve.

    5. Re:Odd model by praxis · · Score: 1

      That's exactly what I did. In fact, with their registration process you don't have to polute their data collection on number of people who chose to pay zero.

  39. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by drix · · Score: 1

    I agree with you, but just playing devil's advocate: isn't downloading it off BitTorrent equivalent to paying $0? If anything, you're saving them the cost of bandwidth.

    --

    I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
  40. http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by AsnFkr · · Score: 3, Informative

    Not that it's not admirable of Radiohead to do something like this, but they aren't the first musicians to work on an electronic donation based system. Here's another "record label" that is entirely donation based: http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/

    1. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by Dr+Reducto · · Score: 1

      Bomb the Music Industry!

    2. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by lucifig · · Score: 1

      They may not be the first, but they are probably the first that actually matter. (No offense to CHOTTO GHETTO, and their cohorts and quoteunqoute records).

    3. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by Stormx2 · · Score: 1

      You'd think they'd just be a shitty band with a great stance/name, but their music rocks my socks :D

    4. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by comradeeroid · · Score: 1

      They're definitely the band with the largest media exposure and the highest recognition factor though.
      Swedens Royal Downfall gave away their second album on Mp3 but I bet you an entire download of Radioheads latest that you never heard about them.

      Nerdy cthulhupunkers Darkest of the Hillside Thickets used to promote people to download their songs through Napster since it would be hard to get them overseas, but still nobody knows much about them or their lovely lovecraftian music.

      Radiohead on the other hand... you can pick almost anyone from my generation and they'll know who Radiohead are. And to be honest, that's what's needed and why this is newsworthy material.

      I could create all the avant garde black metal I wanted and give it away for free on the Internet, but I wouldn't create a buzz. We need the huge stars to get this bandwagon really rolling.

      --
      If you see a rock violating the law of gravity, then the law is wrong, not the rock!
    5. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by AsnFkr · · Score: 1

      I didn't mean first to give away music, I meant the donation based system.

      If it was first to give away albums, I would have stated myself (haha!) as my bands have had exclusively free albums since everyone was still dialing up and mp3 was a fresh new buzzword. So obviously, Radiohead is ripping me off. Right?

    6. Re:http://www.quoteunquoterecords.com/ by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, sue... it's worth a shot.
      Or perhaps you ought to have patented "a method for giving away music for free" back in the good old dial-up days.
      Damn... can't remember my password.

  41. Steve Jobs concerned? iTunes model by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    If influential bands continue to imitate radiohead like they do their with radiohead's music, this is a small spanner in works for the iTunes model.

    Thom once wrote:

    vee shall make zem PAY for zer mistake. ha ha ha. they vill never get avay viz ziss. vee are verrry verrry precious about are little KID A yu know and also zee others and you mr job jobs are no exception ya?

    unbundle zis KID A record anda vee vill unbundle yor face.

    H HA HA ha HA ha HA ha ha

    (cough)

  42. Yes, but . . . by cashman73 · · Score: 1

    Will they be recruiting William Shatner and Leonard Nimoy to help promote it?

  43. Magnatune by bohlke · · Score: 2, Informative

    Does anyone know magnatune [www.magnatune.com]?

    1. Re:Magnatune by Workaphobia · · Score: 3, Interesting

      I think of them every time I hear one of these stories. Magnatune is one of the very few labels you can do business with and not feel like you have to take a shower afterwards. I discovered them while investigating online DRM-free labels with a conscience, after realizing that eMusic didn't have the (quite idealistic) philosophy I was looking for.

      --
      Evidently, the key to understanding recursion is to begin by understanding recursion. The rest is easy.
    2. Re:Magnatune by Kwirl · · Score: 1
      I just thought I should chime in....I have been a huge fan of almost everything I've heard on http://www.cstrecords.com/constellation records. About them, and this feels applicable to the nature of the thread,

      Constellation was fiercely anti-corporate, anti-capitalist, and anti-globalist; its mission, according to its founders, was to "enact a mode of cultural production that critiques the worst tendencies of the music industry, artistic commodification, and perhaps in some tiny way, the world at large." It also hoped to recover and rebuild an independent music ethic that it saw as commodified and corporatized.
  44. Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by soliptic · · Score: 3, Insightful

    My guess is that the slashdot "groupthink" will be positive, and likewise, I'm broadly positive about the attitude behind this.

    However, in the details, it ends up leaving me high and dry.

    Downloads, for me, are for those cases where "there's only one or two tracks on the CD I really like". If an album is any good, I vastly prefer to buy the CD - I enjoy the physical product, the artwork, lyrics/inlay notes, the free backup, the future-proof lossless quality.

    On the other hand, I've no interest in vinyl - I've got no decks!

    So with a choice of "buy the mp3s" or "buy the CD and vinyl boxset", I don't really want either :(

    Shame they're abandoning the middle ground of selling regular CDs, which I'd guess still represents the majority of music purchasing in the western world today.

    (And no, this isn't one of these "and thus I feel justified in pirating" excuse-posts. I spend more of my money on music than any other form of leisure/luxury; over £100/mo isn't uncommon. And I'm in a band who has cd and mp3 sales of our own, and we've been at the wrong end of Russian allofmp3 style sites ("wholly legitimate" cry the slashdotters - legally, perhaps, on a technicality, but not morally... they're not sending any money through) and p2p. So, if I like the sound of this, I will pay for it, but I will be slightly miffed there is no way to get a CD without also wasting money (and space) on unwanted vinyl.)

    1. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Actually, they'll be selling a regular CD too, you'll just have to wait for it.

    2. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by soliptic · · Score: 1

      Actually, they'll be selling a regular CD too, you'll just have to wait for it.

      Great! Thanks, Sir AC :)
    3. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      *Don't leave me high.... Don't leave me dry*

    4. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're intending to sell a regular CD in shops early next year (http://www.pitchforkmedia.com/page/news/46028-radiohead-album-coming-out-as-regular-cd-too).

    5. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by sincewhen · · Score: 1

      I suspect you will also be able to buy a regular CD of the album in a regular shop, if that's what you want.

      --
      -- Braden's law of data: All data spends some of its lifetime in an excel spreadsheet.
    6. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by Ignominious · · Score: 1

      However, in the details, it ends up leaving me high and dry.

      I don't think that's just.

      Shame they're abandoning the middle ground of selling regular CDs, which I'd guess still represents the majority of music purchasing in the western world today.

      Don't be such a paranoid android.

      (SCNR - I'll go to sleep now)
    7. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by meringuoid · · Score: 1
      However, in the details, it ends up leaving me high and dry.

      No surprises there. I might be wrong, but I think the whole industry's climbing up the walls; anyone can play guitar, publish online, and if you prove yourself and maybe get lucky, and if everything's in its right place then there's grounds to be optimistic. If you're a record executive at this point you probably feel like your time is up, you're falling and can't find the ripcord. Before too long there'll be just bones. No wonder they're in a sulk. They wish they were bulletproof, but in reality they're completely in limbo; the once-glamourous record company guy is shown up now as a creep out for dollars and cents, and everyone has the knives out for them.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
    8. Re:Hmmm.... Nice, but sadly I'm not 100% happy by soliptic · · Score: 1

      Hehe. Well done you and Ignominious. I was wondering if anyone would catch that :)

      Too bad none of the moderators did, you deserve a +funny.

  45. FLAC me beautiful by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I like radiohead. I'm not a fan, but their music is nice. Give me flac and I'll give you 5 bucks just for the idea, orelse I might just go over to my neighbour and borrow his cd. Or something like that ;-)

  46. Great idea! by JackMeyhoff · · Score: 1

    Anybody got a torrent for this? Can we say $0.00 for the price? :)

    --
    http://www.rense.com/general79/wdx1.htm
  47. Vinyl by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 1

    Yeah, vinyl is real hard to download over KaZaA and burn afterwards. It's the best attack yet against P2P Free.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:Vinyl by Virgil+Tibbs · · Score: 1

      You can't beat the hi-fidelity of vinyl can you? I just chucked out my computer, cd player, ipod etc... so i could just listen to everything in crystal clear vinyl. ;)

      --
      www.tdobson.net #### Dare to Dream #### blog.tdobson.net
    2. Re:Vinyl by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      It's harder for the average person, but check around the P2P sites. There are plenty of vinyl-only releases available in digital form.

    3. Re:Vinyl by Chris+Pimlott · · Score: 1

      Harder for the average person, perhaps. But look around, there's plenty of vinyl-only releases on P2P sites.

    4. Re:Vinyl by petermgreen · · Score: 1

      going from vinyl to digital media is not hard, a moderate turntable, a preamp (or a mixer or hifi with a preamp built in) and a computer with a sound card are all you really need.

      going back from digital media to vinyl is harder because of the cost of the cutting machine and other problems (iirc they have a tendancy to pick up ambiant noise when cutting) but how many people really want to do that anyway? a few who like scratchplay maybe but that's it.

      --
      note: i'm known as plugwash most places but i screwd up registering that here somehow in the past and now can't register
    5. Re:Vinyl by praxis · · Score: 1

      I actually prefer the sound of vinyl myself. Digital media doesn't sound as good to my ear as analog media. Granted, you get the odd imperfection not intended for repruduction but on the other hand it doesn't sound quite a "sterile". Not sure how else to describe it.

      Don't get me wrong, I do listen to digital media, quite often too. When I sit down to actually devote all my attention to listening to music, I drop a record on the turntable though.

  48. You just pay the band however much you think by JackMeyhoff · · Score: 1

    "You just pay the band however much you think the downloads are worth and they'll be happy" I say 0.00, ya think they're still happy?

    --
    http://www.rense.com/general79/wdx1.htm
    1. Re:You just pay the band however much you think by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why wouldn't they be? It's obvious they're not losing a sale if you think the downloads are worth nothing.

    2. Re:You just pay the band however much you think by wes33 · · Score: 1

      "You just pay the band however much you think the downloads are worth and they'll be happy" I say 0.00, ya think they're still happy? I imagine they've factored in the asshole quotient in their plan.
    3. Re:You just pay the band however much you think by east+coast · · Score: 1

      So are you saying the people who download from eMule and the like are all assholes too?

      --
      Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
    4. Re:You just pay the band however much you think by Joe+Hardy+(_yoda) · · Score: 1

      Yes

      --
      -- No, no gems to be found in this sig.
  49. Important question by Quiet_Desperation · · Score: 3, Funny

    What would Scott Tenorman pay?

    1. Re:Important question by toddhisattva · · Score: 2, Funny

      What would Scott Tenorman pay? Enough for some chili.
    2. Re:Important question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sixteen dollars and twelve cents, obviously!

      But how much is that in pubes?

    3. Re:Important question by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What Would Jesus Pay?

  50. Zero paradox by athloi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If it's worth nothing ($0.00) to you, don't download it, because it's worth nothing to you and therefore you have no need of it.

    This is the first major label major band defection that I can recall since Trent Reznor, and this will be sizably more influential as Radiohead still has a career left.

    The real problem with getting rid of major labels is how artists will handle promotion. Radiohead would not have become this big without mass-media coverage, radio station payola, and other forms of promotion. Independent artists have more freedom and make more money, but how do they promote outside a local area?

    1. Re:Zero paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it's worth nothing ($0.00) to you, don't download it, because it's worth nothing to you and therefore you have no need of it.

      I completely agree with your argument about $0.00. If you're thinking of being a cheapskate and putting $0.00, then you probably really think it's worth at least $5.00, so go ahead and pay half that: $2.50. Most albums only have about 3 good songs anyway, so you'll only be paying $0.83 for each of the good ones, with a possibility that you'll like the whole thing.

      This is the first major label major band defection that I can recall since Trent Reznor, and this will be sizably more influential as Radiohead still has a career left.

      I personally disagree here, because I would pay $10 for NIN, but I'll only pay $2.50 for Radiohead.

    2. Re:Zero paradox by Cedric+Tsui · · Score: 1
    3. Re:Zero paradox by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 3, Interesting

      If it's worth nothing ($0.00) to you, don't download it, because it's worth nothing to you and therefore you have no need of it.

      I could buy the air I need to breath -- it's certainly worth enough to me, being necessary for life and all, and people do sell bottled air for underwater use and the like -- but since I'm not under water and here air is superabundant ("not scarce") I don't have to pay anything for it, and quite logically choose not to. I'm sure the air-bottlers would love to eliminate their free competition, but unlike the music publishers they haven't managed to buy themselves a legislative distribution monopoly.

      Translation: when a good is available for free from one source it's hardly surprising that people won't pay more for the same thing elsewhere. It has nothing to do with the good's "worth" and everything to do with the available alternatives -- which in this case are nearly identical in quality and as close to "free" as one is likely to find.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
    4. Re:Zero paradox by binarymax · · Score: 1

      "This is the first major label major band defection that I can recall since Trent Reznor..."

      Don't forget Prince.

    5. Re:Zero paradox by Surye · · Score: 1

      Agreed, look at Year Zero's reviews and sales figures, sure, not #1 on all charts, but sure as hell not out of a job.

    6. Re:Zero paradox by abrinton · · Score: 1

      I could buy the air I need to breath -- it's certainly worth enough to me, being necessary for life and all, and people do sell bottled air for underwater use and the like -- but since I'm not under water and here air is superabundant ("not scarce") I don't have to pay anything for it, and quite logically choose not to.
      People pay for bottled water all the time. What's your point? Nobody is trying to make a living making air for you to breathe.
    7. Re:Zero paradox by Catnapster · · Score: 1

      Those people are idiots because they usually pay for tap water as well.

      Part of me thinks there is money to be made in the bottled air business. I must consult the underpants gnomes to draw up a business plan.

