Slashdot Mirror


Virgin-Universal Deal Offers Unlimited Music, Goes After File Sharers

suraj.sun writes "The UK's Virgin Media could start suspending persistent file sharers on a temporary basis, using information provided to it by Universal Music. The ISP announced on Monday that it would, before Christmas, launch an all-you-can-eat music download service for its users, based on a monthly subscription fee. The tracks will all be DRM-free. 'In parallel, the two companies will be working together to protect Universal Music's intellectual property and drive a material reduction in the unauthorized distribution of its repertoire across Virgin Media's network,' a statement read. 'This will involve implementing a range of different strategies to educate file sharers about online piracy and to raise awareness of legal alternatives. They include, as a last resort for persistent offenders, a temporary suspension of internet access.' DTecNet has already been working with UK content companies for some time to do much the same thing, and is also working with RIAA in the United States."

13 of 254 comments (clear)

  1. Sounds like a plan by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Are they going to suspend Virgin Corporation's internet access if one of their employees downloads an MP3 using it?

  2. Interesting by langelgjm · · Score: 3, Interesting

    Interesting. First off, when they say suspend, does that only go for Virgin Media customers (if there are any, not sure what the UK ISP world is like)?

    Second, the all-you-can-download idea sounds reasonable. If the catalog is extensive enough (including classical), and it truly is DRM-free and platform-agnostic, I could actually see myself using this. They had better make sure the file metadata is good (a large collection with good metadata is worth paying for), and it'd be nice if they had something like iTune's "Genius" to find things you might like based on your current collection.

    --
    "Anyone who [rips a CD] is probably engaging in copyright infringement." - David O. Carson
    1. Re:Interesting by nine-times · · Score: 4, Interesting

      From a consumer side of things, a pay-per-month model of getting access to a DRM-free library does sound good, but it seems awfully fishy that Universal would offer it. Wouldn't most people sign up for 1 month, download everything they want, and then cancel? Or are they really going to make it cheap enough, and adding new (good) content frequently enough, to make the whole thing worth it? I have my doubts.

      As far as suspending copyright infringers, I've always been concerned by how readily ISPs seem to punish their own customers over a civil dispute in which they ought to have no stake. I guess if they're getting a cut of the action with this service, it makes some sense.

    2. Re:Interesting by meringuoid · · Score: 3, Interesting
      Wouldn't most people sign up for 1 month, download everything they want, and then cancel?

      Debatable.

      It's easily said: download everything they want. Maybe quite a few people will do that: sign up, binge on free mp3s, save them, then quit. But it seems to me that the people who would do that are pirates already. They've already downloaded everything they want.

      Meanwhile, if you're Joe Average, can you enumerate all the tracks you want, such that you could grab the lot of them in one mass download? It's a hell of a job. You'd always forget some band or other, then months later slap your head in frustration and go 'Oh... I knew I should have downloaded more of the back catalogue of Oingo Boingo!'

      I don't view the service here as 'pay to download music'. It's not really a sale thing. Why would I buy what I can have for free? This service is pitched at the lost generation, at the people aged 30 and down who have completely lost touch with the idea that music is something you pay for and then keep. We now treat music differently. Music is free - and I don't want to hear about copyright: maybe music SHOULDN'T be free, but that doesn't change the fact that it IS free.

      What I'll pay for is the service of organising music. My music collection is a total shambles. It's inconsistently tagged. It's encoded at a variety of bitrates and in a variety of formats, such that no MP3 player made since the glory days of iRiver will play them all without a Rockbox hack. And it occupies disk space that could be used for anime or porn. Frankly it's a mess.

      So that's what might attract me to Virgin's offering. If it's as complete as The Pirate Bay or more so, and the music is consistently tagged and encoded at a high quality, then a monthly fee is eminently fair to have access to that resource. Why would I download and keep any of it? Why should I go to the bother of maintaining my own collection? It's right there on a service run by my own ISP at the other end of a 20 megabit connection. Music on demand. The colossal cloud jukebox.

      --
      Real Daleks don't climb stairs - they level the building.
  3. Interesting but... by Sponge+Bath · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What format for the download? 128Kbit lossy compression? I could not find any mention of that. For it to really work out, I would want at least CD quality lossless compression.

    1. Re:Interesting but... by vivaelamor · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is the same company that cries it's customers are using too much bandwidth at the same time as announcing a new faster service. Given the apparent blindness to what their broadband customers want broadband wise I'd be surprised if they manage to offer a music service that keeps mp3 users happy let alone those who want something better. The more companies spend all their effort crying about how their business is hurting because of their customers, the less able they are to offer a service those customers might be satisfied with. It's not an issue limited to the big companies though, apart from Nine Inch Nails (who were hard to miss even had I not already been a fan) I haven't come across any commercial service offering FLAC since allofmp3 died.

      May the IFPI and all they represent reap what they sow for what they did to allofmp3. Those guys had more sense about a good product in one pinkie than Virgin Media have in the entire company.

