Slashdot Mirror


Last.FM To Require Subscription For Mobiles and Home Devices

Hummdis writes "If you, like so many others, listen to Last.FM on your mobile or home entertainment devices, then you're going to need to pay for this once-free service effective February 15th. It remains free to listen on the Last.FM website, Xbox Live, Windows Mobile 7 phones and the desktop app, but if you want to continue to listen on Android, your Blu-ray player, or any other device, you'll need to spend the $3.00 per month to be able to do so."

7 of 173 comments (clear)

  1. Ok, Next by bobjr94 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Shoutcast has thousands of streams, Pandora , Maestro.fm, if you have satellite radio you can listen for free online, there are hundreds of sites on Itunes radio, etc...Shouldnt be much of a problem to ditch them.

  2. Bleh. by Aeternitas827 · · Score: 4, Informative

    Only reason I had the Last.fm app on my phone was because I could listen without either a) having to pay or b) getting stuck with a skip limit; though, to be honest, I haven't used it much as of late, being that I can get an actual decent radio station stream via TuneIn. Still sad to see it go this way though.

    --
    I don't post AC. I like my -1, Flamebaits. Trump/Sheen 2012 on the Batshit Insane ticket!
  3. Quality is the issue for me by Lyrata · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I've used Last.fm for a long time, but on my Android phone (Droid 1) the quality is mediocre at best and cuts out on occasion. I won't be paying for this.

    --
    50,000 characters used to live here.
  4. Re:Interesting. by artor3 · · Score: 5, Funny

    Probably the same price they're asking - $3 per month per user.

    So about $300.

  5. Not relevant because of grooveshark by uigrad_2000 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Last.fm is hardly relevant today, because of grooveshark.

    Grooveshark is like last.fm, except that you can play any list of songs you want in any order that you want, and you can rewind/fast forward as you wish. Oh, and it lets you play music all day long (there is no limit to number of minutes you can be connected).

    I'm surprised that the RIAA hasn't come down like a ton of bricks on Grooveshark yet. It is different from limewire and napster-classic in just two ways:

    • The music you stream cannot easily be downloaded for storage for offline play.
    • Anything that looks like Pink Floyd is removed. That's the only band that Grooveshark admins fear.
    --
    Free unix account: freeshell.org
  6. Re:Enough! by c0d3g33k · · Score: 4, Insightful

    sheesh. Wanting compensation for your efforts does not imply the devil is involved. Get a grip.

  7. Licensing by JBMcB · · Score: 5, Interesting

    Because of draconian content distribution licensing schemes. Buying a license to stream over the internet is probably per-device, so computers require once license to distribute, handhelds/phones need another license fee, set-top boxes need another fee...

    I used to work for a radio company and we ran into the same problems. Some content we paid for could be put over the airwaves and over the streaming internet station, some of it could only be put over the air, depending on the licensing. The company even got into trouble for having a pause button on the player, as that constituted downloading internet content which fell under a separate license than internet "streaming."

    --
    My Other Computer Is A Data General Nova III.