      --
      The world can be wrong today for once.
    8. Re:Zero paradox by bronney · · Score: 1

      Your air thing is valid. But it raises some interesting issues.

      Do you know anyone who buys "stupid shits" that they don't need? A lot of people think Arts is one of the stupid shits. So's the a brand new pair of nike 360. So's a Wii. They do not help your survival. But we buy them anyway. So far, to me, there're 2 reasons why I'd buy something that I could have had for free:

      1. To show support, props, help the people who deliver results beyond what your expectation is of the set price such as and. Tips at restaurants, tips for fast pizza delivery, for a great game on steam instead of bit torrent.

      2. To spend because I can. Spending makes me feel good, oh you learned physics all by yourself? I went to school for it, I paid for it. See? I am better because I paid for it. I win! Some people pay for stuff that they could've had for free because paying for it somehow raises their social status. Whether it really does doesn't matter, they FEEL that it does.

      What Radiohead did was brilliant. The people who were never going to buy a CD at 14.95 would never buy it anyway. By offering their music at your own price, they're not losing those "customers". They're showing the real paying customers who would actually pay 14.95 for a CD a choice. And those real customers will show support anyway. Or else they would've been downloading from day 1.

    9. Re:Zero paradox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "how do they promote outside a local area?"

      There's this nifty little thing called the "internet".

    10. Re:Zero paradox by JesseMcDonald · · Score: 1

      People pay for bottled water all the time. What's your point?

      The points, as I spelled out carefully in my original comment, were that (a) the amount someone would be willing to pay for a good from a particular source has very little to do with the worth of that good to them; and (b) just because someone is "trying to make a living" from supplying a particular good is no reason not to choose a similar good from their competitors instead. There is no right to profit, only the right to seek profit through purely voluntary exchange.

      Nobody is trying to make a living making air for you to breathe.

      Actually they do -- just not for places where you already have all the air you need. Plenty of places supply air for underwater use, for example. They even have different varieties (mixtures) for different circumstances.

      --
      "The state is that great fiction by which everyone tries to live at the expense of everyone else." - Bastiat
  51. You hit it on the nose by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Boolean logic is great for software development....but in meatspace very few things are actually boolean. For that reason, very few words are used as booleans in common speech.

  52. Uniquely unique by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    but the truth is that everyone reading that phrase knows the intention of the author, and therefore information information is being conveyed.

    The intention is to add word count and and to seem more literate by being needlessly verbose without reason. The information being conveyed is that the writer is not very bright or does not have much to say.

  53. You can do that... by Newer+Guy · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Do it like this... Offer them zero dollars for the album. Download it. Listen to it. THEN "Buy" it again, this time paying them what you truly think its worth.

    1. Re:You can do that... by LazyBoy · · Score: 1

      That'll mess up the stats. They'll think they got X/2 per sale not X. But maybe if they focus on the total....

      --

      If Chaos Theory has taught us anything, it's that we must kill all the butterflies.

    2. Re:You can do that... by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

      If you buy it on the same account they could probably work it out.
      In fact that would be quite an interesting stat, how many people will pay (more) for something after they already have it?
      Would also be interesting to see how many people buy it again for convenience, ie rather than copying it to a second PC or to show a friend they just "buy" it again for a buck or so.

      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  54. Let's Do Some Math Here by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 3, Informative
    Let's do some math here. At even a couple dollars for the album, compared to the few cents per song that the major recording companies pay, RadioHead comes out even or better after the credit card transaction fee is subtracted. And the fans save their money to buy RH concert tickets and merchandise, where RH makes lots more money. Seems that only the RIAA record companies are cut out of the cash stream.

    That makes me cry -- not at all.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
  55. How much goes to radiohead? by saleenS281 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've always said, if artists I liked would simply put up a paypal link on their page, where I knew all the money went to them... I'd gladly pay even list price for a lot of cd's. Knowing that only 1$ of my 20$ payment goes to the artist, and the rest to the MAFIAA, has long deterred me from purchasing any new music.

    SO... how much of my price goes straight to radiohead? And how much goes to the MAFIAA (if any)? The article wasn't really clear about that point... Anyone care to enlighten me/us?

    1. Re:How much goes to radiohead? by simong · · Score: 3, Informative

      Well, Radiohead are out of contract at the moment so they're releasing this record independently, so the costs are whatever it's cost for them to record it and get the lovely looking discboxes pressed up. Presumably they are using a download service to distribute the digital version (or there's going to be some annoyed people on Wednesday) so they take a chip, and the credit handler takes a chip (preferably not Paypal as they take 2-3%). They probably have publishing costs, but that could be their own company too. With no record company they are not affiliated the RIAA or BPI (UK equivalent) in any way, so they might be receiving a good 90-95% of the overheads before costs.
      The possible downside is that they have had to take all the risk where a record company would usually underwrite it, but Radiohead are a remarkably popular band and I would expect them to recoup. I have thought that there will be a standard CD for the shops (the supermarkets account for a considerable amount of sales in the UK for example), but this being Radiohead, well, they might not.

    2. Re:How much goes to radiohead? by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 0

      SO... how much of my price goes straight to radiohead? And how much goes to the MAFIAA (if any)?

      Radiohead are out of a contract, making this an independent release. The RIAA make nothing.

    3. Re:How much goes to radiohead? by vertigoCiel · · Score: 1

      Pitchfork Media is reporting that the album is coming out as a regular CD, too.

  56. Admirable, but ultimately useless by duerra · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think this is absolutely great of Radiohead to do, and I give them props for putting their fans first. However, from the perspective of hoping that this moves the industry in the same direction, I don't see that happening. This addresses the problem of "how to cut out the RIAA" from existing, known bands. However, it does not account for how to generate new interest in the marketplace without the RIAA. Currently, 95%+ of the artists out there that most people have actually heard of all still deal with the RIAA.

    iTunes and other online distribution stores are a start. However, there still needs to be a better way to get lesser-known artists' music broadcast to as many people as possible, while still cutting the RIAA out of the loop. The answer to that dilemma? Well, I guess I'm not really sure. =/

    1. Re:Admirable, but ultimately useless by snarlydwarf · · Score: 1

      The "social networking sites" (ie facebook, myspace) want that role, and they seem to be doing very well in promoting indy artists. Now that CBS owns last.fm, they may provide the cash and marketing to let Lastfm take a bigger part in the picture.

      I believe this is what RIAA is really scared about: the payola (or "consultants") they have been paying for are meaningless with the Internet. Albums are meaningless when you can buy the only non-sucky track on an album and eschew the rest. The can no longer tell big acts, "sorry for screwing you, but we're spending all those millions on Artist Development" and then tell the little guys they made no sales after paying for "breakage" on their digital downloads...

      People trust their friends: social groups are great for promoting music, and they are no longer chained to the people in your local circle. That is where real artist development is happening now and why RIAA is upset. They know they are becoming irrelevant.

    2. Re:Admirable, but ultimately useless by Kongming · · Score: 1

      Mod parent up.

      --
      (no sig)
    3. Re:Admirable, but ultimately useless by AVee · · Score: 1

      Webradio would be a good answer to that problem for most of the time (e.g. at home). DAB could also provide relativly cheap terestrial radio because the costs of broadcasting can be shared across more stations. No guess who are really busy right now either preventing or controlling both of them?

  57. Re:Jews will ruin it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You must be unaware of the meme that's circled the internet over the last couple years around jews.. It's a bad taste joke, not intended to discriminate against whatever your beliefs are but rather the word jews gets a new meaning, in this case it means jerks basically..

    Bad luck I guess

  58. So are the MP3s or some other format? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I see nothing on their site that says what they're selling other than that it is digital.
    mp3? AAC? WMA?

  59. $80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1, Insightful

    wtf? Radiohead being one of the bands whose albums I consistently listen to all the way through I was all about this, especially given that there would almost certainly be a higher-quality master on vinyl (due to its inability to participate in the loudness war), but $80 is crazy. If I knew for a fact that it was a fantastic master, with lots of dynamic range and absolutely no clipping I'd be willing to pay $40 for one of the two formats, but with no such guarantee--or any information at all for that matter--I can't imagine what makes this worth that price. Although I applaud basically giving away MP3s (because they're worthless), you can hardly call charging more than double price for a given media and then forcing us to buy two together getting it right.

    --
    <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    1. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      Somehow I missed the details link. So, it comes with the 10-track album on CD and vinyl, a bonus disc of I guess b-sides/rarities/live, some artwork, and lyrics. So, other than what we usually expect, we get an extra CD with digital photographs.

      Maybe for a "fan" thing, but speaking as at least somewhat of a fan, this is just insulting. But... less insulting than the usual RIAA crap, I guess. If there's a way to leave feedback I'll let them know I found a FLAC of the CD somewhere on the Internet and donated $10. Maybe I'll do $15 if I can find a good FLAC of the vinyl. Feh.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    2. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Insightful

      You know, the fact that you're a cheap fuck isn't really a point against the _band_, per se...that and the fact that you specifically mention that you're not even a fan (in a reply to one of your own replies) both add up to make it pretty clear that you're trying hard for a troll and failing miserably.

    3. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      If the problem is you don't know if the music is good before you buy it, buy the download on the cheap, listen to it and decide if you want the vinyl and cds.

    4. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      The music being good or not isn't the problem--I'm fairly certain I'll like it, and finding a preview is easy. The problem is the loudness war, and unfortunately it's almost impossible to find a CD that isn't a combatant, short of classical and jazz.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    5. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by jotok · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The option is between lo-fi downloads on the cheap (depending on your definition of a fair price) and hi-fi recordings for $80. So, if you do not want the hi-fi recordings, you don't have to buy them. This is called "capitalism."

      If they are being cool and releasing un-DRM'd music at a fair price (by definition, fair, since you get to negotiate) then you really have no excuse for downloading it from somewhere else and throwing them a bone, unless you're just a dick.

    6. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 0, Troll

      Or, instead of (or perhaps in addition to) being a dick, it's the fact that I can get a higher quality rip for less than $80, and they don't give me an option to not get a bunch of junk that I don't want but pay more for decent quality.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    7. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by ResidntGeek · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That's why you're a pretentious twat. You don't care that the music is good, you only care if there's an ever-so-slight difference in sound quality between the album and your imagined ideal. Shut up and enjoy the music, won't you? You're the problem with music today, you're the reason modern non-pop music is made up of groups like Radiohead and The Mars Volta and Animal Collective instead of the Who and the Beatles and Van Halen and Black Sabbath and a thousand other bands that are better than Radiohead that not enough people listen to anymore.

      --
      ResidntGeek
    8. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by jotok · · Score: 1

      Where are you going to get it legally?

      You get either the high-quality version they offer ($80) or you get a version that sounds ok on your ipod earbuds. Those are your options, and they remove any justification for downloading it from somewhere else.

    9. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by Eneff · · Score: 1

      For what I can tell, this is just for preorder. I'll bet dollars to donuts that the CD will be available by itself eventually, and probably soon.

      So, get the MP3s for now and pick up the CD when they release it by itself.

    10. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 0, Troll

      What? The fact that I don't like the production of current music, can't stand Mars Volta, never heard of Animal Collective, and am asking them to return to the production values they had when some of my favorite bands--The Beatles, The Who, Black Sabbath--were around, and fight that trend in whatever little way I can whenever I can, that's why music is the way it is today?

      Also, I don't care that the music is good? You don't know what you're talking about. I listen through that, but I listen to the crap production value stuff the same way everybody else does: either for a short duration, at low volume, or drunk. It affects everybody else the same way, the only difference is that I know why we listen to music that way now. And I have absolutely no problem with music being like Radiohead, they're one of the best bands in existence right now. Maybe that's not saying a whole lot these days, but they ain't bad by any stretch of the imagination.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    11. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not necessarily, this capitalism you mention stretches the benefits of competition. If we were truely competitive, we would realize that Radiohead also has to compete in distributing their music with the P2P etc.... He wants JUST a high quality recording, which they could easily provide alongside the download but perhaps insist on a minimum of $2. It's hard to compete with free, but I don't think most people who want a high quality recording are gonna bitch about $2. (Sure they wouldn't make much profit, but that's capitalism).

    12. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by jkauzlar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think you missed his point. Like me, all he wants is a high-quality CD, but they give you a choice of MP3's for free or an $80 box set of stuff that only collectors might enjoy. I'm a huge fan, but of the music. I don't care about their artwork and I don't have a record player.

    13. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by ResidntGeek · · Score: 1

      All right, sorry for making bad assumptions about your musical tastes, but I stand by what I said. If you like music because of the production values, you're listening to the music wrong. It's nice to hear everything in startling clarity and balance, of course, but the beauty of music lies in the melodies and harmonies, the rhythms, and the interplay of instruments. Music of almost any quality should be enjoyable if you can hear all the instruments.

      --
      ResidntGeek
    14. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by m-kirkcaldie · · Score: 1

      "vinyl (due to its inability to participate in the loudness war)" You might want to do some research to check out the difference between compression, the audio mastering tool being used to create over-loud masters of recent pop music, versus the A/D conversion used to put music on CD. If you compress the life out of the master tape to make it sound "hot", vinyl pressed from that master will sound just as bad as a CD pressed from that master. The format is not responsible for the mastering decisions made. In fact, coping with the surface noise of vinyl was one of the reasons compression began to be used in mastering in the first place. A CD has superior dynamic range and if anything, is capable of playing far *less* compressed audio than vinyl, so blaming the CD format for the loudness war is utterly misguided. Mathematical compression, i.e. the basis of MP3, does introduce audible artefacts into the sound, and it might be the case that "hot" mastering is an attempt to work around this (although it's still an aesthetic decision rather than a technical limitation). But the real reason is that people are listening on mediocre quality amplifiers (the output of iPods, etc) through low quality earbuds (no highs, no lows) in noisy environments, and so you need the track to sound "hot" to cut through all of these limitations. When you put it on the stereo in the lounge room, it sounds noisy and lifeless. Doesn't matter to the company because they sell ten times as many units to the lo-fi crowd, and then "remaster" the album to sell it to the hi-fi crowd!