  4. Re:Net Neutrality implications? by master5o1 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I want to know if they will cut someone off for downloading Warner Bros. or Sony BMG music, considering that this deal is for Universal Music Group, would they protect the rights of the other labels even though they are not directly involved in the deal?

    --
    signature is pants
  5. Not the law, their rule by loufoque · · Score: 2, Interesting

    This will involve implementing a range of different strategies to educate file sharers about online piracy and to raise awareness of legal alternatives. They include, as a last resort for persistent offenders, a temporary suspension of internet access.

    By this they really mean they will ban you from their network not because you're breaking the law, but because you're not following their EULA, which would stipulate you may not transfer copyrighted material by other means than their service. (which is completely unrelated to what the law does and doesn't allow)

    Transferring copyrighted music on the internet is fair use, not piracy.
    By educating people about online piracy, they really mean lying to them to make them believe their rights do not exist.

  6. Re:Net Neutrality implications? by Lumpy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Oh no it's not risky.. you are not looking at it right.

    Everything for one monthly fee, and they will be going after file sharers and illegal file holders with vigor...

    I.E. if you dont subscribe and have music on your computer, you're a criminal. The ONLY way to not get labeled a criminal is to subscribe to the service.

    I might be paranoid, but Evil is as Evil does.

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  7. Re:Net Neutrality implications? by xtrafe · · Score: 5, Interesting
    I'm not quite sure what you think qualifies as 'morally bankrupt', but here's how I'd illustrate the term:
    • Inspiring generations of musicians (and other professionals) to toil for free in some faint hope of rockstar-scale success is morally bankrupt.
    • Crowding out a cornucopia of music, and an entire economy of middle-class musicians, is morally bankrupt.
    • Conning people into thinking it costs hundreds of thousands of dollars to produce a produce a professional-sounding album when it really only costs a couple thousand, at most, is morally bankrupt.
    • Convincing musicians that they should live off recordings, rather than performance, is morally bankrupt.
    • Subjugating art, expression, and creativity in the name of selling impressionable children on fad after fad, is morally bankrupt.
    • Leveraging the legal system at taxpayers expense in a hopeless attempt to keep a depricated business model working is morally bankrupt.
    • Lying to people that somehow the most fundimental law of economics we have, that price = demand / supply, does not apply, as if somehow even gravity could be driven off by a marketing campaign, is morally bankrupt.
    • Capitalizing on ignorance to charge both producers and consumers for a middleman service that can be had entirely for free is morally bankrupt.
    • Trying to sell people into acting against their own self interest is morally bankrupt.
    • Spying on people is morally bankrupt.
    • Propagandizing is morally bankrupt.
    • Brain-washing people is morally bankrupt.
    • Telling me I can't twiddle the bits on my own harddrive any way I see fit is morally bankrupt.

    But record companies don't care about being morally bankrupt; They're just in business to make money.
    And after all that, if you really think there's still some reason that record companies should exist, and moreover deserve some portion of your income or mine, I'd love to hear it.

  8. Re:Fairness in the EU by Larryish · · Score: 2, Interesting

    AAC blows. My Sony Walkman NW-E0005x uses it and it royally blows. The encoding has more bugs than a 2.0 Microsoft product and doesn't work well even with hardware designed specifically for it.

  9. Re:Fairness in the EU by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Itunes is slow as a dog (on a quad core machine with 4 gigs of ram no less)

    I find this hard to believe. My mother uses it on her 550MHz P3 and it seems responsive. On my C2D Mac it doesn't cause a noticeable spike in CPU load except when encoding.

    I despise it's music ordering structure or lack there of

    Personal preference. Some people like to create complex structures, but most don't. This is one of the reasons why programmers make terrible UI designers; almost all programmers fall into the category that does, while most of their users tend to fall into the other category (there was an interesting paper published about this around 5 years ago, but my Google-Fu is weak this morning so I can't find it).

    That said, the iTunes UI peaked around 4.2. Every version since then has had at least as many regressions as it's had improvements.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News
  10. Re:Net Neutrality implications? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Is it like America across the pond where many municipalities allow broadband providers a legal monopoly?

    Virgin Media is the result of a group of mergers between all of the cable companies in the UK. There are basically three ways of getting wired Internet access here:

    • Get an ADSL connection from a BT (incumbent monopoly telco) reseller. Owing to regulation, you can't buy directly from the part of BT that operates the network, you have to buy from an arm which gets the lines at the same prices as their competitors. This also requires you to have a BT land line
    • If you life near an exchange with local-loop unbundling, you can get ADSL from a third-party provider without paying BT anything, but they still typically need you to have a landline phone connection with somebody.
    • If you are one of around 60% of the population living in areas covered by Virgin, you can get a connection from them.

    For some strange reason, the regulator recently decided that Virgin doesn't need any regulation, while BT needs a lot. This is odd, because it makes it increasingly difficult for ADSL providers to compete in the areas where Virgin's network extends (i.e. all of the profitable areas of the UK). There are occasionally mutterings about making Virgin sell access to their network wholesale (as BT has to), but they keep being rejected.

    --
    I am TheRaven on Soylent News