    15. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by mstahl · · Score: 1

      ResidntGeek is totally right. I listen to my music through superb headphones or earbuds, depending on where I am, and from various media (78rpm vinyl, LPs, EPs, CDs, MP3s, lossless), but really it's the music itself that moves me. Production quality is very important to me, yes, but it takes a back seat to the actual quality of the music and the skill of its players. When you're listening to music, are you really so stuck up that you look at it like a science rather than an experience of someone else's art? Though to a certain extent I'm the same way about my sound, I still pity you if that's how you feel about music.

    16. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      No, you're just not getting it. I listen to, and am moved by music every bit as much as you. I wish I could stop hearing the flaws, and I do things to try and mask them, but once you hear them you can't stop. And here's the thing that gets me, the thing that really makes me mad about it--it doesn't have to be that way. There's just no good reason for it, it makes it sound worse than it needs to, and they have to expend a whole lot of effort to get their tracks up to -3 dB, just to make it sound crappy but loud. It's stupid and it pisses me off. So sorry I don't just accept it.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    17. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by mintshows · · Score: 1

      Well, when you think about it, Radiohead aren't charging $80.00 for the vinyl / cd, they're charging 40GBP. It's not their fault that the dollar has been seriously devalued over the last few months.

    18. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by mstahl · · Score: 1

      No I get it. I just wish I had something I could suggest to you other than chill the fsck out and maybe smoke some pot and that'll clear right up. Or, you know, maybe figure out why music is getting louder and do something about it. I've always seen the audiophile population of slashdot as a pretty active group here, but I don't know if this is the right venue for you to vent your frustration about the changing values of music production. It's driven by the majority of consumers, and you and I are not the majority. So while I can sympathize with both sides of the issue, I just think you're overreacting over there.

    19. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by tehcyder · · Score: 1

      78rpm vinyl
      Blimey, when did they stop making 78's? Seriously, how old are those records you're listening to?
      --
      To have a right to do a thing is not at all the same as to be right in doing it
    20. Re:$80 for a CD and vinyl? by mstahl · · Score: 1

      A quick glance at Wikipedia indicates that the LP was invented around 1954. I've only about a dozen or so 78s among about 5,000 or so LPs, and they're all the bakelite kind, early 40s or so. Good ones are hard to come by, but totally worthwhile because most of the ones I've found are classical recordings. Try listening to Toccata and Fugue in D on a 78rpm record through really good headphones and tell me that isn't heavenly!

  60. Not even close to unique. by Gray · · Score: 1

    There are hundreds of musicians just giving their music away for free without even trying to charge anybody. It's just that Radiohead has the money, connections and reputation to get people to write about them.

    Instead of selling $20CDs to hardcore fans, now they get to sell $80 boxes and still smell of roses. Nifty trick.

    1. Re:Not even close to unique. by DaggertipX · · Score: 1

      The big difference is that people actually WANT the music that Radiohead is producing. Not that I am implying the other music is bad, just that it isn't even heard of, so people may not even know they should want it.

      This is not a big deal because it is a unique idea. This is a big deal because a very big name in music is telling the RIAA to go to hell.

  61. Round number bias by Hao+Wu · · Score: 1

    How about we all generally say $5 for the album? Or, any other amount. 5 seems right to me.

    --
    I suggest you read Slashdot
  62. Serious question by SIIHP · · Score: 1

    "They're asking to be paid a fair price, not to be stiffed."

    I think that's perfectly reasonable.

    Now what about if I listen and decide it was a waste of my time? What would be fair compensation there?

    --
    I only go to buffets for the unlimited soft serve.
  63. If they could perform a $2 concert w/ MTV... by r_jensen11 · · Score: 1

    How realistic would a $2 album be?

    On a serious note, I'd love to get both vinyl and CD. Granted, you can say "Well, you always could, they just weren't bundled," but finding vinyl readily available and at convenient locations is a rarity. Would this count as a single sale or a double sale though?

  64. Treat Them As Artists? by FreshFunk510 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I'd like to offer a perspective different from the PR stunt that people seem to think it is.

    Perhaps they are just artists. Granted, they've probably made enough money from their prior albums to no longer need to worry about money. They are treating their music like a piece of art. Real art should be free and open to the public (which is why public museums in London are free to the public). If this was their intention then I applaud Radiohead.

    Personally, I'm a fan but not the biggest fan. I would've liked to sample the album beforehand but their reputation and previous albums are good enough for me to put money on the line.

    --


    "Injustice anywhere is a threat to justice everywhere." - Martin Luther King, Jr.
    1. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by bwalling · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Real art should be free and open to the public (which is why public museums in London are free to the public
      Taxes or admission - you're still paying for it.
    2. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by Biffer4810 · · Score: 1

      Real art should be free and open to the public


      I don't quite follow this... what is your rationale? Also, what defines "real" art? This is a nice idea, but in my mind it's reasonable to charge for art (concert tickets) and all art is "real".
      --
      -.-- -.-- --..
      One fish / Two fish / Red fish / Blue fish
      ShyaOS - Think Differently!
    3. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Real art should be free and open to the public
      This is why I really, really hate the word 'should'. Its inclusion in a sentence allows people to make all sorts of completely bizarre assertions - like that one right there. Could you explain what train of thought led you to that conclusion? I'm personally quite happy that artists are remunerated for their art, and wish they were better paid, not worse ...
    4. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by $uperjay · · Score: 1

      Art should be free as in freedom, because exposure to art is good for a society.

      Whether or not art should be free as in beer has to do with a) how much of a barrier charging for it is (does your society suffer from such inequality of distribution of wealth, viz. the United States of America, that charging for it would prevent many people from accessing it?) and b) how much money needs to go to your artists in order to keep them producing? If you aren't completely utilitarian, you may also want to consider c) how much is fair compensation for an individual artist's labour?

      In theory, to keep art free as in freedom, you want it as cheap and unrestricted as possible.

    5. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by TommyMc · · Score: 1
      The boost to the economy from the tourism industry (and the taxes therein) as people flock to London for the culture, and the money that is made in the shop/cafe sales are, of course, purely illusionary.

      Oh the common man and his taxes, such a burdened soul!

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    6. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think some people are missing the point of this whole exercise

      Every Radiohead album since OK Computer has been leaked months in advance of the cd release, what they're effectivly doing here is leaking it themselves, and asking for a contribution towards costs.

      The digi pack isn't coming out till december, and the regular cd only version isn't coming out till early next year. The fact they've kept the (5 years in the making) album release secret up until 9 days before hand is in its self wholely remarkable, but they myust have known as soon as production started proper on the cd's that it would leak at some point, they've just formalised the process

    7. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by rhakka · · Score: 1

      while I agree it may be justified, the GP is correct that it's not "free".

    8. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by TommyMc · · Score: 1
      My point was that, although it is not "free", it is probably self-sustaining, or possibly better, when considering the UK economy as a whole (like, for example, any successful business in the world, none of which are "free" to run, but most importantly, they recoup more than they spend. )

      Whilst it is a little futile to have an in depth discussion about it without numbers or figures, the post I replied to was making one of two statements:

      1) It costs the normal taxpayer (which I disputed the extent of) or

      2) It generally costs money to maintain a museum, (which you interpreted it as). This is so asinine a statement it is barely worth the paper its not written on, let alone an insightful mod.

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    9. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by rhakka · · Score: 1

      You raised a point but you also ran forward a lot further than was justified with your burdened man slam. The GP was not lamenting taxes, he raised a point of fact, that citizens, not someone else, pay for the museum's operation.

      If your points are correct and not just rampant conjecture, that's great (evidence is nice). Then you could have a very long debate about who gets the benefit of tourism, whether it's equal and fair, or what have you. Personally, I think art is important and should be accessible and I'm willing to pay for that so I'm not inclined to really argue it. But that doesn't mean I have to make sweeping assumptions about people raising other points or act like a pretentious asshole towards them either.

      which was my point.

    10. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by TommyMc · · Score: 1
      Do you honestly think that someone raising a point about taxes paying for something (Art, of all things!), on fucking slashdot is doing so purely in the interest of stating such an obvious fact as "someone pays for things which cost", or do you think that they're trying to provoke a reaction from the notoriously anti-government crowd that lurk round here? It's like the newspapers that pick and choose their stories about "immigrants". They don't need to be outright racist then, do they? They just let the readers join the dots..

      Don't try and pull the evidence card, I brought that up and freely admitted that we'd need the facts and figures, and then interpret them exactly (which, even for Government it's nigh-on impossible to do, i.e. how do you measure how satisfied a couple of million people are with their holiday and therefore likely to return/recommend it?) All we can do is use logic and rationality to interpret a likelihood, which I attempted to do.

      If I'm pretentious please tell me what importance or distinction I am making claim to. I'd love to hear it.

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    11. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by rhakka · · Score: 1

      Being a person who would in fact post such a thing, I do think it's POSSIBLE and reasonable that the OP MIGHT have simply been making sure that reality is addressed, as it is quite easy to forget that WE pay for things that are "free".

      Since it's possible and reasonable, and there is NO indication that the OP was crying about taxes unless you attribute a bunch of things that weren't said, playing the sarastic "wounded bird" response back is pretentious. You are assuming you know the poster, and you are behaving like your knowledge is absolute enough to insult the person from the get go.

      That's not only pretentious, but rude, and not very conducive to civilized discussion. If that's not important to you, so be it, but don't act like you're taking the moral high ground when you're being an ass.

      An ass I agree with, on this issue, but still an ass.

    12. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by TommyMc · · Score: 1
      I haven't made a single attack at anyone's character in this thread, only their actions, and this is the second time you've flung names at me, so don't talk to me about what's conducive to civilized discussion. I would suggest you look up and learn what "pretentious" means, because you're using it in the wrong context. The only way my comments could be un-conducive to discussion would be if the poster took themselves and their opinions so seriously that they would not respond to anything considered flippant, or if they read it to themselves in a tone-of-voice filled with spite and bitterness, rather than the more casual and good-natured 'ribbing' tone-of-voice it was intended (Out of interest, did you do this? No-one else jumped on it like you did, mods or otherwise.)

      Reading your posts it seems that you are, figuratively speaking, backed into a corner, having to choose between being wrong, or else defending a statement which is otherwise utterly mundane, and have resorted to throwing insults. It's almost irrelevant how the OP meant his message to be read, as the /. crowd certainly took it in the manner which I did (taxes==evil), as otherwise it would not have been modded to +5 Insightful. The people here are, in general, smart enough to know that "free" museums must be paid for somehow, and do not need reminding in the same way that they do not need reminding that the sky is blue..Give yourself a rest my friend, its just not worth it.

      --
      Stupid people think it's cool. Smart people thinks it's a joke; also cool.
    13. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by rhakka · · Score: 1

      Maybe I sound a little more ferverent than I mean to, if so, I apologize. I didn't think using the term "ass" would be such a big deal.

      I just saw you attacking an assumption rather than the substance of a post, and I regard that as a dangerous behaviour trait, because it allows for misunderstanding very, very quickly. You made some points as well, but that doesn't change the assumption built into your last statements, and your characterization of the poster's stance, which is what I object to. Your characterization may very well have been accurate, I don't know the OP. But that's not the point. The point is it's hubris to assume, as well as pointless, when you could instead clarify.

      The fact that I regard that kind of debate behaviour as boorish, and that it causes me to address people who use it in insulting terms, isn't really being "backed into a corner", since i have nothing to lose with being wrong here. Just trying to point out a behaviour choice that, while perhaps popular, isn't effective if finding truth is your goal. Maybe that's not your goal... Obviously, using insulting terms isn't very effective if achieving understanding is your goal as it is here with me, and so I was wrong to do it... I apologize for that. I think the one example of your behaviour was ass-ish, but that doesn't make you an ass.

      But I think Ostentatious, a synonym for pretentious, is quite accurate. You "intended to attract notice and impress others" with a statement that was not firmly attached to the comment you replied to... it was flash, not substance.

      anyway, take care and be well.

    14. Re:Treat Them As Artists? by garbletext · · Score: 1

      In theory, to keep art free as in freedom, you want it as cheap and unrestricted as possible.
      At least with software, libre necessarily implies gratis, since anyone with a copy can freely distribute it (obviously the converse is not true). I assume that art libre would be the same. The problem is it's difficult and complicated to get a million people to collaborate on a play or a painting, and one man will have a hard time living on something he can't sell.
  65. Yeah about that... by SIIHP · · Score: 1

    1. Being the only one of its kind: the unique existing example of Donne's handwriting.
          2. Without an equal or equivalent; unparalleled.
          3.
                      1. Characteristic of a particular category, condition, or locality: a problem unique to coastal areas.
                      2. Informal. Unusual; extraordinary: spoke with a unique accent.

    The bolded part shows why you're wrong. But if that weren't enough...

    http://www.answers.com/topic/unique?cat=technology

    "USAGE NOTE For many grammarians, unique is the paradigmatic absolute term, a shibboleth that distinguishes between those who understand that such a term cannot be modified by an adverb of degree or a comparative adverb and those who do not. These grammarians would say that a thing is either unique or not unique and that it is therefore incorrect to say that something is very unique or more unique than something else. Most of the Usage Panel supports this traditional view. Eighty percent disapprove of the sentence Her designs are quite unique in today's fashions. But as the language of advertising in particular attests, unique is widely used as a synonym for "worthy of being considered in a class by itself, extraordinary," and if so construed it may arguably be modified. In fact, unique appears as a modified adjective in the work of many reputable writers. A travel writer states that "Chicago is no less unique an American city than New York or San Francisco," for example, and the critic Fredric Jameson writes "The great modern writers have all been defined by the invention or production of rather unique styles." Although these examples of the qualification of unique are defensible, writers should be aware that such constructions are liable to incur the censure of some readers. See Usage Notes at absolute, equal, infinite."

    You are arguing for an absolute definition where it does not exist.

    --
    I only go to buffets for the unlimited soft serve.
  66. RIAA Even More Irrelevant by queenb**ch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Considering that most bands are lucky to see two or three cents per CD sale, I'd say that won't be too hard. I'm going to explain the recording industry for you folks. Follow along and see if you kids can keep up. Let's pretend for a few minutes that you're a musician. You bust your butt gigging, playing all over town and one day some guy walks up to you and says, "Hi! I'm with (fill in name of record company here), and we'd really like to sign you to a recording contract." Well, you get all excited and you sign your deal with the devil.

    The devil says "Come to my recording studio and we'll cut the record." Once you get there, they've got the studio lined up, the producer, and a few other people to "help you" make your record. If you ask about how much is going to cost, you get told, as is standard in the recording industry that "it will come out of the profits." Then you cut your album and "you have to promote it". If you ask how much that's going to cost...you guessed it kids, "it comes out of the profits". Now that you have to market your album, you have to go on tour. That means a bus, lights, roadies, stage, sound equipment, etc. If you ask how much that's going to cost...you guessed it kids, "it comes out of the profits".

    While you're on tour, you need to have T-shirts, posters, bumper sticker, etc. You also need to have hot dogs, twinkies, beer, and cokes for people to consume during the concert. If you ask how much that's going to cost...you guessed it kids, "it comes out of the profits". By the time they're through pulling all the costs out of "the profits", there usually aren't any profits left, which means all that the artist gets is what ever they get as a signing bonus. Not the advance - the signing bonus - since the advance comes "out of the profits", too.

    The way that this works out is that if you're lucky, the artist on any given album might see 1 or 2 cents of the $16.99 you pay for CD of music at Wal-Mart. Given that the Internet is the ideal distribution medium for music, I'd rather just go to the artists web site and buy the songs directly from them. Then the artist would get the whole $16.99 for the album instead of $0.02. But you see, the RIAA can't allow that because in that $16.97 lies their profit margins. Without them, it's a brave new world for digital music.

    Why do you and I have to pay a third party middleman to broker the transaction for nothing more than a song? Worse yet, we are required to continue to pay this middleman who threatens to sue both the consumer and the musician when we try to cut him out of the transaction. If the artist tries to sell their songs on the website the RIAA will try to sue them for contract violations. If you and I try to download the music, we get sued. The only reason for this is that it leaves the big, fat RIAA profit margin intact.

    The RIAA complains that their sales are down and points an accusing finger at "piracy". I'd like to take a moment to dispel that myth. When Napster was operating at it's peak, music sales were up 20% without the RIAA doing any additional marketing. Viral, word-of-mouth would spread quickly about new bands and good new interesting music. People were buying CD's because they'd get a taste of some stuff and like it. Then they'd go to the store, find the artist and buy some stuff. Now, there's no place to share that isn't full of viruses, worms, trojans, fake files, etc. No more free marketing RIAA - you pretty much litigated the goose that laid the golden egg out of existence.

    Compounding the problem is that the RIAA is key in determining what gets pushed to the public. Frankly, I think that they've lost the pulse. We don't care about Brittany Spears, although my husband was caught peering at her photos when she got snapped sans the undies. For some reason, the music industry has decided to cater to 14 year old girls. Why? I don't really know. When's the last time you saw a 14 year old that had more than $20 of disposable income at any given moment? If you

    --
    HDGary secures my bank :/
    1. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Considering that most bands are lucky to see two or three cents per CD sale, I'd say that won't be too hard.

      care to back this figure up? or is this just a made up number meant to shock the reader?

      I'm thinking it's just made up myself. bet you don't have either the facts or the balls to prove me wrong.

    2. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by MaerD · · Score: 1

      I find your ideas intriguing and would like to subscribe to your newsletter.

      As to why they are marketing to the 14 year olds.. it's all about control. The 18-35 crowd may have more disposable income, but the 12-14 year olds have mommy and daddy to buy whatever crap mtv says is good for them. Control them early enough and they'll keep going after the crap, and the artists tend to be younger (heck quite a few aren't 18 themselves) and therefore the hooks get in deeper and the artists (manufactured or not) will take whatever scraps because it's more money then they've ever seen.

      I've seen the same thing happen to kids out of college in the IT industry. They'll get hired for peanuts because the company can "train them up" and then has a hook of control to under pay the entire time they are with the company.

      --
      I put on my robe and wizard hat..
    3. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no doubt that the music industry is particularly rapacious both in the extent of the contracts it tries to get people to sign and in their interpretation of them. The fact that they do business largely with musical, non-business types kind of guarantees that, although it doesn't justify it.

      However some people seem to have a wholly unrealistic view of how records are financed.

      Suppose you you went to a bank or VC and said "I'd like a loan/investment for $100,000 please to finance a completely new, untested tech product. There is an 80% chance it won't make enough be repaid, 10% chance it will be marginal and 10% that it will be a success and return many times the investment. If the 80% chance happens and you lose most of your money I don't want you to bankrupt me or take my assets (not that I have any). If the product breaks even or makes a profit I want you to accept maybe a royalty of 10% which is fair, because I am the genius inventor geek and you are just a banker. Oh, and I want to be paid out the gross, and your royalty can be paid out of the net regardless of the cost of making the product. And I may decide to cancel my contract with you if it becomes a success and just sell directly to the consumer and keep all of the profit."

      No bank would accept those terms. No VC would accept those terms. Yet this is effectively the situation you propose for "music products". It costs $100,000s to launch a major recording artist. Most of them go nowhere in the charts, the artist effectively makes nothing and the label loses money. This is why the labels demand so much of the royalties. Believe it or not, there are more very talented artists that would like a record deal than there are investors willing to chuck money at a very, very risky proposition. Supply and demand.

      Yes, I'm SURE you prefer the guy down at your local indie coffee shop who plays chilled out jams or whatever for $5. That's great, but it is not the industry we are discussing.

      I'm also unsure what you are talking about in terms of the tour expenses being expenses. Well, no shit. Both the music and movie industry have a long habit of making up fake expenses. This is not an argument against the principle that ticket revenue is not the same as tour profit. And if you think the record labels are making 99% profit margins you are on crack.

      Also, it's Britney Spears, not "Brittany". I would also point out that many people who worked out how to tap into tween and teenage pocket money are now very,very rich. Tens of millions of teens with nothing better to spend $20 on than records is a lot of money.

      Nice tactic of presenting the mean overpayment but the maximum underpayment on contract audits by the way. That was a really persuasive debating tactic.

      Oblig disclaimer: I have never invested in, worked for, or contracted on, music industry/record label/distributor companies. They don't make enough money.

    4. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I am friends with some guys in a successful band that experienced exactly this scenario. But while some artists may get taken advantage of these guys took the opportunity of a major record label footing the billing and 'taking it out of their profits' and made something of it. With all that promotion behind them they cashed in on ticket sales, merchandise sales, and yes, did make some money (not alot) on CD sales. End result - they live well and make music for a living. I believe they are the exception to the rule in that they run their band like a business, maintain control of as much as possible and actually negotiate the terms of the deal rather than signing whatever is put in front of them, but the reality is being in a band is like running a small business. Bands and artists who can't run their own business (or find a dedicated and honest manager) are either going to play around town and keep their day job, or have a major label turn them into a product and manage all aspects of their business for them in which case they don't really deserve the lion's share of the cash.

      The current state of the music industry and RIAA have their problems and will definitely see some changes coming, but I don't think the artists that can't 'make it' now are going to have much more luck with a different business model.

      Also, I've never heard of concession money being pulled out of record sales, usually thats a revenue source for the venue.

    5. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by comradeeroid · · Score: 1

      I think it was the great and always dead on Terry Pratchett who said that highway robbers is what people who want to live of others become in worlds that have yet to invent the recording industry.

      --
      If you see a rock violating the law of gravity, then the law is wrong, not the rock!
    6. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Perhaps you could have just linked to Steve Albini's The Problem With Music which you appear to have read.

    7. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      Compounding the problem is that the RIAA is key in determining what gets pushed to the public. Frankly, I think that they've lost the pulse. We don't care about Brittany Spears, although my husband was caught peering at her photos when she got snapped sans the undies. For some reason, the music industry has decided to cater to 14 year old girls. Why?

      Because, believe it or not, that demo (or, more specifically, the 12-18 M/F demo) commands a *lot* more disposable income than you would expect. After all, what parent doesn't buy CDs for their kids? And that ignores allowance, part-time jobs, etc. Combine that with the fact that they're *extremely* easy to market to, and more importantly, manipulate, and they really are the cash cows of the pop music industry.

      Incidentally, none of this should be news to you. This has been the case for at least, oh... 25 years now, I'd guess. Probably longer.

    8. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by McWilde · · Score: 1

      TLDR. Well, not beyond the first few paragraphs. But I did see responses asking for figures to back you up. So here's my anecdotal evidence:
      My previous band was signed with a small British label. We "made" 6p per copy sold. I've put made in quotes, because the band's technically still in debt to the tune of several thousand pounds. Yeah, you pay for the recording, mastering etc. out of your own cut. It's not like we'll ever have to pay them back, the label dropped us after the second album and the band fell apart soon after that.

      --
      Maybe
    9. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by Shadow99_1 · · Score: 1

      Maybe it is now, but when I was a teen in that bracket (about 12 years ago), my 'allowance' was ~$2.5/week... To buy the average CD would have taken me about 2 months (no 'walmart' or other big chain stores with low priced CD's so closer to $20 than $15)... And my parents wouldn't just go buy me crap, I'd have to earn enough to buy it. The best I ever got out of them was getting and advance on the next couple weeks allowance.

      I don't think I'm going to treat my kids (when I have some) all that differently either... I may get called 'stingy' by my kids whose friends have iphones and weekly 'allowances' in excess of $200 for lazying around the house all day, but I think learning to deal with small amounts of money for the things they want and making them work for it is a good thing for preparing them for the real world. Not some fantasy.

      --
      we are all invisible unless we choose otherwise
    10. Re:RIAA Even More Irrelevant by mistahkurtz · · Score: 1

      well put. frankly i think it's a great move. and could be one of the biggest things we could have going for us. get a few of the most influential bands of the day to say 'fuck you' to the recording industry, and see what happens. at concerts, trent reznor shouts at the fans to pirate away. prince also tried this recently, with the free cd after buying the newspaper. smashing pumpkins tried something similar as well, though from what i heard, they didn't really have a choice. before too long, we could easily see this as the norm for bands. though i wonder how some bands will handle the overhead and logistics involved with recording, mastering, and distributing an album. a band like radiohead, with their resources, connections, and relatively established infrastructure, and their reputation, could pull this off a lot easier than someone like an interpol circa 2002, i would think.

      another thing that would be nice to see would be a rise in the prominence of underground labels, such as constellation, or underground studios, such as hotel2tango. or even co-ops between artists and bands.

      is it possible we'll see some sort of equivalent from our favorite directors, actors, and screenplay writers?
      i also wonder if coldplay will be following suit w/ their next album....

      --
      not only is time travel possible, it's irrelevant.
  67. Obligatory retort by Dogtanian · · Score: 1

    It's worth nothing to me, because I don't want to listen to their whiny music. If only there were some way I could actively keep them from staying afloat so that they all had to wind up broke and poor and scrounging for change in the streets. That is something I would participate in. You're a creep... you're a weirdo.
    What the hell are you doing here? You don't belong here.
    --
    "Slashdot - News and Chat Sites Deviant". (Click "homepage" link above for details).
  68. What a load of wank by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 4, Insightful

    40 quid isn't bad for two CDs, two LPs, digital download, a nice book and shipping.

    It's assinine to be crapping on about "dynamic range" and so forth. Given the albums provenance it will probably sound like Radiohead want it to sound which is where the actual value lays for people who like their music.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    1. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are so pretentious...

    2. Re:What a load of wank by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      So sorry for paying attention to the music I listen to. I'm sure the band will be glad to hear that you tune them out so much while you're playing it that you don't even notice the glaring fucking flaws in production.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    3. Re:What a load of wank by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Number two, the digital download, unless it's vastly different than any other digital download, is next to worthless
      Yes, the millions of people that get enormous amounts of enjoyment out of MP3s every single day don't exist. You pretentious twat.
      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    4. Re:What a load of wank by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 0, Troll

      Right, I'm pretentious because I claim that MP3s are an inferior format. I don't know what kind of weird jealousy or other emotions lead to you becoming hostile because I say that MP3 isn't as good as lossless, high dynamic range is better than next to no dynamic range, and unclipped is better than clipped, but I have a hunch that it's the fact that you don't hear any difference. Well, to make you feel better, I'm sure that you could hear the difference if you knew what to listen for and listened for it. In fact, you can even say that it's your choice to not listen for it, and try to turn that into some justification for why you're better than me instead of arguing the merits of a given distribution method or format.

      Sure, I'm the troll, I'm the pretentious one, and the guy that turns his inability to take any criticism of his preferred format into a personal attack on me, yeah, he's the insightful one. This is ridiculous. I feel like I'm taking crazy pills that on Slashdot, of all fucking places, I'm being basically mobbed for not falling for bullshit, preferring the objectively better format, and yes, maybe being a little pretentious.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    5. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, they'll be selling a regular CD too, you'll just have to wait for it.

      Also, the second CD in the discbox will have multimedia content on it, and the box includes an artwork booklet, a lyric booklet, and it's encased in a hardcover book with a slipcase. It's more an expensive objet d'art with music than just "the next Radiohead album."

      I'm with you on the sound issue, but the record companies screwed up the high-resolution (SACD, DVD-Audio) media rollouts with crushing DRM, costly hardware/software, and not always fixing the volume problem in those environments. (That said, I buy them whenever I can, but they're getting harder and harder to find nowadays.)

    6. Re:What a load of wank by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 1

      Well. That's better.

      I suppose I'll have to stop frothing at the mouth now, but I still don't see what is so great about this. I mean, yeah, downloading is illegal, and unlike damn near everybody these days I actually support the artists I enjoy by both buying their albums and going to live shows, and usually getting the t-shirt too, but how, how, how does this beat the fact that I can go to Oink and get a lossless rip from the Vinyl, for free, and before they choose to let my cheap ass buy their album for $15 three months later? Whether it's moral or not, that's what they really have to compete with.

      What I want is an instant download after purchase of properly tagged, properly mastered, lossless, DRM-free media. What they're offering for my money is a consistent high production value and ease of use instead of the crap you have to go through to try and find a decent rip online, not to mention maybe a notification of when they'll be doing a live show within 100 mi... for some reason it's almost impossible to get those notifications before tickets go on sale and you have to go to some auction site. At around $10 per album, I think they'd be offering a good value there, enough to make me never steal if I had the option to buy that. For people who like to have things, well, they already have you at their online store. They can sell actual CDs, LPs, SACDs, t-shirts, making of videos, etc., etc., etc.

      --
      <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
    7. Re:What a load of wank by Von+Helmet · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Well, to make you feel better, I'm sure that you could hear the difference if you knew what to listen for and listened for it.

      Well done on turning a relaxing hobby into hard work.

      Yes, CDs sound better than mp3s, but if you rip half decently then the difference is negligible for the vast majority of people, say 95% of them. Double blind tests bear this out. Sure, a handful of audiophiles can tell the difference, but you guys are far and away in the minority. No one really cares about your airless gold plated cables on your hi-fi that cost more than my car. Most people listen to mp3s on an ipod using low end earbuds, and most people are perfectly happy with that.

    8. Re:What a load of wank by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Right, I'm pretentious because I claim that MP3s are an inferior format
      No you are pretentious because you call them worthless, because from on top of your high horse you can't even see what is useful and enjoyable for an awful lot of people.

      and the guy that turns his inability to take any criticism of his preferred format into a personal attack
      I don't even have an MP3 player (other than my computer). I tend to listen to the radio in my car (so I hear new music) and CDs at home. I have a few LPs but no record player. I have DVDs, the odd DVD-audio, some VCDs (A Pink Floyd concert is still enjoyable even with some heavy artifacting) and even some wierd "CD Video" things.

      There's a lot of formats out there, all with pros and cons, but if you spend too much time worrying about all the problems you'll lose sight of why music is enjoyable in the first place.
      --
      Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
    9. Re:What a load of wank by dircha · · Score: 1

      "Yes, the millions of people that get enormous amounts of enjoyment out of MP3s every single day don't exist. You pretentious twat."

      It's no surprise that these suckers can't pick one out in a double blind listening test, and most wouldn't even know how to construct one if they were inclined to try.

      The real giveaway is when they go about the superior "acoustics" of vinyl, when in reality vinyl introduces noise and distortion.

    10. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Meh. All you need is $100 headphones, and a decent source (e.g. a sound card, USB DAC, or decent MP3 player).

      Then you will hear as much detail as you would with a fancy speaker system. Certainly enough to reveal the flaws with dodgy MP3s or badly-recorded music.

    11. Re:What a load of wank by Eq+7-2521 · · Score: 1

      I know you were mostly downmodded into oblivion, but I'm with you on this. Some day people are going to start hearing what they've been missing and have to get everything again in a better format. If I'd paid for MP3s (rather than buying discs and ripping to FLAC), I'd be rather angry when that day arrived. We're already at the point where one can easily hold a decent sized collection (say 1000 discs) losslessly on a single hard drive for home use, and portable storage that cheap isn't far behind. Why people hold on to MP3 (especially as a primary source) I don't understand.

      I guess I'll download the MP3s, pay nothing, as that's what they're worth, and tell the band (if they allow comments when downloading) that I'll buy the lossless and normally priced CD when it comes out, assuming the music warrants such a purchase. I've not been disappointed in the past, though _Hail To The Thief_ was the last disc I've heard.

      --
      At my age I find coming up with a witty signature too exhausting.
    12. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Millions of people that get enormous amounts of enjoyment from masturbation every single day. Masturbation is next to worthless compared to sex. I don't see a contradiction here. MP3 is better than nothing, but still a lot worse than a CD.

    13. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No you are pretentious because you call them worthless, because from on top of your high horse you can't even see what is useful and enjoyable for an awful lot of people.

      You know, a lot of people think that religion is useful and enjoyable. That doesn't make it any less worthless.

    14. Re:What a load of wank by JoeInnes · · Score: 1

      I used to work for a relatively large British hi-fi shop, and we used to sell on commission. If we could get the customer to believe that bi-wiring was better than single wiring, we'd push the bi-wiring (except on those occasions where you can make a sale by pretending that you're being frank and honest, and you're a decent guy). The truth is that bi-wiring actually makes ALMOST no difference to the quality of the sound. The same went for a lot of the products we sold. It's a bit of a racket, to be honest, because (and I admit, I don't know for sure) I reckon that we must have been handing out payments to What Hi-Fi? &c., because they raved on about it. Sure, if a mouse eats your speaker wire, you've got a fifty fifty chance of still hearing your treble, but to be honest, it's really not much more than that.

      On the other hand, the actual hi-fi equipment we sold was top fucking notch, and ninety percent of the time, we were honest and fair. Did I ever feel guilty? No. If a customer can't be arsed doing the research into it themselves, then I have no problems taking their money.

      HOWEVER, the point of this comment was actually to disagree. The cheapest, best bang-for-your-buck way of turning a decent hi-fi into a decent SOUNDING hi-fi is to sort out your speaker cables. And yes, gold plating DOES make a difference. The engineers on here will probably say I'm over simplifying, but basically, the principle is that every wire is a signal, and every connection is a break in that signal. Therefore, if you can improve the connection quality, then you can decrease the amount of signal lost. Gold plating is one of the most effective ways of improving the quality of a connection. Airless? I couldn't give a shit about airless cables, because the signal doesn't travel through the air. As long as the cable is properly insulated, it doesn't matter.

    15. Re:What a load of wank by Urza9814 · · Score: 1

      I saw a double-blind test that said the opposite actually. Using an iPod, with the standard iPod earbuds, the majority of the people tested were able to tell the difference between...I believe it was a 128kbps MP3 and an AAC.

    16. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your point is moot, 128kb mp3s are NOT what you use to rip music if you care about quality... of course people could tell!

    17. Re:What a load of wank by jkauzlar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Pretentious? I'm surprised that 19th Nervous Breakdown is the only one who sees the irony in this: They give us a choice between a free mp3 version or an $80 box set. Why not a $15 CD like every other album that comes out?????? Some of us have decent stereos and we can hear the difference between mp3 and CD. Not to mention radiohead's music is one of the few bands that's worth playing on a good stereo..

    18. Re:What a load of wank by GWBasic · · Score: 1

      Just to stay on topic: Radiohead's new album is the first that I will ever purchase for download-to-own, assuming it's a decent bitrate MP3 or AAC.

      Yes, CDs sound better than mp3s, but if you rip half decently then the difference is negligible for the vast majority of people, say 95% of them. Double blind tests bear this out. Sure, a handful of audiophiles can tell the difference, but you guys are far and away in the minority. No one really cares about your airless gold plated cables on your hi-fi that cost more than my car. Most people listen to mp3s on an ipod using low end earbuds, and most people are perfectly happy with that.

      I've found that the air between my speakers and ears, combined with ambient noise, causes more "loss" then "lossy" compression. With the exception of bud earphones that can push an unmodified signal directly into the ear, all systems, includng my hand-built ultra-high-end system, will induce some form of loss.

      Thus, one can conclude that the signal that hits your ears, even in $20,000 systems, has significant phase changes, harmonic distortion, and an EQ curve that is NOT flat. As a result, the human ear has tolerance for loss; granted, there is debate as to what these tolerances are.

    19. Re:What a load of wank by Capsaicin · · Score: 1

      The real giveaway is when they go about the superior "acoustics" of vinyl, when in reality vinyl introduces noise and distortion.

      Almost everybody, probably even you, will be able to hear the "superiour "acoustics"" (ie. the fact that the sound is analog) of vinyl when compard to the sound of a digitised version (whether on CD or elsewhere). If you haven't been sat down (it only looks grammatically incorrect) in front of audiophile grade equipment and played a CD and a (mint condition) LP of the same thing on, however, you might not be aware of this (someone did this to me many years ago when CDs were new, I'm not such an audio nut). The real problem with vinyl is that you have to throw it out after playing it 3 or 4 times (that is if you want those "superior acoustics").

      --
      Better to be despised for too anxious apprehensions, than ruined by too confident a security. --Edmund Burke
    20. Re:What a load of wank by fractoid · · Score: 1

      I don't think you understand the concept of 'worth'. If something is useful and enjoyable to someone (whether that something is religion, MP3, a hi-fi sound system, cocaine, a pretty rock, whatever) then it is worth something to them. Just because it's worthless TO YOU doesn't make it worthless full stop.

      --
      Rampant carbon sequestration destroyed the Dinosaurs' tropical paradise. I'm here to help repair the damage.
    21. Re:What a load of wank by zenkonami · · Score: 1

      I am such an audiophile, but I have to agree that somehow I like this plan. I'll drop a couple bucks on the download (because I think they're worth it) and if it's really great, I'll drop $80 on the full deal. I believe Nigel Godrich is back to producing them, and consequently suspect they know full well what they're doing when it comes to encoding the MP3s in the mastering process. This band knows about sound.

      I remember when U2 released "...Atomic Bomb" The CD and radio mixes were dreadful. Then someone I know had a theory, so we ripped the disc to MP3 at various compressions. Sure enough, as soon as we got down to 128kbps, we both nodded to each other and said, "that sounds pretty good." Pop in earbuds, and wham. There was the dynamic range and balance we were missing from the CD. I'm not saying that technically it was there, but I suspect they created those mixes with MP3s in mind.

      I for one welcome our cannibalistic walking teddy bear masters...

      --

      Do You Experiment?
    22. Re:What a load of wank by mstahl · · Score: 1

      pfffft! fsck lossless. I'll stick with my 78s thankyouverymuch!

      Seriously though. I feel ya on the high dynamic range thing, but the cold hard fact of the matter is that I'm not the one who's expecting anyone else here to give a toss. I listen to the music that counts on 78rpm vinyl, lossless digital, or even reel-to-reel if you catch me in a weird enough mood (I'm young, yes, but I own the better part of 5K records). For 95% of my library it just doesn't matter that much to me and I'd rather take a truck-full of CDs in my pocket than hear 100% of the sound when I'm on the train anyway.

    23. Re:What a load of wank by giginger · · Score: 1

      Maybe I missed something but where is it stated the download is going to be mp3? They might well be providing FLACs for all we know.

    24. Re:What a load of wank by fistynuts · · Score: 1

      I wish more SACD and DVD-Audio discs were available. The improvement in quality over CD/well-ripped-MP3 is mind-boggling.

      --
      "You heard the man, Tubbs.. get undressed."
    25. Re:What a load of wank by addicted4444 · · Score: 1

      Ummm... Maybe because like slashdotters have been moaning all these days, they decided to cut off from a label, and do not have the facilities, or the knowledge, or the numbers, to manufacture, ship and distribute $15 CDs. They dont have a network of retailers in their pockets who will readly accept what they are providing, at a reasonable price. It just goes to show how much ever people try to improve things, cheap fucks will continue bitching.

    26. Re:What a load of wank by calzones · · Score: 1

      Some mod with a sense of decency should probably be re-modding 19thNervousBreakdown's posts that were modded as trolls as 'underrated'

      I don't see anything trollish or even flame-bait-ish about his posts. I won't jump on his bandwagon, but his opinion is completely valid, educated, and well-stated.

      --
      Asking people to think is like asking them to buy you a new car
    27. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Audiophiles must be so miserable. They so hate listening to any music with the quality not absolutely perfect, that they must not have anything they can actually listen to.

    28. Re:What a load of wank by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      lol @ the crazyman

    29. Re:What a load of wank by garbletext · · Score: 1

      I know this is an 8 day old thread, but ++. A $500 set of headphones sounds better than a $5000 stereo imo, because of the reasons you mention. I have a fairly nice stereo, but when I really want to listen to an album, I pull out the cans.

  69. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by 19thNervousBreakdown · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    Ahahahahaha! Ahaha! HAHAHAHAHA!

    *snicker* ... *snort*

    BUAHAHAHAHAHAAAAaaaaaahhhhh! Oh God ... ahahahaha.

    haha... ha... phwew... Hoo, boy, that was a good one. *wipes tear*

    --
    <xml><I><am><so><damn>Web 2.0</damn></so></am></I></xml>
  70. Justifiable to YOU by TheAxeMaster · · Score: 1

    Just need to make that clear, you think it is fine, others don't. I personally don't like it. I'll kick them a couple of bucks to round out the dollar amount, but unless they're stellar, that's all they get. And yes I have worked in the food service industry and my sister still does. Just because their wages suck doesn't justify customers trying to make up for the employers' decision to pay their employees like crap. It is a stupid loophole in the minimum wage system that they should fix. I wish someone would drop by my desk every day and hand me a $20 just for being here but they don't.

    1. Re:Justifiable to YOU by TheGeneration · · Score: 1

      I was a waiter at one time too while in college. It's difficult work, and you deal with a lot of jerks.

      The outrage some servers reserve for those who don't tip is pretty amazing. If they only spent half that energy on getting their employer to pay a fair wage they wouldn't have to worry about tips at all.

      --


      The Generation
      I'd say something witty here, but I'm not that bright.
    2. Re:Justifiable to YOU by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Have you considered that the tax man expects some people to get tips and will tax this income even if it doesn't exist? For a cab driver for example they expect at least 10% in tips and will take about 40% of that.
        When you go for a meal, often tips are pooled so your tip doesn't just go to your waitress.

      Every business has its regulars and good customers are looked after if you use one cab company on a regular basis you will find cabs are available promptly. It helps of course they know where you live, what you look like:)

      Restaurants will be able to get you a table when you want to eat. Obviously it is not possible every time but an effort will be made on your behalf. Tipping helps, being friendly helps more. Obnoxious customers reap what they sow.

  71. Existing albums already perfect as is. by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    not going to happen.

  72. Just Bought It by grendelkhan · · Score: 1

    Radiohead is one of the few bands I like enough to buy their music without hearing it first. I bought the download for $5.00 ($6.00 after their fees), which is what I usually pay for a used CD anyway. This is a win win for me - I get it on release day, I'm supporting the band directly, and I'm not paying $15.00 for it.

    --
    Wu-Tang Name: Half-Cut Skeleton Get your own Wu-Na
  73. Which format? by TheDefunctMunky · · Score: 1

    I can't seem to find on Radiohead's website which format(s) the digital download is encoded in.

    I suppose MP3 is a given due to its widespread acceptance, but I'd personally be more inclined to pay more for an album encoded in FLAC or similar.

    1. Re:Which format? by babbling · · Score: 1

      I'm holding out for this reason. For all I know they've done a dirty deal with Microsoft where (after I've downloaded the file) I will have to obtain a license from some Microsoft server using Windows Media Player, of which there isn't even an Ubuntu port, let alone a Free Software version!

      If this is WMA or any other kind of DRM, boo! ($-10)
      If this is MP3, good. ($8)
      If it is Ogg, even better. ($12)
      If it's FLAC, superb! ($15)

      We have no idea which one of those it is, though. Until I know, I'm not handing over my money!

  74. free coffee too by wardk · · Score: 1

    in seattle there is a coffee shop that does not charge, they accept payment based on what you think you should pay or want to pay.

    1. Re:free coffee too by praxis · · Score: 1

      You mean the Terra Bite Lounge? That's in Kirkland, not Seattle.

  75. What new model? by igorthefiend · · Score: 1

    Jane Siberry has been doing this for years without anyone paying her much attention - to the point that I the last show I went to she had an honour system even at the merchandise desk - you took an EP, you paid what you thought it was worth.

  76. You mean you haven't heard the bootlegs yet? by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    Of course you're going to like it.

  77. Re: my attempts at filling in the blanks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    three cheesy fig the loudness ham? (mmmm... cheesy figs and ham *drools*)
    three cheeky fag she lewdness has? (yoda, is that you?)
    three cheeps fix the loudness tax? (did you mean chimps?)

  78. If we were solely rational by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 2, Insightful

    then there probably wouldn't be much point in music in the first place.

    There is more to life than game theory, thankfully.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  79. awsome by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now is the album any good?

    Geoff "Mandrake" Harrison for President
    Sometimes Apathy is a good thing

  80. Re-translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "Radiohead is the best band in the world..."

    Only 10 years and 2 1/2 terrible albums too late.

    Re-translation: "If anyone cares anymore...it's time to panic."

    1. Re:Re-translation by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where are these 2 1/2 terrible albums? Radiohead hasn't made a terrible album since Pablo Honey.

      Or perhaps you just don't have taste. Sad, that.

  81. Awful site by Sanity · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It took me about 4 tries before I could pre-purchase that album due to the extremely flaky website. Its a shame because its a great concept, but if it fails, it will probably be due to the awful execution. You would imagine that the creators of "Ok Computer" would know some decent web designers...

  82. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by east+coast · · Score: 1

    Why? If this is honestly an experiment to see how this will do why not let it run wild?

    Oh, I know, I know. You guys want Radiohead to walk away with a few sacks of cash and thumb your nose at the RIAA? That's all fine and well (not really, but that's a topic for a different discussion) but have you stopped to consider what happens to music as a total if the human nature of taking what can be had for free holds?

    If Radiohead, a fairly popular band, can not stand up on it's own merits even with filesharing and such doesn't it mean that their new model is broken and a new approach should be taken? Granted, I can understand if it's a small band just trying to pay rent and feed themselves but if Radiohead can't pull this off and if the RIAA gets it's balls clipped as a lot of the users here are suggesting then it's high time we find a model that works or get ready for some really shitty music to be the norm in the near future.

    Whether or not music fans realize this: people who aren't paying for their music in some fashion are the ones who are going to bring down the music industry. Not the RIAA. Radiohead has and would continue to survive just fine with the RIAA. If they can't pull this off with leeches and all what does it have to say for their form of digital distribution since we have others on here claiming that most bands hardly make a nickle per album sold from a RIAA label but we know these same bands roll in cash?

    I also want to note that those who are talking about throwing down a few bucks with never having heard the album and some even proclaiming that they've never heard of Radiohead but are still willing to pitch in are also a problem here. Having this experiment in music go down like it would if this thing happens everyday is important to mark the impact of such deals on the consumer and the musician. Again, if people do things to artificially make this seem like a winning plan then someone in the future is going to pay the hard way by finding out that so much of it was only charity and had nothing to do with the music.

    I'd rather put good money down for good music and support that model instead of just helping to bend the numbers so I can thumb my nose at the RIAA.

    I hope others see the logic in this too. An experiment that has it's data bent to support an end result artificially is only going to hurt everyone involved in the end.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  83. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    (Score:-1, Wanker)

  84. .....some musicians are idiots too by tacokill · · Score: 1

    I don't know if I've ever seen a more confused example of profits and revenues.

    Profit is what you earn - above all of your costs.
    Revenue is the total amount you take in (ie: the gross)


    If you pay them out of profits, that's easy. Because you have to MAKE profit first. If you have to pay them out of revenues, that's easy too. Because you have to take money in before you can pay them. It's the fees/payments/costs you have to pay no matter what that you have to watch out for. And I suspect, most of these costs you outline are done in that manner.

    Perhaps not knowing the difference contributes to these idiots entering into these contracts in the first place?

    1. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by RobBebop · · Score: 1

      I believe the word "profits" is accurate. My understanding is that it is common for unknown bands to get a 5-figure check in exchange for coming in to cut their album and that they don't earn more until they are able to earn that value for the record. On top of that, the revenues are reserved for covering all the bands that do NOT cover these costs. If there are 9 unsuccessful bands for everyone that brings in 6-figures... then the record is left paying all those other guys from the revenues and they need to wait until there are profits to pay the band who hit it big.

      IANAM-AID-HARD (I am not a musician and I don't have a record deal) so don't hold me to this.

      --
      Support the 30 Hour Work Week!!!
    2. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by queenb**ch · · Score: 1

      While I won't dispute that statement with you but the record companies are clearly set up to take advantage of musicans. Instead of putting them on this expensive grind, let them produce the songs inexpensively, distribute them through the internet cheaply and see what does well. OMFG, a business model that 1) might actually work and 2) cuts them almost entirely out of the loop.

      2 more cents,

      QueenB

      --
      HDGary secures my bank :/
    3. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by rhakka · · Score: 1

      They are not "idiots". They are "musicians", which is to say, they probably didn't get an MBA while they were learning how to make music. Perhaps all the people with MBAs they are working with could have an ounce of integrity and abide by the contracts at least?

      Perhaps they could even have an ounce of concience and not rip someone off just because they can?

      Obviously not. But if you really think it's realistic that a bunch of pot smoking 19 year old aspiring musicians could EVER go toe to toe in contract negotiation with a horde of MAFIAA lawyers and a few dozen pages of small print, no matter how serious they were and how many classes they took up to that point, and call them "idiots" for wanting to play music instead of engaging in high finance, and use that to insinuate that perhaps ripping them off is somehow JUSTIFIED, well, fuck you, quite simply.

      The evil here is the EVIL, not the idiocy.

      Now if you plan to write "record contraction negotiation for dummies", maybe you'd have a leg to stand on. But the knowledge musicians need to negotiate with the big boys is quite simply not available to most people who are spending their time writing music.

    4. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by tacokill · · Score: 1

      If you want to make a living being a musician, then you are an idiot if you do not understand what you are doing, with respect to contracts.

      I 100% understand what you are saying about musicians being musicians and not being MBA's. But if they are going to try and make a living at it, don't you think some time should be spent on HOW to do that? Part of being a paid musician is "running the business" and if you ignore the business aspect of your music, then you will get whatever comes to you. Same for lawyers, doctors, or any other "professional" working on their own.

      Nobody expects MBA's. But to bury your head in the sand, saying "I am a musician. I don't know anything about finance/contracts/business" is asking for trouble. That's all I meant with my post.


      I have lots of friends who fall into this category. They want to make a living playing music but can't be bothered to learn the basics about how to do that. They seem to think that as long as they play -- it will all work out. Except that is rarely does. Naivete will get you killed in the real world, despite having lofty goals of everybody working together for the best solution. In many cases, you'll find the other guy sitting across the table is NOT working for your interests so you have to protect yourself.

      Knowledge and education is the only way to do that.

    5. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by rhakka · · Score: 1

      I understand what you are saying.

      Have you ever seen a recording contract?

      NO one without extensive training could sort it out. Any normal person would need professional assistance to understand it. Somewhere, you have to trust those used to legalese, unless you are very gifted, or spend a lot of time reading legal documents, AND a background in bookkeeping at least, accounting preferred. And most of the contracts are signed by someone "in the biz" going out to be the "face" of the company, why get a lawyer, this guy is cool, he gets us, he likes us, he wants to help us get big so he can make money too, everyone wins, where do I sign??

      It's simply not realistic, or fair, to pin the blame on the musician. Yes, they sign a contract, yes it's legal, yes they are adults, AND they are being totally conned by someone in a position of power.

      IF the musician were capable of handling all those details, most of them would be making a lot more money sitting on the other side of that negotiating table (or in another industry).

      I don't think it's too much to ask that people not exploit other people ridiculously, and when they do, holding THEM accountable, and not just shrugging your shoulders and saying "well, they signed it...". That's realistic if you have lawyers working with each other. It's realistic if you have a simple contract.

      It is NOT realistic when side A is a pile of young musicians and side B is a horde of high priced and experienced lawyers, setting up contracts that are basically legal versions of loansharking agreements wrapped in dozens of pages of bullshit, exit clauses, latin, you name it. This is simply bullshit.

      I am a small business owner myself without extensive business knowledge and yes, I understand that how to handle finances is integral to any business endeavor... I wish I had more from the beginning instead of having to figure it out as I went along. However, I do not use my position of superior knowledge in my field to abuse my clients, and I have a very dim view of those who do. Also, I do technical work. Columns of numbers and math are second nature to me. To a musician, this is not generally true.

      In a CIVILIZED culture, naivete does not get you killed. It will deal you setbacks, though, you're right. We can't protect everyone all the time.

      But I do think we CAN fight predatory business practices, and I think this qualifies. The deck is stacked heavily in this game. At least... it was, for a long time.

      It's kind of like mortgages... if you've ever gotten one, you know that it is NOT POSSIBLE to have read and understood everything in the mountain of paperwork you have to sign. By the time you're done, EVEN IF YOU'RE A REAL ESTATE AGENT, you could have signed away breeding rights for your children.. who'd know? Or EULA's... we all click them all the time because no way would we have time to read them all. This is why they are shakily enforceable at best; it's simply not reasonable to expect we're all going to read them all and understand them all and "agree" from any legally responsible footing to abide by the "contract". That doesn't always stop the courts of course, but really, there is room for 'yeah I signed it, and I was completely unqualified to give consent to what was asked of me, AND THE PERSON ASKING FOR MY SIGNATURE KNEW IT".

      Personally, I think contract complexity needs to be curtailed.. how, of course, is always the devil.

    6. Re:.....some musicians are idiots too by GodfatherofSoul · · Score: 1

      Some musicians get called "idiots" by the same "idiots" who routinely do things like buying a house or a car or purchasing software without getting a lawyer to read the fine print. Same concept, people have a tendency to trust clean-cut, intelligent sounding people. The jokers who love to prey on musicians and pro athletes have the image down pat. Lots of people made fun of artists like MC Hammer and TLC for going bankrupt. They indebted themselves because they weren't aware of how badly they were being screwed.

      --
      I swear to God...I swear to God! That is NOT how you treat your human!
  85. Reverse Psychology by Cmorrelli · · Score: 1

    I don't know about anyone else, but being offered free music DOES make me want to give them money and support. On the other hand, being told I have to pay $13 bucks for a half an hour of music on a plastic disc that will inevitably scratch and break makes me want to steal the album. I can't think of a smarter thing to do than to offer your music for free to the general public anyway. So everyone in the world downloads it and doesn't pay a cent? Now everyone knows who they are and what their music is like and they go out and buy all the other albums and concert tickets and get the exposure any musician should want. Seems like that's been the smart idea all along, versus the Metallica route of suing their fans for trying to hear their music for free. I hope this does unhinge the record industry and buries the ridiculous propaganda and outrageous pricing that has controlled the music community for decades now. VIVA RADIOHEAD!

  86. Mod parent up by spun · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The post highlights some very important research in game theory that show that the Homo Economicus model is severely flawed. This is important as our entire free market, capitalist system is based on assumptions from this model. Most people are more motivated by notions of fairness and reciprocity than pure selfish gain. That being the case, cooperative systems that allow people to punish inequality are more suited to real human nature than our current system, which rewards selfishness and increases inequality.

    --
    - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    1. Re:Mod parent up by Watson+Ladd · · Score: 1

      Thank you for rediscovering Marxism.

      --
      Inventions have long since reached their limit, and I see no hope for further development.-- Frontinus, 1st cent. AD
    2. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Though I am a strong Marxist, I don't think he was implying Marxism specifically; it's far more of "left" idea. I think he was implying more a general socialist idea.

    3. Re:Mod parent up by spun · · Score: 1

      That's your best rebuttal? That doesn't even make sense. Oh wait. Pointing out flaws in the free market capitalist system automatically means Marxism. Of course, how silly of me. Well played.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
    4. Re:Mod parent up by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think the Homo Economicus model is hurt in the least bit by the presence of altruism. Just look at altruism as selling guilt, and the model still holds up pretty well. People still maximize their utility, it's just that their utility function is somewhat different. I don't see how that violates any of the axioms that ensure Pareto Optimality.

    5. Re:Mod parent up by spun · · Score: 1

      Ah, good old Pareto Efficiency. If one person owns everything in the world, and no one else owns anything, that is Pareto optimal, as any change involves that one person owning less. What a beautiful metaphor for our entire economic system: screw you, I've got mine.

      --
      - None can love freedom heartily, but good men; the rest love not freedom, but license. -- John Milton
  87. big slice of small pie, or small slice of big pie by blitz487 · · Score: 1

    It's the standard conundrum - which one will make you more money, having 100% of a smaller pie (do it yourself), or a small percentage of a larger pie (having another company do it for you)? I've tried it both ways, and make more money doing it myself with the smaller pie.

  88. I disagree about the problem by blueZ3 · · Score: 1

    I think that the real problem with "piracy" is that most people don't think of software (which is essentially intangible) as a "good" in the same way that they think of a pair of Levis.

    My bet is that if you asked the average person if it's acceptable to shoplift a pair of jeans, the overwhelming response would be "No, it's not OK." If you asked if it's OK to download software/music without paying, the response is more likely to be "Sure"

    --
    Interested in a Flash-based MAME front end? Visit mame.danzbb.com
    1. Re:I disagree about the problem by nine-times · · Score: 1

      That's because software is not the same sort of "good" as a pair of Levis. When you download software/music/movies, you deprive the content owner of a possible sale. When you steal a pair of Levis, you deprive them of the possible sale plus you deprive them of the actual jeans (materials, production, transport, stocking). It's different. In short, downloading a song is not "theft", it's "copyright infringement".

      However, it's been shown over and over that a large number of people are willing to pay for content. At least in abstract. So it becomes meaningful to ask, what's the difference between instances when a person downloads content illegally and when a person buys the content download? Sometimes it's different people or different content, but I know from listening to people that it's often an issue of who is perceived to be deprived of the "possible sale". People are more likely to want to pay when they think their money is going to "the artist" than when they think it's going to "the RIAA".

  89. Not true. Levels of uniqueness exist by lennier · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Something is either unique or it isn't. There's no "Somewhat unique", or "very unique"."

    This is trivially disprovable. Any collection of objects can have a mixture of unique and shared elements. What do you call the result other than 'partially unique'? Take a Linux distribution, or human DNA, for instance. We have unique bits - a tiny fraction of the whole - and we have this vast sea of shared bits.

    It seems to me that it's perfectly sensible to say '25% of this collection is unique', and therefore to say 'this collection as a whole is 25% unique'.

    An entity which was '100% unique' would be utterly alien to us, by the way. We'd have absolutely no referents for it at all. It probably wouldn't even exist in our spacetime universe, because by so doing it would share phenomena with many other objects and thus compromise its uniqueness.

    --
    You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
  90. Big mistake: radiohead site doesnt have bandwidth by mozkill · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Well, if nobody can download the Radiohead album from anywhere except via BitTorrent then that kindof kills there business model where the site was going to ask for a donation.

    If people download the album from another place they aren't going to see any donations.

    They need to get their site fixed so that it is no longer getting slashdotted or else they areen't going to prove anything.

    --

    -- Betting on the survival of the media industry is a serious risk. I advise investing elsewhere.
  91. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's not an attempt to skew the numbers by "behaving" during this experiment. The experiment is all about the "honorary" or fairness aspect: If you're only trying to get the album as cheaply as possible, then you can always download it for free from a filesharing network, and that's the end of it. A purely egoistic listener has no short-term incentive to buy the download version of the album for any price, other than the law, and we know how respected that is. From a purely economic point of view, you simply can't compete with "free". Consequently the experiment can only be a test if people accept the proposition and respond in fairness. That includes people who make albums available through file sharing networks. This wouldn't be the first situation where "pirates" recognize an honest attempt at finding a common middle ground and honor it by not cracking/releasing something.

  92. Welcome to the New Math by 3mpire · · Score: 1

    Of course since they are distributing these files themselves, they can keep 100% of the profits. Say a typical deal has the artist getting 2% of a sale, the rest going to the record company. So for a 12.99 CD, that is approx 26 cents. So say per 1000 CDs sold using the old model, Radiohead would get $259.80. Say that w/ this new scheme, they average one dollar per album download. That would mean $1000 straight to them, 3.849 times more per 1000 units than under the old system. Not bad. It just goes to show how poor the old system is. It takes such a low "market value" per album for them to come out ahead.

    1. Re:Welcome to the New Math by multisync · · Score: 1

      On the off-chance you haven't already seen this, Courtney Love made much the same point in this speech at the Digital Hollywood Online Entertainment conference many years ago. She was responding to the whole Metalica vs. Napster thing. I think she was ahead of her time.

      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
  93. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    From a cost/revenue perspective, downloading it off BitTorrent is roughly equivalent to paying $0, but releasing it on BitTorrent is a problem because you take eyes away from the legal offer. Paying $0 because that's what everything costs on a file sharing network (and you couldn't pay someone for the download if you wanted anyway) is not the same as paying $0 even though you have the option to reward the artists by paying a small price.

  94. What is wrong with the design? by Chuck+Chunder · · Score: 1

    I thought it was interesting yet simple. It may be experiencing load problems now it's new but it's not probably not worth investing a boatload of money to cater for a peak server load that will only be experienced at initial launch.

    --
    Boffoonery - downloadable Comedy Benefit for Bletchley Park
  95. Stephen King did this with The Plant. by /dev/trash · · Score: 3, Interesting

    You'll notice that he's NOT finished that story since people were not paying.

    1. Re:Stephen King did this with The Plant. by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      But could it be that the book just sucked? I mean, I'm a pretty big King fan, but I'll be the first to admit that he's published more than his share of stinkers. And given that The Plant was being released in episodic fashion, it could be that people just discovered it wasn't very good.

    2. Re:Stephen King did this with The Plant. by tthomas48 · · Score: 1

      Yes, and you're missing the bigger point. The download only copies are essentially "marketing costs". It's what people have asked for for ages. Give me the ability to listen the music first. In this case they can optionally make money from you with the download only copies. What they're really hoping is that you'll hear the album and NEED to have the art and lp and cd. Cause Radiohead CDs are cool to touch, and look at, and read. Look at the number of EPs and books and other stuff you can buy on Amazon by Radiohead. They have a fanatical fanbase. They're giving the fans what they want and making money off of them, and they're offering a low cost way to get new fans. Seems like win-win.

    3. Re:Stephen King did this with The Plant. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      I dunno. I thought it had potential.

    4. Re:Stephen King did this with The Plant. by /dev/trash · · Score: 1

      I must not be hard core. I just go to etree and get their live sets. Funny when looking for music, I actually GET music, not cover art, and BOOKS? By a band? No.

  96. The Karma Police will Know. by dj42 · · Score: 1

    You can stiff Radiohead all day long, but the karma police will be out to get you. You'll be living your life as a paranoid andriod, trying to come to grips with kittens tied to sticks in frozen winter shit. And then one day, you'll change your price from $0 to $5 or $10, and everything will be in its right place.

    --
    We are one consciousness experiencing itself subjectively. Back to you with the weather, Bob!
  97. Does this mean my 2 Cents by Namors · · Score: 1

    Will Finally redeemable for something of worth ?

    --
    Dual Century Programming: Yeah I know ... But it sounds Good
  98. Ditto Marillion by phorm · · Score: 1

    Well, their website doesn't offer free Mp3's, but their music was once quite available on the late mp3.com (before the remake), and they've got a myspace page (yeah, it's myspace... but still) with music and videos etc. The cool thing, though, is that they send you a free (yes free, including shipping) disc if send a request through their website. I remember sending through the request last year and then forgetting about it, only to be very pleasantly surprised when a demo disk (I think it had somewhere between 5 and 7 songs, which is decent) arrived.

    They're a good band, so I recommend checking them out on their website. Don't be cheap though, if you get the demo disc and really like it - try and hit a tour (if you're a European or in the area) or buy a CD.

    1. Re:Ditto Marillion by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      In fact, Marillion also did something very close to the model I've been pushing: their album Anoraknophobia was financed by their fans. Instead of making the music first (at a loss) and then hoping to collect enough money later to make up for it, they collected the money first.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
  99. Re:Jews will ruin it by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    7. Fuck you.

    That's not a very Christian thing to say.

    Oooh right. Jewish! Never mind..

  100. Dilemma by ekhben · · Score: 1

    It's been a long time since I bought new music. The combination of my increasing age, my decreasing disposable income, and the increasing rate of defective by design CDs has made me leery of the whole thing. So, were Radiohead putting out a traditional CD, I would pay nothing for it, and likely not even hear any of the music from it.

    Now, I'd really like to support a distribution model that offers a way to let me pick up music at a more reasonable cost than the price of a CD in Australia. However, the web site is extremely scant on what I would consider to be critical details:

    • What format is the downloaded audio in?
    • Are any special tools required to download the audio?
    • Is the "download code" good for several download attempts, should the first fail?

    Any single one of these questions would make or break the deal. I won't download WMVs. I won't use some proprietary tool to download. I won't pay for something that I may not be able to get.

    Of course, I can opt to pay nothing at all, and thus be safe from any of these problems: the most I will be out is the time spent discovering the answer to those questions. But if I pay nothing at all, I'm not really showing my support for the basic idea. Is it worse, then, to pay nothing and download it, or to just ignore the whole thing? Which is more likely to cause the scheme to be abandoned rather than refined in the ways that would make it more palatable?

    1. Re:Dilemma by karbin · · Score: 1

      What format is the download audio in? While I can't find my source at the moment, I am 99% certain that it will be distributed in mp3 format. Are any special tools required to download the audio? I doubt it, as the audio is confirmed to be DRM free, and a special tool would be rather pointless. If, for some reason, a special tool is required, one could simply buy the album and then torrent it. Is the "download code" good for several download attempts, should the first fail? Regardless of whether or not the download code is valid for multiple attempts, you can purchase the album for $0.00, allowing you to retry.

  101. even if you don't want the tunes... by EdelFactor19 · · Score: 1

    1. go to rh site
    2. proceed to name my own price
    3. enter -1000000000000 dollars
    4. Profit !!!!!!!!!!!! :-)
    hey its so simple and stupid could happen sadly

    --
    "Jazz isn't dead, it just smells funny" ~Frank Zappa
    EdelFactor
  102. Strangely... by Munchkinguy · · Score: 1

    Interestingly, the whois lookup for inrainbows.com shows that the registrant is "Sandbag Ltd", a British company that produces ethically manufactured, fair trade fashion.

  103. Awesome! by Ignatius+D'Lusional · · Score: 1

    I can't wait to download this off of OiNK! Sure, I could probably download it for free from them, but... oh... you mean I don't have to pay for it either way?

  104. Done Before... by Oyume · · Score: 1

    Actually, this is not something new, only new in this day and age. The Singer / Songwriter Keith Green did this about 2 decades ago:

    (quoted from Wikipedia)
    In 1979, after negotiating a release from his contract with Sparrow, Green surprised many in the music industry by refusing to charge money for concerts or albums. Keith and Melody mortgaged their home to privately finance Green's next album, So You Wanna Go Back To Egypt. The album, which featured a guest appearance by Bob Dylan, was offered through mail-order and at concerts for a price determined by the purchaser. As of May 1982, Green had shipped out more than 200,000 units of his album - 61,000 for free. Subsequent albums included The Keith Green Collection (1981) and Songs For The Shepherd (1982).

    Note how his CONCERTS were free (pay as you like) as well! I wonder if Radiohead would do that?

    Cheers,
    Jeffrey

    PS -- Quote source: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Keith_Green

  105. I'm not happy either. by metamatic · · Score: 1

    Yeah, I'm really confused by the choices available.

    I don't want vinyl. Vinyl sucks.

    I do want all the music.

    Neither option fits what I'm looking for. So I'm going to wait and see if other options become available.

    --
    GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  106. Six by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Radiohead have released six studio albums.

    1. Pablo Honey
    2. The Bends
    3. OK Computer
    4. Kid A
    5. Amnesiac
    6. Hail to the Thief

    This newest release, In/Rainbows, is their seventh.

    1. Re:Six by bob.appleyard · · Score: 1

      There was a live album as well.

      --
      How dare you be so modest!! You conceited bastard!!
  107. Now where is that... by WithLove · · Score: 1, Funny

    Excel spreadsheet I had for deciding how much to pay?

  108. Massive in the USA by jaypaulw · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Kid A debuted at Number 1 in the USA. Also, they wouldn't be forced to work with the RIAA, and Thom has already released a non-riaa record.

    Between that and the previous mentioned 6 records instead of 7, you are pretty ill informed to be "Insightful"

    1. Re:Massive in the USA by Nasajin · · Score: 1

      Sorry, I just guessed at the number of albums off the top of my head. I know that Kid A debuted at #1 in the States, and, yes, Thom released a non-RIAA album. However, Thom's solo projects aren't part of Radiohead's contractual agreement so I don't see quite what you're getting at. Also, Radiohead have had 4 albums at #1 in the UK, as opposed to this single one in the states. Anyway, that's beside the point, since I was just notifying those who didn't know that Radiohead are now outside of their contractual agreements to the EMI, and, due to another member's concern regarding the RIAA, they are outside their relationship with their US distributor, Capitol, which is an RIAA member.

  109. pirating trail of the dead albums.... by SethJohnson · · Score: 1



    Glad you're a trail of the dead fan. I've been a huge fan since the early days when they played house parties here in Austin. Over the years, I've seen a lot of sensitivity they've had over people pirating their music. At least one of their CD covers carries the phrase, "Please don't steal our music." And now their publishing is called 'Steal our music.' I recall a rumor that one of their close friends was ostracized when a copy of their 2005 album was leaked on the internet before it had even really gotten out of the studio.

    Source Tags and Codes is not a bad album, but I highly recommend their previous two. Madonna and their self-titled first album. Those links are supposed to let you see the album on iTunes where you can purchase it legally.

    Seth

  110. Odd model might be the new model by SethJohnson · · Score: 1



    I agree with your prediction on what people will pay on something speculative is less than if they're bidding on a known-quantity.

    I think they're rolling the dice on a business model that doesn't try to squeeze their fans for album sales. I think they're looking at their royalties from all their past albums and figuring that it's chump change compared to their touring income. So with this new album, they're probably thinking it would be nice if it got into the ears of as many people as possible to get them all excited about paying >$100 apiece to go to their concerts. And if they make some money on the downloads, it's icing on the cake.

    Seth

  111. Summary Statistics by ProfessionalCookie · · Score: 1

    as long as your doing summary statistics you should suggest average, low, high and standard deviation

  112. Radiohead Aside by photomonkey · · Score: 1

    Radiohead aside, I really think a reasonable price for a media-less album downloaded by the end-user is between $2 and $4 dollars per album.

    With modern recording technology, cutting an album has become VERY cheap. In fact, while studying music in college, my brother used to make recordings in the basement of his house with minimal adjustments or enhancements made to the space. Basically an Ebay soundboard, a few decent microphones, a few decent amps and cabinets and he was good to go. Oh yeah, and a TON of knowledge about how sound works and what sounds good.

    Online storage and hosting is becoming cheap enough that it really wouldn't cost a band much to host their own 'store'. The best part is that it only gets more expensive as they get more popular (and need more space/bandwidth).

    Even having your own pressed CD to sell at shows has gotten much cheaper. Check out current pricing on cd duplicators at B&H (bhphotovideo.com). For under $2k, you can have a really nice set-up and the ability to stamp enough CDs to sell at your shows. And you can make (reasonably speaking) as many or as few as you need. Sure, when you get super popular, then you can contract with someone to press the discs for you.

    Desktop publishing has gotten simple enough that basically anyone can design posters, t-shirts and mousepads; and find someone to manufacture them on the cheap/on-demand.

    Record companies as we know them are basically fscked.

    --
    Message contains 1 attachment: spam.gif
    1. Re:Radiohead Aside by Abcd1234 · · Score: 1

      With modern recording technology, cutting an album has become VERY cheap. In fact, while studying music in college, my brother used to make recordings in the basement of his house with minimal adjustments or enhancements made to the space.

      Hell, even the big guns are doing this. In fact, as it happens, Thom Yorke's solo effort, "The Eraser", was composed primarily on Thom's laptop.

  113. word by weighn · · Score: 1

    I'll pay $20 ... for OK Computer 2. heck yeah, I know RH have an army of fans at the ready so I'll try to not sound trolly.

    Its been 10 years since OK Computer was released. Can you guys PLEASE produce another good album?

    --
    Mongrel News all the news that fits and froths
  114. Then stop voting too! by Herve5 · · Score: 1

    ... because your vote alone, is an incredibly small amount of what would be needed for your candidate to be elected, indeed, your presence is entirely undetectable in the result.

    Thus, don't vote.

    Just let me choose for you :-)

    --
    Herve S.
  115. Re: Unique is on a spectrum by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    There are indeed gradients of unique. All are the first of their kind. The question of how unique they are is the % they differ from known examples.

    I came up with my own mixed drink. Sake & Moxie. It's unique. But since it's just two known items mixed, it's only unique by a small percentage.

    Talking Trashcans are ... more unique. (I saw one in a mall once. It was later removed.)

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  116. oh come on! by speardane · · Score: 1
    I'm with 19th Nervous Breakdown

    Vinyl sounds better than CD sounds better than MP3 sounds better than Ringtones.

    a well engineered Vinyl player will last for decades - mine has lasted nearly 30 years so far. CD players crap out between 5 and 10 years

    Yes more choices would be nice - but frankly if you want a CD buy a download and burn it to a CD

    Personally I plan to buy a download first & then upgrade to Vinyl, if I really like it

    There are few heavy duty vinyl albums for less than £25 ($50 approx) here. The notable exception being White Stripes - Icky Thump - that was both a great album and good value £14 for a double album. The drums and guitar sound so... live

    Sit down and listen to the both - really good music is compulsive

    yeah not a terribly subtle joke - but better to lighten up a bit...

    --
    if "Faith" could be proved with facts - would it still be faith? So why does "Faith" try to present beliefs as fact? -
  117. Re: New Music Marketing, aka Intelligent Digg by TaoPhoenix · · Score: 1

    Simple.

    Once some of the brouhaha clears out, there will be some 7 music sites. iTunes, Amazon, your choice of a few more.

    Combine slightly lower grade files like 96kbps for free with a weighted ranking system.

    Modern intelligent users are capable of ranking good music, and when the music you rate up is also agreed with by other respected raters, you get a "postive respect factor" of some name, much like Karma here.

    Then the exhausted new members simply try the highly rated stuff. To go from free 96kbps to 256 plus hardcopy CD plus premium notes on bands they like, they can buy the premium materials.

    We're all a little shell shocked at the moment... All we really did at the music store was stare at the selection in the category, buy our two favorites, and take a chance on some random third album.

    Within 8-12 more years, 30+% of the internet userbase will feel just as comfortable doing that from online stores.

    Then we'd cue the discussions about how dumb the Respected Reviewers are, and form our own "find the hidden gems" clubs squirrelling around the "undiscovered bands"... who then get boosted.

    --
    My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
  118. Radiohead Fan But Annoyed With Them by pandrijeczko · · Score: 1
    Personally I've no interest in digital downloads - as long as I can buy the CD and can rip it, I'm happy.

    I'm a Radiohead fan but I think it's irresponsible of the band offering a box that contains both the vinyl and CD versions - how many people these days actually need both? Why not just create two versions of the box, one with the vinyl LP and the other with the CD, and save on some of the waste?

    Incidentally, I don't need gimmicks either. Extra tracks are sometimes nice but I research my music well and never end up buying duff albums - therefore every CD I buy these days I consider great value for money.

    --
    Gentoo Linux - another day, another USE flag.
  119. don't count on users paying by spage · · Score: 1

    Two college kids set up Fairtunes (Salon article) during the Napster heyday so music downloaders could contribute money directly to musicians. They received a pittance in donations despite a lot of publicity.

    Fairtunes was divorced from the act of grabbing an MP3 from Napster, so perhaps the people who claimed they weren't pirates and intended to donate money conveniently never got around to paying. Maybe by making the donation part of the download process, Radiohead will get more people to pay a decent price... but I wouldn't bet on people's ethics on the Internet.

    --
    =S
  120. Re:Let's not see this one on the filesharing netwo by east+coast · · Score: 1

    From a purely economic point of view, you simply can't compete with "free"

    Hey now. Just slow down a bit here. The RIAA has been saying this for nearly a decade now and all the music pirates who don't want to admit being pirates and the anti-DRM crowd has been shouting this down as a lie created by the RIAA. So which is it?

    Consequently the experiment can only be a test if people accept the proposition and respond in fairness.

    Again, hold on a minute. Fairness could have been part of the earlier long-standing music piracy "experiment". Instead of users pirating music they could have been a bit more honest, let's say fair, about it and decided to take up the good fight and boycott the industry instead of resorting to theft (that's what it is folks, regardless of what feel-good terminology you use for it). But instead we have a situation now of DRM, **AA lawsuits and people from Sam Goody looking for a new job. Playing the devil's advocate, had the consumer been "fair" in the first place we'd have a new model today that would be sponsored and embraced by the RIAA, that would likely see a drop in prices and that the consumer wouldn't need to skulk in the shadows like a common criminal to get their songs from a CD or a download to an iPod or on their cell phone. AFAIC, the user brought this onto themselves by not playing "fair" in the first place. Everything after that is simply backlash.

    This wouldn't be the first situation where "pirates" recognize an honest attempt at finding a common middle ground and honor it by not cracking/releasing something.

    But the situation is not real. It's still artificial. The bottom line is that even with a name-your-own-price music economy there are going to be tons of users who are going to chose zero. You admitted it yourself. This means that since the genie is out of the bottle there will be a segment of users who will feel justified using the free copy versus paying even a single cent. I'd like to think that you've been around here long enough to know how petty Slashdotters can be in their justification of anything they do. This should be no different. If this experiment has any positive end result for Radiohead it should be able to do it on it's own. Otherwise it's dishonest since piracy is here to stay.

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  121. Speaker cables.... by Joce640k · · Score: 1

    I'm pretty sure James Randi is offering his million dollars to anybody who can hear the difference between speaker cables in a totally blind test, and has been for a number of years now.

    If you're such an expert maybe you could take his money from him.

    --
    No sig today...
  122. True to their lyrics by jagermeister101 · · Score: 1

    Ambition makes you look pretty ugly
    This is gonna be a great experiment, could revolutionize music sales and set the true market price for an album. Awesome.

  123. A bit condescending by jaypaulw · · Score: 1

    I read your post as a bit condescending and that's why I replied with that fact about the #1 album. Everyone in the US knows who radiohead is, well beyond "creep." They might have been "the creep band" in 1996, and even though the Bends hit bigger initially in the UK, they have since won US Grammys awards, and otherwise received as much press and publicity as any other band could possible receive. Of course they are bigger in their home country, but they are about as far away from perceived as a one-hit-band as can be.

  124. Newday article: "Who Needs Record Labels"? by NewYorkCountryLawyer · · Score: 1

    Great article in Newsday by Glenn Gamboa, Who needs record labels?"

    --
    Ray Beckerman +5 Insightful
  125. Make a statement...and buy this one! by jefreyisnotzen · · Score: 1

    I bought and downloaded the new release from Radiohead just now. The album I must say is very good, but that could be entirely a matter of my own taste. I enjoy Radiohead, having listened to them from the old days of "The Bends" and on up until now..."Kid A" is probably my favorite. But, I usually listen to anything I buy, before I buy it. iTunes has the preview, and sometimes, I'll sift the net a bit to see if the CD or download is worthy of purchase in some way...sometimes it via the KCRW Top Tune of the day podcast...check that out if you'd like something very cool.:) So, I paid 11.08 US $ for the new release. I thought around $10 was a fair price, especially considering it all goes to the band, and perhaps a few admins of course... The RIAA? No where in site on this deal. I bought without preview, for 1., I love Radiohead, and 2., I want the RIAA, and anyone else involved with DRM stuff to get the message. I would love to see the $220,000 court case verdict be eclipsed by what Radiohead is doing, as it's a high profile band, and I'd love to send a message that we don't want what the RIAA is selling us. So lets buy this one, and make a stink by doing so. If I had more money, I'd pay $100, just to vote in $, which is what the RIAA understands, that they are losing because they are too concerned with $, and have completely lost touch with what we want to buy. If I paid that $100, I'd consider it a vote, to send a message, paying for a freedom we all want, and sending further, a message that we want the artists to get paid fairly, and that we want real artists, not Britney Spears. But, at least, I got in $10, and did it while having to spend some time learning about currency conversion, which was also kinda cool, in the process. Imagine what type of message it would send to the RIAA, as well as every other musician, if 1,000,000 people paid $10 to download the new Radiohead release. This is how change occurs, how a revolution that's underway, can be furthered. Bye bye, RIAA. We don't need you...nor do the artists. I won't steal what you have to offer. And, I won't be buying as much as I did when I was younger. I still do, but I don't as much as I'd like. I just don't like the feeling of distrust that the RIAA puts out when I'm buying something. They are prejudging our character, which is disrespectful. Sure, there are people who steal. There always will be. Jailing all of the music, which restricts the freedom of musicians and listeners, of course, is like building a prison, one without bars perhaps, but still feels much the same. And I'm not inclined to harm, but to give, where credit is due. Initially, as I made my purchase, I thought, maybe I'll give 'em $5 bucks. Nah. $10 sounded better. Conversion and a small fee of $.45 brought it to a bit more, which I'm more than happy to pay. Then I thought of all this other stuff.:) Now I'm waiting for the next NIN album. What other artist is going to join? If we send a message to them with Radiohead, perhaps we'll see more than small independent bands, that while very good at times, often don't have what we've been accustomed to for years. But then again, that clearly has been controlled by the RIAA distribution channels for decades, and now they are completely falling on their own face. The bands are leaving them behind now.